Abstract

The goal of this follow-up study was to generalize the findings of a previous inquiry into how assessing teachers’ mathematical knowledge within a professional development (PD) course impacted the teachers’ perspective of their learning and their learning experience. This quantitative research study examined whether the teachers’ attitudes about assessments found in the original study were generalizable to a similar population as well as whether factors involving their No Child Left Behind (NCLB) status and prior experience with the PD facilitators were factors affecting their perspectives. Results indicate that the teachers felt that they learned more mathematics, increased their learning efforts, and gained confidence in their understanding of and ability to teach mathematics because they were assessed. Additionally, the teachers’ NCLB status or prior experience in PD with the facilitators had virtually no impact on the teachers’ perceptions about assessment. Characteristics of the PD that led to these results are explained.

Highlights

  • The goal of this follow-up study was to generalize the findings of a previous inquiry into how assessing teachers’ mathematical knowledge within a professional development (PD) course impacted the teachers’ perspective of their learning and their learning experience

  • We wanted to know if these results were influenced by No Child Left Behind (NCLB) status or previous professional development courses with the facilitators

  • Mean scores to responses about sources of why participants were not concerned about taking the exam showed significant agreement for the reasons that the exam was not counted toward their grades in the professional development course (M = 4.75, t = 9.06) and that the exam was intended to show growth in mathematical understanding over time (M = 5.02, t = 16.02)

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Summary

Introduction

The goal of this follow-up study was to generalize the findings of a previous inquiry into how assessing teachers’ mathematical knowledge within a professional development (PD) course impacted the teachers’ perspective of their learning and their learning experience. This quantitative research study examined whether the teachers’ attitudes about assessments found in the original study were generalizable to a similar population as well as whether factors involving their No Child Left Behind (NCLB) status and prior experience with the PD facilitators were factors affecting their perspectives. The goal of this study was to generalize the findings of a previous inquiry into how assessing teachers’ mathematical knowledge within a PD course impacted the teachers’ perspective of their learning and their learning experience (Chamberlin, Farmer, & Novak, in press). The remainder of this article describes this follow-up quantitative evaluation

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