The document summarizes a study that examined factors affecting the impact of teacher education courses on teacher preparedness. The study aimed to identify effective elements of pre-service teacher education programs based on perceptions of beginning teachers after their first year. The conceptual framework considered teacher background, course structure, in-school experience, opportunity to learn, and school context. Surveys assessed beginning teachers' perceptions of how well their program prepared them in areas like content knowledge, teaching practice, and meeting professional standards. The results could help policymakers determine appropriate standards for accrediting teacher education programs.
Teacher Educators’ and Student Teachers’ Attitude towards Teacher Education P...IJSRP Journal
Attitudes vary at different times of one’s life and are usually determined by several factors such as work environment, job satisfaction and status of the profession. Both student-teachers’ and teacher-educators’ attitudes may affect the quality of teacher preparation program and finally quality of the teacher either positively or negatively. This paper is a focus on the attitude of teacher educators and student teachers towards teacher education programmes in universities. The study adopted a descriptive survey design. The study sample consisted of Bachelor of Education fourth year students drawn from three Public universities and three Private universities, Teacher Educators and Heads of Departments from the faculty of Education. Stratified random sampling was used to select the universities, student-teachers and Teacher Educators. Data was collected using questionnaires, interview schedules, observation checklists and documents analysis. Data was analyzed using descriptive statistics. The study found that a large percentage of the respondents portrayed a negative attitude of teacher education programmes. This may be to the fact that most student teachers and teacher educators enrolled in these programmes, do not have teaching as their professional interest thus join by circumstance. The study recommends the need to conduct screening of individuals before admission in teacher education programmes so as to ensure that only those who are interested and committed to teaching as a profession are enrolled. Keywords: Attitude, Teacher Education Programmes, Enrollment, Teacher Educators, Student Teachers, Public University, Private University
Leading the Instructional Program and its effect on Academic Achievement of s...inventionjournals
ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between instructional program and academic achievement of students in national examinations in public secondary schools in Tinderet sub county Kenya. The objective of this study was: to determine the impact of leading the instructional program on the students’ academic achievement in national examinations. The study was guided by the effective schools model by Lezotte (2010), which states that an effective school is characterized by seven correlates namely: leading the instructional program, focus on school mission, safety and orderliness of schools, expectations for success, home-school relations, frequent monitoring of students progress and opportunity to learn for students. The researcher employed a survey design targeting all the 18 public secondary schools in Tinderet Sub County, all the 18 principals and the 225 teachers. Stratified sampling technique was used to select 10 schools for the study from the total 18 schools in the distinct. The sampled schools were stratified according to the academic performance for the last three years (2011-2013). All the principals of the sampled 10 schools took part in the study. Simple random sampling was used to select 90 teachers (9 teachers from each school selected). The sample size was 100 respondents. Questionnaires and interview guide were used to collect data. The descriptive survey allowed the generation of both qualitative and quantitative data. Quantitative data was analyzed using the descriptive statistics including frequencies and percentages. Pearson product moment correlation coefficient and Anova were used to make inferences. Qualitative data was put under themes consistent with the research objectives. The analyzed data was then presented in form of graphs, pie charts and tables for easy interpretation. Findings from the study showed that, majority of the principals indicated that they always led the instructional program. Majority of the teachers on the other hand indicated that, principals did not always engage in these leadership practices but did engage sometimes. Analysis of variance between principals' and teachers' responses on similar issues indicated that there was a significant difference in the manner teachers and principals were responding to questions. Findings on the effect of leadership practices on academic performance were consistent as the teachers and principals were in agreement that these leadership practices when applied had a positive effect on academic performance. Correlation test however revealed that the effect was weak as indicated by the correlation coefficients which were below 0.5. The study concluded that; leading the instructional program was not being implemented fully. The study recommended that; Implementation of leading the instructional program practices should be effected in schools by all principals. Various stakeholders that is teachers, students, Board of Management and princi
Despite a healthy production of teachers, teacher attrition is a significant concern facing school administrators across the state of Texas. This study sought to determine the extent to which questions on the Exit and Principal Surveys reflect three sets of standards which guide educator preparation in Texas: Association of Teacher Educators (ATE) Standards for Teacher Educators, Texas Administrative Code (TAC) Educator Preparation Program Curriculum Standards, and Pedagogy and Professional Responsibilities (PPR) Exam Standards. This analysis provides important information about the validity of survey questions as a measure of standards compliance for educator preparation in Texas and also sought to determine if there is a difference between teacher candidates’ Exit Survey evaluation of preparation and principals’ Principal Survey evaluation of first-year teachers’ preparation. Findings indicated a clear disconnect. Recommendations are provided as contributions for future discussion on much needed educator preparation program standards reform.
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI)inventionjournals
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Humanities and Social Science. IJHSSI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Humanities and Social Science, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online.
The Journal will bring together leading researchers, engineers and scientists in the domain of interest from around the world. Topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to
An Assessment of Professional Standards exhibited by Teacher Educators in Col...Premier Publishers
Multiple measures capturing different aspects of teacher educators’ performances, including analysis of artefacts, self-report and student survey are being encouraged in teacher evaluation. The current professional standards developed by the National Commission for Colleges of Education (NCCE) in Nigeria included the use of students’ observation of some aspects of teacher educators’ practices in their evaluation. In this study, the teacher educators’ performance on some of the professional standards was assessed using students’ ratings. A questionnaire was used to gather the required data. The findings of this study suggest that the students perceived that the teacher educators exhibited the following attributes
i. Foster scientific enquiry within instructional framework.
ii. Create enabling learning environment.
iii. Use formal and informal assessment strategies to evaluate students’ progress.
iv. Demonstrate professional values and practices that support teacher education programme. The findings further suggest that the students did not perceive that the teacher educators employed diverse instructional resources in their classroom. It is concluded on the basis of the findings that students’ ratings/feedback could be considered a valid source of information on some teacher educators’ performances, and should be harnessed in the assessment process.
EFFECTS OF PRINCIPALS’ PROVISION OF TEACHING AND LEARNING MATERIALS ON STUDEN...ijejournal
In the past few years, Mathematics performance among secondary school learners in Meru County has been decreasing. The current study aims to evaluate various administrative strategies used by principals and their effects on learners’ grade attainment in Kenya Certificate of Secondary Educationin Meru County. The study examines ways through which principals support mathematics teachers through trainings, seminars, workshops and how the support is translated into students’ performance. The study adopted ex post facto design to collect data and analyze the information for conclusion. The researcher analyzed KCSE data over the previous 5 years in Meru County, interviewed the principals, and designed questionnaire for Mathematics teachers. A total of 836 Mathematics teachers and 299 principals across the county were targeted.Using stratified and random sampling, only 251 Mathematics teachers and 92 principals were engaged, which accounts for only 30% of the target. The researcher used split half technique to test reliability and instrument piloting to ensure validity of the data. The study concluded that principals provided little support to Mathematics teachers to attend seminars and workshops. However, principals defended this by citing low resource budget allocations and inadequate resources to support teachers’ seminars and workshops. The findings of the current study can be used by education ministry, school administrator, teachers, and other stakeholders during the decision-making.
FROM PERSONAL EXPERIENCES OF TRANSFORMATIVE LEARNING ON EDUCATIONAL CHALLENGE...ijejournal
Educational policy generating 21st-century skills is accelerating, but Chinese education still employs traditional teaching such as memorizing and test-based instructional practices. The pencil and paper tests, no matter how sophisticated, are hard-pressed to measure interpersonal, intrapersonal skills, and the penetration of educational core values into secondary schools internationally, which is weak. This article aims to navigate the secondary school challenges and proposed reforms through analyzing the over 20 years of the author's experience. Findings show that high stakes cause teachers, school principals, parents, and students to disincentivize deeper learning. The exam-oriented teaching and learning approach causes students who might obtain a high score but lower functional performance. Parents' high hopes cause educational inequality and restrict students to develop their skills. Worse, the school principal utilized the power and authority in leading school development and evaluated teachers' performance based on students' test scores that force teachers to demand students to complete the mock practices and test. Because of test-based accountability, the study suggested that secondary school in China necessitates to abolish the "Gaokao" system instead of using a whole-personal assessment. The school leadership needs to shift from bureaucratic management to transformational, Junzi, and adaptive leadership. School principals advocate parents' commitment and deliver a quality of education to secondary school students. Therefore, future research explores how the "Gaokao" system causes inequality and impacts 21st-century skills for secondary school students' academic, emotional, and behavioral development through a comparative mixed research design.
Effects of students attitude towards teaching professionArul Sekar J.M.
The purpose of this study was to examine the interaction effects of gender and programs of study on attitudes of
postgraduate diploma in teaching (PGDT) students towards the teaching profession. The main aim of the study
was to find out whether there are any significant interaction effects of gender and programs of study of PGDT
students’ attitude towards the teaching profession. A descriptive survey was carried out among PGDT students
during the year 2016/2017 regular session with a population of 371 students. The survey was conducted between
science and non-science students in the department of teacher education at Mekelle University, Ethiopia. Using
a stratified random sampling method, 130 student-teachers were selected as samples for the study. A scale entitled
“attitude towards teaching profession” was developed and validated by the researchers based on established
procedures in the literature (Aliyu Musa and Ado Abdu Bichi, 2015). A scale contained 15 items to be scored on
the five-point Likert scale as Strongly Agree (SA), Agree (A), Neutral(N), Disagree (D) and Strongly Disagree
(SD) was used. The data analysis of descriptive statistics through quantitative analysis by computing SPSS 16.0
(Statistical Package for the Social Sciences) for Windows 10 was employed. Statistical techniques which include
percentage analysis for levels, mean, standard deviation, and two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) were also
used for data analysis and interpretation. The findings of the two-way ANOVA demonstrated that there are no
significant interaction effects of gender and programs of study on attitude towards the teaching profession of
PGDT students. Correlation analysis of gender and programs of a study indicated that the student teachers’
attitude towards the teaching profession was positively related to gender and programs of study.
Pedagogical Influences on Students’ Academic Achievements in KCSE in Public S...paperpublications3
Abstract: This study was carried out in Nyamira South District, Nyamira County in the Republic of Kenya. This study was compelled by the frequent low performances of students in KCSE each year when results are released. The purpose of the study was establish the pedagogical influences on students’ academic achievements, teaching learning facilities, teachers’ motivation and teachers’ professional experience on students’ academic performance. The study established curriculum delivery based factors leading to differences exhibited by different secondary schools in the district. Descriptive survey design of the ex post facto type was used. The location of the study was Manga in Nyamira County- Kenya where dismally low performance has been perennially exhibited. The Districts Education Officers (DEOs), Head the Education department at the sub county while the county is under the County Director of Education. The population constituted 18 public secondary schools in Nyamira South District with a total 225 teachers and 2800 students. The sample constituted of secondary schools which have presented student for KCSE at any one time that is 18 public secondary schools 23 teachers , 280 students which is 10% the population (Mugenda & Mugenda 2003) and 1 District Education Officer. Simple random sampling was employed to obtain student sample obtained through stratified random sampling. It reveals that pedagogy influences performance, these findings indicate that different pedagogy employed determines the performance outcome. Majority of the respondents prefer that learners centred types of pedagogy are best related to good performance unlike the lecture- teachers centred teaching method which many felt is a factor towards poor performance and High level motivation of teachers increase morale in terms of rewards and remuneration will increase the morale of teachers hence committed to their work reducing absenteeism and changing their altitude which will lead to syllabus coverage and like of profession leading to learners confidence and eventually improved good performance in public secondary school in Manga in Nyamira County.
