[NIFL-AALPD:2010] Re: Professional Development Recommendations

From: David Rosen (djrosen@comcast.net)
Date: Wed Apr 06 2005 - 16:22:59 EDT


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From: David Rosen <djrosen@comcast.net>
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Subject: [NIFL-AALPD:2010] Re: Professional Development Recommendations
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NIFL-AALPD Colleagues,

On Apr 6, 2005, at 11:27 AM, Jackie asked

> In what ways do programs and states support teacher participation in 
> program
> improvement?  Would those from Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and other 
> states
> comment?
> Does professional development necessarily lead to program improvement? 
> What
> have program directors and others found to be the most effective 
> options that
> integrate PD and PI?

I think the most valuable professional development  for adult literacy 
education teachers takes place:

1) within the context of program improvement, and/or
2) as part of a professional certification or graduate degree program, 
and/or
3) as a systematic effort carried out by a very committed teacher on 
her own.

I don't mean that every program improvement effort, or every 
certification or graduate degree program, provides an example of good 
professional development, but that program development and 
certification or degree programs often provide a larger, sustained, 
more highly committed context in which teachers can engage in a 
meaningful cycle of learning, application, and reflection for 
professional growth.  And, of course, a degree or certificate cannot 
necessarily be assumed to be evidence of good professional development 
or of good teaching skills and knowledge.  Often, it isn't.

Professional development theory and research is best integrated in 
one's professional knowledge or repertoire of skills when it takes 
place alongside a practice context. Teachers engaged in professional 
development benefit from having students with whom they can try out new 
skills, knowledge and approaches.  (Let's leave aside for now whether 
or not those students benefit.) The professional growth takes place 
through an interactive process between teacher and student(s), practice 
informed by the teacher's learning from theory or research -- including 
her own research -- and reflection. It is more than an interactive 
process between the teacher and teacher educator. Both kinds of 
interaction (teacher and teacher educator, teacher and students) are 
needed.  And the teacher needs enough time, in both interactions, for 
reflection. This meaningful professional development process takes 
place best when programs and the state education agency support a 
professional development environment.

What does a professional development (PD) environment look like at a 
program level?

1) Administrators, including supervisors, and other colleagues 
encourage teachers to grow professionally, for example, by providing 
paid work time for PD, by including PD activities as part of a teacher 
job description, by putting PD on the agenda at staff meetings, and by 
setting aside a time (a day a month, for example) for PD work and staff 
discussion about it.
2) Every teacher has an individual PD plan, with PD goals and 
activities planned for the year.
3) Examples of substantive PD which are encouraged include: curriculum 
development (not just lesson planning);  adding a major new set of 
teaching skills; learning a major new area of content to teach; peer 
evaluation, peer mentoring, and/or systematic supervision; conducting 
classroom and other kinds of research; writing a journal article; 
learning to use -- and integrate -- new technology for student 
learning; or adding a new dimension to the role of teacher such as 
counselor, public policy advocate, assessment specialist, or LD 
specialist.
4) Attending workshops, conferences, and short courses is encouraged, 
but this is regarded as less important than the more significant 
professional development activities (like those listed in 4 above) 
which are sustained over time.
5) Professional development evaluation is regarded as important.  
Teachers are asked to show evidence that they have acquired new skills 
and knowledge described in the goals of their professional development 
plans.  Programs look at evidence of improved student learning, and 
evidence of links between teacher professional development and those 
new learning gains.
6) Creativity, constructivist (project-based) and other unconventional 
approaches, and teachers' insights about their own and other teachers' 
professional growth are valued by administrators and teachers.
7) Written program policies address 1-6.

How can State Education Agencies (SEAs) support programs' creation of 
or maintenance of a program professional development environment?

SEAs can:

1) Build in sufficient paid time for teachers and administrators to 
engage in 1-5 above
2) Provide tuition reimbursement for PD, as many K-12 public school 
systems do
3) require teachers to have PD plans, and monitor programs to see that 
these are real and meaningful to teachers and to the program
4) Ask programs to systematically set and evaluate program improvement 
goals, and as part of their program improvement plans to describe the 
role, resources and major activities of PD which will enable teachers 
to acquire the needed knowledge and skills.
5) Value creativity, constructivist (project-based) and other 
unconventional approaches, teachers' insights about their own and other 
teachers' professional growth.
6) Write state-level policies which address 1-5.

David J. Rosen
djrosen@comcast.net



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