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Journal ArticleDOI

A successful professional development program in history: What matters?

TL;DR: In this paper, a successful Professional Development Program for improving students' understanding of historical time, consisting of a training and the implementation of Timewise, a teaching approach in which timelines were used consistently, was carried out with 16 elementary school teachers in grades 2 (ages 7-8) and 5 (ages 10-11).
About: This article is published in Teaching and Teacher Education.The article was published on 2018-10-01 and is currently open access. It has received 21 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Curriculum & Professional development.

Summary (5 min read)

1. Introduction

  • In the past decades multiple reviews discussed professional development programs (PDPs) of teachers, although PDPs in the field of social studies are rare.
  • In the PDP in this study teachers adopted a teaching approach, named Timewise, in which they consistently made connections between historical events and the timeline, while using stories, pictures and videos to develop their students' understanding of time.
  • Linear mixed model analyses showed that students in grade 2 as well as grade 5 scored significantly higher on the post-test compared to the pre-test and compared to the control condition.

2. Theoretical background

  • Many studies identify characteristics for PDPs that could be effective in improving teaching practices.
  • Secondly, the “theory of instruction” relates to the relationship between the content of the intervention and student learning.
  • The theory of improvement is represented in Desimone's (2009) much cited framework for the design, implementation and evaluation of PDP's, inwhich relations are shown between design features of the PDP, increased knowledge and skills, changes of teachers' attitudes, beliefs, and instruction, and improved student learning (Fig. 1).
  • The arrows in Fig. 1 show that there are interactive, non-recursive relations between the different components (Desimone, 2009).
  • The authors will finish this section with a description of the PDP in the present study (Fig. 1).

2.1. Design features of professional development programs

  • In studies on PDPs various design features are mentioned that could be effective for teacher learning.
  • In their selfdetermination theory Ryan and Deci (2000) and Deci and Ryan (2008) also stress the need for autonomy, next to competence and relatedness, to enhance motivation and effective performance.
  • In addition, some review studies put forward that some of the more effective programs appeared to be directly carried out by authors or their affiliated researchers, who were familiar with the work of teachers (Kennedy, 2016; Yoon, Duncan, Wen-Yu-Lee, Scarloss, & Shapley, 2007; Guskey & Yoon, 2009).
  • PDPs need to facilitate teachers in learning how to use curriculum materials with regard to content, aims, approaches and underlying ideas, whereasmaterials should be carefully framed with regard to the representations of content and pedagogy (Remillard, 2005).

2.2. Teachers' knowledge, skills, attitudes and beliefs, about the understanding of historical time

  • The importance of content knowledge for teachers' classroom practice is confirmed in multiple reviews and often referred to as pedagogical content knowledge (PCK).
  • Therefore, teachers will need to gain insights into students' development in learning about understanding of historical time.
  • The use of the vocabulary of historical time develops from the use of relative time phrases such as “long ago” to the use of dates and names of historical periods.
  • The next paragraph will elaborate on the change in teachers' instructional behavior.

2.3. Change in instruction - the instructional behavior for the teaching of historical time aimed at

  • The intention of a PDP is that teachers use their new knowledge, skills and beliefs to improve their instructional practices.
  • This should result in improved student learning.
  • A small body of empirical studies confirms the assertion that timelines are effective (Hodkinson, 2003; Masterman & Rogers, 2002).
  • Some studies have shown that teaching with pictures and stories is helpful to stimulate students' use of the vocabulary of time and their reasoning about chronological sequence and characteristic features of historical eras (De Groot-Reuvekamp et al., 2014; Barton & Levstik, 1996; Harnett, 1993; Hoge & Foster, 2002; Hoodless, 2002; Levstik & Pappas, 1987).
  • For most teachers in the lower grades the teaching about historical time means that they have to develop the instructional behavior aimed at, since history in these grades usually does not feature in the curriculum.

