Exploring Teachers’ Perceptions of the Complex Contextual Factors Influencing Decisions to Participate in Professional Learning on Early Reading and Their Uptake of Classroom Strategies

Research demonstrates those who fail to learn to read well face unfair and lifelong societal disadvantage (Allington, 2011; Castles et al., 2018; Frontier, College, 2018). The number of children who fail to learn to read proficiently remains unacceptable and persists even as research suggests practi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fairbrother, Michael
Other Authors: Whitley, Jessica
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41254
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25478
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-412542020-11-01T17:36:52Z Exploring Teachers’ Perceptions of the Complex Contextual Factors Influencing Decisions to Participate in Professional Learning on Early Reading and Their Uptake of Classroom Strategies Fairbrother, Michael Whitley, Jessica Teacher learning Early reading Teacher change Professional learning Complexity theory Qualitative research Case study Teacher knowledge Learning systems Literacy Inclusion Inclusive teacher learning Research demonstrates those who fail to learn to read well face unfair and lifelong societal disadvantage (Allington, 2011; Castles et al., 2018; Frontier, College, 2018). The number of children who fail to learn to read proficiently remains unacceptable and persists even as research suggests practices to help struggling readers (Allington, 2011; Castles et al., 2018). Building upon dismal findings from literacy networks and evidence from empirical research this study addresses this problem by exploring how contextual factors influence teachers’ learning and practice and student early reading achievement through two research questions: 1) How do contextual variables at the school, board and provincial level influence the planning, delivery and uptake of early reading professional learning opportunities? 2) How do teachers perceive the relationships between (a) their professional learning experiences, (b) their classroom early reading practices, and (c) student reading outcomes? This complexivist multiple instrumental case study explores the role of context upon teachers’ (N = 6) perspectives in three diverse schools (rural, urban and suburban) in one school board with the voices of principals (N = 3) and board-level reading experts (N = 3) providing additional layers of context. Within-case findings demonstrate the importance of meeting local teacher and student needs. Contextual networks represent pathways leading to learning, teaching and student reading development. Cross-case findings reveal the universal needs of the participants for meeting students’ core social and academic needs. Finally, a conceptual framework depicts the interaction of contextual factors within the teaching, learning and student achievement process. Theoretical, empirical and practical implications anchor a discussion proposing a research agenda situating teacher early reading learning into a professional learning collective compassionate to the learning needs of teachers who in turn can be more responsive to the local and universal needs of their students. 2020-10-30T17:59:28Z 2020-10-30T17:59:28Z 2020-10-30 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41254 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25478 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Teacher learning
Early reading
Teacher change
Professional learning
Complexity theory
Qualitative research
Case study
Teacher knowledge
Learning systems
Literacy
Inclusion
Inclusive teacher learning
spellingShingle Teacher learning
Early reading
Teacher change
Professional learning
Complexity theory
Qualitative research
Case study
Teacher knowledge
Learning systems
Literacy
Inclusion
Inclusive teacher learning
Fairbrother, Michael
Exploring Teachers’ Perceptions of the Complex Contextual Factors Influencing Decisions to Participate in Professional Learning on Early Reading and Their Uptake of Classroom Strategies
description Research demonstrates those who fail to learn to read well face unfair and lifelong societal disadvantage (Allington, 2011; Castles et al., 2018; Frontier, College, 2018). The number of children who fail to learn to read proficiently remains unacceptable and persists even as research suggests practices to help struggling readers (Allington, 2011; Castles et al., 2018). Building upon dismal findings from literacy networks and evidence from empirical research this study addresses this problem by exploring how contextual factors influence teachers’ learning and practice and student early reading achievement through two research questions: 1) How do contextual variables at the school, board and provincial level influence the planning, delivery and uptake of early reading professional learning opportunities? 2) How do teachers perceive the relationships between (a) their professional learning experiences, (b) their classroom early reading practices, and (c) student reading outcomes? This complexivist multiple instrumental case study explores the role of context upon teachers’ (N = 6) perspectives in three diverse schools (rural, urban and suburban) in one school board with the voices of principals (N = 3) and board-level reading experts (N = 3) providing additional layers of context. Within-case findings demonstrate the importance of meeting local teacher and student needs. Contextual networks represent pathways leading to learning, teaching and student reading development. Cross-case findings reveal the universal needs of the participants for meeting students’ core social and academic needs. Finally, a conceptual framework depicts the interaction of contextual factors within the teaching, learning and student achievement process. Theoretical, empirical and practical implications anchor a discussion proposing a research agenda situating teacher early reading learning into a professional learning collective compassionate to the learning needs of teachers who in turn can be more responsive to the local and universal needs of their students.
author2 Whitley, Jessica
author_facet Whitley, Jessica
Fairbrother, Michael
author Fairbrother, Michael
author_sort Fairbrother, Michael
title Exploring Teachers’ Perceptions of the Complex Contextual Factors Influencing Decisions to Participate in Professional Learning on Early Reading and Their Uptake of Classroom Strategies
title_short Exploring Teachers’ Perceptions of the Complex Contextual Factors Influencing Decisions to Participate in Professional Learning on Early Reading and Their Uptake of Classroom Strategies
title_full Exploring Teachers’ Perceptions of the Complex Contextual Factors Influencing Decisions to Participate in Professional Learning on Early Reading and Their Uptake of Classroom Strategies
title_fullStr Exploring Teachers’ Perceptions of the Complex Contextual Factors Influencing Decisions to Participate in Professional Learning on Early Reading and Their Uptake of Classroom Strategies
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Teachers’ Perceptions of the Complex Contextual Factors Influencing Decisions to Participate in Professional Learning on Early Reading and Their Uptake of Classroom Strategies
title_sort exploring teachers’ perceptions of the complex contextual factors influencing decisions to participate in professional learning on early reading and their uptake of classroom strategies
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41254
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25478
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