A Roundtable Discussion About Online Professional Development
Three
EDC experts in online professional development discuss the
evolution of the field.
Parts of the discussion:
Dan Tobin: Judy,
NCIP (the National Center to Improve Practice) was one of EDC's
first major experiments with online professional
developmentactually predating the Internet. Did NCIP
start out with the agenda of researching emerging technologies
for
professional development, or did that evolve over time?
Judith Zorfass: From the beginning, we envisioned using an electronic
network. With WGBH [Boston's public television station] as our
partner for the first three years, we were very much focused on
new media. We were interested in testing ideas about how we could
foster better communication within the field, so we ran discussion
forums and special events that lasted three to five weeks. Every
couple of weeks, we would bring in a new guest expert. We even
tried doing action research online around when and how keyboarding
should be introduced to students with and without disabilities.
We designed a structure that asked participants to describe what
they planned to do, report back after they tried activities in
their classrooms, and then reflect on what they were learning.
But we found that structure too rigid; it tended to interfere with
communication rather than facilitate it.
DT: Was it difficult to get people talking to one another?
JZ: Not really. We started with a small group. Little by little,
as each person's identity and personality emerged, people became "visible" to
one another. And they contributed to this feeling that they were
becoming a community. In fact, one of our biggest problems was
figuring out how to deal with people who were using NCIP as a way
to talk about their personal problems, like their own children's
disabilities. We worried about keeping the conversation professional
while still allowing people to discuss their personal issues.
Glenn Kleiman: We had a similar issue recently with an extension
class I am teaching at Harvard. One of the participants wrote in
his introduction about leaving his job as vice president of a major
corporation and becoming a teacher as a result of discovering he
had a life-threatening illness. It opened up a good discussion
about why we do what we do. He said he hesitated before he pushed
the "send" button, but figured he'd go ahead. What was
interesting is that the class is part online and part face-to-face,
and people were more revealing about themselves in the online introductions
than when they introduced themselves in class.
Robert Spielvogel: In the early days, there was
anonymity in being part of an online community. In the Math Learning
Forums, we had
several teachers who said, "I can talk about things in this
forum that I wouldn't want the teacher next door or my principal
to know about—such as my weaknesses.
In my school, you don't expose yourself in that way." That
was certainly a powerful factor when people were just getting used
to this new medium. There was a sense of community without a lot
of risk.
Facilitation
JZ: A lot of it also comes down to the skills a
facilitator brings to the discussion. We used to
have facilitated topical discussion forums, and we worked
very hard
to find facilitators who were not only respected in terms of their content
knowledge, but also comfortable enough with the medium to draw people out.
Part of our role became supporting the facilitators, who were not part of
our project staff. We had to guide them so that they could create
a safe and comfortable
environment.
DT: You actually made the art of online facilitation a
key area of the project research.
RS: Very much. Projects like NCIP weren't focused primarily on
trying out new technology. These were actually deliberate experiments
with the goal of bringing a community together for reflective discussions.
We treated them like serendipitous communities, where we could
try out different tools and see how people responded. One of the
important innovations in NCIP was that it wasn't simply a discussion
forum or an online workshop. Judy put a lot of energy into other
things as well, such as a Web tour using text, video clips, and
photographs, and a resource library that would attract people even
if they weren't initially sure about participating in the discussion.
There was a lot to attract people to the NCIP environment, and
hopefully some would stay and take part in the community discussions.
That's similar to what we did with the Math Learning Forum, which
had three stages. In the first stage, teachers watched classroom
videos focused on a particular theme of the National Council of
Teachers of Mathematics Standards, which were new at the time.
The teachers followed up by doing a mathematics activity themselves
and talking about their own mathematical understanding. And then
they tried the activity with their students and reflected on the
experience online. It was a sequence of getting teachers to think
deeply about math, and each stage provided a common denominator
for a good discussion.