2.4. The PDP in the present study

  • The PDP in the present study consisted of two 4-h training sessions, followed by a curriculum intervention with Timewise.
  • All materials were practical and user-friendly, and needed little time for preparation.
  • The aim of the introductory lessons was to introduce and clarify the names and characteristics of the eras on the timeline, for which PowerPoint presentations for instruction were included.
  • Teachers could select appropriate teaching methods and learning activities linked to the objectives.

4. Design and method

  • The present study further explores the findings from an earlier effect study, which showed a medium effect of the Timewise approach of .44 for grade 2, and .54 for grade 5 on students' scores in the post-test, compared to the pre-test on the understanding of historical time (De Groot-Reuvekamp, Ros, & Van Boxtel, 2017).
  • This study offered no insights into how or why learning gains differed between teachers, nor how the PDP contributed to the success of Timewise.
  • A mixed-method design was applied in which qualitative methods are complementary to quantitative methods.
  • Fig. 2 presents an overview of the instruments used, during different phases of the PDP.
  • After the training they answered questionnaire 2 on the support of educative curriculum materials.

4.1. Participants

  • Between February and July 2015 eight teachers from grade 2 (ages 7e8) and eight teachers from grade 5 (ages 10e11) participated in this study.
  • The teachers had between 2 and 40 years of experience (M¼ 17.13, SD¼ 14.44); fourteen were female and two male (Table 1), which corresponds to the situation in the Netherlands where the majority of the teachers is female.
  • Five teachers (Jill, Olivia, Mary, Alice and Mabel) wanted to learn specifically how they could teach history in their grade-2 classes, and two grade-5 teachers (Vanessa and Rachel) participated because they were not satisfied with their current program for history.
  • The grade-2 teachers added the Timewise approach to their curriculum, since they did not teach history in their regular curriculum.
  • Vanessa did not use her textbook anymore, because it had become outdated.

4.2. Instruments

  • Questionnaire 1 contained three positive statements and one negative statement on beliefs on the teaching of historical timewith a four-point scale, also known as Questionnaires.
  • In questionnaire 3 teachers could give their opinion on how the materials of the PDP were supportive in the implementation of Timewise.
  • The authors observed all teachers for 30e45min for their instructional behavior during one of the Timewise lessons.
  • The interviews were audiotaped with the teachers' consent and there were member checks on the transcriptions.
  • The authors measured students' learning gains through a pre-/post-test design (sub-question 4).

4.3. Data analysis

  • Because of the small number of participating teachers, it was not possible to investigate whether differences between teachers were statistically significant.
  • The authors coded the interviews in Atlas-ti, with codes for the educative curriculum materials and the four supportive methods (Kennedy, 2016).
  • With respect to the observations the first researcher rated sixteen observations, and subsequently a teacher trainer from another faculty for teacher training rated four videos, using the same protocol.
  • For each objective the percentages of teachers who repeatedly focused on the objectivewas calculated, as well as the percentages of teachers who actively engaged their students.
  • To answer sub-question 4 (learning gains in grade 2 and 5) the authors made an overview per teacher of the mean student learning gains, resulting from the pre- and the post-test.

5.1. How did teachers perceive the support of educative curriculum materials provided by the PDP?

  • Immediately after completing the training, all teachers answered to closed questions in questionnaire 2 that they had received sufficient support to implement Timewise in their classrooms, and that they had gained sufficient insights into the Timewise approach.
  • Teachers of both grade 2 and 5 were very satisfied with the lesson formats in the instructionmanual and on the website, as well as with the theoretical background knowledge and the materials to stimulate students' learning.
  • Afterwards she thought that this could have been confusing for the students.
  • Bought the story book or borrowed it from the library to read the stories at home.

5.2. Which changes in their beliefs and attitudes, and gains in knowledge and skills did teachers perceive?

  • At the start of and one year after the PDP the teachers responded on four statements about beliefs about students' development in and the teaching of the understanding of historical time.
  • The first statement was based on older theories and therefore negative.
  • Grade-5 teachers mentioned similar experiences, as George explained: “I became convinced that it works well to start with the classroom timeline”, and Rose remarked: “The students reacted very positively, they now have a better understanding of the eras and of dates and centuries”.
  • Table 4 shows that before the PDP teachers felt not to a little competent in their knowledge of and skills for the teaching of historical time, whereas since the PDP all teachers felt competent.
  • This had never been explained to me very inspiringly.

