A framework for planning and facilitating video-based professional development

被引:27
|
作者
Tekkumru-Kisa, Miray [1 ]
Stein, Mary Kay [2 ]
机构
[1] Florida State Univ, Sch Teacher Educ & Learning Syst Inst, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA
[2] Univ Pittsburgh, Learning Res & Dev Ctr, Pittsburgh, PA USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
MATHEMATICAL TASKS; TEACHERS; CAPACITY; THINKING; CONTEXT; SUPPORT; WORK;
D O I
10.1186/s40594-017-0086-z
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Background: Recent transformative changes in science education require new learning opportunities for teachers opportunities that include rich images of classroom enactment of the reform vision. One fruitful way for doing that is to use video clips of instruction. Teachers do not, however, learn how to improve their instructional practice from simply watching and reflecting on classroom videos. The videos need to be carefully selected and embedded in professional development in ways that-through facilitator-led, participant-centered discussion-can help teachers to notice and reason about important aspects of instruction and learning that occur in the video. Consistent with the recent efforts to identify planning and facilitation approaches that guide effective professional development (PD) programs, in this paper, we adapted the Five Practices Framework for orchestrating productive classroom discussions to describe how PD facilitators plan for and enact professional learning tasks to help science teachers learn within a video-based PD program. These practices include anticipating, sequencing, monitoring, selecting, connecting and two additional practices that set the stage for the five practices (i.e., setting goals and selecting tasks). Results: Our analyses of the video-based discussions in the PD provide insights into how the facilitators engaged teachers in video-based conversations by using the practices of monitoring, selecting, and connecting. The monitoring moves, such as clarifying, countering, and redirecting, were used by the facilitator in nearly all the PD sessions. Similarly, selecting moves were used and were consistent with the goals of the PD. Finally, analysis of facilitators' and participants' connecting comments indicated their increased capacity to make connections to the bigger ideas of teaching science by maintaining the cognitive demand on students' thinking. Conclusions: This paper provides elaborated descriptions of the five practices for planning and facilitating video-based PD and the ways in which they were enacted in a video-based PD program in science. In so doing, it proposes five practices as a guiding framework to support teachers' learning from videos. Overall, the study's results endorse the promise of a goal-driven, theory-informed design that foregrounds careful attention to teachers' thinking in ways that support their understanding of complex classroom interactions.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] A Deep Learning Framework for Video-Based Vehicle Counting
    Lin, Haojia
    Yuan, Zhilu
    He, Biao
    Kuai, Xi
    Li, Xiaoming
    Guo, Renzhong
    FRONTIERS IN PHYSICS, 2022, 10
  • [32] VPU: A Video-Based Point Cloud Upsampling Framework
    Wang, Kaisiyuan
    Sheng, Lu
    Gu, Shuhang
    Xu, Dong
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING, 2022, 31 : 4062 - 4075
  • [33] Exploring Teachers' Emotions via Nonverbal Behavior During Video-Based Teacher Professional Development
    Chang, Chiung-Fang
    Groeschner, Alexander
    Hall, Nathan C.
    Alles, Martina
    Seidel, Tina
    AERA OPEN, 2018, 4 (04)
  • [34] Representations of Practice in a Video-Based In-Service Teacher Professional Development Project and in Its Evaluation
    Kuntze, Sebastian
    MATHEMATICS TEACHERS ENGAGING WITH REPRESENTATIONS OF PRACTICE: A DYNAMICALLY EVOLVING FIELD, 2018, : 47 - 69
  • [35] A Video-based Framework for Automated Trajectory Collection at Intersections
    Yang Z.
    Zhang Q.
    Tongji Daxue Xuebao/Journal of Tongji University, 2019, 47 (03): : 369 - 377and407
  • [36] EFFECT OF A VIDEO-BASED REFLECTION PROGRAM ON TEACHERS' PROFESSIONAL VISION
    Cocca, Michaela
    Cocca, Armando
    Castro, Jose Luis Dimas
    Verdugo, Franscisco Daniel Espino
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 16TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE EFFICIENCY AND RESPONSIBILITY IN EDUCATION 2019 (ERIE), 2019, : 34 - 42
  • [37] Remote Assessment via Video Evaluation (RAVVE): Video-based Peer Assessment to Support Rheumatology Continuing Professional Development
    Kherani, Raheem
    Yao, Christopher
    Collins, David
    Eva, Kevin
    Jamal, Shahin
    Koehler, Barry
    Meneilly, Graydon
    Novak-Lauscher, Helen
    Shojania, Kamran
    Ho, Kendall
    JOURNAL OF RHEUMATOLOGY, 2017, 44 (06) : 934 - 934
  • [38] MinVIS: A Minimal Video Instance Segmentation Framework without Video-based Training
    Huang, De-An
    Yu, Zhiding
    Anandkumar, Anima
    ADVANCES IN NEURAL INFORMATION PROCESSING SYSTEMS 35 (NEURIPS 2022), 2022,
  • [39] Promoting video-based research in teacher education and professional development: A commentary on ontological, methodological and epistemological advances
    Groeschner, Alexander
    LEARNING CULTURE AND SOCIAL INTERACTION, 2023, 39
  • [40] Open Iris - An Open Source Framework for Video-Based Eye-Tracking Research and Development
    Sadeghi, Roksana
    Ressmeyer, Ryan
    Yates, Jacob
    Otero-Millan, Jorge
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2024 ACM SYMPOSIUM ON EYE TRACKING RESEARCH & APPLICATIONS, ETRA 2024, 2024,