A Descriptive Correlational Study of Teacher Participation in Professional Development and Teacher Efficacy

This study examines teacher efficacy within the context of professional development to understand the relationship between teacher efficacy and teacher collaboration. Two theoretical frameworks framed this teacher efficacy study based on locus of control and social cognitive theory. A 29-item ques...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tupou, Samuel
Other Authors: Tindal, Gerald
Language:en_US
Published: University of Oregon 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1794/13248
Description
Summary:This study examines teacher efficacy within the context of professional development to understand the relationship between teacher efficacy and teacher collaboration. Two theoretical frameworks framed this teacher efficacy study based on locus of control and social cognitive theory. A 29-item questionnaire was e-mailed to approximately 500 K-5 classroom teachers, special education teachers, and Title I specialists in 18 elementary schools and two K-8 schools in a suburban school district where the practitioners participated in staff development on the language arts and math adoption using the district-developed response-to-intervention model, Instructional Intervention and Progress Monitoring. Descriptive statistics, correlations, cross-tabulation and chi-square analyses were used to investigate the relationship between the level of teachers' participation in the professional development and their sense of efficacy.