Great professional development which leads to great pedagogy

Contributed by:
Sharp Tutor
Looking at the question ‘What makes great professional development which leads to consistently great pedagogy?’ the word ‘great’ needs explanation. For professional development, the word ‘great’ indicates that powerful learning experiences must have an impact. The following definition of professional development by Sara Bubb and Peter Earley strongly reinforces the importance of making a difference to pupil outcomes by improving pedagogy and teachers’ learning
1. Inspiring leaders to
improve children’s lives
Schools and academies
Great professional development which
leads to great pedagogy: nine claims from
Louise Stoll, Alma Harris and Graham Handscomb
Resource
Research and development network national themes:
theme two
Autumn 2012
2. Great professional development which leads
to great pedagogy: nine claims from research
It seems obvious to state that great professional development is fundamental to great pedagogy, but what
are the characteristics of great professional development? A recent international review concludes that
teachers must become ‘active agents of their own professional growth’ (Schleicher, 2012:73). What is needed
for this to become a reality? Teaching schools demonstrate excellence in and commitment to professional
development. With alliance partners, they have a mission to develop and enhance this across their schools.
Working together, teaching school alliances have great potential to secure improvement gains across the
system, through clusters of institutions sharing resources, to meet a range of staff needs, distributing
innovation and transferring professional knowledge (Hargreaves, 2011). How can research on professional
development help with this endeavour and support all schools’ and school partnerships’ improvement
efforts? This research review offers nine claims about great professional development that leads to great
What’s in a word?
Looking at the question ‘What makes great professional development which leads to consistently great
pedagogy?’ the word ‘great’ needs explanation. For professional development, the word ‘great’ indicates that
powerful learning experiences must have an impact. The following definition of professional development by
Sara Bubb and Peter Earley strongly reinforces the importance of making a difference to pupil outcomes by
improving pedagogy and teachers’ learning:
an ongoing process encompassing all formal and informal learning experiences that enable
all staff in schools, individually and with others, to think about what they are doing,
enhance their knowledge and skills and improve ways of working so that pupil learning and
wellbeing are enhanced as a result... creating opportunities for adult learning, ultimately for
the purpose of enhancing the quality of education in the classroom.
Bubb & Earley, 2007:4
These authors and others (Opfer & Pedder, 2011; Timperley et al, 2008; Garet et al, 2001) emphasise that
great professional learning and development consistently makes a difference to the learning of both pupils
and teachers:
Effective continuing professional development is likely to consist of that which first and
foremost enhances pupil outcomes, but which also helps to bring about changes in practice
and improves teaching.
Bubb & Earley, 2007:4
Our review broadly takes this line. It’s important to note that while there should be strong links between
professional development experiences and pupil outcomes, the research doesn’t always track exactly
how professional development improved pedagogy or what it was about the changed pedagogy that
resulted in positive pupil outcomes. This provides teaching school alliances, and any other schools or school
partnerships, with exciting opportunities to think about evaluating impact in planning projects.
The word ‘consistently’ also needs some explanation. This means that pedagogy consistently focuses on
those aspects that make a difference, and that pedagogy has to be great all the time, across the school
(addressing in-school variation) and, in the case of alliances, across alliance schools. That’s the big challenge.
For our purposes, effective professional development is the process of professional learning which results in
great pedagogy within and across schools. This process, which includes putting in place supporting conditions
for professional learning, leads to improved pupil learning, achievement and wellbeing.
2 © National College for School Leadership
3. The need to consider both great and consistently effective professional learning is at the core of this
literature review which is an indicative summary of what is known and can be claimed, based on the
evidence, rather than a comprehensive research review. We have largely identified research or syntheses of
research to provide evidence of the impact of professional learning and development on pupil and teacher
learning, and which in turn directly support school improvement.
At times, we use the term ‘professional learning’ synonymously with ‘professional development’ as,
increasingly, teachers and other professionals are interested in their learning and it has been argued that
professional learning better reflects the kinds of experiences that are effective (Timperley et al, 2008). As
Lois Brown Easton argues:
It is clearer today than ever that educators need to learn, and that’s why ‘professional
learning’ has replaced ‘professional development’. Developing is not enough. Educators must
be knowledgeable and wise. They must know enough in order to change. They must change
in order to get different results. They must become learners.