A PATH ANALYTICAL MODEL ON FACTORS WITH THE IMPLEMENTATION OF CIVIC EDUCATION...ijejournal
The height of moral decadence of adolescent is a worrying development that may degenerate to uncontrolled situation if not checked. The crime rate and other civic problems in the society cannot be clearly linked to any particular cause, hence, the need to explore the underlying principle behind this horrible fashion. This problem prompts this study on factors with teachers’ implementation of civic education curriculum in secondary schools in Cross River State, Nigeria. The study adopted cross sectional survey design approach. A total number of all the 510 civic education teachers in public Secondary Schools in Calabar Education Zone of Cross River State in 2019/2020 academic session were used for the study. A self-developed 60-item Questionnaire was used for data collection. The data analysis was subjected to Structural Equation Modeling using Analysis of MOment of Structure to generate a path analytical model and data analysis at .05 level of significance. The result revealed that there were significant direct predictive effects between teacher’s supervision, teacher’s knowledge of subject matter and teachers’ attitude and the implementation of civic education curriculum. It was recommended among others that teachers should advance their knowledge by enrolling further in academic programmes as well as engage in in-service training to update their knowledge for a better academic outcome of the students.
Teacher Educators’ and Student Teachers’ Attitude towards Teacher Education P...IJSRP Journal
Attitudes vary at different times of one’s life and are usually determined by several factors such as work environment, job satisfaction and status of the profession. Both student-teachers’ and teacher-educators’ attitudes may affect the quality of teacher preparation program and finally quality of the teacher either positively or negatively. This paper is a focus on the attitude of teacher educators and student teachers towards teacher education programmes in universities. The study adopted a descriptive survey design. The study sample consisted of Bachelor of Education fourth year students drawn from three Public universities and three Private universities, Teacher Educators and Heads of Departments from the faculty of Education. Stratified random sampling was used to select the universities, student-teachers and Teacher Educators. Data was collected using questionnaires, interview schedules, observation checklists and documents analysis. Data was analyzed using descriptive statistics. The study found that a large percentage of the respondents portrayed a negative attitude of teacher education programmes. This may be to the fact that most student teachers and teacher educators enrolled in these programmes, do not have teaching as their professional interest thus join by circumstance. The study recommends the need to conduct screening of individuals before admission in teacher education programmes so as to ensure that only those who are interested and committed to teaching as a profession are enrolled. Keywords: Attitude, Teacher Education Programmes, Enrollment, Teacher Educators, Student Teachers, Public University, Private University
Leading the Instructional Program and its effect on Academic Achievement of s...inventionjournals
ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between instructional program and academic achievement of students in national examinations in public secondary schools in Tinderet sub county Kenya. The objective of this study was: to determine the impact of leading the instructional program on the students’ academic achievement in national examinations. The study was guided by the effective schools model by Lezotte (2010), which states that an effective school is characterized by seven correlates namely: leading the instructional program, focus on school mission, safety and orderliness of schools, expectations for success, home-school relations, frequent monitoring of students progress and opportunity to learn for students. The researcher employed a survey design targeting all the 18 public secondary schools in Tinderet Sub County, all the 18 principals and the 225 teachers. Stratified sampling technique was used to select 10 schools for the study from the total 18 schools in the distinct. The sampled schools were stratified according to the academic performance for the last three years (2011-2013). All the principals of the sampled 10 schools took part in the study. Simple random sampling was used to select 90 teachers (9 teachers from each school selected). The sample size was 100 respondents. Questionnaires and interview guide were used to collect data. The descriptive survey allowed the generation of both qualitative and quantitative data. Quantitative data was analyzed using the descriptive statistics including frequencies and percentages. Pearson product moment correlation coefficient and Anova were used to make inferences. Qualitative data was put under themes consistent with the research objectives. The analyzed data was then presented in form of graphs, pie charts and tables for easy interpretation. Findings from the study showed that, majority of the principals indicated that they always led the instructional program. Majority of the teachers on the other hand indicated that, principals did not always engage in these leadership practices but did engage sometimes. Analysis of variance between principals' and teachers' responses on similar issues indicated that there was a significant difference in the manner teachers and principals were responding to questions. Findings on the effect of leadership practices on academic performance were consistent as the teachers and principals were in agreement that these leadership practices when applied had a positive effect on academic performance. Correlation test however revealed that the effect was weak as indicated by the correlation coefficients which were below 0.5. The study concluded that; leading the instructional program was not being implemented fully. The study recommended that; Implementation of leading the instructional program practices should be effected in schools by all principals. Various stakeholders that is teachers, students, Board of Management and princi
Despite a healthy production of teachers, teacher attrition is a significant concern facing school administrators across the state of Texas. This study sought to determine the extent to which questions on the Exit and Principal Surveys reflect three sets of standards which guide educator preparation in Texas: Association of Teacher Educators (ATE) Standards for Teacher Educators, Texas Administrative Code (TAC) Educator Preparation Program Curriculum Standards, and Pedagogy and Professional Responsibilities (PPR) Exam Standards. This analysis provides important information about the validity of survey questions as a measure of standards compliance for educator preparation in Texas and also sought to determine if there is a difference between teacher candidates’ Exit Survey evaluation of preparation and principals’ Principal Survey evaluation of first-year teachers’ preparation. Findings indicated a clear disconnect. Recommendations are provided as contributions for future discussion on much needed educator preparation program standards reform.
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI)inventionjournals
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Humanities and Social Science. IJHSSI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Humanities and Social Science, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online.
The Journal will bring together leading researchers, engineers and scientists in the domain of interest from around the world. Topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to
An Assessment of Professional Standards exhibited by Teacher Educators in Col...Premier Publishers
Multiple measures capturing different aspects of teacher educators’ performances, including analysis of artefacts, self-report and student survey are being encouraged in teacher evaluation. The current professional standards developed by the National Commission for Colleges of Education (NCCE) in Nigeria included the use of students’ observation of some aspects of teacher educators’ practices in their evaluation. In this study, the teacher educators’ performance on some of the professional standards was assessed using students’ ratings. A questionnaire was used to gather the required data. The findings of this study suggest that the students perceived that the teacher educators exhibited the following attributes
i. Foster scientific enquiry within instructional framework.
ii. Create enabling learning environment.
iii. Use formal and informal assessment strategies to evaluate students’ progress.
iv. Demonstrate professional values and practices that support teacher education programme. The findings further suggest that the students did not perceive that the teacher educators employed diverse instructional resources in their classroom. It is concluded on the basis of the findings that students’ ratings/feedback could be considered a valid source of information on some teacher educators’ performances, and should be harnessed in the assessment process.
EFFECTS OF PRINCIPALS’ PROVISION OF TEACHING AND LEARNING MATERIALS ON STUDEN...ijejournal
In the past few years, Mathematics performance among secondary school learners in Meru County has been decreasing. The current study aims to evaluate various administrative strategies used by principals and their effects on learners’ grade attainment in Kenya Certificate of Secondary Educationin Meru County. The study examines ways through which principals support mathematics teachers through trainings, seminars, workshops and how the support is translated into students’ performance. The study adopted ex post facto design to collect data and analyze the information for conclusion. The researcher analyzed KCSE data over the previous 5 years in Meru County, interviewed the principals, and designed questionnaire for Mathematics teachers. A total of 836 Mathematics teachers and 299 principals across the county were targeted.Using stratified and random sampling, only 251 Mathematics teachers and 92 principals were engaged, which accounts for only 30% of the target. The researcher used split half technique to test reliability and instrument piloting to ensure validity of the data. The study concluded that principals provided little support to Mathematics teachers to attend seminars and workshops. However, principals defended this by citing low resource budget allocations and inadequate resources to support teachers’ seminars and workshops. The findings of the current study can be used by education ministry, school administrator, teachers, and other stakeholders during the decision-making.
FROM PERSONAL EXPERIENCES OF TRANSFORMATIVE LEARNING ON EDUCATIONAL CHALLENGE...ijejournal
Educational policy generating 21st-century skills is accelerating, but Chinese education still employs traditional teaching such as memorizing and test-based instructional practices. The pencil and paper tests, no matter how sophisticated, are hard-pressed to measure interpersonal, intrapersonal skills, and the penetration of educational core values into secondary schools internationally, which is weak. This article aims to navigate the secondary school challenges and proposed reforms through analyzing the over 20 years of the author's experience. Findings show that high stakes cause teachers, school principals, parents, and students to disincentivize deeper learning. The exam-oriented teaching and learning approach causes students who might obtain a high score but lower functional performance. Parents' high hopes cause educational inequality and restrict students to develop their skills. Worse, the school principal utilized the power and authority in leading school development and evaluated teachers' performance based on students' test scores that force teachers to demand students to complete the mock practices and test. Because of test-based accountability, the study suggested that secondary school in China necessitates to abolish the "Gaokao" system instead of using a whole-personal assessment. The school leadership needs to shift from bureaucratic management to transformational, Junzi, and adaptive leadership. School principals advocate parents' commitment and deliver a quality of education to secondary school students. Therefore, future research explores how the "Gaokao" system causes inequality and impacts 21st-century skills for secondary school students' academic, emotional, and behavioral development through a comparative mixed research design.
Effects of students attitude towards teaching professionArul Sekar J.M.
The purpose of this study was to examine the interaction effects of gender and programs of study on attitudes of
postgraduate diploma in teaching (PGDT) students towards the teaching profession. The main aim of the study
was to find out whether there are any significant interaction effects of gender and programs of study of PGDT
students’ attitude towards the teaching profession. A descriptive survey was carried out among PGDT students
during the year 2016/2017 regular session with a population of 371 students. The survey was conducted between
science and non-science students in the department of teacher education at Mekelle University, Ethiopia. Using
a stratified random sampling method, 130 student-teachers were selected as samples for the study. A scale entitled
“attitude towards teaching profession” was developed and validated by the researchers based on established
procedures in the literature (Aliyu Musa and Ado Abdu Bichi, 2015). A scale contained 15 items to be scored on
the five-point Likert scale as Strongly Agree (SA), Agree (A), Neutral(N), Disagree (D) and Strongly Disagree
(SD) was used. The data analysis of descriptive statistics through quantitative analysis by computing SPSS 16.0
(Statistical Package for the Social Sciences) for Windows 10 was employed. Statistical techniques which include
percentage analysis for levels, mean, standard deviation, and two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) were also
used for data analysis and interpretation. The findings of the two-way ANOVA demonstrated that there are no
significant interaction effects of gender and programs of study on attitude towards the teaching profession of
PGDT students. Correlation analysis of gender and programs of a study indicated that the student teachers’
attitude towards the teaching profession was positively related to gender and programs of study.
Pedagogical Influences on Students’ Academic Achievements in KCSE in Public S...paperpublications3
Abstract: This study was carried out in Nyamira South District, Nyamira County in the Republic of Kenya. This study was compelled by the frequent low performances of students in KCSE each year when results are released. The purpose of the study was establish the pedagogical influences on students’ academic achievements, teaching learning facilities, teachers’ motivation and teachers’ professional experience on students’ academic performance. The study established curriculum delivery based factors leading to differences exhibited by different secondary schools in the district. Descriptive survey design of the ex post facto type was used. The location of the study was Manga in Nyamira County- Kenya where dismally low performance has been perennially exhibited. The Districts Education Officers (DEOs), Head the Education department at the sub county while the county is under the County Director of Education. The population constituted 18 public secondary schools in Nyamira South District with a total 225 teachers and 2800 students. The sample constituted of secondary schools which have presented student for KCSE at any one time that is 18 public secondary schools 23 teachers , 280 students which is 10% the population (Mugenda & Mugenda 2003) and 1 District Education Officer. Simple random sampling was employed to obtain student sample obtained through stratified random sampling. It reveals that pedagogy influences performance, these findings indicate that different pedagogy employed determines the performance outcome. Majority of the respondents prefer that learners centred types of pedagogy are best related to good performance unlike the lecture- teachers centred teaching method which many felt is a factor towards poor performance and High level motivation of teachers increase morale in terms of rewards and remuneration will increase the morale of teachers hence committed to their work reducing absenteeism and changing their altitude which will lead to syllabus coverage and like of profession leading to learners confidence and eventually improved good performance in public secondary school in Manga in Nyamira County.
