This special report aims to provide a fresh look at teacher professional development. The stories examine many facets of teacher training, including its research base, implementation in districts, cost, and evolution. For the project, our reporters drew on interviews with teachers, administrators, and scholars.
It is our hope at Education Week that the report will generate new conversations for those school leaders charged with upgrading the quality of teacher professional development.
As Education Week reporters in 2010 investigated the critical challenges involved in improving the quality of teacher professional development and in-service training, they collected compelling stories from classroom teachers about their experiences, both good and bad.
Jennifer Smith’s world history students prepare for a class presentation. The teacher, center, coaches regular classroom educators to be more effective with English-learners.
An evaluation Austin conducted of the first two years of the program for regular classroom teachers finds it "moderately effective."
Mary Ann Zehr, November 10, 2010
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6 min read
Edward M. Davey, right, works with his PLC colleagues, from left, Kathryn Harper, Ramille Romulus, and David Vincent, to devise the best ways to teach students about reading and understanding historical texts.
The professional learning community of, from left, Hillary Berbeco, David Lawrence, Geetika D. Kaw, and Anne Demallie discusses ways to help 8th grade science students at Jonas Clarke Middle School in Lexington, Mass.
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