Easton, 2008:756
John Hattie, based on his synthesis of more than 800 meta-analyses of factors and interventions related to
pupil achievement, also concludes that:
The more the student becomes the teacher and the more the teacher becomes the learner,
then the more successful are the outcomes.
Hattie, 2009:25
Our review of the literature, based on these considerations, has led to nine claims from the research.
Although these are articulated separately, in reality they are frequently connected.
1. Effective professional development starts with the end in mind.
2. Effective professional development challenges thinking as part of changing practice.
3. Effective professional development is based on the assessment of individual and school needs.
4. Effective professional development involves connecting work-based learning and external expertise.
5. Effective professional learning opportunities are varied, rich and sustainable.
6. Effective professional development uses action research and enquiry as key tools.
7. Effective professional development is strongly enhanced through collaborative learning and joint practice
development.
8. Effective professional development is enhanced by creating professional learning communities within
and between schools.
9. Effective professional development requires leadership to create the necessary conditions.
3 © National College for School Leadership
4. 1. Effective professional development starts with the end in mind
If professional development is to make a difference to pupils’ learning outcomes, it has to start with an
analysis of their needs. Pupils’ learning needs should directly influence what teachers need to learn. Detailed
analysis of pupil data that leads to the identification of potential areas for further development in teachers’
knowledge, skills and understanding drives many examples of effective professional development (Harris &
Jones, 2010; Ofsted, 2006; Butler et al, 2004; Fishman et al, 2003).
Evaluating impact has to be planned at the outset, and the data to support judgements of impact needs to
be identified (Earley & Porritt, 2009; Guskey, 2000). Clear baseline evidence prior to the professional learning
experience helps gauge accurately the impact of the intervention, innovation or learning opportunity and
supports the evaluation of progress. Impact on staff is the difference in behaviours, attitudes, skills and
practice that occurs as a result of the professional development. This difference is found in:
—— practice for example changes in subject or process knowledge and classroom practice
—— personal capacity including learning or improving skills, increased self-confidence, greater motivation,
improved reflection on practice and greater ability to take part in or lead change initiatives
—— interpersonal capacity for example working more effectively with colleagues, increased confidence
about sharing great practice and greater ability to question alternative viewpoints (Earley & Porritt, 2009;
Frost & Durrant, 2003)
Starting with the end in mind (Earl et al, 2006 based on Covey, 1989) involves tracking actions through to
outcomes. Chris Argyris and Donald Schön (1978) introduced the idea of a theory of action, a set of logically
connected statements that connect people’s actions with their consequences for quality and performance.
Theories of action describe the set of assumptions that explain the mini-steps that lead to the long-term goal
and connections between activities and outcomes that occur at each step of the way. They provide storylines
and maps of how change is intended to happen, which can be revised as intentions are checked against
what happens in reality (City et al, 2010).
2. Effective professional development challenges thinking as a
fundamental part of changing practice
The result of professional learning is visible in changes in practice and also ‘in one’s thinking about the
how and why of that practice’ (Kelchtermans, 2004:220). Developing great pedagogy is more than doing
something differently. It involves digging deep and understanding why one strategy is more effective than
another at a particular time. Powerful professional learning challenges and interrupts assumptions (Timperley
et al, 2008; Argyris & Schön, 1978), and encourages teachers to develop their own theory from their practice.
Teachers are challenged by professional learning experiences that stretch them ‘to do more than they think
possible’ (Barber, Whelan & Clark, 2010:20) and benefit from being aware of and understanding their own
learning processes (ie, metalearning: see Watkins, 2000) exploring what motivates and influences their
learning, what hinders it and what it feels like as they are learning. This helps them better understand pupil
Skilled and informed exchange about teaching is critical to developing teaching expertise. Deep and enduring
conversations stimulate reflection and inform action. In focused learning conversations, educators make
meaning together, and jointly come up with new insights and knowledge that lead to intentional change to
enhance their practice and pupils’ learning. Exploring new ideas and evidence, participants bring different
perspectives and challenge each other respectfully. They are open to being honest, and push themselves to
reflect deeply in ways that challenge their thinking (Stoll, 2012; Earl & Timperley, 2008; Little & Horn, 2007).