5.3. To what extent did teachers implement the instructional behavior aimed at?

  • The observations showed that, although the authors offered the teachers the opportunity to select teaching methods and learning activities, they used the educative curriculum materials according to the suggestions in the training.
  • Most teachers started a lesson with a short review of the previous lesson.
  • Furthermore, all teachers used the classroom timeline: often at the start, like Claire, who started and ended her lesson about castles in the Middle Ages with referring to the timeline and having the students attach a picture of a castle to the classroom timeline.
  • The observations were confirmed in the logs and the scores on teachers paying attention to the objectives and actively engaging students during the observed lessons.
  • Only Claire and Mary reported lower percentages in their logs.

5.4. Which student learning gains were realized by the teachers?

  • Table 7 shows the mean student learning gains per teacher, as calculated from the differences between the pre- and post-test on the understanding of historical time.
  • Claire and Olivia also reported in their logs (Table 6) that they had paid less attention to the objectives, whereas Jill reported having paid 100% attention to the objectives.
  • The two teachers with the highest student learning gains in grade 5 (Chantal and Maureen) showed the highest results on their instructional behavior in the observation (Table 6).
  • In grade 2, teachers did not give extra history lessons in addition to Timewise lessons.
  • Two grade-5 teachers (George and Emmy) spent more time on history lessons (85min in total) than most other teachers, but their learning gains were below average.

6. Discussion

  • The present study examined which components of a PDP on improving elementary school students' understanding of historical time were relevant for the success of the PDP, which resulted in a significant improvement of learning outcomes of students in grade 2 and 5.
  • It seems that teachers' motivation to work with the curriculum materials played an important role in the success of this PDP.
  • With regard to the positive effects of Timewise, it could be argued that learning gains might have improved because of the extra time teachers spent on history, since six grade-5 teachers gave extra history lessons, which were part of their regular textbook program (Table 7), in addition to the Timewise lessons.
  • In their review studies Yoon et al. (2007) and Kennedy (2016) found this as a positive effect for successful PDPs.
  • A drawback of the small sample was that it was difficult to apply statistical analyses to investigate whether differences between teachers' behavior and students' learning outcomes were statistically significant.

7. Conclusion

  • Whereas most studies on PDPs focus on changes in teachers' behavior, the present study included all components of Desimone's (2009) framework for PDPs, and it confirmed that the interplay between design features, changes of teachers' attitudes and beliefs, increased knowledge and skills and change in instruction leads to improved student learning outcomes.
  • This structure, next to the possibility of always being able to consult the materials for background information, may have supported teachers' feeling of competence.
  • Finally, the implementation of Timewise offered teachers experiences that appeared to have changed their beliefs and attitudes about students being able to learn about historical time.
  • Summarizing, recommendations from the PDP in the present study would be that it is important to provide teachers with attractive and user-friendly educative curriculum materials and clear prescriptions and strategies, within a structure that supports their feelings of competence and gives room for autonomy.
  • This research was supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, grant number 023.001.084.