A PATH ANALYTICAL MODEL ON FACTORS WITH THE IMPLEMENTATION OF CIVIC EDUCATION...ijejournal
The height of moral decadence of adolescent is a worrying development that may degenerate to uncontrolled situation if not checked. The crime rate and other civic problems in the society cannot be clearly linked to any particular cause, hence, the need to explore the underlying principle behind this horrible fashion. This problem prompts this study on factors with teachers’ implementation of civic education curriculum in secondary schools in Cross River State, Nigeria. The study adopted cross sectional survey design approach. A total number of all the 510 civic education teachers in public Secondary Schools in Calabar Education Zone of Cross River State in 2019/2020 academic session were used for the study. A self-developed 60-item Questionnaire was used for data collection. The data analysis was subjected to Structural Equation Modeling using Analysis of MOment of Structure to generate a path analytical model and data analysis at .05 level of significance. The result revealed that there were significant direct predictive effects between teacher’s supervision, teacher’s knowledge of subject matter and teachers’ attitude and the implementation of civic education curriculum. It was recommended among others that teachers should advance their knowledge by enrolling further in academic programmes as well as engage in in-service training to update their knowledge for a better academic outcome of the students.
Challenges facing staff development and training: A survey of secondary schoo...inventionjournals
ABSTRACT: The main purpose of this study was to investigate the challenges facing staff development and training needs of teachers of English in secondary schools in Kenya with reference to Kericho County. The objective of the study was to describe factors limiting teachers’ participation in staff development and training programmes. In doing this, the study adopted the needs assessment theory and Frederic Herzerberg’s two factor theory of job motivation and satisfaction. Both theories talk of the need for continuous training of staff in order to increase their productivity. Both qualitative and quantitative research methodologies were used in the study. The study used a survey research design. A total of 25 schools, 50 teachers of English, 25 heads of department and 25 head teachers took part in the study. Simple random sampling technique was used to select the 25 schools out of which two teachers of English from each of the participating schools were randomly picked. All heads of English departments and head teachers of the participating schools took part in the study. Questionnaires were used to collect data from the 50 teachers of English while interview schedules were used to obtain data from the heads of English departments and head teachers. Quantitative data was analyzed using descriptive statistics like percentages and presented using tables, charts and figures, while qualitative data from the heads of departments and head teachers’ interview schedules was coded and analyzed thematically to establish relationships, trends and patterns from which the researcher drew useful conclusions and recommendations. The study established that most of the teachers fell short of the expected competencies under investigation, an indication of the need for more in-service training for serving teachers. The study also established that there were many factors hindering teachers’ participation in the existing staff development and training programmes. The study recommends that in-service training should be structured, regularized, institutionalized and made compulsory for all teachers of English.
No nation whether developed or developing countries can rise above the level of its education without giving adequate consideration for its Human and Material resources in terms of curriculum to be used. One of the Basic qualities of a curriculum is dynamism. This implies that a good curriculum is never static rather it changes along with changes in societal needs and aspirations, political and economic factors. For example in Nigeria the educational system has witnessed some changes in Content, Context and Structure (9-3-4 educational systems). Like most of the countries in the world, the changes have come as result of the growing awareness of the need to develop technologically, socially, and economically.
Impact of school facilities and teachers’ training on child education: Evidence from Balochistan and KP
Syed Shujaat Ahmed, Asif Javed, Rabia Manzoor, Vaqar Ahmed and Duaa-e-Zahra Shah
September 2021
SDPI working paper # 190
Staff Development and Training Needs That Teachers of English Desire to Parti...inventionjournals
ABSTRACT: The main purpose of this study was to investigate the staff development and training needs that teachers of English desire to participate in with reference to Kericho County. The objective of the study was to: identify the staff development and training programmes that teachers of English desire to participate in, In doing this, the study adopted the needs assessment theory. The theory talks of the need for continuous training of staff in order to increase their productivity. Both qualitative and quantitative research methodologies were used in the study. The study used a survey research design. A total of 25 schools, 50 teachers of English, 25 heads of department and 25 head teachers took part in the study. Simple random sampling technique was used to select the 25 schools out of which two teachers of English from each of the participating schools were randomly picked. Te study used questionnaires to collect data from the 50 teachers of English. Quantitative data was analyzed using descriptive statistics like percentages and presented using tables, charts and figures. The study established that there is a discrepancy between the training needs of teachers of English and what was offered through the existing staff development and training programmes. Most of the teachers fell short of the expected competencies under investigation, an indication of the need for more in-service training for serving teachers. The study recommends that a thorough needs assessment should be carried out to clearly establish the training needs of teachers before implementing any training programmes.
Eunetra Ellison Simpson, PhD Proposal Defense, Dr. William Allan Kritsonis, D...William Kritsonis
Dr. William Allan Kritsonis, PhD Dissertation Chair for Eunetra Ellison Simpson, PhD Program in Educational Leadership, PVAMU, Member of the Texas A&M University System.
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
Welcome to TechSoup New Member Orientation and Q&A (May 2024).pdfTechSoup
In this webinar you will learn how your organization can access TechSoup's wide variety of product discount and donation programs. From hardware to software, we'll give you a tour of the tools available to help your nonprofit with productivity, collaboration, financial management, donor tracking, security, and more.
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
1. FACTORS AFFECTING THE IMPACT OF TEACHER
EDUCATION COURSES ON TEACHER PREPAREDNESS
Lawrence Ingvarson, Adrian Beavis and Elizabeth Kleinhenz
Teaching and Learning Program
Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER)
www.acer.edu.au
April 2005
Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational
Research Association, Montreal, April 11-15, 2005
This study was commissioned by the Victorian Institute of Teaching (VIT) in 2003 as part of its Future
Teachers Project. The authors wish to acknowledge the support given to the project by officers at the
VIT, especially Ms Ruth Newton, Manager Accreditation and Ms Kathy Liley, Manager Special Projects.
2. 1
FACTORS AFFECTING THE IMPACT OF TEACHER EDUCATION COURSES ON
TEACHER PREPAREDNESS
Lawrence Ingvarson, Adrian Beavis and Elizabeth Kleinhenz
Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER)
INTRODUCTION
The OECD recently completed a major project in 25 countries called, Attracting, Developing
and Retaining Effective Teachers, which found that teacher education was high on the
political agenda in many countries. The Synthesis Report for the project, Teachers Matter
(OECD, 2004), identified a number of common concerns about teacher quality, such as
supply, teacher education, the status of teaching, and the retention of quality teachers in
schools, especially disadvantaged schools.
With increasing evidence that variation in student achievement at the class level is a function
of the knowledge and skills of their teachers, governments are giving more attention to
policies that will enhance the capacity and composition of the teacher workforce. With
respect to teacher education, the OECD report drew several implications for government
policy, including the accreditation of teacher education programs and the need to increase
their flexibility and responsiveness.
Teacher education is also high on the political agenda in Australia, with several parliamentary
inquiries on the topic underway at federal and state levels currently. These inquiries reflect,
in part, dissatisfaction among many school principals with the preparedness of graduates,
together with more general concerns about the extent to which education faculties give
priority in promotion decisions to academic status over demonstrated capacity to prepare
teachers well and the practicalities of teacher preparation (Parliament of Victoria, 2005).
University faculties of education, for their part, are clearly stretched in terms of resources,
particularly in terms of providing strong links between course components and school
experiences, as we found in a recent report prepared for state ministers of education
(Ingvarson et al. 2004). Most universities are having difficulty in finding schools and
teachers who are able and willing to provide quality practicum experiences for their students
and in ensuring that those experiences link productively with the theoretical components of
their courses.
The purpose of the study reported here was to provide guidance to policy makers about the
standards that might be appropriate for assessing and accrediting teacher education programs
in the future to ensure their graduates were well prepared for the demands of teaching. The
study focuses on the characteristics of effective initial teacher education programs, as
reported by teachers who have just finished their first year of teaching.
The study was commissioned by the Victorian Institute of Teaching (VIT), a statutory body
established in 2001 by the Victorian state government with responsibility for the registration
(licensing) of teachers and the assessment and accreditation of teacher education programs.
All teacher education programs in Australia are based in universities. In 2003, the VIT
initiated a Future Teachers Project to inform its plans for improving the quality of teacher
education. The purpose of Phase 1 of the project was to look ahead to 2010 and beyond and
to address questions such as:
!" What will future teachers need to know and be able to do to be effective?
3. 2
!" What demands will governments, systems, employers and the community make on
future teachers?
!" What directions might schooling take in the future and what requirements might these
changes place on teachers’ knowledge and skill?
!" What changes should be made to teacher education programs to better prepare future
teachers?
The VIT commissioned several research studies to support Phase 1 of the Project. These
studies were designed to assist the Institute in developing future guidelines for providers of
teacher education courses and standards for accreditation. The Australian Council for
Educational Research conducted the study reported here. The VIT brief for the study was to
identify the effectiveness of various elements and sub-elements of pre-service teacher
education programs. The study focused on the following questions:
1. What perceptions do beginning teachers and principals have about the effectiveness
of current teacher education models in Victoria?
2. What changes should be made to teacher education courses to better prepare future
teachers?
This paper focuses mainly on the second question, which, in effect, asks, “what are the
characteristics of teacher education programs whose graduates felt well prepared for their first
year of teaching?” Findings relevant to the first questions can be found in ACER’s final
report.1
METHODOLOGY
A key feature of the method used in this study is that teachers were surveyed at the beginning
of their second year of teaching. This meant that these teachers had the experience of their
first year of teaching on which to make a judgment about how well they believed their teacher
education program had prepared them for the demands of teaching.
Conceptual framework
The conceptual framework for the study is shown in Figure 1. Figure 1 provides a graphical
depiction of the relations between the key concepts predicting perceived outcomes of pre-
service teacher education courses. The framework suggests three main factors – teacher
background, pre-service course, and school characteristics – are associated with outcomes.
Reading from left to right, Figure1 indicates that the following assumptions were made
concerning the likely influences on beginning teacher perceptions of their preparedness for
their first year of teaching.
1. Background characteristics of beginning teachers such as their gender and their
previous educational and work experiences will influence their perceptions of pre-
service teacher education courses and preparedness. (We would have liked to include
some measures of academic ability and achievement, but it was not possible to gain
access to this kind of data in this study).
1
Copies of the full report from the ACER study can be found at
http://www.vit.vic.edu.au/pdfs/FTP_final_report.pdf.
4. 1
Figure 1
Conceptual Framework: Graphical depiction of the relations between the key concepts predicting
perceived outcomes of pre-service teacher education courses
BACKGROUND
FACTORS
!" Teacher age
!" Gender
!" Previous career
TEACHER EDUCATION
PROGRAM STRUCTURE
Undergraduate
!" Four year B.Ed.
!" Double degree program (e.g.
BA/BEd)
End-on postgraduate diploma
IN-SCHOOL EXPERIENCE
!" Quality of practicum
!" No of days in school
!" No of days spent teaching
!"Block or continuous practice
!" Shared supervisor
!"Range of roles in school
OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN
!" Content to be taught
!" Practice of teaching
!" Feedback on practice
!" Assessment and planning
Quality of university teaching
MEDIATING
VARIABLES
School context in first year
of teaching
!" Av. contact hours per
week
!" Proportion of ESL
students
!"Proportion of students
with literacy problems
!"Induction program
!"Formal mentor teacher
OUTCOME
MEASURES
!" Preparedness
!" Knowledge
!" Practice
!" Professionalism
5. 2. The structure of the course – whether the course is an undergraduate degree in
education, an undergraduate double degree (education degree concurrent with a
degree in another faculty), or a postgraduate qualification (taken after a first degree in
a discipline related to subjects to be taught in school), will shape perceptions of
preparedness.
3. The nature and extent of in-school experience during the teacher education program
will affect the extent to which beginning teachers will feel well prepared.
4. Opportunity to learn about teaching through exposure to certain kinds of course
content and through experience of certain modes of learning how to teach will
influence the extent to which teachers believe they are well-prepared for their first
year of teaching. Opportunity to learn, and therefore preparedness, will also be
affected by the quality of university teaching.
5. School context in the first year of teaching will also shape perceptions of
preparedness. School context here includes: the background of the students they
taught, whether there was an induction program at the school, whether there was a
mentor program in the school, and the workload of the teacher.