Coaching stimulates powerful conversations and provides a structured learning process focused on particular
aspects of practice. Within a coaching culture that fosters trusting, respectful relationships, narrative and
evaluative feedback challenges thinking and improves teachers’ practice and student learning (Robertson,
4 © National College for School Leadership
5. 3. Effective professional development is based on the assessment of
individual and school needs
Individual and collective professional learning needs both have an explicit focus in studies of effective
professional development (Ofsted, 2006). Individual needs relate both to the content of professional
development, and also to teachers’ personal concerns. Personal drivers such as life history, personal
circumstances and professional life phase can affect teachers’ needs at any particular time (Day et al, 2007;
Grundy & Robinson, 2004), as well as learning needs, performance management and professional standards.
When professional development is effective, it allows for a range of starting points and differentiates
appropriately between diverse professional learning requirements (Loucks-Horsley & Matsumoto, 1999). It
involves teachers in shaping their learning agenda and influencing the means by which this will be taken
forward. Such development needs must also be matched to the best sources of support (Ofsted, 2006).
Understanding specific needs helps promote ownership of professional learning which is essential for
positive impact (Timperley et al, 2008).
To create consistently great pedagogy and widespread impact, team needs also have to be considered
(Bubb, Earley & Hempel-Jorgensen, 2009). Professional development tends to be more effective when it
is an integral part of a larger school improvement effort, rather than isolated activities that have little to
do with other school initiatives or changes (Darling-Hammond et al, 2009). This is best set within a culture
of professional learning where there is no tension between the respective needs of the individual, team
and institution. Rather, there is a learning environment in which individual development contributes to
the whole, and collaborative experiences and opportunities help to empower and provide meaningful and
strategic context to the work of the individual.
4. Effective professional development involves connecting
work-based learning and external expertise
The workplace is a critical site for experiential learning as a continuous process that is grounded in
experience (Kolb, 1984) and which fosters development through work activities and tasks. The key point
is learning from action in real situations, with concrete, hands-on experience and, often, the feedback
of a mentor. Teachers value professional learning approaches that enable them to experiment with their
classroom practice and adapt it in the light of reflection and feedback from pupils and colleagues (Opfer,
Pedder & Lavicza, 2008).
Successful professional development alliances draw together three principles: collaboration between schools;
collaboration across time; and collaboration with external partners (Husbands, 2011). The challenge brought
by external partners is an important ingredient. Many agree that good professional learning involves learning
in context, ie, classroom and school settings (Buck & Francis, 2011). High-quality professional development
comprises a thoughtful mix of school-based and facilitated development experiences with key contributions
from external expertise (Timperley et al, 2008; Cordingley et al, 2007). Although school focused, school
based and school led, it also needs to draw in and use external expertise where appropriate. External
expertise may be offered in person, but it can also come through reading and online learning that helps
teachers to connect theory and practice. External expertise provides the kind of critical friendship that offers
challenge and support and stimulates new thinking. The provision of such external expertise and critique
is also an important factor in helping schools and practitioners become research engaged, particularly in
providing support on research techniques of analysis, evaluation and reporting (Sharp et al, 2005; GTC, CUREE
& LSIS, 2011).
5 © National College for School Leadership
6. 5. Effective professional learning opportunities are varied, rich and
Effective professional learning recognises, endorses and actively models the best ways that adults learn.
What learners already know influences their learning, and they acquire new knowledge by constructing
it. Constructing knowledge is experiential – it is a process of change that includes addition, creation,
modification, refinement, restructuring and rejection (Brandsford et al, 1999). Teachers need many
opportunities to learn through a range of activities, which can be tailored to particular preferences, needs
and contexts. Learning happens through diverse experiences. Not surprisingly, researchers conclude that
time needs to be well spent (Bubb & Earley, 2010; Wei et al, 2010; Bubb, Earley & Hempel-Jorgensen,, 2009)
and this means the kind of professional learning experiences outlined in this review. Teachers around the
world say they need more professional learning focused on teaching and learning and subject disciplines
(Schleicher, 2011). Strong effects of professional development on practice are also found where it’s focused
on how to teach specific kinds of content to learners, how to use specific pedagogical skills, and on analysis
of pupil learning, including their conceptual understanding and skills (Desimone, 2009; Cohen & Hill, 2001).
