One Program Fits All? Patterns and Outcomes of Professional Development During a Large-Scale Reform in a High-Stakes Science Curriculum
When translating large-scale policy changes into educational practice, classroom-level implementation is crucial and dependent on teachers’ capabilities. Most research underscores the importance of professional development (PD) as a proximal factor to achieve educational change. Connected to the rec...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584211028601 |
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doaj-8b008933d2344f31bf4eca2ddf531cfb2021-07-09T21:34:01ZengSAGE PublishingAERA Open2332-85842021-07-01710.1177/23328584211028601One Program Fits All? Patterns and Outcomes of Professional Development During a Large-Scale Reform in a High-Stakes Science CurriculumNicolas HübnerChristian FischerBarry FishmanFrances LawrenzArthur EisenkraftWhen translating large-scale policy changes into educational practice, classroom-level implementation is crucial and dependent on teachers’ capabilities. Most research underscores the importance of professional development (PD) as a proximal factor to achieve educational change. Connected to the recent Advanced Placement (AP) science examination reform, this large-scale quantitative study (N Teachers = 9,096; N Students = 197,589) investigates teacher participation in different PD formats (i.e., face-to-face, online, materials) and their associations with teacher- and student-level outcomes. We found that teacher characteristics (e.g., gender and administrative support) were associated with the choice of the PD format. We also found AP subscore differences between students of teachers who participated in different PD formats. Furthermore, teachers who participated in formal PD activities tended to report higher challenges with the AP reform. Thus, this study encourages PD providers to implement changes alongside a variety of PD programs to account for the potential differential benefits for teachers.https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584211028601 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Nicolas Hübner Christian Fischer Barry Fishman Frances Lawrenz Arthur Eisenkraft |
spellingShingle |
Nicolas Hübner Christian Fischer Barry Fishman Frances Lawrenz Arthur Eisenkraft One Program Fits All? Patterns and Outcomes of Professional Development During a Large-Scale Reform in a High-Stakes Science Curriculum AERA Open |
author_facet |
Nicolas Hübner Christian Fischer Barry Fishman Frances Lawrenz Arthur Eisenkraft |
author_sort |
Nicolas Hübner |
title |
One Program Fits All? Patterns and Outcomes of Professional Development During a Large-Scale Reform in a High-Stakes Science Curriculum |
title_short |
One Program Fits All? Patterns and Outcomes of Professional Development During a Large-Scale Reform in a High-Stakes Science Curriculum |
title_full |
One Program Fits All? Patterns and Outcomes of Professional Development During a Large-Scale Reform in a High-Stakes Science Curriculum |
title_fullStr |
One Program Fits All? Patterns and Outcomes of Professional Development During a Large-Scale Reform in a High-Stakes Science Curriculum |
title_full_unstemmed |
One Program Fits All? Patterns and Outcomes of Professional Development During a Large-Scale Reform in a High-Stakes Science Curriculum |
title_sort |
one program fits all? patterns and outcomes of professional development during a large-scale reform in a high-stakes science curriculum |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
AERA Open |
issn |
2332-8584 |
publishDate |
2021-07-01 |
description |
When translating large-scale policy changes into educational practice, classroom-level implementation is crucial and dependent on teachers’ capabilities. Most research underscores the importance of professional development (PD) as a proximal factor to achieve educational change. Connected to the recent Advanced Placement (AP) science examination reform, this large-scale quantitative study (N Teachers = 9,096; N Students = 197,589) investigates teacher participation in different PD formats (i.e., face-to-face, online, materials) and their associations with teacher- and student-level outcomes. We found that teacher characteristics (e.g., gender and administrative support) were associated with the choice of the PD format. We also found AP subscore differences between students of teachers who participated in different PD formats. Furthermore, teachers who participated in formal PD activities tended to report higher challenges with the AP reform. Thus, this study encourages PD providers to implement changes alongside a variety of PD programs to account for the potential differential benefits for teachers. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584211028601 |
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