This study was designed to allow analysis of the extent to which the different components of
teacher education programs contributed to the variation in the ratings teachers gave about
their preparedness. Figure 1 also indicates it was designed to control for the contribution that
other factors might make to that variation, such as the background characteristics of the
beginning teachers and the context of the school in which they spent their first year of
teaching. The analyses reported upon below investigated the extent to which these factors
influence perceptions of pre-service courses. These factors, it was theorised, would account
for most of the variance in the perceived outcomes of the courses.
There have been several recent syntheses of research on the characteristics of effective
teacher education. Wilson, Floden & Ferrini-Mundy (2001) and Wilson & Floden (2003)
provide one of the most comprehensive. Their review was guided by five questions of key
interest to policy makers:
!" What kinds of subject matter preparation, and how much of it, do prospective teachers
need?
!" What kinds of pedagogical preparation, and how much of it, do prospective teachers
need?
!" What kinds, timing, and amount of clinical training (”student teaching”) best equip
prospective teachers for classroom practice?
!" What policies have been used successfully to improve and sustain the quality of
preservice teacher education?
!" What are the components and characteristics of high quality alterative certification
programs?
It is clear from their literature review that it is not easy to find definitive answers to these
apparently straightforward questions. They admit that the research results are often
contradictory and confusing. Only 64 studies met their criteria for inclusion in terms of
quality and rigor, which is surprising given the huge literature on teacher education and the
scale of the teacher education enterprise. While the present study does not address each of
these questions in depth, it does have the potential to address the questions as a set and
6. 3
compare the relative importance of the different components of teacher education to teacher
preparedness.
Outcomes of teacher education
Figure 1 also indicates that four types of teacher education outcomes were conceived of for
this study. These were derived from an analysis of the registration (licensing) standards
developed by the Victorian Institute of Teachers (VIT), the professional standards body for
the state of Victoria. These standards were considered appropriate as outcomes as they had
been developed by the profession to reflect what the profession believed beginning teachers
needed to know and be able to do in order to provide quality opportunities for students to
learn, regardless of where or how they were trained. The standards fall into three main
groupings: professional knowledge, professional practice and professional engagement.
The survey instrument asked beginning teachers how well they thought their teacher
education programs had prepared them to meet VIT standards in each of these groupings.
Further details about the measures are provided below.
Two other outcome indicators were included in the questionnaire:
!" Whether teachers would enrol in their teacher education course again, and
!" Preparedness: An overall rating by teachers of the effectiveness of their teacher
education program in preparing them to teach.
MEASURES USED IN THE STUDY
The following section provides more detail about the measures used for the various
components in the conceptual framework and the rationale behind them.
Background variables
1. Gender – theorised to be related to perceptions of the course because of a possible
lack of comfort some male teachers might feel teaching in a primary school
environment now strongly feminised (Gottfredson, 1981, 1996, 2002).
2. Age (whether under 25 or over) – theorised to be important on the expectation that a
wider life experience of older graduates may provide a different framework for
reflecting upon their pre-service course.
3. Previous career - whether the respondent had another career before commencing their
pre-service teacher education – theorised to be important for much the same reason as
the age of the respondent.
Opportunity to learn scales
Opportunity to learn refers to both the form and the substance of learning experiences in
teacher education programs. The scales used in this study were developed in our previous
research on teacher education and professional development programs (Ingvarson, Meiers &
Beavis, 2004), which in turn owed much to a number of research studies reviewed for
7. 4
example by Hawley & Valli (1999), Wilson & Floden (2003), Kennedy (1998) and Sykes
(2002)
Respondents were asked to indicate the extent to which (Not at all, To a minor extent, To a
moderate extent, To a major extent) their pre-service teacher education program had given
them the opportunity to learn, using the following four scales, which had been confirmed by
factor analysis2
:
1. Opportunity to learn content knowledge and how it is taught. Respondents were asked,
“To what extent did your pre-service teacher education program give you the opportunity
to:
a) gain a deep understanding of the content knowledge you were expected to teach
b) make clear links between content or subject matter units and units about how to teach
the content
c) make clear links between theoretical and practical aspects of teaching
d) develop a sound understanding of how students learn the specific content that you
were expected to teach
e) learn how to probe students’ prior understandings of content you were about to teach
f) learn how to present content in ways that build on students’ existing understanding
g) learn methods of teaching specific to the content you were expected to teach.”
This scale had good reliability as indexed by Cronbach’s alpha (0.88).
2. Opportunity to learn the practice of teaching. Respondents were asked, “To what extent
did your pre-service teacher education program give you the opportunity to:
h) see models of expert teachers in action
i) observe models illustrating new teaching practices
j) learn methods for reflecting on your teaching
k) practise analysing and reflecting on examples of your practice
l) use teaching standards to identify specific areas of your practice that you needed to
develop
m) develop and test new teaching practices
q) analyse your teaching practice in relation to standards for good teaching practice
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.88).
3. Opportunity to learn via feedback from university staff. Respondents were asked, “To
what extent did your pre-service teacher education program give you the opportunity to:
n) practise new teaching skills, with feedback from your tutor/lecturer
o) receive useful feedback about your teaching from your university tutor/lecturer
This scale has adequate reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.78).
4. Opportunity to learn assessment and planning. Respondents were asked, “To what extent
did your pre-service teacher education program give you the opportunity to:
r) examine student work in relation to standards for student learning
2
Technical details about the psychometric quality of scales used in this study and analyses of data can be found
in the Technical Report at www.acer.edu.au/publications
8. 5
s) learn how to diagnose students’ achievement in relation to expected learning
outcomes
t) plan and prepare units of work collaboratively
u) assess and monitor collaboratively, students’ progress against standards for student
learning
v) plan and assess in accordance with the CSF/VCE
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.88).
School context variables
School context included characteristics of the school where the respondent was teaching most
frequently during 2003 that might have mediated the extent to which beginning teachers felt
able to cope with the job:
1. Average contact hours per week – theorised to be important on the assumption that the
higher the workload experienced, the less likely teachers would feel able to cope with
the demands of teaching.
2. Proportion of English as a Second Language (ESL) students – theorised to influence
perceptions of pre-service course quality on the assumption that these students present
particular challenges and difficulties that will shape the experience of teaching and
hence reflections on the adequacy of the pre-service course.
3. Proportion of students with English literacy problems – theorised to be relevant on the
same basis as the proportion of ESL students.
4. Induction provided by the school – was theorised to be important because where the
school supports the transition to the world of work, the less likely the experience will
be difficult for the new teacher. This may, in turn, influence the perceptions of the
adequacy of the pre-service course.
5. Formally allocated a mentor – was theorised to be important for the same reason as
for whether there was a formal induction into the school.
Nature and quality of school experience
A number of measures were used to gather data about the practicum component of the teacher
education programs that respondents had experienced. These included:
!" The total number of days spent in schools during the program
!" The number of days spent teaching in schools during the program
!" Whether the practicum was organised in blocks of time (e.g. 3-4 weeks in schools), or
on a continuous basis (e.g. 2-3 days per week)
!" Whether they shared their supervising teacher with another student or not.
We were interested in the richness of the practicum experience. Respondents were asked
about the extent to which they had a wider range of experiences and roles other than the
traditional practice teaching with a supervising teacher. These included opportunities to:
!" observe other teachers (apart from their supervising teachers) in their classrooms
!" join in regular meetings of teachers (e.g. planning, reviewing student work, etc)
9. 6
!" visit families or local community agencies and organizations
!" interview principals and teachers
!" conduct small research projects in the school as part of their pre-service teacher
education program
!" assist with wider school activities without teaching (e.g. helping on excursions,
camps, with sport, providing individual tutoring)
!" plan lessons jointly with other student teachers
We were also interested in the quality of their practicum experiences. To gather data about
the quality of the practicum experience respondents were asked about the extent to which
they agreed or disagreed with the following statements about their practicum experiences in
the last year of their teacher education program:
a) My supervising teacher(s) had a clear idea of what my university required me to do
as part of my practicum
b) I had a clear understanding of what was expected of me as a teacher in order to pass
the practicum
c) I used teaching standards as a guide to evaluating and reflecting on my teaching
d) My supervising teacher(s) used clear and explicit standards when reviewing my
lessons with me
e) Overall, the feedback I received from my supervising teacher(s) helped me to
improve my teaching
f) The methods used to assess my ability to teach were valid
g) My university lecturer(s) and my school-based supervising teachers had similar
views on good teaching methods
h) My supervising teacher(s) generally valued the ideas and approaches I brought from
my university teacher education program
i) Overall, my practicum experience was a valuable part of my preparation to become a
teacher
j) My supervising teacher(s) used criteria/standards provided by my university for
evaluating my teaching
A factor analysis suggested that there was one dimension underlying these items. This scale
had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha 0.87).
Quality of teaching at university during teacher education course scale
To gather data about the quality of teaching that respondents received during their teacher
education course, respondents were asked, “How often did your university lecturers and
tutors in your pre-service teacher education program:
a) model good teaching practices in their teaching
b) draw on and use research relevant to the content of their courses
c) model evaluation and reflection on their own teaching
d) have recent experience in primary or secondary schools
e) value the learning and experiences you had prior to starting the program
f) link their university units to the school experience component of the program
g) value the learning and experiences you had in your practicum
10. 7
A factor analysis suggested that there was one dimension underlying these items. (Response
choices were: never; rarely; sometimes; and often.) This dimension was interpreted as the
quality of university teaching. This scale also had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha 0.83).
OUTCOME MEASURES
As mentioned above, a feature of this study was to use teaching standards as the framework
for developing outcome measures, specifically the VIT standards for registration (licensing).
The following measures contained items derived from a close reading of the standards.
Professional knowledge scales
Respondents were asked to describe the extent to which their pre-service teacher education
course had provided them with a good understanding of a number of aspects of professional
knowledge. A factor analysis (see the technical report) suggested that there were two
dimensions underlying these data:
1. Professional knowledge about content and how to teach it. The following items tapped
this dimension:
a) the content areas you were qualified to teach
b) how to analyse students’ existing understanding of topics you are about to teach
c) how to build on students’ existing knowledge and experience
e) current developments in your field of teaching
h) resources to support your students’ learning in the areas you are qualified to teach
i) the Victorian Curriculum Standards Framework (CSF) and/or Victorian Certificate of
Education (VCE – the state end of high school examination) in the areas you are
qualified to teach
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha 0.84).
2. Professional knowledge about students and how they learn . The following items tapped
this dimension:
d) individual differences in student approaches to learning
f) the effects of the social, cultural, religious and ethnic backgrounds of students on
their learning
g) how individual students learn and develop
j) how to use findings from research to improve your knowledge and practice
l) how cultural and gender differences can affect communication in the classroom
m) ethical standards and codes of conduct expected of teachers
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.87).
11. 8
Professional practice scales
Respondents were asked to describe the extent to which their pre-service teacher education
course prepared them in a range of areas of professional practice. A factor analysis suggested
that there were four dimensions underlying these data:
1. Professional practice to do with the curriculum. The following items tapped this
dimension:
a) design teaching and learning units/ programs relevant to your students
b) communicate ideas and information clearly to your students
c) use effectively the principles of curriculum documents (e.g. CSF)
f) develop questions to challenge students and promote higher order thinking
g) locate suitable curriculum materials and teaching resources
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha 0.84).
2. Professional practice to do with classroom management. The following items tapped this
dimension:
q) enhance student confidence and self-esteem
r) use motivational strategies effectively
s) encourage appropriate student behaviour
u) provide flexible learning pathways
v) incorporate effective classroom management strategies into your teaching
w) make your teaching relevant to your students’ experience
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.90).
3. Professional practice to do with assessment. The following items tapped this dimension:
n) assess and monitor the progress of your students
o) use assessment to give effective feedback to your students
p) keep useful records of your students’ progress
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.89).
4. Professional practice to do with cross-curriculum teaching in literacy and numeracy. The
following items tapped this dimension:
i) incorporate opportunities for teaching literacy skills across the curriculum
j) incorporate opportunities for teaching numeracy skills across the curriculum
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.82).