The quality of teachers’ professional development is related to sustained opportunities to
apply learning gained to their practice over an extended period of time. It’s not about one-
off, brief or sporadic experiences, but rather about learning that is sustained, intensive
and in-depth. In a 2008 state-of-the-nation research project on schools and continuing
professional development, teachers reported that professional development that was
sustained and intensive had a greater effect on changing their practice (Opfer et al, 2008).
Even when teachers share experiences of professional development, activities need to
be sustained, continuous or embedded over time to have impact beyond individuals. If
activities lack a coherent focus, there is little sustained impact on practice (Bubb & Earley,
2009).
6. Effective professional development uses action research and
enquiry as key tools
Engaging with and using research helps to improve practice (GTC, CUREE & LSIS, 2011; Sharp & Handscomb,
2007; Hemsley-Brown & Sharp, 2003). Action research has a long history in England and many advocates,
with more recent encouragement for and examples of whole-school research engagement (Sharp et al,
2005; Handscomb & MacBeath, 2003). Research engagement across a school involves staff undertaking
individual and joint research activity to investigate key issues in teaching and learning, accessing research
findings from external sources and taking these into account in their work. Using enquiry for professional
development involves turning data and experience into knowledge, using evidence for decision-making,
participating in others’ research and promoting communities of enquiry (Wilkins, 2011; Sharp et al, 2006).
A best-evidence synthesis on professional learning and development identified how cycles of enquiry and
knowledge-building can improve pupils’ engagement, learning and wellbeing (Timperley et al, 2008).
Helen Timperley (2011:10) argues: ‘When teachers have a deep understanding of the profiles of their
students, they then move to inquire about what knowledge and skills they need if they are to be more
effective in addressing the needs of individuals and groups of students’. Developing structured, collaborative
partnerships between schools and with researchers helps increase teachers’ involvement in and use of
research (Rickinson, Sebba & Edwards, 2011). Commitment to research engagement is an important feature
of professional learning because it fosters a proper regard for evidence which can be used to change practice
and improve pupil outcomes. It also establishes research communities within and beyond the school that
sustain professional learning over time.
6 © National College for School Leadership
7. 7. Effective professional development is strongly enhanced through
collaborative learning and joint practice development
Learning effectively with and from other professionals is reinforced in the literature as a powerful component
of effective professional learning. Purposeful collaboration between peers is also a feature of how the
world’s greatest school systems improved from already being great to becoming excellent (Mourshed,
Chijioki & Barber, 2010). Teachers value learning with other teachers (Day et al, 2007), and many teachers
involved in focused collaborative professional development subsequently change or substantially develop
aspects of their teaching which improves their pupils’ learning. Other outcomes for teachers found in
syntheses of studies on collaborative professional development are greater self-confidence and belief
in their ability to make a difference to pupils’ learning, more enthusiasm for collaborative working and
being observed and receiving feedback, and greater commitment to changing their practice and trying
new strategies (Cordingley et al, 2003). When compared with the impact of collaborative professional
development, studies of individually oriented professional development offer only weak evidence of its
capacity to influence teacher or pupil change (Cordingley et al, 2005). No one form of collaborative learning
outshines others in all studies, but focused peer observation with feedback features in a number (Cordingley
et al, 2005). Powerful modes of collaborative learning include lesson study, learning walks, instructional
rounds, and coaching and mentoring.
Teachers working in partnership with teachers from other schools have increased opportunities for learning
with and from each other. In many ways, this joint practice development, as Michael Fielding and his
colleagues called it (Fielding et al, 2005), is another term for collaborative learning. At its heart this involves
mutual engagement where colleagues open up, share and co-construct ways of developing practice.
Notably, collaborative learning is most likely to be effective where attention is paid to developing trust,
building on existing relationships and networks, recognising respective roles and contributions, ensuring
knowledge meets local needs and addressing competing priorities (Sebba, Kent & Tregenza, 2012). Learning
about networks and how to network both involve understanding these ideas and learning to participate
(McCormick et al, 2007).
