Saturday, September 26, 2009

Effective ICT PD - thoughts

Thumbs up to Sandy for pointing me towards a couple of readings on PD and TPACK - the Schmidt et al (2009) article really fills in part of the gap between theory and practice with regard to TPACK by listing content, pedagogy and elearning approaches to the delivery of literacy activities to K-6 classes. A little young for my own current context but still applicable - especially as I am leading teachers in this age range. It's certainly feasible to ask teachers to incorporate an elearning dimension to much of their planning when resources like this are available - one way I've tried this in my own practice is to include an area for elearning related activities in all of my planning templates - this works well for teachers as a reminder, the danger though is that the activities become tokenistic and are not thought through enough to really enhance student learning (a great exaple is getting kids to brainstorm on something like Inspiration when the brainstorm will not be reused/augmented later in the unit - much better and more effective use of time, to use paper in this case). I've also taken a look at MacKenzie's (1998) "Just-in-time" model and am interested in creating a fusion from the two approaches which are already by no means mutually exclusive. TPACK can provide the framework and a modified (read "financially feasible") version while Just-in-Time can provide the PD delivery model. I've been looking at some of the work by Garet et al (2001) on effective PD models and it seems to align well with my thinking - the main point they make is around the idea that PD should a) focus on of content... this is all very well for subject teachers at secondary but does pose problems for the wearers of many hats that we primary people tend to be. However, the same argument can be applied to TPACK theory in general and for me the answer to it lies in the idea of tinkering, outlined by John Seely Brown which advocates that students (and therefore teachers) try things out to make them their own and then build on that knowledge by reflecting and sharing - to this end, primary teachers could become proficient (knowledgeable) in a technology and its pedagogical application in a specific content area (e.g. a group of kids using google docs for collaborative poetry writing) to be able to APPLY this TPACK to other content areas (e.g. a group of kids using google docs for collating research ideas/notes for an inquiry unit) -a rather simplistic example which doesn't necessarily address the pedagogy but you get the idea...
b) involve active learning - this is very much in line with Mackenzie's Just-in-Time model
c) be coherent (in other words, be easily integrated into the daily life of the school) - or into the daily pedagogy of the teacher. This is an important element - PD can often fail because the teachers feel overwhelmed with too many changes to implement at once. You can't get a teacher to use an IWB if they don't know how to rig up the projector. Thereore, PD must be tailored to individual levels of proficiency to make it "coherent".

The elements of effective PD seem to be well known and researched - it's just that the cost a lots of money and it's cheaper to send someone off to a workshop and tick a box to say they've had their PD. My challenge is to sell a different model of PD to my BoT and do it in a way which does not involve unreasonable extra expenditure.
REFS Garet, M, Porter A. C., Desimone, L., Birman, B. F., and Yoon, K. S. (2001). What Makes Professional Development Effective? Results From a National Sample of Teachers. American Educational Research Journal 38: 915-945

McKenzie Jamie. (1998) Creating Learning Cultures with Just-in-Time Support. Retrieved 26/09/08 http://staffdevelop.org/adult.html

Schmidt, D., Harris, J., & Hofer, M. (2009, February). K-6 literacy learning activity types. Retrieved from College of William
and Mary, School of Education, Learning Activity Types Wiki: http://activitytypes.wmwikis.net/file/view/K-
6LiteracyLearningATs-Feb09.pdf
K-6 Literacy Learning Activity Types” by Denise A. Schmidt, Judi Harris and Mark Hofer is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

3 comments:

  1. Hi Louis,

    I have joined the TPACK google group:
    http://groups.google.com/group/tpack

    On this site I found some links in the public domain related to their research - some that you might find more relevant to the age of the students you teach. (through their newsletters, we seem to be able to access more through these)

    Anyway they have developed two surveys measuring TPACK, one by Archambault, L., & Crippen, K. (2009). the other by Schmidt, Baran, Thompson, Koehler, Mishra, & Shin (2009).

    I am looking at these to see if I can create a needs analysis survey to assist in the development of an action plan for e-learning 2010 based on the TPACK theory but adapted for our context. Anyway the work is with secondary school teachers so it might interest you too.

    Cheers Sandy

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  2. We have been using staff PD inquiry (big 6 model) and presentations at 3 of my schools and unwittingly this has aligned to a TPACK type scenario where the staff look at an aspect of their own selection - (ownership- not done to them)
    the integration - ( the content circle)
    The why to ( the pedagogy circle )
    and the how to - ( the technical circle )
    they then present to the reset of the staff on the combination and outcomes / recommendations of their inquiry - ( the TPACK inner circle? )
    This has worked very well at letting each staff member control the pace and direction of their learning whist providing measurable outcomes and allowing the facilitator (me) to carefully craft in cluster direction as needed. :)

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  3. Thanks for your comment Beth. Sounds like an effective model you have there - I particularly like the presenting to the rest of the staff... this aspect of PD is critical for a number of reasons:
    - accountability
    - forces teachers to "tinker" so that they become proficient themselves from the technical perspective (i.e they "own" the technology" and in due course, the pedagogy which goes with it)
    - becomes a shared resource/understanding for all staff
    - creates the sustainability of the knowledge/change

    Timperley et al (2007) talk about the accountability side quite a lot saying that all too often the success of PD is measured by the amount of teacher change and there is no reference to the effect on student learning. This is something we need to address on our own PD contract I feel. The effect on student learning is not just about improved results, Timperley lists a number of different things to measure:
    "gains in academic achievement; enhancement of personal identity, self-esteem, self-concept, and attitudes towards learning; and improvement in interactions with, and acceptance by, peers and teachers, as well as attachment to schools” (p. 33)…

    I like the idea of the Big 6 model (have you looked at http://www.big6.com/) but I'd like to restructure it so that it becomes more explicitly iterative and less linear - the way ICT understanding seems to have no end and becomes this organic growing knowledge which repeats the process of the big 6 over and over. There are some excellent discussions around this on Konrad Glogowski's superb teaching blog - here's one such post for you if you're interested in pursuing this - http://www.teachandlearn.ca/blog/2007/08/16/creating-learning-experiences/

    ps - why don't you come and work with our cluster!!! ;-)

    ref:
    Timperley, H., Wilson, A., Barrar, H and Fung, I. (2007). Teacher Professional Learning and Development: Best Evidence Synthesis Iteration (BES). Retrieved 28 September, 2009, from http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/series/2515/15341

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