Other professional practice scales
Respondents were asked to describe the extent their pre-service teacher education course had
prepared them in several areas of professional practice. A factor analysis suggested that there
were two dimensions underlying these data:
1. Reflection on own teaching. The following items tapped this dimension:
12. 9
f) reflect upon the effectiveness of your teaching
g) reflect upon your professional knowledge
h) identify your learning needs
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha 0.89).
2. Work with parents and others. The following items tapped this dimension:
a) work with parents or guardians
e) use assessment to give effective feedback to parents or guardians
This scale had good reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.81).
DATA COLLECTION
The survey instrument was distributed in March 2004 to all registered teachers (2667) who
had graduated from their teacher education program in 2002, taught in 2003 and were now
one month into their second year of teaching in 2004. 1147 teachers returned completed
questionnaires, a response rate of just over 44%.
All Victorian institutions providing pre-service teacher education courses were represented in
the data. Over 99% of respondents had completed their teacher education in Victorian
universities and 94% had taught in a school in 2003. Forty three percent taught in primary
schools, 40 % taught in secondary schools and the rest in P-10 or P-12 schools. About 67%
taught in Government schools, 18% in Catholic schools, and 14% in Independent schools.
The analysis reported here is based only on those teachers who had completed their first year
of teaching.
In order to protect the confidentiality of teachers’ addresses, the VIT organised the mail out
of the questionnaires. Accompanying the mailed out questionnaire was a covering letter from
the VIT explaining the study and a reply-paid pre-addressed envelope for the return of the
questionnaire. A reminder was sent to teachers who had not replied three weeks after the
initial mail-out.
The population surveyed consisted of 26.7% who were male and 62.3% who were aged 25
years and over. Of those responding, 21.1% were males and 54.5% were aged over 25 years.
Thus, there was a slight over-representation of females in the achieved sample, and a
somewhat greater under-representation of over 25s. This may bias the results – views
associated with females and younger persons are heard a little more often – but it is unlikely
that this effect will be large given the relatively small differences in the distribution of gender
and ages between the sample and the population. 45% had a career prior to commencing their
pre-service teacher education course. 60% of males reported a prior career, compared with
around 40% of females. Thus, just over 5% did not teach in their first year after graduation.
Of those teaching, 27.9% indicated that they were in an on-going position, 58.5% indicated
that they were on a contract and 21.6% indicated that they had worked as casual relief
teachers.
About 25% of teachers reported teaching, at least part of their teaching time, in a subject area
for which they were not qualified. Respondents averaged about 20 hours of class contact
hours per week in their first year of teaching.
13. 10
Some 64% of respondents indicated that their school provided an induction program for them.
Of these, just under 60% indicated that it had supported them to a moderate or major extent in
the development of their teaching practice. Nearly 80% of respondents indicated that their
colleagues had supported them in the development of their teaching practice to a moderate or
major extent.
Respondents were also asked about mentoring in their school. (If they worked at more than
one school, they were asked to think of the school in which they spent most time in 2003.)
Just over 60% indicated that they had been formally allocated a mentor in their school. Of
these, 40% met with their mentor once a week and 20% met twice a week. Around 25% met
three or more times per week. A little over 60% of respondents indicated that these meetings
were either helpful or very helpful.
The language background and the literacy levels of the students in the school where the
respondent worked were also investigated. A wide range of cultural backgrounds, or low
levels of literacy achievement or a combination of both factors could impose significant
demands upon a new teacher, and also test the adequacy of their pre-service education.
Around 20% had nearly all their students with English as a second language. Just over half
reported that they had hardly any students with English as a second language.
Around 20% had half or more of their students’ with literacy problems. Just on 80% had
25% or fewer of their students with literacy problems. There was an even distribution of
teachers across year levels taught except for Year 12 where fewer reported teaching. Most
teachers reported that they had few students with literacy problems or students from a non-
English speaking background.
The data provided a good coverage of pre-service teacher education courses and providers,
across a wide cross section of the new teacher population for 2003.
RESULTS
The study was designed to address two major questions:
1. What are the perceptions of beginning teachers and principals about the effectiveness
of current teacher education models in Victoria?
2. What changes do stakeholders believe should be made to teacher education programs
to better prepare future teachers?
The answers to these questions are, in turn, designed to identify steps that could be taken to
ensure that teaching graduates in the future would have the knowledge and skills to be
effective teachers.
1. Descriptive Findings
A full report of the descriptive findings can be found in the full report to the VIT on the VIT
website (http://www.vit.vic.edu.au/pdfs/FTP_final_report.pdf). Only a summary of those
descriptive results will be reported here as the focus of this report is mainly on the second
question above, which is about identifying factors that characterise effective teacher
education programs.
14. 11
On a four point scale (1 = not at all, 2 = to a minor extent, 3 = to a moderate extent and 4 = to
a major extent) these teachers generally scored the core elements of their courses slightly
below a 3, except for working with and reporting to parents and guardians, which scored near
2 on average. In other words, respondents on average said their teacher education program
had prepared them to a moderate extent on the core elements of the VIT standards.
As this is the first time these measures of teacher education outcomes have been used there is
no basis on which to make comparisons with previous years, or with teacher education
courses in other states and territories. However, while the distribution of ratings indicates
many teachers believed their courses prepared them well for the first year, it also indicates
that a worrying proportion felt their preparation was less than adequate.
It should be kept in mind that perceptions of effectiveness vary with the time a survey such as
this is administered. As a rule, perceptions gradually improve the longer teachers have been
teaching. Teachers often rate their first year of teaching as the most demanding and stressful
year they have experienced.
In this study, teachers who completed a four-year undergraduate course generally reported
more favourably on their course than teachers who completed a post-graduate degree (but the
latter rated the quality of university teaching they received significantly higher).
Significant differences were not found between double degree courses and undergraduate or
postgraduate courses on the outcome measures. School experience was rated higher than
other elements of teacher education programs, but teachers from most courses made frequent
mention of unsatisfactory arrangements, including the selection and preparation of teachers
supervising the practicum experience in schools.
Teachers rated their courses in terms of opportunities to learn how to teach along four key
dimensions that included content knowledge, teaching skills, feedback from lecturers and
assessment of student learning. A summary of these results can be found in the first four
tables in Appendix 1, showing significant variation between teacher education courses in
different universities.
On the same four-point scale (1 = not at all, 2 = to a minor extent, 3 = to a moderate extent
and 4 = to a major extent), average ratings were about 2.75, except for feedback where the
average was about 2.5. This is not a strong endorsement of the methods currently used to
help people to learn how to teach. Given the central importance of feedback for learning,
especially in acquiring new skills, these findings point to areas that require more focused
attention and structured provision in teacher education programs.
Teachers who had completed an undergraduate degree course were more likely to rate their
course as effective overall compared with teachers who had completed a postgraduate degree
(but, interestingly, the latter rated the quality of university teaching they received
significantly higher).
Teachers who completed a four-year undergraduate course generally reported more
favourably on the effectiveness of their courses across the outcome measures (knowledge,
teaching practice, professional practice) than teachers who completed a post-graduate degree.
The most highly rated courses were undergraduate courses that prepared secondary specialist
teachers, such as physical education teachers.
15. 12
Overall, teachers and principals viewed pre-service teacher education positively, although
they still saw room for improvement, especially in preparing for work with parents, and in the
quality of teaching at universities. Twenty five percent of teachers rated their course as very
effective and about 50% rated it as effective. Nearly 80% said they would recommend their
course to others.
2. Analysis of factors associated with teacher views of preparedness
This section of the paper reports on analyses of the strength of association between
preparedness and the range of factors in the conceptual framework theorised to affect
perceptions of pre-service courses by teachers who had recently completed their first year of
teaching.
The results reported in this section were obtained by using multiple regression analyses to
estimate the strength of the linear relationship between measures of preparedness and the set
of independent variables in the conceptual framework. The order in which these variables
were entered into the analyses was determined by the theory underlying the conceptual model
described in Figure 1. The purpose of these analyses was to identify the relative strength of
association between aspects of pre-service courses and preparedness, while controlling for the
effect of a range of extraneous factors that may affect perceptions, but have little to do with
the nature and quality of these courses.
Results of the analyses
Significant variation was found across the universities in the reported effectiveness of courses
on each of the outcome measures listed above. Some idea of the extent of this variation can
be found in Table 5 in Appendix 1. This table shows the means and confidence intervals for
each of the university courses in terms effectiveness in preparing teachers for their first year
of teaching. Similar tables could have been included for each of the outcome variables.
Table 5 indicates there were significant differences between the teacher education programs
in terms of reported effectiveness.
This study was designed to allow analysis of the extent to which a range of features of teacher
education courses accounted for this variation. It was also designed to control for the
contribution that other factors might make to the variation, such as the background
characteristics of the beginning teachers (e.g. age, sex, previous career) and the context of the
school in which they spent their first year of teaching (e.g. workload, presence of induction or
mentoring programs).
The results for the regression analysis are summarised in tables below. Each table shows the
standardised regression coefficients and significance levels for each of the predictors in the
conceptual model. The use of standardised coefficients permits easy comparison of the
strength of associations within the model. Statistically significant results – those where it
95% likely that the coefficient is different from zero – are marked in bold in the tables.
Statistical significance is shown in the columns headed ‘Sig.’.
Professional knowledge
Table 1 shows the most important factors associated with having a good understanding of
professional knowledge related to the content, as defined above. Unsurprisingly, the extent to
which the pre-service teacher education program gave the opportunity to learn this content
had the strongest effect (0.45) among the variables in the framework. Also important was the
16. 13
opportunity to learn about assessment and planning, which had a moderately strong effect
(0.30). An opportunity to learn via feedback from university staff during the pre-service
course and the quality of the teaching conducted within this course both had weaker, though
statistically significant, effects.
Doing the practicum only as a block also had a weak positive effect. No other aspects of the
practicum had statistically significant effects on professional knowledge to do with content.
This model explained 65% (adjusted R-squared) of the variance in the dependent variable –
having a good understanding of professional knowledge to do with the content taught.
Table 1 also shows the most important factors associated with having a good understanding
of professional knowledge concerning students. The strongest effect was the extent to which
the pre-service teacher education program provided an opportunity to learn the practice
teaching as defined above (0.27). This is a moderately strong effect. All other opportunity to
learn variables had weak though statistically significant effects. Also having weak though
statistically significant effects were the quality of university teaching in the pre-service course
(0.12), and whether the school had formally allocated a mentor to the respondent when
starting at their school (0.10).
Table 1 Factors associated with preparedness in knowledge of content and students
Knowledge of
content
Knowledge of
students
Stand.
Coeff Sig
Stand.
Coeff Sig
Sex (F=0 M=1) 0.04 0.16 -0.04 0.21
Age (<=25=0, >25=1) 0.02 0.62 0.03 0.49
Previous career (Yes=1 No=0) -0.04 0.30 0.00 0.94
Average contact hours per week 0.04 0.18 0.02 0.56
Proportion of ESL students -0.01 0.74 -0.07 0.04
Proportion of students with English literacy
problems
0.03 0.29 0.05 0.15
School induction (Yes = 1 No = 0) -0.05 0.12 -0.09 0.02
Formal mentor at school (Yes = 1 No = 0) 0.04 0.15 0.10 0.01
OTL - Content knowledge & how taught 0.45 0.00 0.16 0.00
OTL - Practice of teaching 0.03 0.53 0.27 0.00
OTL via feedback from uni staff 0.08 0.01 0.13 0.00
OTL - Assessment & planning 0.30 0.00 0.19 0.00
Quality of university teaching in ed course 0.11 0.00 0.12 0.00
Degree type (PG=1 else=0) -0.02 0.69 -0.05 0.24
No. of days spent in schools -0.03 0.50 -0.01 0.83
No. of days spent teaching 0.04 0.23 0.00 0.97
Practicum only done as a block (Yes=1
No=0)
0.08 0.01 0.07 0.04
Student partner for practicum (Yes=1 No=0) -0.05 0.08 -0.05 0.10
Width of role in school practicum -0.01 0.73 0.00 0.95
Quality of the practicum -0.02 0.45 -0.01 0.75
Whether the school offered an induction program had a weak negative effect. The proportion
of students in the school with English as a second language also had a weak effect (-0.07)
17. 14
such that the higher the proportion, the less likely the respondent was to report their pre-
service course gave them a good understanding of students.
