New Technologies and Learning Environments for Teacher Professional Growth : New Technologies and Learning Environments for Teacher Professional Growth Roy Pea
Center for Technology in Learning
SRI International
NECC
Chicago
June 27, 2001
Overview: Overview The national context of teacher workforce development and the appearance of for-profits
“Addressable market” size and issues
How to think about the key technological developments
Emerging designs for teacher learning environments
Closing questions
What is happening to teaching? : What is happening to teaching? Huge turnover and new workforce preparation need—2 Million new teachers needed by 2008-2009 (3.1 Mil today)
Increasingly accountable, but unprepared for new standards and assessments
Weakly-defined professional career path for lifelong learning
Yet…emerging higher standards for teaching (NBPTS, INTASC)
And rapid growth of alternative certifications
Changing roles of post-secondary institutions and the private sector “There is a national crisis in teacher professional development”
-Glenn Commission, 1999
“U.S. teachers …. have no time to work with or observe other teachers; they experience occasional hit-and-run workshops that are usually unconnected to their work and immediate problems of practice. [Effective TPD cannot] be adequately cultivated without the development of more substantial professional discourse and engagement in communities of practice.” — Darling-Hammond and Ball (NEGP, 1997): “U.S. teachers …. have no time to work with or observe other teachers; they experience occasional hit-and-run workshops that are usually unconnected to their work and immediate problems of practice. [Effective TPD cannot] be adequately cultivated without the development of more substantial professional discourse and engagement in communities of practice.” — Darling-Hammond and Ball (NEGP, 1997)
Current state of in-service TPD: Current state of in-service TPD Teachers continually isolated; rare mentoring
Dominant mode of delivery is one-day off site workshops with no follow-up
Teaching strategies too rarely linked to content, advances in learning research, standards, or modeled in classroom settings
No assessment tools or results orientation
Market dominated by fragmented, local non-scaleable solutions
Little use of technology
No “just-in-time” teacher learning support
District level TPD planning or management tools are lacking
Addressable Market, Available Funds* : Addressable Market, Available Funds* $3.7 billion (37% of all in-service TPD funds) available to purchase TPD services**
$750 million in teacher expenditures for TPD services**
$4.5 billion total addressable market**
Growing at 15% per annum**
*Excludes all public high schools and all private, parochial, charter and home schools. Also excludes approximately $6Bil spent on teacher salaries to attend TPD events
**Sources: McKinsey & Co., National Commission of the States, US Department of Education, Merrill Lynch
What key technological developments are catalyzing the changing roles of post-secondary institutions and the private sector in teacher education? : What key technological developments are catalyzing the changing roles of post-secondary institutions and the private sector in teacher education? ??? ??? ??? ??? ???
Slide8: 1960s: First Wave - Fundamental Net protocols
Led by government agencies and contractors
Driven by computer-to-computer file transfer and messaging
Nobody imagined the Net as becoming a mass medium
1980s: Second Wave - Bulletin Boards & Online Services
Led by Proprietary Commercial Online Services Ventures
Text and crude graphics; driven by access to programs and data from computer hobbyists and serious techno/business users
1990s: Third Wave - WWW (content, community, commerce)
Led by Garage Startups and Media Empires - they ran circles around big technology companies and labs
Rich text, graphics, images
Driven by info hungry business and consumers
Race to capture eyeballs and create cyberspace brand identity
The Fourth Wave... Fourth Wave Internet (Sarnoff Labs)
Slide9: Fourth Wave Internet A multidimensional explosion Media Richness Smart Service Ubiquitous
Connectivity Text and Graphics Process MIPs
Storage MB
Speed kbps PC connected Audio and video Everything connected Process 100s MIPs
Storage GB
Speed Mbps 3D interactive objects Several things connected IT Capacity Browsers Search Engines Media based searches Personalized Search Personalized Web View
Key Technological Developments for Teacher Learning Environments: Key Technological Developments for Teacher Learning Environments Market penetration of low-cost networkable multimedia computers and Internet access
Easy-to-use Web Browsers as user interface
Streaming media standards, tools
Community tools
Web hosting and ASP model (Application Service Provider) to improve QOS
Personalization (profile-specific features)
Integration with “back-office” systems (e.g., authentication, student records, e-commerce)
Emerging designs for distributed teacher learning environments: Emerging designs for distributed teacher learning environments Uses of generic course platform “shells” (e.g., Blackboard, WebCT)
Special-purpose proprietary course platforms (e.g., Teachscape, Classroom Connect)
Use of web-accessible video materials of teaching practices (e.g., Teachscape, Teachstream, PT3 grantees, PBSTeacherLine)
Use of on-line community tools for meetings, moderated events (e.g., TAPPED IN, Teachscape, Classroom Connect)
On-line course “malls” (e.g., AT&T Learning Network)
Benefits of on-line TPD services: Benefits of on-line TPD services Convenient, self-paced learning to meet in-service certification requirements (typically 30 hours TPD per year)
Access to professional “communities of practice”
Ongoing, on-line mentoring with district TPD professionals or faculty
Districts may better scale the certification of teachers, at lower cost per teacher than off-site models
Addressable Market: Capacity: Addressable Market: Capacity Nearly all teachers use a computer at home and/or at school for professional activities; 2/3rds of public school teachers report using computers or the Internet for classroom instruction. (1)
77% of schools have sufficient bandwidth to access on-line services with 128kbs or better connectivity.(4)
61% of school computers have processors able to support streaming media today.(2)
80% of all teachers have computers at home (3)
59% of all teachers have Internet connections at home. (3)
66% of all U.S. teachers received up to 8 hours of basic technology training last year (2)
(1) U.S. Department of Education, NCES, “Teacher Use of Computers and the Internet in Public Schools,” April 2000.
