A Long-Term Study on the Effect of a Professional Development Program on Science Teachers’ Inquiry
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (a)
- Focusing on specific content. Programs aiming to familiarize participants with new teaching approaches need to focus on specific content. This ensures that participants make good use of the appropriate content to support teacher learning within the same school context in which they will use them.
- (b)
- Promoting teachers’ active participation. Teachers need to actively engage in designing and implementing new teaching approaches that will guide their students, e.g., interactive activities. The same authors [12] conclude that authentic experience of professional knowledge connected with school reality and implementation cannot be realized through traditional PD approaches such as lectures.
- (c)
- Promoting peer collaboration. Effective PD programs encourage teachers to share ideas and motivate collaboration in the same way that they will need to with their students. In this way, modification of teachers’ views and professional culture is more easily achieved.
- (d)
- Use of models and good practice examples. Use of examples of good implementation practices helps teachers realize what they should be aiming for and how this could be achieved. Such examples can be teaching plans, samples of students’ papers, observation of teaching, or study of recorded teaching sessions.
- (e)
- Provision of appropriate teaching support. Providing specific knowledge and support for teaching content as well as implementation practices, based on teachers’ needs on a personal basis, is considered an important factor in the program’s effectiveness.
- (f)
- Feedback and reflection. Creating opportunities and providing time for teachers’ reflection and peer feedback is a common characteristic in PD programs empowering participants to reconsider practices and upgrade their teaching skills.
- (g)
- Time viability. This aspect highlights that it is extremely important to provide sufficient time for teachers to gain new knowledge on a theoretical basis and then offer the opportunity to try these new methods and reflect on them without time pressure.
- (a)
- Focus on content, including both subject matter content and how students learn that content;
- (b)
- Teachers’ active participation in learning during the program;
- (c)
- Coherence between what is taught in the PD program, reforms and policies at the state and local levels, and teachers’ prior knowledge and beliefs;
- (d)
- A long duration of the program, including consideration of the number of days spent in the program, how spread apart those days are, and the amount of time (e.g., in hours) spent carrying out activities within the program itself;
- (e)
- Collective participation of teachers of the same school, grade or department.
2. The Research
2.1. Research Background
2.2. Methodology
2.2.1. Research Question and Method
- (a)
- How have teachers’ views and practices about inquiry teaching been shaped a year after their attendance of a PD program?
- (b)
- Which aspects of inquiry approach that they have been familiarized with in the past are still integrated and implemented into their current science teaching?
2.2.2. Participants and Research Tools
2.2.3. Data Analysis
- Between 1 and 1.5 were characterized as mixed since they covered a range of 25% of the used scale (scale range: 1 to 3, 0.5 out of 2 results in 0.25, which is actually a percentage of 25%);
- Between 1.51 and 2 was characterized as relative innovative since they covered an additional range of 25% of the used scale (scale range: 1 to 3, 0.5 out of 2 results in 0.25, which is actually a percentage of 25%);
- Between 2.1 and 3 was characterized as innovative since they covered a range of 50% of the used scale (scale range: 1 to 3; 1 out of 2 is a percentage of 50%).
- Score differences lower than 0.40, meaning 20% deviation in the two-grade scale used (0.40/2 = 0.2), were indicative of characterizing the practice as mixed (meaning equally traditional and innovative);
- Score differences between 0.41 and 0.80, suggesting a considerable deviation of 21–40%, were indicative of characterizing the practice as relatively innovative or relatively traditional;
- Score differences higher than 0.81, suggesting important deviation between practices, were indicative of characterizing the practice as explicitly innovative or traditional, depending on which practice was, respectively, dominant (innovative or traditional).