Doing the practicum only as a block had a weak though statistically significant effect. No
other aspects of the practicum had statistically significant effects on professional knowledge
to do with content or students. This model explained 46% of the variance in the dependent
variable – having a good understanding of professional knowledge concerning students.
Professional practice
Professional practice as defined above had four components. Table 2 shows the most
important factors associated with the extent to which respondents reported that their pre-
service course had prepared them for each of these components: (1) the curriculum, (2)
classroom management, (3) professional practice, and (4) cross-curriculum teaching.
Table 2 shows the most important factors associated with the experience of preparedness for
professional practice relating to the curriculum. Having the opportunity to learn about both
content (0.29), and assessment and planning (0.34) had moderately strong effects. The
opportunity to receive feedback from university staff had a weaker, though statistically
significant, effect (0.10), as did teaching quality within this course (0.16). While having a
high proportion of students with literacy problems had a weak effect, it is clear from Table 2
that the most important factors affecting preparedness for professional practice relating to the
curriculum were the opportunity to learn variables during the pre-service course. This model
explained 56% of the variance in preparedness for professional practice relating to the
curriculum.
Table 2 shows the most important factors associated with preparedness relating to classroom
management. Having had the opportunity to learn about content (0.24), and assessment and
planning (0.20) had moderate effects. Feedback from university staff, the quality of the
teaching conducted within this course and having a high proportion of students with literacy
problems had weak though statistically significant effects. Having an induction program at
the school had a weak negative effect. Again, the most important factors affecting
preparedness for professional practice – this time relating to classroom management – were
those related to the opportunity to learn variables during the pre-service course. This model
explained 48% of the variance in preparedness for professional practice relating to classroom
management.
Table 2 shows the most important factors associated with preparedness for professional
practice relating to assessment. Having had the opportunity to learn about assessment (0.46)
had a strong effect. One other opportunity to learn variable also had a weak though
statistically significant effect – feedback from university staff. The number of contact
teaching hours was also negatively related to the level of preparedness for the professional
practice of assessment that respondents reported. Gender also had a weak effect – males were
slightly more likely to report higher levels of preparedness. Once again, the most important
factors affecting preparedness for professional practice were those related to opportunities to
learn during the pre-service course. This model explained 49% of the variance in
preparedness for professional practice relating to assessment.
Table 2 shows the most important factors associated with preparedness for professional
practice relating to cross-curriculum teaching. Having the opportunity to learn about
assessment (0.20) and content knowledge (0.24) had moderately strong effects. Having the
18. 15
opportunity to learn about the practice of teaching had a weak effect. Having an induction
program in the school and a formally allocated mentor also had weak, though statistically
significant, effects.
Table 2 Factors associated with preparedness in professional practice: curriculum,
classroom management, assessment and cross-curriculum
Curriculum
Classroom
Management Assessment
Cross-
Curriculum
Stand.
Coeff Sig
Stand.
Coeff Sig
Stand.
Coeff Sig
Stand
Coeff Sig
Sex (F=0 M=1) -0.01 0.65 0.01 0.68 0.06 0.05 -0.06 0.14
Age (<=25=0, >25=1) -0.03 0.50 0.00 0.94 0.02 0.70 -0.01 0.81
Previous career (Yes=1
No=0)
0.02 0.57 -0.02 0.57 0.00 0.99 0.04 0.45
Average contact hours per
week
0.01 0.74 -0.02 0.54 -0.08 0.02 0.04 0.24
Proportion of ESL students 0.00 0.89 -0.05 0.11 0.00 0.95 -0.06 0.12
Proportion of students with
English literacy problems
0.07 0.03 0.09 0.00 -0.01 0.85 0.05 0.23
School induction (Yes = 1
No = 0)
-0.06 0.06 -0.09 0.02 -0.03 0.37 -0.11 0.01
Formal mentor at school
(Yes = 1 No = 0)
0.03 0.46 0.06 0.08 0.00 0.94 0.14 0.00
OTL - Content knowledge
& how taught
0.29 0.00 0.24 0.00 0.09 0.07 0.24 0.00
OTL - Practice of teaching 0.02 0.69 0.09 0.07 0.10 0.06 0.12 0.05
OTL via feedback from uni
staff
0.10 0.01 0.19 0.00 0.11 0.01 0.03 0.48
OTL - Assessment &
planning
0.34 0.00 0.20 0.00 0.46 0.00 0.20 0.00
Quality of university
teaching in ed course
0.16 0.00 0.14 0.00 0.04 0.33 0.08 0.12
Degree type (PG=1 else=0) -0.04 0.35 -0.01 0.81 -0.03 0.44 -0.08 0.15
No. of days spent in
schools
-0.02 0.59 0.00 0.98 -0.07 0.13 0.10 0.09
No. of days spent teaching -0.02 0.61 0.01 0.86 0.00 0.96 -0.02 0.71
Practicum only done as a
block (Yes=1 No=0)
0.03 0.30 0.04 0.28 0.03 0.40 0.04 0.27
Student partner for
practicum (Yes=1 No=0)
0.00 0.88 0.02 0.63 0.01 0.77 0.02 0.54
Width of role in school
practicum
0.01 0.64 0.02 0.49 0.02 0.56 -0.04 0.28
Quality of the practicum 0.02 0.49 0.01 0.74 0.03 0.46 -0.02 0.65
Again, the most important factors effecting preparedness for professional practice were the
opportunity to learn components of the pre-service course, experience in the school, and the
type of pre-service course. However, it should be noted that this model explains only 29% of
19. 16
the variance in preparedness for professional practice relating to cross-curriculum teaching.
This suggests that key variables are missing from this model and that this account is
therefore incomplete.
Table 3 shows the most important factors associated with reporting that the pre-service course
prepared the respondents for professional practice relating to parents.
Table 3 Factors associated with preparedness: parents and reflection on practice
Parents Reflection
Stand.
Coeff Sig
Stand.
Coeff Sig
Sex (F=0 M=1) 0.05 0.14 -0.03 0.43
Age (<=25=0, >25=1) -0.07 0.17 -0.13 0.00
Previous career (Yes=1 No=0) -0.02 0.71 -0.01 0.89
Average contact hours per week 0.00 0.97 0.03 0.43
Proportion of ESL students -0.08 0.02 -0.01 0.80
Proportion of students with English literacy
problems
0.08 0.02 0.02 0.53
School induction (Yes = 1 No = 0) -0.02 0.58 0.00 0.93
Formal mentor at school (Yes = 1 No = 0) 0.04 0.37 0.00 0.95
OTL - Content knowledge & how taught 0.11 0.04 0.13 0.01
OTL - Practice of teaching 0.10 0.06 0.34 0.00
OTL via feedback from uni staff 0.09 0.05 0.01 0.79
OTL - Assessment & planning 0.29 0.00 0.14 0.00
Quality of university teaching in ed course 0.16 0.00 0.22 0.00
Degree type (PG=1 else=0) -0.04 0.47 -0.06 0.20
No. of days spent in schools -0.10 0.06 0.06 0.20
No. of days spent teaching 0.02 0.72 -0.01 0.85
Practicum only done as a block (Yes=1
No=0) 0.00 0.95 0.01 0.73
Student partner for practicum (Yes=1 No=0) 0.03 0.38 -0.01 0.75
Width of role in school practicum 0.02 0.67 0.05 0.18
Quality of the practicum -0.02 0.57 -0.06 0.10
Having the opportunity to learn about assessment and planning (0.29) had the strongest
effect on preparedness for working with parents. Having the opportunity to learn about
content knowledge, to receive feedback from university staff and the quality of the university
teaching also had statistically significant, though weak, effects. The proportion of students
with a literacy problem had a weak effect. The higher the proportion, the lower the
preparedness for cross-curriculum practice. The proportion of students with English as a
second language also had a weak effect. However, on this variable the lower the proportion,
the lower the preparedness for cross-curriculum practice. Again, the most important factors
associated with preparedness for professional practice in this model were the variables
measuring the opportunity to learn components of the pre-service course.
This model explains 38% of the variance in preparedness for professional practice relating to
parents. This suggests that key variables may be missing and that this account is therefore
somewhat incomplete.
20. 17
Table 3 shows the most important factors associated with reporting that the pre-service course
prepared respondents for professional practice relating to reflection on practice as defined
above. Having had the opportunity to learn about the practice of teaching had a strong effect
(0.34). Having had an opportunity to learn about content and about assessment and planning
had weak, though statistically significant, effects. The quality of the university teaching had a
moderate effect (0.22). The age of the respondent also had a weak effect – younger
respondents tended to feel somewhat better prepared to reflect upon their practice. Again, the
most important factors affecting preparedness for professional practice were opportunities to
learn during the pre-service course. This model explains 47% of the variance in preparedness
for professional practice relating to reflection on their own teaching.
Table 4 shows the most important factors associated with reporting that the pre-service course
was, overall, effective in preparing the respondents to teach. Having the opportunity to learn
about content knowledge and how to teach it had a strong effect (0.38). Having an
opportunity to learn via feedback from university staff had a weak, though statistically
significant effect. The quality of the university teaching had a weak effect (0.15).
Table 4 Factors associated with reports of the overall effectiveness of pre-
service teacher education program in preparing to be a teacher
Overall
effectiveness
Stand.
Coeff Sig
Sex (F=0 M=1) -0.07 0.04
Age (<=25=0, >25=1) -0.05 0.27
Previous career (Yes=1 No=0) -0.06 0.24
Average contact hours per week -0.04 0.32
Proportion of ESL students 0.04 0.27
Proportion of students with English literacy
problems 0.01 0.73
School induction (Yes = 1 No = 0) -0.04 0.34
Formal mentor at school (Yes = 1 No = 0) 0.04 0.30
OTL - Content knowledge & how taught 0.38 0.00
OTL - Practice of teaching 0.01 0.84
OTL via feedback from uni staff 0.15 0.00
OTL - Assessment & planning -0.01 0.90
Quality of university teaching in ed course 0.15 0.00
Degree type (PG=1 else=0) -0.13 0.01
No. of days spent in schools -0.01 0.82
No. of days spent teaching 0.03 0.52
Practicum only done as a block (Yes=1
No=0) 0.06 0.08
Student partner for practicum (Yes=1 No=0) -0.05 0.13
Width of role in school practicum 0.08 0.03
Quality of the practicum 0.07 0.09
Opportunity for reflection on practice was not associated with preparedness. The type of
degree had a weak effect such that teachers with four-year undergraduate degrees were more
likely to report their courses as overall effective than teachers who had post-graduate
21. 18
teaching qualifications. Gender had a weak effect such that females tended to report their
course as more effective than males. This model explains 39% of the variance in the
reported overall effectiveness of the pre-service course.
DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS: CHARACTERISTICS OF EFFECTIVE TEACHER
EDUCATION PROGRAMS
The variables related to opportunity to learn during the pre-service course, as defined above,
had the strongest and most consistent effects on the extent to which teachers felt adequately
prepared to carry out their duties in their first year of teaching. These features of teacher
education had consistently stronger effects than the structural features of teacher education
courses (e.g. undergraduate or postgraduate), or the nature of school experience during the
teacher education program. Some components of OTL, such as the focus on content, had
more pervasive effects than others, but each had a significant bearing on at least some of the
outcome measures. The quality of university teaching during the pre-service teacher
education course also had consistently significant effects on preparedness.
The effects of these ‘opportunity to learn’ variables were independent of the background
characteristics of the new teacher, their in-school experiences during their pre-service course
and in the school in which they worked as a teacher in their first year of teaching.