(2) Market Data Retrieval, 1999.
(3) Center for Research on Information Technology & Organizations, UC Irvine, November 1999.
(4) U.S. Department of Education, NCES, “Internet Access in U.S. Public Schools and Classrooms: 1994-2000,” May 2001.
As an example: As an example http://www.teachscape.com
Slide16: A new approach to teacher professional development A scaleable, Web-based, teacher professional development system that offers teachers “just-in-time” access to annotated video cases and distributed learning courses, linking pedagogy to content, while also providing tools for school administrators to plan and manage professional development
A company based in New York with partners including AFT, NBPTS, Intel, SRI International, ABC News
Focused efforts to bring learning sciences and educational research as well as practical knowledge on teacher communities into Teachscape’s products and services
Approach for TPD: Video case studies of research-informed and standards-based teaching strategies in literacy, math, and science
Annotated with teacher reflections, expert commentaries
Embedded assessment activities with rubrics
Structured community discussion around case materials
Distributed learning courses built up from collections of video case studies from digital library -- for use in schools and at home
Partner with districts to develop plans to meet distinctive needs of their schools and teachers and build PD capacity with existing staff
Supported by on-site and on-line mentoring by participating districts
Supported by on-line communities of practitioners -- enabling peer-peer collaboration and continuous feedback for “teacher reflection on practice”
Teachers can earn CEUs, academic credits Approach for TPD
“Living Cases” : “Living Cases” Visible models: A video-based narrative account of how one or more teachers experienced a problem, the strategy used to deal with it, and the outcomes
Principles underlying the teachers’ practices Guided practice: Guidance in reflective use comparing cases to experience is instrumental to changing teaching practices.
Reflective community: Cases created as fertile soil for reflective community dialog, elaboration, multiple interpretations-- not as sterile packages of inert ‘wisdom.’ They extend the published case-and-commentary model with on-line commentary, dialog.
Slide21: Research-based teaching practices Standards-based curriculum Case-based learning theory Embedded assessments Expert commentaries Use with on-line community Augmenting collective intelligence for teacher learning using interactive video case studies with community Documentary film-making Exemplary teachers and practice artefacts Capture
distributed
expertise in
web-based
video cases Establish and
refine models
of case use School-site use Add “Gems” from community discourse
Teachscape: Connecting Video Models of Instructional Strategies with On-Line Community: Teachscape: Connecting Video Models of Instructional Strategies with On-Line Community
Opportunities and questions for schools of education: Opportunities and questions for schools of education Opportunities:
Scaleup your best teacher programs in partnership with for-profits
Use digital assets of for-profits in new on-line courses that augment your teacher programs
Create state or regional alliances between post-secondary institutions and for-profits
Procure federal grants for experimental programs with for-profit partners
Questions
Can you go it alone and “do it yourself?”
What are business models for public-private engagement?
Quality review issues in designing and reviewing courses, and commitment to research and evaluation
Can you “do it yourself”? : Can you “do it yourself”? Caution is due: It’s more than a website
Scaleability of web-based TPD services
Costs of course production are significant and need many users to amortize costs
Faculty challenges: authoring tools and interests
New talents: for running online community services
Maintenance and upgrade: of web platforms, browsers, media servers
Authentication and security
Technical support and quality of service (QOS)
Business model possibilities: Business model possibilities Sharing of costs and revenues relating to the production, distribution and sale of on-line courses
Payment of a royalty to your university on revenues generated by the co-developed courses
University can negotiate for warrants to purchase equity in shares of its for-profit partner
Summary: Summary A convergence is underway between traditional on-site teacher education programs and on-line teacher professional development services
New media web-based publishing enables broad access to research-based teaching practices, and community tools make new learning networks possible
Complementary strengths of public and private sector may be highly leveraged for improving teacher learning and professional growth
Questions: Questions What will be the most effective “use models” for on-line TPD services?
What is needed to support teachers documenting and reflecting on their own practices routinely, on-site and on-line, as recommended by NBPTS?
What are appropriate forms of formative and summative assessment of “what’s working” in uses of on-line TPD services?