Moving the Learning of Teaching Closer to Practice: Teacher Education Implications of School-based Inquiry Teams

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract
A five-year prospective, quasi-experimental investigation demonstrated that grade-level teams in nine Title 1 schools using an inquiry-focused protocol to solve instructional problems significantly increased achievement. Teachers applying the inquiry protocol shifted attribution of improved student performance to their teaching rather than external causes. This shift was achieved by focusing on an academic problem long enough to develop an instructional solution. Seeing causal connections fosters acquisition of key teaching skills and knowledge, such as identifying student needs, formulating instructional plans, and using evidence to refine instruction. These outcomes are more likely when teams are teaching similar content, led by a trained peer-facilitator, using an inquiry-focused protocol, and have stable settings in which to engage in continuous improvement.

Description

Type of resource text
Date created May 2009

Creators/Contributors

Author Gallimore, Ronald
Author Ermeling, Bradley A.
Author Saunders, William M.
Author Goldenberg, Claude
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Sponsor The Spencer Foundation
Sponsor Office of Educational Research and Improvement
Sponsor Center for Culture and Health (UCLA)
Sponsor LessonLab Research Institute

Subjects

Subject teacher education
Genre Article

Bibliographic information

Related Publication Gallimore, R., Ermeling, B.A., Saunders, W.M., & Goldenberg, C. (May, 2009, in press). Moving the Learning of Teaching Closer to Practice: Teacher Education Implications of School-based Inquiry Teams. Elementary School Journal (special issue)
Location https://purl.stanford.edu/dt570zp9020

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License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-NC).

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Graduate School of Education Open Archive

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