JZ: We were really able to develop the NCIP environment much further
when we moved to the Web. Starting with what we knew about best
face-to-face professional development, we asked ourselves what
strategies we could transfer to this new environment, given the
Web's capabilities. For example, people love to visit other classrooms
and then debrief about what they've seen. So we designed an online
tour of early childhood classrooms where students with disabilities
were using a range of technology tools, and we used the same kind
of conceptual framework we would use for an actual visit. When
you go on a visit, you have an orientation, you visit classrooms,
you talk to teachers afterward. We tried to build all that into
our Web environment. We even added a "souvenir" stopa
resource library with information about all the technologies on
the tour.
DT: Glenn, how did the Leadership and the New Technologies
(LNT) website and online workshops evolve from the face-to-face
LNT Institute?
GK: When we first started planning the Institute,
Bob, Margaret
Honey¹, and I (along with Marilyn Resnick from the AT&T
Foundation) talked about the idea of making the one-week institute
part of
something that continued online. We also found that we had, even
in the first year, about four times as many applicants as we could
accept. By using the Web, we could extend the reach of the Institute
to many more people. At first, we simply wanted to document the
Institute in great detail. Then we started experimenting with follow-up
online discussions. We found early on that our audience consisted
of very busy professionalsprincipals, curriculum coordinators,
media specialists, and others in leadership rolesand we had
to convince them that the online community could be valuable to
them.
DT: Was it hard to disabuse people of the notion that online
discussions equal chat?
GK: There are many online communities consisting of college students
who hang out in the dark at night and like to mess around on the
Web. Our audience was not about to hang around online hoping something
beneficial would come along. They need to know that their time
will be well spent to meet their professional needs. We did try
some listservs without success, so we moved on to the workshop
model. We found that when we framed the discussion as an online
workshop with a focus and facilitators, running over six or eight
weeks, there was a lot of interest.
RS: Some formats lead to deeper, richer learning experiences.
The workshops we run have an order to them; they have a beginning,
a middle, and an end. Most online listservs are amorphous. You
jump into the middle of the stream, and you stay as long as you
wantwhich is fine, if you just want a how-to or something
like that. But it is not good when you are trying to build a sense
of community for reflection on deeper issues. You need groups with
common experiences, groups who can be mutually supportive.
DT: Let's talk about the structure of some of these workshops.
Judy, you've experimented with many different ways to structure
online workshops. What has worked well?
JZ: In one course, we focused the whole discussion
on the case study of one child. Everybody had to work through the
case—understand
the child's strengths and needs, the curriculum goals, the environment,
and the tools, and then jointly work through the question of how
you match technology for the specific needs of a child with disabilities.
That was very successful. We also designed an online workshop around
the early childhood tour I spoke about, which served as a terrific
springboard for conversation.
One of the other big challenges is structuring the discussion
itself. As the discussion grows, some people report that they don't
have the time or energy to follow the conversation thread. They
are afraid they are going to say something that has been said four
messages back. We needed to find ways to capture the ideas and
create a semantic map—the kinds of things you might do with chart
paper at a workshop. So you have to think about group dynamics,
different ways people approach reading and writing, and information
processing.
GK: That's a critical point. We write weekly
summaries of the discussions. That kind of summary is incredibly
valuable—particularly
because you can link from the summary to the original messages.
But we've found that it's also very time-consuming, trying to distill
75 or 80 messages. It takes someone who really understands the
field and who can think very carefully.
DT: Can you predict who is going to be a good online facilitator?
Are there good face-to-face trainers who aren't good online?
GK: Absolutely. Online facilitation is very different from face-to-face
teaching because you don't have as many control points. I feel
that I have much more control to set a style of interaction and
the culture of a class in a face-to-face classroom than I do in
an online environment. When people go off-topic online, you may
not even notice for a day or two. And then you don't have the equivalent
of giving them a look or using humor to get the discussion back
on track. You don't have the sort of casual tools that are very
effective in a classroom setting.