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Citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, Seixas and Torpey discuss the relationship between history education and historical awareness, and present a theoretical framework for comparing history education with historical knowledge and historical distance.
Abstract: * Peter Seixas: Introduction. I. Historiographies and Historical Consciousness. * Chris Lorenz, Professor of Philosophy and Medothology of History, Leiden University and Free University of Amsterdam. 'Towards A Theoretical Framework For Comparing Historiographies: Some Preliminary Considerations'* James Wertsch, Department of Education, Washington University, St. Louis. 'Specific Narratives and Schematic Narrative Templates'* Jorn Riisen, Institute for the Advanced Studies of the Humanitiies, Essex. 'What Is Historical Consciousness? A Theoretical Approach To Empirical Evidence'* Mark Phillips, Department of History, Universtiy of British Columbia. 'Historical Distance: An Introduction'* II. History Education and Historical Consciousness * Jocelyn Letourneau and Sabrina Moisan, Department of History, Laval University, Quebec. 'Young People's Assimilation of a Collective Historical Memory'* Peter Lee, University of London Institute of Education. 'Understanding History'* Christian Laville. 'Historical Consciousness and History Education: What To Expect from the First for the Second'* Roger Simon, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto. 'The Pedagogical Insistence of Public Memory'* Kent den Heyer (ed.). 'A Dialogue on Narrative and Historical Consciousness'* III. The Politics of Memory and History Education * Tony Taylor, Faculty of Education, Monash University, Victoria, Australia. 'Disputed Territory: Some Political Contexts for the Development of Australian Historical Consciousness'* John Torpey, Departments of Sociology and History, University of British Columbia. 'The Pursuit of the Past: A Polemical Perspective'

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Abstract: In view of growing emphasis in the field of education world-wide, and particularly in the United Arab Emirates, there is a strong demand for the refinement of instructional practices through practical and effective professional development. Teacher-led Professional Development (TLPD) is implemented by teachers in the field, rather than by external practitioners. It involves collaborative and reflective meetings, peer observation, and the cooperative refinement and implementation of strategies. This study investigated educators’ perceptions of the value of TLPD, and explored their notions on its impactful instructional benefits. In a sequential mixed-methods approach, data were first collected via a questionnaire from 305 educators from private schools in Abu Dhabi and Al Ain. Then classroom observations, semi-structured interviews and document analysis yielded qualitative data. The findings revealed that teachers perceive TLPD to be effective for: 1) collaboration; 2) meeting school-wide priorities; 3) building leadership capacity; and 4) creating professional learning communities; thus 5) consolidating effective school leadership. These findings may offer principals, policymakers and teachers’ solid insights into establishing a professional learning programme that contributes to effective reform, with practical and immediate advancement in pedagogy, positively impacting the educational process in the UAE and world-wide.

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Cites background from "A successful professional developme..."

  • ...De Groot-Reuvekamp et al. (2018) targeted exploring an effective PD program that improved students’ grasp of historical time....

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References
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TL;DR: In this article, a discussion of the role of tradition in the historical culture of modern societies is presented, and it is argued that the past is already present (as a result of historical developments) in the circumstances and conditions under which historical thinking is performed and is influenced by it.
Abstract: This article is divided into five parts. After a brief example in the first part, the second explains what historical sense-generation is about. The third characterizes tradition as a pregiven condition of all historical thinking. With respect to this condition, the constructivist theory of history is criticized as one-sided. The fourth part presents tradition as one of the four basic sense criteria of historical narration. The article concludes with a discussion of the role of tradition in the historical culture of modern societies. Historical sense-generation is a mental procedure by which the past is interpreted for the sake of understanding the present and anticipating the future. This mental procedure is an anthropological universal in the cultural orientation of human practical life and will lead to a concept of the course of time as a necessary factor in the cultural orientation of human life. Today the dominant opinion in metahistory conceives of historical sense-generation in a constructivist way. The sense of the past is understood as an ascription of meaning onto the past; the past itself has no impact on this meaning. But I hold that the past is already present (as a result of historical developments) in the circumstances and conditions under which historical thinking is performed and is obviously influenced by it. This presence can be called tradition. Before historians construct the past they themselves are already constructed by the present outcome of past developments in the world. Thus tradition is always at work in historical thinking before the past is thematized as history. Historical sense-generation needs basic principles of sense and meaning. Using these principles transforms the experience of the past into a meaningful history for the present. Despite cultural differences, four sense criteria can be identified as basic for making historical sense of the past. One of the four principles is tradition. It is the most fundamental one upon which all other modes of making sense of the past are grounded. It presents temporal change in the human world such that the world's order is maintained despite all its changes. Since the emergence of the so-called advanced civilizations, other types of historical narration have overshadowed the constitutive role of tradition. Historical narration has been supplemented by exemplary, genetic, and critical approaches to the past. Yet the traditional one has remained the most frequently used and is the most basic and popular.

