Abstract

Online communities and social-network sites are used to deliver professional-development services for teachers. Professional development should help teachers to reflect on their practice and improve in helping them to guide students' growth. Peer and community models, such as coaching and sharing knowledge in network and knowledge communities, have been proposed. Recently these practices have been taken into use in social media services, such as Facebook. Although earlier research has examined teachers' online communities, we move beyond understanding individuals motivations and examine community-level dynamics. Understanding these dynamics is important to understand the interaction between teachers, resources and the platform in use and resulting professional development. To understand the evolution of an informal and self-organised Facebook teachers' group, containing nearly 20,000 teachers, its eight years of activity was analysed by employing a mixed-methods research design; data science and participatory observation. Analysis gives account of both the evolution of participants' engagement and activity, and the evolution of content and its relevance for teachers’ professional development. The results suggest that managers of professional development need to consider how to facilitate participation in order to focus on pedagogically motivated use of information technology, for system developers to consider how to assist recruitment of members and sustain their activity, and for all stakeholders to acknowledge that a peer-organised online professional development community requires significant effort. Furthermore, we suggest that instead of addressing large groups like these as communities, scholars and practitioners should instead see them as personal learning networks and think about how to establish smaller and more manageable groups as communities.

Highlights

  • There are increasing demands to improve teachers’ capabilities to use ICT in education

  • Due to the limitations of Facebook application programming interface (API), we cannot ascertain the number of people who consume content but do not produce it themselves

  • To answer RQ2, we carried out structural topic modelling of the data and interpreted the topics in light of the authors’ experiences with the Facebook group

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Summary

Introduction

There are increasing demands to improve teachers’ capabilities to use ICT in education. In order to improve the use of ICT in education there is a need to support teachers’ professional development, in the domains of both technology and pedagogy. Research on professional development has concluded that focus should be on helping teachers examine their practice and improve in helping them to guide students’ growth (Avalos, 2011). Many consider such goals as not within the reach of traditional professional-development interventions, such as workshops or lectures. In their view, development efforts should instead centre on reform activities and open-ended models that support professional learning. These have demonstrated a slightly larger impact on teaching effectiveness (Garet, Porter, Desimone, Birman, & Yoon, 2001)

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