Abstract

The professional development of experienced teachers has received considerably less attention than that of novice teachers. This study focuses on four experienced secondary mathematics teachers in Shanghai, China, with two participating in a year-long professional development program (treatment teachers) and the other two received conventional knowledge-based professional development (comparison teachers). The program introduced productive classroom talk skills which can facilitate teachers’ formative assessment of student learning during class. To encourage teachers to reflect on their classroom discourse when reviewing recordings of their teaching, we used visual learning analytics with the treatment teachers and theorized the use of this technology with activity theory. After completing the program, the treatment teachers were better able to use productive talk moves to elicit student responses and to provide timely formative feedback accordingly. Specifically, the percentage of word contributions in lessons from students and the length of their responses increased noticeably. Qualitative findings suggest that the use of visual learning analytics mediated the treatment teachers and improved classroom discourse. Based on these findings and activity theory, we provide recommendations for future use of visual learning analytics to improve teachers’ classroom talk and designing professional development activities for experienced teachers.

Highlights

  • Experienced teachers are every school’s important resource

  • This study focuses on experienced mathematics teachers who participated in a professional development project on classroom talk in Shanghai, China

  • We developed a visual learning analytics tool, the classroom discourse analyzer, to facilitate teachers’ reflections on classroom talk

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Summary

Introduction

Experienced teachers are every school’s important resource. Teachers can elicit student responses which provide information for teachers to assess students’ current level of learning and modify their instructions [3,4]. This kind of assessment is formative because student responses are used as evidence “to make decisions about the steps in instruction that are likely to be better, or better founded, than the decisions they would have taken in the absence of the evidence that was elicited” [5] Teachers can better support their learning during class

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