RSA 3: Teacher Professional Development
Elizabeth Meza
RSA 3: Teacher Professional Development
EDT 6030 Using Technology to Build Learning Communities
Online Source: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19415250903396034
In, Teacher Professional Development: Its Not an Event, It’s a Process; it explains the importance of focusing professional development on the impact within the classroom. It states that professional development should change teachers’ classroom behaviors in ways that lead to students’ improvement in student performance. It describes the context, content, and process of high quality teacher professional development. It states that it is a process of change and does not occur in one sitting. This paper also demonstrates the importance of using online professional development as well as face to face to make professional development successful. Using both ways helps the participants to practice what they learned and to collaborate with other participants. Using online professional development allows teachers with different schedules to still be able to access the content at their convenience.
One idea that is very important to note is that professional development can only be successful when the setting has been set to succeed with both the leaders and participants on board to create an atmosphere of change. Before providing professional development there must be a sense of urgency in changing teacher behaviors in ways that lead to improvements in students performances. The administration must support the professional development provided for it to succeed. It also shows that there must be a buy in from all participants before the professional development can ever show any significant change. The teachers must themselves feel the urgency that change must happen and that the professional development will very likely help them create that change. If within the group there are people who disagree about the urgency of change then there is a limited chance of change. Another factor for the success of professional development is the setting in which it occurs. If teachers consider learning a communal activity and involve themselves in discussions, take time to interact with other participants, and help one another practice the new skills the professional development becomes even more powerful. (Harwell,2003)
In the next reading, Planning teacher professional development: the struggles and successes of an inter‐organizational collaboration, it mentions the fact that although collaboration shows benefits in teacher instruction and students outcome, it can also bring about collaborative inertia. Teachers who for many years have been isolated in their teaching practices might not want to join in reflective practices and discussions. Groups might enforce rules allowing for little flexibility and reflection. If there is no common purpose within the overall goal of the school or organization then most teachers will not take to the professional development. Although it might seem there is a common concern there might be tension which then in turn changes the sense of community. Once the differences and tensions are sorted and worked out in the group then there grows new perspectives and understanding. In this study it mentions the struggles a professional development group had to go through in their first year of working together.
The study involves a group of high school and college teacher that came together to create professional development. Some teachers were assigned to this professional development group and so they had a difficult time becoming an active participant. It explains the difficulties they had to create professional development plan within this group. In this study it states, “Collaboration is often promoted as a means of providing effective and sustainable teacher professional development.” With this idea in mind most people believe the more collaboration within a group in a professional development the better the quality of its content.
One of the issues presented in this study is the fact the team members did not know their role in the group. Each member took on a role they felt they should be doing. Thus each person felt that they were not participating as they felt they should be.
Member of this study also felt they did not share the same vision although each of them said they did in the beginning of the professional development group. One member mentioned that although his personality is of a “go getter and finish the job”, he recognized the fact that they must build the community before ever accomplishing anything else.
These varying and evolving expectations reflect the issues that often lead to collaborative
inertia. This group had to work through determining a common goal, figuring out the needs of the group and their particular role in the professional develops planning. They began establishing a common language and protocol, and establishing trust among its members. They also had to figure out issues of lack of commitment to the team’s overall goal and the shared responsibility of workload. Finally, the group members worked out their issues on trust and began to collaborate more freely among each other. They learned to accept each other differences, respect each others ideas. The study states, “Through the process of working together, they have to integrate the perspectives into a new collaborative perspective.”
In the group, they assumed that because they worked together before in other types of situations and they had common ideas of what direction they wanted to go all of the difficult issues would be easily handle. After working within the group they realized that this was not so and that it could have been avoided if they took the time to create a community of learners where there would be a specified protocol in acknowledging each other strengths and differences. The time spent in the beginning establishing this process would have transitioned the work of creating a professional development plan far easier. (Frost, Janet Hart, Akmal, Tariq T. &. Kingrey, Joan U., 2010)
After reading each of these studies, I realized a connection in the idea that professional development is not an easy concept developed in just one day. Professional development is a process and it takes each member to create a successful professional development that show overall students increase in performance. I notice the importance of creating and environment that is safe and respectful for each team member. I also believe that there is a commonality in each idea that the participant must each believe there is a goal that has to be accomplished to create a professional development that is successful.
Setting the stage for it to succeed occurs when all participants are actively involved and the belief that there is a urgency to the change needed in teachers’ behaviors.
References
Harwell, Sandra Ph.D.. (2003). Teacher professional development: It’s not an event, it’s a process. Waco:Texas.CORD
Frost, Janet Hart, Akmal, Tariq T. &. Kingrey, Joan U (2010): Planning teacher
professional development: The struggles and successes of an inter‐organizational collaboration, Professional Development in Education, 36(4), 581-595