Author/Authors :
Niki Davis، نويسنده , , Christina Preston and Ismail Sahin، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
This paper is one of a pair that re-examines the evidence from a national
initiative to train all teachers in England to bring them up to the level of newly
qualified teachers, who are required to know when to use and when not to use
information and communication technologies (ICT) in their professional
practice. Reanalysis of data gathered for the 2004 evaluation uncovers the
complexity of such professional development. The effectiveness of contrasting
approaches to ICT-related teacher training was analysed using the national
survey of 496 trainees and experts’ reports on 11 of the 47 training providers.
multilevel evaluation of professional development was shown to be robust for
ICT teacher training, including a significant correlation between the views of
experts and those of teachers. The presence of the middle level of ‘organisational
support and change’ emerged as a particularly discriminating factor,
indicating that higher-quality teacher training supports change in the classroom
and in the school. Therefore, we recommend that all five of Guskey’s
levels be consistently adopted for the evaluation of ICT teacher training, and
that research should also adopt a multilevel model. A second paper delves
deeper to describe and contrast the highest and lowest-rated approaches to ICT
teacher training.