To make up for that, some people tend to overfacilitate online—saying
too much too quickly. Often, saying less is more effective. Jamie
McKenzie, who is well known in the field of educational technology,
served as a guest facilitator for us, and he was great. He just
had a way of putting out provocative statements that got people
rolling. He came in with very clear, succinct questions and observations
that captured the essence of the issue and moved the discussion
along well.
JZ: We had one facilitator who felt responsible for sending a
message to everyone who posted a comment. That was interesting
because although it was a lot of work, she was able to establish
a personal bond with participants, and they in turn became more
invested in learning online. But this was an unusual situation.
It is more common for a facilitator to post some sort of general
statement to the whole group, followed up with selective, pointed
comments. It's also interesting to look at what the facilitators
reveal about themselves; what are they are willing to say about
themselves and their lives?
RS: There are levels, like the guy Glenn mentioned
who wrote about his dramatic life change and health issues. That
pushed the border,
but the class responded well. If the facilitator
had said something like that at the beginning of the discussion,
it might have been too revealing. It might have made people uncomfortable.
Subtle Differences
DT: In
some ways, it sounds like you are trying to replicate the power
of a face-to-face workshop. But you also have tools—like archives
and hyperlinked resources—that are over and
above what you could do face to face.
GK: I wouldn't say over and abovejust different.
For example, there is the tremendous energy you can get when you
are brainstorming
in a classroom—the way people build off one another's ideas. We
haven't found a way to replicate that online. On the other hand,
you often see more thoughtful, reflective contributions online.
People have listened to others more carefully because they have
been able to read and reread what others have contributed. They
don't have to do that dual tracking of listening to what others
are saying while thinking about what they want to say next.
JZ: Being known by what you put in writing is very different from
being known through speech. The persona that you present to the
world looks different; it may push you to be more reflective, or
it may inhibit you because you can't capture the ideas in writing
the way you would like to. It has to do with the literacy skills
you bring to the online discussion, and that is a critical dimension.
GK: There are many categories of people who,
for one reason or another, are not comfortable speaking up in class.
Sometimes you
find that students posting very thoughtful
pieces online won't even say much in class—such as ESL students
who may feel more confident with their written English than their
spoken English.
Professional Development Models
DT: It occurs to me that since this is a new medium, we
might have more power to model ways of interacting than we do in
more
traditional forms of professional development. Do online tools
provide new possibilities for professional development?
GK: Again, there are advantages and disadvantages
that come with the medium. For example, we've discovered that a
six-week online
workshop, as a rough guideline, can cover about the same content
as an intensive weekend workshop. But that gives it a very different
character. Because it is spread out over time, it can be more "job
embedded," to use the current jargon. We can, for example,
have teachers design a lesson with some of their colleagues, try
it out, and then report on what the students did—even sharing some
of their students' work.
RS: I think it is pretty universally agreed that the one-shot
model of professional development is not as good as continuous
professional development over the length of a career. Online environments
can be an important tool for encouraging people to take a long-term
approach to their own professional development.
JZ: When you talk about collaborative professional
development, the context and the goals of the project matter more
than the medium.
In our LINK*US project, we work within school districts,
so everything is job-embedded and aligned to the district's initiatives.
It's co-constructed with the district so that it meets the district's
specific needs and standards. That's very different from trying
to, say, build an online community made up of teachers around the
country. It's a different goal.
GK: You can also use an online adjunct to support the work you're
doing within a districtas we do in EdTech
Leaders Online.
Online and face-to-face professional development can support one
another; it's not an either/or situation.
RS: In Schools
Around the World (SAW), most of the change in practice
will come as a result of local teams working together to examine
student work across grade levels and to study their own expectations.
We're finding that even the process of preparing for a SAW course
sparks valuable offline conversations for local teams as they work
together to decide which cases to submit to the database and who
will participate in the international exchange. One reason that
all of us are working with school teams is that the research on
systemic change says that you have to build a critical mass within
a district in order to change the culture. You don't want to end
up with just a few isolated pockets of people invested in changing
their practice.