The feature of teacher education programs that had the strongest and most consistent effect on
reported outcomes was the extent to which the course had a strong focus on the ‘content to be
taught’. Courses with a strong content focus enabled future teachers to:
a) gain a deep understanding of the content knowledge they were expected to teach
b) make clear links between content or subject matter units and units about how to teach
the content
c) make clear links between theoretical and practical aspects of teaching
d) develop a sound understanding of how students learn the specific content that they
were expected to teach
e) learn how to probe students’ prior understandings of content they were about to
teach
f) learn how to present content in ways that built on students’ existing understanding
g) learn methods of teaching specific to the content they were expected to teach
Teachers who reported that they were well prepared for the demands of teaching were those
whose courses had a strong focus on these features. Students from highly rated courses
frequently referred to the most helpful features of these courses in these terms:
“Developing and implementing units of work for various Key Learning Areas.”
“Providing fantastic support and encouragement /providing in-depth theory as well as
relating it in a practical sense”
“Knowledge of Early Years Literacy”
“Planning units of work as a team”
22. 19
“The assignments that I can use in my teaching now, eg designing units of work and
planning a maths unit for a term.”
These findings about the importance of focusing on the content to be taught and research on
how students learn that content are consistent with research on the characteristics of effective
professional development programs for practising teachers (e.g. Kennedy, 1998; Cohen &
Hill, 2000; Hawley & Valli, 1999; Wilson & Berne, 1999; Sykes, 2002). Hawley & Valli
(1999), for example, identify nine research-based characteristics of effective professional
development, the first of which is:
The content of professional development (PD) focuses on what students are to learn
and how to address the different problems students may have in learning the material.
Judging by the present study, this is also true for initial teacher education. As should be clear,
a focus on “content,” means much more than mere factual subject matter knowledge. Content
knowledge, as used here, refers to core professional knowledge for helping students learn.
When evaluating professional development courses with a strong focus on curriculum content
and research related to the learning of that content, we have often heard teachers say they
have gained the kind of professional knowledge they wish they had had a chance to learn in
their initial training.
Opportunity to learn ‘how to assess student learning and plan curriculum units’ was strongly
associated with preparedness in the areas of professional knowledge and knowledge of
students in the first year of teaching. It was also very strongly related to teachers reporting
that they were able to deal with core professional tasks in their first year, such as designing
challenging curriculum units, managing classrooms, assessing student progress, cross
curriculum teaching, and interestingly, working effectively with parents. However, less that
20% of teachers said their courses had prepared them, to a major extent, to establish
appropriate learning goals for their students, give useful and timely feedback to students
about their learning and keep useful records of their students’ progress.
Once again, these findings are consistent with the research on effective modes of professional
learning for experienced teachers, especially if that learning is to link to improved student
learning outcomes. In perhaps one of the most thorough studies about the kind of
professional development that improves student learning outcomes in mathematics, Franke et
al. (1998) identified the importance of improving teachers’ skills in diagnosing students’ level
of development of key understandings. The second of the nine characteristics of effective
professional development identified by Hawley & Valli is:
Professional development that is based on analyses of the differences between (a)
actual student performance and (b) goals and standards for student learning.
Hawley & Valli provide a substantial literature review to back this claim. This study
indicates that proficiency in many ways of diagnosing student level of understanding,
monitoring student progress and assessing student development is core professional
knowledge for effective beginning teachers. It is a matter of some concern that less than 29%
of teachers in this sample felt well prepared in this area.
Opportunity to receive feedback was also significantly related to the reported effectiveness of
courses. Students in the most highly rated courses were much more likely to mention the
opportunities they had had for gaining timely and useful feedback from lecturers and
practicing teachers as helpful features.
23. 20
“Our pre-service rounds were the best opportunity to practice methods and strategies in
the environment we will be working in and gain instant feedback.”
“Observation of leading teachers and the opportunity to gain instant feedback.”
“Doing it and reflecting and doing it again”.
However, in talking about how this course could be improved, one teacher did say that the
course could be improved by,
“Further analysis by lecturers/tutors from the uni, (I was) only observed once in 4 years
and 100 days of teaching.”
Feedback on practice has long been recognised as a vital requirement for professional
development programs that aim to help teachers develop new skills and integrate them into
their practice (Joyce & Showers, 1995). An important finding from this study is that teachers
generally reported receiving little feedback from university staff as they were learning to
teach, as shown in Table 4 in Appendix 1. Table 4 also shows how significant the variation
was from course to course across the universities in opportunities for feedback.
It is understood that current levels of funding for teacher education do not make it easy for
university staff to provide feedback to students about their developing practice. However, the
low level of feedback about practice may point to a significant weakness in current
approaches to teacher education, as has been found in research on continuing professional
learning for teachers, where it is now more widely understood that opportunities for feedback
need to be funded and built into programs from the start.
Given the context of initial teacher education, which is preparation for professional practice,
it is surprising that feedback is not at a much higher level. One of the key elements in linking
theory to practice is feedback. New understandings, skills and attitudes are rarely acquired
without timely, relevant and informative feedback about our actions and their effects. It is
hard to understand how teacher education courses can link theory to practice effectively if
lecturers are rarely in a position to provide feedback to students as they attempt to put the
theory into practice. Encouraging students to reflect on their practice may go some way
toward helping the situation, but this study suggests that an emphasis on reflective practice is
not an adequate substitute for the kind of feedback and insights that an expert teacher can
provide.
The study found that courses for the preparation of physical education teachers particularly
appear to be organised in ways that facilitate strong links between the presentation of theory
and modelling by university staff and opportunities for student teachers to practice the theory
and receive feedback and coaching. In contrast, teachers in less effective courses were rarely
in situations where it was possible to try new practices and receive feedback. The feedback
that supervising teachers gave on teaching rounds was valued, but the relationship between
this type of feedback and the theory being taught in the university courses is uncertain.
The effects of the four ‘opportunity to learn’ features of teacher education programs on the
outcome measures were much stronger than the effects of a number of features of the
practicum. These features included: the number of days in schools; number of days teaching;
whether done as a block of time (e.g. three weeks) or extended over time (e.g. 2-3 days per
week); whether they worked with a fellow student; the width of their role in the school; and
the perceived quality of the practicum.
24. 21
These features of the practicum were not related to the reported effectiveness of teacher
education programs. This is not to say that the practicum is not important. It is more likely
that, for this study, the practicum experience was probably much the same for students from
highly rated courses and poorly rated courses. One of the most consistent themes that comes
through in the beginning teacher comments about the practicum is the general difficulty of
integrating the work that student teachers undertake on the practicum - what they practice -
and what they are learning about teaching in the university component of the course. This
makes the conditions for linking theory and practice less than optimal. Another is the quality
of the school based supervising teacher and the lack of special training to be an effective
student-teacher supervisor in a school.
Differences between the schools where teachers spent their first year of teaching made little
difference to their reported effectiveness, except where beginners were allocated a formal
mentor teacher, as was the case with the VIT’s Standards and Professional Learning Project
during 2003. Teachers with mentors were more likely, for example, to report that they felt
they knew their students well and that they could handle cross-curriculum aspects of teaching
literacy and numeracy. (A recent study of a mentor program to support beginning teachers in
California has shown that it can also reduce the attrition rate of beginning teachers.)
This finding appears to be worthy of further investigation. Well-trained supervising teachers
and mentors might help to rectify the theory-practice problem and the low level of accurate
and timely feedback mentioned above. (All provisionally registered teachers in Victoria are
now expected to have a trained mentor in their first year or two of teaching - and mentors are
expected to observe and give feedback on several lessons using the VIT standards. ACER is
currently conducting another survey to ascertain whether the beneficial effects of the VIT’s
2003 pilot project have generalised and “gone to scale” in 2004.)
The quality of teaching in the teacher education program, had significant though weak effects
on several of the outcome measures, specifically reflection, curriculum planning and
classroom management. Recency of teaching experience among lecturers was not related to
ratings of course effectiveness, but modelling of good teaching practice and linking of their
units to school the school experience component of the program were. Recency of lecturer
experience was a frequent theme in the open-ended comments. In listing helpful features of
programs, teachers from highly rated courses were more likely than teachers who had
completed other courses to make statements such as:
“Having lecturers who had recently been in schools was most beneficial.”
“Subjects about teaching and learning . . . with recently practising teachers as tutors –
inspirational and very helpful”
When talking about how courses could be improved, teachers from poorly rated courses were
more likely to make comments such as:
“Engaged professional lecturers who teach relevant material”
“The university (people) were out of touch and didn’t provide enough practical skill
development which is essential in the field. On job learning was the only development I
had.”
25. 22
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
Teachers who reported that they felt well prepared to meet the demands they faced in their
first year of teaching, as defined in the VIT registration standards, had completed courses that
gave them deep knowledge of what they were expected to help students learn, and how
students learned it, as well as skill in diagnosing students’ existing levels of understanding of
the content to be taught, planning activities that would promote further development and
assessing the extent to which development had taken place.
These professional capabilities appear to remain the necessary, though not sufficient,
foundations in preparing teachers to meet the wider demands of the job, from establishing a
productive learning environment to working effectively with parents.
These results are consistent with recent research on the characteristics of effective programs
for teachers’ continuing professional learning. These researchers have also found that the
substance of what teachers learn matters more than the form (Kennedy, 1998). The most
effective professional learning programs, in terms of improved student learning outcomes,
strengthen teachers’ knowledge of the content they are expected to teach, how students learn
that content, how to help students learn that content and how to diagnose student progress in
learning that content. This is the kind of knowledge that is essential to the development of
pedagogical skill and preparedness. This study does not support an emphasis on developing
skills in reflective practice and pedagogy over an emphasis first on the development of
substantive professional knowledge as identified above.
It is important to recognise that the findings of this study do not provide support for those
who think that making teacher education “practical” and “school-based” is the answer, absent
substantive content related professional knowledge. The kind of content knowledge
identified in this study has pervasive and generative effects on teachers’ capacity to manage
the complex demands that teaching presents, as other researchers have demonstrated (Franke,
et al. 1998). In other words, it is foundational; in the sense that areas such as pedagogical
skill, classroom management, reflective practice and the capacity to provide a challenging
and supportive learning environment depend fundamentally on possession of this kind of
professional knowledge (Ball & Cohen, 1999). The reverse does not apply. Teacher
education programs that might be highly “practical”, in the sense of giving heavy emphasis to
skills in classroom management for example, will not make up for a deficiency in the aspects
of content knowledge identified in this study.
Structural features of teacher education courses did not relate closely to the variation in
perceived preparedness. Consistent with the findings of the 2004 OECD Report, Teachers
Matter, this study indicates that tinkering with course structures will not be the solution to
more effective teacher education. The key features of effective courses lie in the quality of
the opportunities and processes for learning how to teach something to someone. School
experiences that provide quality opportunities for feedback as new teaching strategies are
practiced will be essential. To act on the findings of this study, it will not be enough to use its
findings to change the course content requirements for course approval and accreditation.
The methods used for assessment and accreditation of programs themselves will need to
change. This issue is taken up in the next section.
26. 23
IMPLICATIONS FOR ACCREDITATION
The purpose of this study was to provide advice to the Victorian Institute of Teaching, the
agency responsible for teacher registration in the state of Victoria, about the development of
new guidelines and standards for the accreditation of teacher education programs. This final
section of the paper moves into broader considerations, not only about standards for the
accreditation of teacher education programs, but the methods by which such programs might
demonstrate they meet the standards.
Put simply, the argument is that it is unlikely that the findings of studies such as this will be
implemented effectively if providers of teacher education programs are only required to show
that they have modified the content of their courses accordingly. The guidelines for assessing
and accrediting teacher education programs will need to move from a focus on course
approval, based on analysing the content of courses, to a focus on course outcomes based on
evidence that graduates from teacher education courses can provide quality opportunities for
student learning in authentic school settings.
