The Role of Teacher Empowerment and Teacher Accountability in School-University Partnerships and Action Research

Large-scale educational reform is occurring in Canada, the USA and the UK. Different strategies for change have resulted, including the school-university partnership and teacher-led action research.  While this partnership and professional development method is perceived as a way to empower...

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Main Author: Lauren Segedin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2011-05-01
Series:Brock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice
Online Access:http://brock.scholarsportal.info/journals/brocked/home/article/view/169
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spelling doaj-3dac94aa587942688e7402a2754d1d0a2020-11-24T20:49:14ZengBrock UniversityBrock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice1183-11891183-11892011-05-01202145The Role of Teacher Empowerment and Teacher Accountability in School-University Partnerships and Action ResearchLauren SegedinLarge-scale educational reform is occurring in Canada, the USA and the UK. Different strategies for change have resulted, including the school-university partnership and teacher-led action research.  While this partnership and professional development method is perceived as a way to empower teachers it also appears to be riddled with issues of accountability. This study investigates the impact of participation in a school-university partnership, using action research as the professional development method for school improvement, on teaching professionals' sense of accountability and empowerment.  The findings from this study showed that these projects were organized from the top-down and teachers felt accountable to the government, their peers, their students, the School Board, the school community, and the project funding body.  However, teachers also were found to be empowered as they experienced shared decision making, teacher autonomy, professional growth, and school change.  This suggests that the relationship between accountability and empowerment is not a simple one.  http://brock.scholarsportal.info/journals/brocked/home/article/view/169
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren Segedin
spellingShingle Lauren Segedin
The Role of Teacher Empowerment and Teacher Accountability in School-University Partnerships and Action Research
Brock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice
author_facet Lauren Segedin
author_sort Lauren Segedin
title The Role of Teacher Empowerment and Teacher Accountability in School-University Partnerships and Action Research
title_short The Role of Teacher Empowerment and Teacher Accountability in School-University Partnerships and Action Research
title_full The Role of Teacher Empowerment and Teacher Accountability in School-University Partnerships and Action Research
title_fullStr The Role of Teacher Empowerment and Teacher Accountability in School-University Partnerships and Action Research
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Teacher Empowerment and Teacher Accountability in School-University Partnerships and Action Research
title_sort role of teacher empowerment and teacher accountability in school-university partnerships and action research
publisher Brock University
series Brock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice
issn 1183-1189
1183-1189
publishDate 2011-05-01
description Large-scale educational reform is occurring in Canada, the USA and the UK. Different strategies for change have resulted, including the school-university partnership and teacher-led action research.  While this partnership and professional development method is perceived as a way to empower teachers it also appears to be riddled with issues of accountability. This study investigates the impact of participation in a school-university partnership, using action research as the professional development method for school improvement, on teaching professionals' sense of accountability and empowerment.  The findings from this study showed that these projects were organized from the top-down and teachers felt accountable to the government, their peers, their students, the School Board, the school community, and the project funding body.  However, teachers also were found to be empowered as they experienced shared decision making, teacher autonomy, professional growth, and school change.  This suggests that the relationship between accountability and empowerment is not a simple one.  
url http://brock.scholarsportal.info/journals/brocked/home/article/view/169
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