Understanding teachers’ professional learning goals from their current professional concerns

Monika L. Louws*, Jacobiene A. Meirink, Klaas van Veen, Jan H. van Driel

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

In the day-to-day workplace teachers direct their own learning, but little is known about what drives their decisions about what they would like to learn. These decisions are assumed to be influenced by teachers’ current professional concerns. Also, teachers in different professional life phases have different reasons for engaging in professional learning. In this study, we explored the professional concerns underlying teachers’ learning goals in order to understand variation in professional learning over a teacher’s career. In this qualitative study, we administered a semi-structured interview and a card sorting task to 15 secondary school teachers to elicit teachers’ learning goals and current professional concerns. By conceptually combining teachers’ learning goals with professional concerns in concern-goal pairs, we sought to understand the different reasons for teachers’ learning. These concern-goal pairs were characterized in three different types of reasons: continuous, growth and improvement, and work-management. The results showed that early career teachers have mainly growth and improvement concerns, whereas mid- and late-career teachers have both continuous and growth and improvement concerns. Work-management concerns differ for early- and late-career teachers. Results are further discussed in terms of professional life phase models and teachers’ developmental tasks throughout their career.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)63-80
Number of pages18
JournalTeachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice
Volume24
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2018

Keywords

  • continuous professional development
  • learning goals
  • professional concerns
  • professional life phases
  • Teacher learning

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