Teacher Professional Development| The Impact of Delivery Structure, Student Physical Presence, and Technology-Enhanced Instruction

<p> In an ever-changing labyrinth of standards, accountability, and standardized testing, educators seek ways to improve instruction. Teachers need learning experiences that help them navigate an environment in which a growing list of student performance standards and standardized tests determ...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Durbin, Rebecca A.
Language:EN
Published: Duquesne University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10839813
id ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-10839813
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-108398132018-09-21T04:30:46Z Teacher Professional Development| The Impact of Delivery Structure, Student Physical Presence, and Technology-Enhanced Instruction Durbin, Rebecca A. Educational leadership|Education|Elementary education|Teacher education|Educational technology <p> In an ever-changing labyrinth of standards, accountability, and standardized testing, educators seek ways to improve instruction. Teachers need learning experiences that help them navigate an environment in which a growing list of student performance standards and standardized tests determine their success in teacher evaluations (Crawford, 2015; Terehoff, 2002). In this same pursuit, many administrators are challenged in their efforts to provide meaningful professional development to support teachers (Terehoff, 2002). The goal of this study is to gain insight into which TPD delivery types and which levels of student presence create the most meaningful and applicable learning for educators and to provide insight and guidance to administrators and TPD planners who are seeking ways to provide quality TPD. </p><p> The study data was gathered through qualitative methods, including participant observation, surveys, interviews, and focus groups. The data was exlored through the SPLT model. The major findings of the study suggest that higher model levels&mdash;which included student physical presence&mdash;led to an increased application of teacher-learning in the classroom and an increased confidence in attempting to apply newly learned techniques and tools. Teachers also suggested that these in-classroom session were more valuable when a pre- or post-discussion accompanied the session. The results demonstrated that learning at all model levels had value for different intended learning purposes. They also suggested that the TPD learning could be more effective when lower model level sessions are followed up with higher-level SPLT model sessions that occur in the classroom during instructional time with students physically present.</p><p> Duquesne University 2018-09-20 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10839813 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Educational leadership|Education|Elementary education|Teacher education|Educational technology
spellingShingle Educational leadership|Education|Elementary education|Teacher education|Educational technology
Durbin, Rebecca A.
Teacher Professional Development| The Impact of Delivery Structure, Student Physical Presence, and Technology-Enhanced Instruction
description <p> In an ever-changing labyrinth of standards, accountability, and standardized testing, educators seek ways to improve instruction. Teachers need learning experiences that help them navigate an environment in which a growing list of student performance standards and standardized tests determine their success in teacher evaluations (Crawford, 2015; Terehoff, 2002). In this same pursuit, many administrators are challenged in their efforts to provide meaningful professional development to support teachers (Terehoff, 2002). The goal of this study is to gain insight into which TPD delivery types and which levels of student presence create the most meaningful and applicable learning for educators and to provide insight and guidance to administrators and TPD planners who are seeking ways to provide quality TPD. </p><p> The study data was gathered through qualitative methods, including participant observation, surveys, interviews, and focus groups. The data was exlored through the SPLT model. The major findings of the study suggest that higher model levels&mdash;which included student physical presence&mdash;led to an increased application of teacher-learning in the classroom and an increased confidence in attempting to apply newly learned techniques and tools. Teachers also suggested that these in-classroom session were more valuable when a pre- or post-discussion accompanied the session. The results demonstrated that learning at all model levels had value for different intended learning purposes. They also suggested that the TPD learning could be more effective when lower model level sessions are followed up with higher-level SPLT model sessions that occur in the classroom during instructional time with students physically present.</p><p>
author Durbin, Rebecca A.
author_facet Durbin, Rebecca A.
author_sort Durbin, Rebecca A.
title Teacher Professional Development| The Impact of Delivery Structure, Student Physical Presence, and Technology-Enhanced Instruction
title_short Teacher Professional Development| The Impact of Delivery Structure, Student Physical Presence, and Technology-Enhanced Instruction
title_full Teacher Professional Development| The Impact of Delivery Structure, Student Physical Presence, and Technology-Enhanced Instruction
title_fullStr Teacher Professional Development| The Impact of Delivery Structure, Student Physical Presence, and Technology-Enhanced Instruction
title_full_unstemmed Teacher Professional Development| The Impact of Delivery Structure, Student Physical Presence, and Technology-Enhanced Instruction
title_sort teacher professional development| the impact of delivery structure, student physical presence, and technology-enhanced instruction
publisher Duquesne University
publishDate 2018
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10839813
work_keys_str_mv AT durbinrebeccaa teacherprofessionaldevelopmenttheimpactofdeliverystructurestudentphysicalpresenceandtechnologyenhancedinstruction
_version_ 1718734609097687040