Abstract
AbstractIn teacher education, there is a growing need for teachers to become data literate by collecting a variety of data on student learning to assess student progress and inform instruction. Research on pedagogical documentation in education, in particular early childhood education, has been undertaken to make students' learning visible by documenting multiple forms of student data. Although the notion of pedagogical documentation could be broadened in teacher data literacies practice, little is known about teacher data literacies practice in implementing pedagogical documentation. To fill this research gap, we performed a scoping review of the studies to investigate the landscape of teacher data literacies practice with pedagogical documentation published from 2000 to 2020. Our scoping review employed Arksey and O'Malley's methodological framework and identified 62 studies in our review. Our analysis provided an overview of the existing studies on teacher data literacies practice with pedagogical documentation. The implications of its findings were discussed. Context and implicationsRationale for this studyDespite the increased demand for teachers to make data‐driven and evidence‐based decisions in teaching, to our knowledge this is the first review of teacher data literacies in implementing pedagogical documentation.Why the new findings matterOur scoping review identifies knowledge gaps in teachers' pedagogical documentation in diverse K‐12 settings, particularly in developing countries.Implications for educational researchers and policy makersIt also calls for more classroom‐based research on teacher data literacies practice in implementing pedagogical documentation and the need to further understand the relationship between teacher data literacies and pedagogical documentation. These implications are relevant for both educational researchers and teachers.
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