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"A successful professional developme..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Understanding historical time includes reasoning about change and continuity, which is considered to be a core concept of historical thinking (L evesque, 2008; Seixas& Morton, 2013) and of historical consciousness (Grever, 2009; Rüsen, 2012; Seixas, 2006)....

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TL;DR: Evaluation of the software built using the conceptual design and pedagogical approach to developing effective dynamic, interactive representations and activities at the computer interface found that it was able to facilitate children's understanding of, and ability to reason about, chronology.
Abstract: Young children's understanding of thehistorical past is often characterised by alack of temporal differentiation and a sense oftotal discontinuity with the present. Researchhas suggested that this situation may be causedin part by their formation of inappropriaterepresentations when solving problems ofchronology. To help children construct moreappropriate external representations forparticular tasks and reason more effectivelywith them about chronological concepts, weinvestigated the role that interactivemultimedia might play in scaffoldingteacher-led activities in the classroom. Inthis paper we report on our conceptual designand pedagogical approach to developingeffective dynamic, interactive representationsand activities at the computer interface, aimedat bridging the conceptual gap between concreteexperience and abstract concepts. Evaluationsof the software built using this frameworkshowed that the program was well received bychildren and teachers alike, and that it wasable to facilitate children's understanding of,and ability to reason about, chronology.

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"A successful professional developme..." refers background in this paper

  • ...…skills in the teaching of historical time, particularly in the use of the classroom timeline, which in several empirical studies has proven to be effective in enhancing students' understanding of historical time (Hodkinson, 2003; Masterman & Rogers, 2002; Prangsma, Van Boxtel, & Kanselaar, 2008)....

    [...]

  • ...A small body of empirical studies confirms the assertion that timelines are effective (Hodkinson, 2003; Masterman & Rogers, 2002)....

    [...]

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TL;DR: This article explored third, sixth, and ninth grade students' interpretations of a collection of nine historical photographs using semi-structured interviews and found that the ability to date photographs progressed with age and without remarkable differences in regard to gender or race.
Abstract: This study explored third, sixth, and ninth grade students' interpretations of a collection of nine historical photographs using semi-structured interviews. Specifically, the study focused on students' replies to three historical questions: When do you think this photograph was taken? Why do you think it was taken? and What does this photograph tell you about these peoples' lives? Results showed that the ability to date photographs progressed with age and without remarkable differences in regard to gender or race. Similar results occurred in regard to students' inferences about why a photograph was taken. Age and race related differences were noted, however, in students ability to draw inferences about the lives of the people shown in the photographs.

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TL;DR: Gutiérrez and Penuel as mentioned in this paper argued that good general knowledge can increase the practitioner's chances of being right, but no theory or systematic generic knowledge can provide [practitioners] with detailed, high-confidence prescriptions for action in each contingency that arises.
Abstract: model into a specific strategy that fits a particular situation” (p. 269) or diagnosis of a problem. While good general knowledge can increase the practitioner’s chances of being right, “No theory or systematic generic knowledge can provide [practitioners] with detailed, high-confidence prescriptions for action in each contingency that arises” (p. 272) . Given that, “Theory and generic knowledge are best understood as a source of inputs to policy analysis of specific problems....They are an aid, not a substitute ...for judgments that decision makers make” (p. 276). They note further that generic knowledge may be most useful when it moves beyond answers to simple cause and effect questions to identify “conditions, processes, and causal mechanisms that link the use of each strategy to variance it its outcomes” (p. 272). Similar circumstances face teachers 60 Gutiérrez and Penuel (2014) and Moss (2014) note that IES is beginning to signal an interest in contextualizing questions like this through some grant programs and in statements by its advisory board (NBES, 2012) and its recent director (Easton, 2010).

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