I was at a conference this week for schools from the East Midlands and we had a table discussion about cluster-based CPD. I was commenting that there is lots of evidence about the principles of good collaborative CPD that could form a foundation for structuring cluster-based CPD and there was lots of interest in this. In a nutshell key factors in successful collaborative CPD are:
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- the use of external expertise linked to school-based activity
- observation
- reflection and experimentation
- an emphasis on peer support
- scope for teacher participants to identify their own CPD focus
- processes to encourage, extend and structure professional dialogue
- processes for sustaining the CPD over time to enable teachers to embed the practices in their own classroom settings
- recognition of individual teachers’ starting points.
And there's more! The impact of specialists in CPD
Previous reviews have looked at the impacts of sustained, collaborative CPD in primary and secondary schools on teachers and students. The aim of this fourth review is to identify the common characteristics in specialist provided sustained collaborative CPD that reports positive impacts. This will help to identify factors which are important to the design of specialist led collaborative CPD.
What do specialists do in continuing professional development (CPD) programmes for which there is evidence of positive outcomes for pupils and teachers? (2007)
Did you see more about collaborative CPD on the recent enews?
So does collaborative CPD get results?