JZ: I'm currently involved in designing an online
component for a 12-week literacy seminar. We expect that this seminar
will be
used by study groups that are part of whole-school reform efforts,
such as ATLAS. We're trying to figure out how to use the Web to
connect these study groups across the country. What is the value
added to their face-to-face collaborative experience? We haven't
fully answered that question yet.
RS: Rightwe have to take a hard look at the value added
in online professional development overall. We have gone from being
pioneers in online courses to the point where almost every university
in the country is offering them. People are inundated with courses
from almost every professional organization and society and technical
systems provider. But what do these courses offer that you cannot
get from other places? We add value by creating databases and other
online resources, and by linking the course to face-to-face professional
development. Or we design the course in a way that allows the work
participants do to contribute to a teacher portfolio they are developing
for national board certification. All those kinds of things embed
the course in a larger piece of professional growth.
DT: Are you worried about the number of providers rushing
to do online professional development?
GK: I worry about the noise level. Too many organizations are
providing online courses of all sortssome of high quality,
but others with little understanding of what's involved in effective
online professional development, and minimal quality control. As
the field develops, we just focus on doing our work well, while
also conducting careful research and working toward articulating
principles and guidelines that can help others in the field.
RS: To toot our own horn a bit, I think EDC's
strength is that our approach is never about the technology alone.
It is always
about adding value. So, we've gone beyond the point of simply offering
a course; we're now focused on creating an environment. In SAW,
for example, the database of student work is, in itself, incredibly
valuable. But now we are creating Web tours in which an educational
expert like Grant Wiggins comes in and comments on the student
work along with the teachers. That will give people who are not
yet ready to take the course a feeling for the power of looking
at student work. The end goal is not necessarily to
have people take a lot of online courses. In SAW, the goal is to
get teachers from around the country to study student work as a
basic professional activity.
Impact
DT: How do you measure the impact of online environments
on classroom practice?
GK: While our focus up to this point has been on developing and
refining the models, we do distribute fairly extensive surveys
to every participant in our workshops, which provide very useful
feedback. We ask specifically about each component of the course,
each type of activity, and we use that to refine the workshops.
Like Judy's group, we've spent a lot of time hashing through examples,
dealing with design issues, getting the kind of feedback we need.
By running a large collection of courses, we have a body of what
I think of as "naturally occurring phenomena." Now we're
ready to move forward with more formal research projects and will
be looking for funding to add a larger research component.
JZ: In the early days of NCIP, we used Nancy Brigham's tracer
design methodology to see if our target audience of change agents
was passing the information on to others. Did they download material,
share the resources with others, and find ways to use the resources
in workshops or training sessions? The goal is to see why and how
your materials found their way to teachers in classrooms. That
kind of evaluation helped us measure the impact NCIP was having
in the classroom.
RS: For the Passport to Knowledge evaluation, we developed a system
of message analysis for online discussions. We examined how the
discussion changed over time by coding each message throughout
the discussion. Who is the author? What is the content of the message?
Is the participant responding to the facilitator or to another
participant? In the early weeks of a discussion, a lot of postings
may have simply been requests for technical assistance. In the
later stages, there were more messages about the student work or
the course content.
The point is that all of these research strategies attend to the
context of the discussion. That's a principle that cuts across
a lot of EDC's work: Context is everything. So we're not going
to research the effectiveness of online professional development
by using a pure experimental designwhere you control all
the variables to isolate a comparison between online and face-to-face
professional development. That is almost a worthless endeavor because
it's so artificial. Rather than viewing these technologies as new
variables to test in isolation, a more sophisticated approach is
to ask, how do they contribute to the field and change the culture?
The value of an approach should be measured by how well it can
be replicated to meet the real needs of a wide variety of people.
That's what Glenn and Judy are doing: replicating effective approaches
with many different people. As you do that, you start to learn
more than you would by waiting to do very controlled studies.
For questions or comments, contact mosaic@edc.org.
Copyright 2000-2003
Education Development Center, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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