Arrangements for ensuring external validation of teacher education courses have been weak
in Australia, unlike England, for example, where the Teacher Training Agency has a clear
statutory role to monitor the quality of courses and graduate capabilities, with beneficial
effect (Tabberer, 2003). A recent study across twelve professions in Australia (NBEET,
1996) showed that teaching was the only one without an external agency responsible for
assessing and accrediting preparation programs leading to professional registration.
Although each state has professional standards bodies, such as the Victorian Institute of
Teaching, their statutory capacity to carry out the accreditation function is limited or unclear.
Universities in Australia sometimes use the claim that they are legally “self-accrediting
institutions,” when it comes to teacher education, to resist attempts by state registration
bodies to introduce stronger forms of external accreditation – a claim they rarely make when
it comes to meeting accreditation and registration requirements for other professions such as
medicine. The Australian Universities Quality Authority itself denies that its requirements
for evidence of quality assurance procedures for courses within universities obviates the need
for external validation that graduates have met standards of performance for entrance to
professions.
In the USA, the National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future spoke about
accreditation in strong terms:
Because accreditation is not required of teacher education programs, their quality
varies widely with excellent programs standing alongside shoddy ones that are
allowed to operate when they do an utterly inadequate job. Too many American
universities treat their schools of education as “cash cows” whose excess revenues are
spent on the training of doctors, lawyers, accountants and almost any students other
than prospective teachers themselves. (Darling-Hammond, 1996, p. 195)
The National Commission recommended that states insist on professional accreditation for all
schools of education and that licensing move from a system based on course completion to
one based on demonstrated performance, including tests of subject-matter knowledge
teaching knowledge and teaching skill. Art Wise, President of the National Council for
Accreditation of Teacher Education in the USA, has been a strong advocate for accreditation
and its potential for assuring all entrants to the profession are qualified and competent. For
27. 24
many years, he has advocated that states move to an outcome-based accreditation system, yet
in 2003 only seven states have procedures in place for assessing “whether new teachers can
put to work what they have learned, so that their students will learn” (Wise, 2004, p. 169).
Where states, such as Connecticut have seriously focused their education policy on teacher
quality (since 1986), including standards-based assessments of beginning teacher
performance that are used to approve teacher education programs, beneficial effects have
been clear (Wilson, Darling-Hammond & Berry, 2001). The higher standards attracted,
rather than discouraged, candidates with better academic qualifications into teacher education
programs. Most significantly, achievement gaps between white and minority students
narrowed during the 1990s. Fourth graders outscored all other students in the 1998 National
Assessment of Educational Progress reading test and the proportion of students at or above
the proficiency level increased from 34 to 46 percent. Eighth graders also met or surpassed
student performance in all other states and student achievement on the state’s own academic
performance tests has steadily improved.
In this study, major differences were found in the effectiveness of different teacher education
courses, as reported by these teachers beginning their second year of teaching. The design of
this study made it possible to analyse the relative effects of a range of carefully measured
components of teacher education courses on a range of measures of teacher preparedness.
These measures were based on the VIT standards for teacher registration, which set out what
beginning teachers are expected to know and be able to do. They are, however only
perceptions of preparedness, rather than measures of performance. In another study being
conducted currently by ACER in another state, based on classroom observations by trained
observers, significant differences have also been found between universities in the capacity of
their graduates to meet performance standards. More needs to be known about the
consistency of these differences over time, but where they persist, they raise public interest
questions.
One of the purposes of this study was to develop and trial measures that might be used
subsequently as benchmarks for monitoring the outcomes of the teacher education system. It
was found that the measures developed for this study were high on internal consistency.
They were also able to discriminate between teacher education courses. The internal
reliability of these measures means that they could be used as benchmarks for examining
changes over time, or the effects of programs or policies designed to influence the quality of
teacher education. There was a wide distribution of individual scores on each measure.
Significant differences between courses were also found on each of these measures. The
results of this study indicate that the scales developed for the survey instrument would be
suitable as a basis for creating benchmarks that might be used in a monitoring system. The
scales also provide room for detecting changes in perceptions of teacher education courses on
each of the outcome measures if they were to be used in the future. However, used alone,
these measures would not provide a sufficiently reliable basis for accreditation. The latter
would require a wide range of independent measures about course quality.
In developing standards for the accreditation of teacher education courses in the future, a
wide range of factors should obviously be taken into account. This study draws attention
especially to the quality of learning opportunities provided, especially opportunities to learn
in the school context. One contribution that this study makes is to suggest several features of
courses that warrant particularly careful examination. Close attention should be given to the
capacity of a course to ensure that graduates have quality opportunities to learn in the four
28. 25
areas identified in this study: content focus, assessment, feedback and the practice of
teaching.
One of the main questions this study raises is the extent to which it will actually be possible
to provide students with high quality opportunities for learning and feedback in these areas
unless it is done mainly in the school and classroom context. While deep understanding of
relevant subject matter needs several years of study at university level, practice in authentic
school settings will be the best site, for example, for effective opportunities for modelling
theory, receiving timely and useful feedback on practice and learning how to diagnose student
learning and selecting appropriate activities to meet students’ learning needs. In this sense,
this study suggests the need for a shift from university to more school-based opportunities for
profession learning during training and induction. This finding suggests a need to remodel
completely the traditional one-on-one practicum with a supervising teacher; to remodel the
practicum to provide greater assurance of a planned series of opportunities for practicing
theoretical course components in the school context with informed feedback on
implementation progress.
A dilemma, especially for universities, will be how to shift from the traditional practicum to
the kind of school experience that will ensure student teachers receive effective opportunities
to learn of the kind identified as important in this study. One requirement will definitely be a
new breed of highly accomplished teachers in schools, specially trained to work shoulder to
shoulder with student teachers and to provide these opportunities rather than the current hit or
miss provision from (usually) untrained supervising teachers. Another may be for student
teachers to have more opportunities to work in team situations with experienced teachers and
other student teachers.
These suggestions will not appear particularly new. While major changes are taking place in
society as a result, for example, of information technology and globalisation - and teacher
education will need to take account of these - this study provides a reminder that certain core
features of quality teaching and learning will remain. These features include an
understanding of what it means to educate a mind and what it takes to meet the core challenge
in teaching – how to reach a child and how to ensure a pleasurable meeting of minds around
worthwhile subject matter and fertile questions in a trusting environment. Accreditation
standards need to continue to value these qualities in teacher education programs.
The results of this study, though perhaps unsurprising, do say that teacher education matters.
In a field where some have questioned the impact of, or need for, professional preparation
programs, this is a significant finding. While we have found wide variation in the reported
quality of teacher education programs, we have not found that teacher education is
unnecessary; quite the opposite.
29. 26
REFERENCES
Ball, D.L., & Cohen, D.K. (1999). Developing practice, developing practitioners: Toward a
practice-based theory of professional education. In L. Darling-Hammond & G. Sykes
(Eds.), Teaching as the Learning Profession: Handbook of Policy and Practice (pp. 3-
32). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Carpenter, T.P., Fennema, E., Peterson, P.L., Chiang, C-P., & Loef, M. (1989). Using
knowledge of children’s mathematical thinking in classroom teaching: An
experimental study. American Educational Research Journal, 26, 499-531.
Cohen, D K and Hill H C, (2000) “Instructional policy and classroom performance: the
mathematics reform in California”, Teachers College Record 102, 2, February 2000
Darling-Hammond, L. (1996). What matters most: A competent teacher for every child. Phi
Delta Kappan, Nov, 1996, 193-200.
Franke, M.L., Carpenter, T., Fennema, E., Ansell, E., & Behrend, J. (1998). Understanding
teachers’ self-sustaining, generative change in the context of professional development.
Teaching and Teacher Education, 14 (1), pp.
Gottfredson, L. S. (1981). Circumscription and compromise: a developmental theory of
occupational aspirations. Journal of Counseling Psychology Monograph, 28(No. 6,
November), 545-579.
Gottfredson, L. S. (1996). Gottfredson's Theory of Circumscription and Compromise. In D.
Brown & L. Brooks (Eds.), Career Choice and Development (3rd ed.). San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass.
Gottfredson, L. S. (2002). Gottfredson's theory of circumscription, compromise, and self-
creation. In D. Brown (Ed.), Career Choice and Development (4th ed., pp. 85-148).
San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Hawley, W., & Valli, L. (1999). The essentials of effective professional development: A new
consensus. In Linda Darling-Hammond, & Gary Sykes (Editors), Teaching as the
Learning Profession. Handbook of Policy and Practice. (pp. 127-150) San Francisco
Jossey-Bass Publishers.
Ingvarson, L., Meiers, M. & Beavis, A. (2005, January 29). Factors affecting the impact of
professional development programs on teachers’ knowledge, practice, student
outcomes and efficacy. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 13(10). Retrieved [date]
from http://epaa.asu.edu/epaa/v13n10/.
Ingvarson, L.C., Beavis, A. Elliott, A. & Kleinhenz, E. (2004). Pre-service teacher education
in Australia: A review of selection procedures, course structure and content, and
accreditation practices. A report prepared for the Teacher Quality and Educational
Leadership Taskforce of the Ministerial Council for Education, Employment,
Training, and Youth Affairs.
Ingvarson, L and Meiers, M, (Forthcoming) “Investigating the links between teacher
professional development and student learning outcomes.” Report for the Department
of Education, Science and Training, Canberra.
Joyce, B., & Showers, B. (1995). Student achievement through staff development:
Fundamentals of school renewal. Second Edition. White Plains, NY: Longman.
Kennedy, M. (1998). Form and substance in in-service teacher education (Research
Monograph no. 13). Arlington, VA: National Science Foundation.
30. 27
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (2004). Teachers Matter:
Attracting, Developing and Retaining Effective Teachers. Synthesis Report. OECD
Directorate for Education.
Parliament of Victoria Education and Training Committee (2005). Step Up, Step In, Step Out:
Report on the Inquiry into the Suitability of Pre-Service Teacher Training in Victoria.
Melbourne: Victorian Government Printer
Sykes, G. (2002). Professional Development for Teachers: Principles, Practices and
Contexts. Paper prepared for the Learning First Alliance (Draft).
Tabberer, R. (2003). Promoting teacher quality in England: The role of the Teacher Training
Agency. In M. Meiers (Ed.), Building Teacher Quality: What does the research tell
us? Proceedings of the Australian Council for Educational Research Annual
Conference, Melbourne, 2003 (pp. 2-6). Available at
http://www.acer.edu.au/workshops/documents/Conferenceproceedings2003.pdf
Wilson, S. and Berne, J. (1999) “Teacher learning and the acquisition of professional
knowledge: An examination of research on contemporary professional development’,
in Review of Research in Education, Vol 24, Iran-Nejad and PD Pearson (eds)
American Educational Research Association, Washington DC, pp 173-209.
Wilson, S.M., Floden, R.E. & Ferrini-Mundy (2001). Teacher preparation research: Current
knowledge, gaps and recommendations. Seattle: Center for the Study of Teaching and
Policy (www.ctpweb.org).
Wilson, S.M., Darling-Hammond, L. & Berry, B. (2001). Connecticut’s story: A model of
state teaching policy. Teaching Quality Briefs, Number 4, June 2001, Centre for the
study of Teaching and Policy, University of Washington. (Copy of full report
http://www.ctpweb.org)
Wilson, S.M. & Floden, R.E. (2003). Creating effective teachers: Concise answers for key
questions. ERIC Clearinghouse on Teaching and Teacher Education. Washington,
DC: American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education
31. 28
APPENDIX 1
University and course completed
Table 1
2.00
2.25
2.50
2.75
3.00
3.25
3.50
95%CIQ22OTL-Content
knowledge&howtaught
University and course completed
Table 2
2.10
2.40
2.70
3.00
3.30
3.60
95%CIQ22OTL-
Practiceofteaching
University and course completed
Table 4
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
3.50
4.00
95%CIQ22OTLvia
feedbackfromunistaff
University and course completed
Table 3
2.20
2.40
2.60
2.80
3.00
3.20
3.40
95%CIQ22OTL-
Assessment&planning
L
University and course completed
Table 5
2
2.5
3
3.5
4
95%CIq41_Howeffectivepre-
serviceprogram