The Use Culturally Proficient Professional Development to Enhance Learning Transfer

2021 ◽  
pp. 105268462110182
Author(s):  
Corinne Brion

The National Staff Development Council recommends that principals devote 10% of the school budget and 25% of teacher time to professional development (PD). While PD requires time, it is crucial that the time be organized, carefully structured, and purposefully led to avoid the waste of human and financial resources. Despite the millions of dollars spent on professional development nationally, student learning outcomes continue to stagnate or dwindle, discipline issues continue to skyrocket, and teacher moral plummets. This may be due, in part, to leaders paying little attention to learning transfer. Culture plays a key role in one’s ability to learn because learning is a social endeavor. Because our schools worldwide are more and more diverse, professional development that is grounded in culture is paramount for educators whose goal is to improve learning outcomes for all students. Because attending professional development does not necessarily equate to the implementation of knowledge or skills, this conceptual paper proposes a Culturally Proficient Professional Development (CPPD) framework that includes a Multidimensional Model of Learning Transfer (MMLT). The MMLT and its rubrics aim to be culturally responsive tools that school leaders in PK-12 schools can use to organize, deliver, and assess professional development offerings while also enhancing learning transfer and improve educators’ cultural proficiency. Considering culture as the main enhancer or inhibitor to transfer is innovative and useful because schools spend large amounts of money and resources on PD, yet the money invested does not often produce the desired outcomes.

2020 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-32
Author(s):  
Fernanda Arroyo ◽  
Christopher M. Estepp

The Hispanic population in the U.S. is growing at a rapid rate and Spanish has become a predominant language, which could pose problems if more students are enrolling in school with limited English proficiency. In 2010, the Texas FFA Association implemented the Spanish Creed speaking event in order to help Spanish-speaking FFA members realize the goals of premier leadership, personal growth, and career success. However, no research exists examining the perceptions of students involved in this event. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine the perceived learning outcomes of students who have participated in the Texas FFA Spanish Creed speaking event. Results revealed that the majority of participants were U. S. born who reported English as their first language. Responsibility was reported as the learning outcome most realized by participants. Additionally, results showed that females were associated with higher levels of responsibility, communication skills, and listening skills. Respondents whose first language was Spanish reported higher levels of responsibility. Additionally, the longer participants were in FFA, the higher their scores were for the various learning outcomes. Results suggest that using culturally responsive teaching in the form of the Spanish FFA Creed can have positive benefits for student learning outcomes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin M. Vespia ◽  
Stephanie D. Freis ◽  
Rebecca M. Arrowood

Psychology prioritizes students’ professional or career development by including it as one of the five undergraduate learning goals. Faculty advisors are critical to that development but likely feel less prepared for the role. Departments face challenges assessing associated student learning outcomes. We introduce an instrument programs can use to evaluate outcomes and advisors can use to measure students’ advising needs, perceptions, and preferences. We share results from an undergraduate sample ( N = 91) to illustrate potential data and uses. For example, these students viewed faculty as knowledgeable career advisors and expressed confidence in their major selection but simultaneously reported feeling unprepared for postgraduation life and thought the major was not highly marketable. We offer specific recommendations for using such data to promote professional development.


Author(s):  
Rebecca Ann Shore ◽  
Debra Morris

This chapter traces a brief history of professional development (PD) in P-12 schools from the emergence of the National Staff Development Council (1978), now called Learning Forward, and reviews the evolution of evaluation models from Kirkpatrick (1959) to Guskey (2000). It then traces a brief history of learning theory from Behaviorism to Constructivism, and the impact of the evolving understanding of how we learn on changing professional development delivery. The authors share technological advances from the sciences that have influenced the design and delivery of learning and offer a brain-based approach for delivering PD. A recent phenomenon, the unconference, or EdCamp as some have been called, represents a constructivist approach to professional development which is more closely aligned with brain-based principles of how we learn. (Both authors planned, administered, and evaluated an EdCamp Professional Development day for a program of aspiring high school principals in the spring of 2015.)


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Marjolein Heijne-Penninga ◽  
Inge Wijkamp ◽  
Maarten Hogenstijn ◽  
Marca Wolfensberger

Teacher development courses should be based on both research and literature to promote their success and impact in practice. In this article, we translate the findings of research studies and theories into evidence-based design principles for a professional development course for honors teachers. This course was evaluated on the level of teacher reaction, teacher learning, outcomes, and organizational response. Nine design principles were formulated and translated into concrete actions, resulting in a one-year course (study load of 140 hours), ‘A Teacher’s Road to Excellence.’  We evaluated the impact of the course with a questionnaire filled in by participants (N=10) who finished the course one year ago. The design principles showed to be helpful in developing this course for honors teachers. The course, ‘A Teacher’s Road to Excellence,’ seems to be instructive for honors teachers and impact on student learning outcomes is seen. More research is needed to improve its impact further, on organizational level.


2017 ◽  
Vol 101 (6) ◽  
pp. 1015-1033 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anita M. Schuchardt ◽  
Miray Tekkumru-Kisa ◽  
Christian D. Schunn ◽  
Mary Kay Stein ◽  
Birdy Reynolds

Author(s):  
Rebecca Ann Shore ◽  
Debra Morris

This chapter shares a framework for personalizing professional development through which adult learners' needs are determined in real time and discussed and investigated at the time of need for educators. The model, referred to as an unconference or EdCamp, brings educators together, either physically on the same site or electronically, where needs are identified at the start of the meeting, then shared and addressed by those with similar needs. This chapter traces a brief history of professional development (PD) in P-12 schools from the emergence of the National Staff Development Council, now called Learning Forward, and reviews the evolution of evaluation models. It then traces a brief history of learning theory from Behaviorism to Constructivism, and the impact of the evolving understanding of how we learn on changing professional development delivery. The authors share advances from the sciences that have influenced the design and delivery of learning and offer a brain-based approach for delivering PD.


2019 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-112
Author(s):  
Wendy J. Rodgers ◽  
Michael J. Kennedy ◽  
Victoria J. VanUitert ◽  
Anna Moriah Myers

Effective professional development (PD) for teachers should be directly and intricately linked to their teaching practice. One way to link PD to practice is for administrators or coaches to provide performance feedback based on classroom observations, accompanied by reflection and coaching. This type of PD can be time-consuming and difficult to manage in practice, but technology offers ways to facilitate performance feedback. This article highlights a multimedia observation tool capable of documenting teachers’ instructional moves in real time with the intent of providing a teacher with unbiased, descriptive data used to fuel coaching conversations. Additional multimedia options are provided for observing instruction and providing critical performance feedback with the intent of improving student learning outcomes.


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