Professional Learning Activities in Context: A Statewide Survey of Middle School Mathematics Teachers

Based on a statewide survey of professional learning activities among 577 middle school mathematics teachers in Missouri, this study examined two questions: 1) What professional learning activities do middle school math teachers participate in and how much time do they spend in these activities?, an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Motoko Akiba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2012-05-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/838
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spelling doaj-24e0650f08264fcc96f2e0ea055d2e3e2020-11-25T03:46:59ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412012-05-0120010.14507/epaa.v20n14.20121057Professional Learning Activities in Context: A Statewide Survey of Middle School Mathematics TeachersMotoko Akiba0University of Missouri-ColumbiaBased on a statewide survey of professional learning activities among 577 middle school mathematics teachers in Missouri, this study examined two questions: 1) What professional learning activities do middle school math teachers participate in and how much time do they spend in these activities?, and 2) How are teacher qualifications and contextual characteristics associated with the amount of their professional learning activities? The study examined seven types of formal and informal professional learning activities: 1) professional development programs, 2) teacher collaboration, 3) university courses, 4) professional conferences, 5) mentoring/coaching, 6) informal communications, and 7) individual learning activities. The study found that middle school mathematics teachers spend the greatest amount of time involved in teacher collaboration, professional development programs, and individual learning activities. In addition, mathematics teachers in high-poverty and ethnically diverse districts tend to spend more time in formal learning activities such as professional development programs, teacher collaboration, and mentoring/coaching than do mathematics teachers in wealthier and less diverse districts. To promote a greater level of teachers’ participation in shared learning activities, it is important for district and school administrators to offer professional learning activities that meet mathematics teachers’ learning needs for understanding students’ mathematical knowledge and thinking.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/838teacher learningprofessional developmentmathematics teacherssurvey.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Motoko Akiba
spellingShingle Motoko Akiba
Professional Learning Activities in Context: A Statewide Survey of Middle School Mathematics Teachers
Education Policy Analysis Archives
teacher learning
professional development
mathematics teachers
survey.
author_facet Motoko Akiba
author_sort Motoko Akiba
title Professional Learning Activities in Context: A Statewide Survey of Middle School Mathematics Teachers
title_short Professional Learning Activities in Context: A Statewide Survey of Middle School Mathematics Teachers
title_full Professional Learning Activities in Context: A Statewide Survey of Middle School Mathematics Teachers
title_fullStr Professional Learning Activities in Context: A Statewide Survey of Middle School Mathematics Teachers
title_full_unstemmed Professional Learning Activities in Context: A Statewide Survey of Middle School Mathematics Teachers
title_sort professional learning activities in context: a statewide survey of middle school mathematics teachers
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2012-05-01
description Based on a statewide survey of professional learning activities among 577 middle school mathematics teachers in Missouri, this study examined two questions: 1) What professional learning activities do middle school math teachers participate in and how much time do they spend in these activities?, and 2) How are teacher qualifications and contextual characteristics associated with the amount of their professional learning activities? The study examined seven types of formal and informal professional learning activities: 1) professional development programs, 2) teacher collaboration, 3) university courses, 4) professional conferences, 5) mentoring/coaching, 6) informal communications, and 7) individual learning activities. The study found that middle school mathematics teachers spend the greatest amount of time involved in teacher collaboration, professional development programs, and individual learning activities. In addition, mathematics teachers in high-poverty and ethnically diverse districts tend to spend more time in formal learning activities such as professional development programs, teacher collaboration, and mentoring/coaching than do mathematics teachers in wealthier and less diverse districts. To promote a greater level of teachers’ participation in shared learning activities, it is important for district and school administrators to offer professional learning activities that meet mathematics teachers’ learning needs for understanding students’ mathematical knowledge and thinking.
topic teacher learning
professional development
mathematics teachers
survey.
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/838
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