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Answers to Quiz Doing teacher training right |
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TEACHER TRAINING
Professional development takes center stage Test your professional development IQ Doing teacher training right Seen as a model, Manley plan falls short
Chicago audit triggers change Ward teachers get one prep day a week Home-grown solutions to common problems |
1.
(c) Strategies for teaching specific math content. But most professional development focuses on general teaching methods, such as classroom management or small-group work, says Lee Shulman, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Such training may be useful, he says, but by itself is unlikely to overcome deficits in student achievement. Shulman believes some general approaches should be avoided. He says, for example, that there is little evidence that professional development based on brain research has any practical application for teachers in the classroom. Also, he says, research supporting the idea that every student has a distinct learning style is very weak. Its another thing I wouldnt waste my money on. 2. (b) Devote all
the time to reading. That figure is based on his own experience as a researcher and staff developer for 40 years, and that of his colleagues at Booksend. Nothing in the professional literature contradicts him, he says. Joyce concedes that somebody somewhere may have changed practice with fewer sessions, but theyre a hell of a lot better than we are. 3. (a) 10 percent Teachers then were divided into two groups of equal skill. Over the next several months, Joyce and Showers visited one group to observe lessons and offer feedback; they ignored the other. Six months later, 75 to 80 percent of the teachers who received follow-up help were using the new strategies, compared to only 10 percent in the other group. Subsequent research echoed these findings. Its not that teachers are lazy or unmotivated, Joyce says. Rather, they need help in solving unexpected problems. Without it, they give up and go back to what theyve always doneeven if it doesnt work. On-going classroom coaching from a trainer can strain a schools budget. But Joyce and Showers later found that training teachers to do their own follow-up with each other was nearly as effective. At a minimum, pairs of teachers need to meet weekly to plan lessons that incorporate the new strategies, the researchers say. 4. (b) Provide high-quality,
in-depth training to fewer teachers. However, teachers who did change their practice were more likely to have had high-quality professional developmentfor instance, the strategies taught were content-specific; teachers participated with colleagues from the same school; and training was on-going. 5. (c) Teachers trusted
each other. Elizabeth Duffrin |
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