Teacher professional development to support classroom dialogue

Author(s):  
Sara Hennessy ◽  
Maree Davies
Author(s):  
Kijpokin Kasemsap

This chapter aims to encourage the Continuing Professional Development (CPD) and Teacher Professional Development (TPD) in global education, thus explaining the overviews of professional development, CPD and TPD; TPD and teacher education; technologies for TPD; TPD, classroom dialogue and higher-order learning; the significance of CPD in global education, and the significance of TPD in global education. The attainment of CPD and TPD is required in the educational institutions in order to serve school administrators and students, increase educational performance, sustain competitiveness, and fulfill expected accomplishment in global education. Therefore, it is urgent for educational institutions to encourage their CPD and TPD and develop a strategic plan to regularly check their practical advancements in the educational institutions. The chapter argues that encouraging CPD and TPD has the potential to improve educational performance and reach strategic goals in global education.


AERA Open ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 233285841881985
Author(s):  
Chiung-Fang Chang ◽  
Alexander Gröschner ◽  
Nathan C. Hall ◽  
Martina Alles ◽  
Tina Seidel

Increasing research on teacher professional development (TPD) has found teachers’ self-reflection to be key for improving teaching effectiveness. Although video methodology, as often used in TPD, provides crucial insight concerning situated learning, teachers are often reticent to participate in TPD protocols due to discomfort over being videotaped. This longitudinal study explored emotion-related behaviors by assessing the nonverbal expressions exhibited by teachers during a 1-year video-based TPD program highlighting salient contributors to productive classroom dialogue. Six teachers were observed regarding bodily motion, facial expression, and eye contact, with results obtained across four workshops coded according to five types of emotions. The emotions of shame, defensiveness, and distraction appeared more often than did laughter and surprise, with the negative emotions found to decrease over time. This study highlights the importance of longitudinally evaluating teachers’ emotional expressions during video-based TPD activities and continued efforts to encourage teacher participation in these pedagogical training opportunities.


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