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Participants | Phase 1 (during PD) | Phase 2 (1 Year after PD) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Grade | Topic of Teaching | Grade | Topic of Teaching | |
Teacher 1 (primary) | 6th | Energy Production, Renewable and non-renewable energy sources | 6th | Electric circuits |
Teacher 2 (primary) | 5th | 1st | States of matter (gas/liquids/solids) | |
Teacher 3 (secondary) | 9th | 11th | Ohm’s Law | |
Teacher 4 (secondary) | 9th | 9th | Electromagnetism |
Adoption of Any Kind of Inquiry Approach | Teacher 1 | Teacher 2 | Teacher 3 | Teacher 4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Phase 1 | Average of Practices | 2.76 | 2.50 | 1.8 | 2.28 |
Characterization | Innovative | Innovative | Relative Innovative | Innovative | |
Views characterization | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | |
Phase 2 | Average of Practices | 2.94 | 2.10 | 2.75 | 1.50 |
Characterization | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | Mixed | |
Views characterization | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | |
Practices modification | Stability | Stability | Improvement | Regression | |
Views modification | Stability | Stability | Stability | Stability |
Guided Inquiry Practices | Teacher 1 | Teacher 2 | Teacher 3 | Teacher 4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Phase 1 | Average of Practice | 2.25 | 2.25 | 1.92 | 2.31 |
Characterization | Innovative | Innovative | Relative Innovative | Innovative | |
Views characterization | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | |
Phase 2 | Average of Practice | 2.33 | 2.50 | 2.10 | 2.00 |
Characterization | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | Relative Innovative | |
Views characterization | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | |
Practices modification | Stability | Stability | Improvement | Regression | |
Views modification | Stability | Stability | Stability | Stability |
Open Inquiry | Teacher 1 | Teacher 2 | Teacher 3 | Teacher 4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Phase 1 | Average of practice | 1.0 | 1.00 | 1.30 | 1.30 |
Characterization | Mixed | Mixed | Mixed | Mixed | |
Characterization of views | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | |
Phase 2 | Average of practice | 2.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
Characterization | Relative Innovative | Mixed | Mixed | Mixed | |
Characterization of views | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | Innovative | |
Practices modification | Improvement | Stability | Stability | Stability | |
Views modification | Stability | Stability | Stability | Stability |
Summarizing | Teacher 1 | Teacher 2 | Teacher 3 | Teacher 4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Phase 1 | Teacher Summarizes (TS1) | 1.60 | 2.00 | 2.20 | 2.00 |
Students’ Summarize (SS1) | 2.50 | 2.50 | 2.00 | 2.00 | |
Difference SS-ST | 0.9 | 0.5 | −0.20 | 0.00 | |
Dominant Practice | Innovative | Relative Innovative | Relative Traditional | Mixed | |
Phase 2 | Teacher Summarizes (TS2) | 1.50 | 1.80 | 1.80 | 1.80 |
Students’ Summarize (SS2) | 2.00 | 2.00 | 2.00 | 1.00 | |
Difference SS-TS | 0.50 | 0.20 | 0.20 | −0.80 | |
Dominant Practice | Innovative | Mixed | Mixed | Relative Traditional | |
Difference SS-TS (Phase 2–Phase 1) | −0.40 | −0.30 | 0.40 | −0.8 |
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Tsaliki, C.; Papadopoulou, P.; Malandrakis, G.; Kariotoglou, P. A Long-Term Study on the Effect of a Professional Development Program on Science Teachers’ Inquiry. Educ. Sci. 2024, 14, 621. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14060621
Tsaliki C, Papadopoulou P, Malandrakis G, Kariotoglou P. A Long-Term Study on the Effect of a Professional Development Program on Science Teachers’ Inquiry. Education Sciences. 2024; 14(6):621. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14060621
Chicago/Turabian StyleTsaliki, Christina, Penelope Papadopoulou, Georgios Malandrakis, and Petros Kariotoglou. 2024. "A Long-Term Study on the Effect of a Professional Development Program on Science Teachers’ Inquiry" Education Sciences 14, no. 6: 621. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14060621
APA StyleTsaliki, C., Papadopoulou, P., Malandrakis, G., & Kariotoglou, P. (2024). A Long-Term Study on the Effect of a Professional Development Program on Science Teachers’ Inquiry. Education Sciences, 14(6), 621. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14060621