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Professional development that increases technology integration by K-12 teachers: The influence of the TICKIT Program. John B. Keller, jbkeller@indiana.edu Lee H. Ehman, ehman@indiana.edu Curtis J. Bonk, cjbonk@indiana.edu Indiana University. April 21, 2003. AERA. Chicago. TICKIT.
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Professional development that increases technology integration by K-12 teachers:The influence of the TICKIT Program. John B. Keller, jbkeller@indiana.edu Lee H. Ehman, ehman@indiana.edu Curtis J. Bonk, cjbonk@indiana.edu Indiana University April 21, 2003 AERA Chicago
TICKIT Teacher Institute for Curriculum Knowledge about Integration of Technology http://www.iub.edu/~tickit
Overview of TICKIT • In-service teacher education program • Rural schools in central & southern Indiana • Supported by participating school systems, Arthur Vining Davis Foundations and Indiana University • Cohorts of 4-6 teachers from 4-6 school corporations
TICKIT Goals • Knowledge, skill, & confidence • Thoughtful integration of technology • Leadership cadres in schools • Link schools and university • Help schools capitalize on their technology investments
Program Structure • Teachers attend three workshops at I.U. for a total of 4 days • Curriculum-based, technology supported classroom unit or lesson each semester • In-school workshops to support teachers in their unit or lesson design • Final products are two action research reports • Reports to colleagues and school “giveback”
Program Structure • Various online activities using a course management tool (COW, Virtual University, Blackboard, Web CT, Oncourse) • Article critiques • Chats with technology experts (Bernie Dodge, Annette Lamb) • Free Tool Reviews
Research Question Do teachers who have been through the TICKIT program differ from teachers who have not on dimensions of computer integration?
Structure of Paper • How the TICKIT program compares with the literature on effective professional development. • Results of the study. • Discussion of the relative impact of the TICKIT program. • Limitations, Future Directions, Conclusion
New Vision: Darling-Hammond (‘97) Palincsar (1999) Technical vs. Intellectual View of teaching Richardson & Placier (‘01) Normative-Reeducative Characteristics of: Little (1993) Loucks-Horsely et al. (1998) Hawley and Valli (1999) Professional Development Literature
Effective Professional Development Structure Core Garet, Porter, Desimone, Birman, and Suk-Yoon, 2001
Effective Professional Development Structure Core ?? Garet, Porter, Desimone, Birman, & Suk-Yoon, 2001
Methodology 1/3 Study Design • TICKIT Completers • Teachers from the first four years of TICKIT • The survey is a post measurement • Dropouts. . . • TICKIT Applicants • Teachers who applied for the fifth year of TICKIT • The survey is a pre measurement
Methodology 2/3 Participants • Schools • Rural • Central and southern Indiana • Better than average technology infrastructure • Teachers • Cohorts of 4-6 teachers from each school • Average teaching experience 11.5 years
Methodology 3/3 Instrumentation Two Part Survey • Demographics and TICKIT-Related Questions • Levels of Technology Implementation Survey (LOTI) Moersch (1994, 1995, 2001).
Results 1/3 Survey Returns= 79 %
Results 3/3 **p< .01 ; ***p< .001All effect sizes favor TICKIT group Lower scores on factors two and three indicate more positive responses The ‘n’ for each comparison varies due to incomplete data. We used list-wise deletion of missing data (Completers n=66-77; Applicants n=18-20)
Multiple Sources Relative Impact 2/2 From which individuals do you seek primary guidance, information, and/or direction relating to the integration of technology into your curriculum?
Internal Motivation Influences • I want to be able to help provide the most challenging, interesting lessons for students. As a result of this I need to keep current. • I’m not required to use the technology but do so to learn for myself and help the students. • Even before the TICKIT experience, I was looking for ways to integrate technology into my classroom. I am enthusiastic and committed to this.
TICKIT Teacher Voices • “This class was very helpful. I gained a lot of confidence as a technology user from this class.” • “The door is now open. I will continue to try to find technological ways to teach them.” • “This was the best program I have ever been involved with as a teacher.”
Limitations • Non-random sample • Participants not representative • Above average infrastructure • Above average interest in technology • Self-reported data • No correlation to corroborate the constructs identified by factor analysis • Ex post facto analysis limits ability to infer change due to the TICKIT program
Impact • Researchers and Teacher Educators • K-12 Teaching and Administrators • Government Officials and Politicians
Future Directions Additional Research • Growth of current cohort over the course of this year • Correlation of other data sources with current findings (i.e. observation, document analysis) • Impact of technology integration on student learning
References 1/2 Darling-Hammond, L. (1997). The right to learn. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers. Garet, M. S., Porter, A. C., Desimone, L., Birman, B. F., & Yoon, K. S. (2001). What makes professional development effective? Results from a national sample of teachers. American Educational Research Journal, 38(4), 915-945. Hawley, W. D., & Valli, L. (1999). The essentials of effective professional development. In L. Darling-Hammond & G. Sykes (Eds.), Teaching as the learning profession: Handbook of policy and practice (pp. 127-150). San Francisco: Jossey Bass Publishers. Little, J. W. (1993). Teachers' professional development in a climate of educational reform. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 15(2), 129-151. Loucks-Horsely, S., Hewson, P. W., Love, N., & Stiles, K. E. (1998). Designing professional development for teachers of science and mathematics. Thousand Oaks, California: Corwin Press.
References 2/2 Moersch, C. (1994). Levels of Technology Implementation. Retrieved February 13, 2002, from http://www.learning-quest.com/LoTi/lotihome.html Moersch, C. (1995). Levels of technology Implementation (LoTi): A framework for measuring classroom technology use. Learning and Leading with Technology, 40-42. Moersch, C. (2001). Next steps: using LoTi as a research tool. Learning and Leading with Technology, 29(3), 22-27. Palincsar, A. (1999). Response: A community of practice. Teacher Education and Special Education, 22(4), 272-274. Richardson, V., & Placier, P. (2001). Teacher change. In V. Richardson (Ed.), Handbook of research on teaching (4th ed., pp. 905-950). Washington D. C.: American Educational Research Association.