8. Effective professional development is enhanced by creating
professional learning communities within and between schools
Successful professional learning and development is consistently associated with professional learning
communities (Schleicher, 2012). This is because professional learning communities can make a real
difference to teachers’ practice and pupil outcomes. Where they are properly constructed and have a
persistent focus on improving learning outcomes, they help teachers to develop and to integrate new
learning into their existing practice (Harris & Jones, 2011; Vescio, Ross & Adams, 2008; Wiliam, 2007/8; Hord,
Offering teachers the opportunity to participate and collaborate in professional learning communities is
essential to high-quality professional development (Borko, Jacobs & Koellner, 2010; Little, 2006). Distributed
leadership provides the infrastructure that holds professional learning communities together and makes
them effective. The collective and interdependent work of educators at multiple levels, who are driving
forward the innovative work, creates and sustains successful professional learning communities (Harris &
Jones, 2011). Developing and maintaining collaborative professional learning communities ensures that
professional development is located within sustainable learning cultures and environments (Saunders,
Goldenberg & Gallimore, 2009; Stoll et al, 2006). Professional learning communities can exist within and
between schools. Such communities have a clear and shared understanding of effective teaching and
learning that enhances learning for all pupils in their school or schools. The norm across the community is
for colleagues to support each other in interrogating their practice critically, and there is a sense of collective
responsibility for all colleagues’ professional learning. Professional learning communities also foster change
in practice by creating an environment that supports innovation and experimentation (Bryk, Camburn &
Louis, 1999).
7 © National College for School Leadership
8. 9. Effective professional development requires leadership to create
the necessary conditions
Leadership strongly influences the kinds of settings where all or most teachers see their learning as
cumulative and developmental and where teachers believe that you never stop learning to teach. Leaders
create the conditions where pedagogy is either great or not, and leaders at all levels have a critical role
in ensuring professional development is great. They make a profound difference to pupil outcomes by
promoting and participating in teachers’ development (Robinson, 2011). Effective approaches to professional
development are underpinned by senior leaders who recognise the potential of professional development
for enhancing pupil outcomes, give it a central role in school improvement planning and reflect it in their
policies (Coldwell et al, 2008). Where professional development is effective, leaders integrate professional
development with performance management and school self-review (Ofsted, 2006). They also make an
important difference by establishing a culture of evidence-based enquiry, and nurturing trusting and mutually
respectful relationships (Kaser & Halbert, 2009; Bryk & Schneider, 2002). Effective professional learning takes
place in contexts that support teachers’ positive sense of themselves as teachers, which is critical to their
commitment to ongoing improvement (Day et al, 2007).
Acquiring and continuing to use knowledge and skills depend on organisational arrangements that support
ongoing learning and the application of new learning. Where schools are strategic in creating time and
productive working relationships, the benefits include greater consistency in teaching and learning, greater
willingness to share practices and try new approaches, and more success in solving classroom problems
(Darling-Hammond et al, 2008).
Effective leaders focus on pedagogy. Effective professional learning promotes the development of leadership
capacity at all levels, enriching both formal and informal leadership of great pedagogy (Harris, 2011; Spillane,
2006). Excellent teachers recorded especially high levels of collaborative and research-based professional
development and valued these activities (Opfer et al, 2008).
Concluding comments
The core purpose of professional learning is the improvement of pupil achievement and outcomes. This
tenet has gained increasing support from a range of research and commentary in recent years. It builds on
the long-standing evidence that continuing professional development is best located within schools where
it can be linked and applied to classroom practice. So effective professional learning is school focused,
school based and school led, whilst also drawing in external expertise where appropriate. Great professional
development incorporates into this mix professional learning experiences that are sustained and intensive,
rather than brief and sporadic, and that are undertaken collaboratively. We hope this review will help deepen
efforts to stimulate and explore great professional development which leads to consistently great pedagogy.
8 © National College for School Leadership
9. Argyris, C & Schön, D, 1978, Organizational Learning: A Theory of Action Perspective, Reading, Mass, Addison-
Argyris, C & Schön, D, 1974, Theory in Practice: Increasing Professional Effectiveness, San Francisco, Jossey-
Barber, M, Whelan, F & Clark, M, 2010, Capturing the Leadership Premium: How the World’s Best School
Systems are Building Leadership Capacity for the Future, London, McKinsey & Co
Bolam, R & Weindling, D, 2006, Synthesis of Research and Evaluation Projects Concerned with Capacity-
building through Teachers’ Professional Development, London, General Teaching Council for England
Borko, H, Jacobs, J & Koellner, K, 2010, Contemporary approaches to teacher professional development. In PL
Peterson, E Baker & McGaw (eds), Third International Encyclopedia of Education, 7, 548–56
Brandsford, JD, Brown, AL & Cocking, RR, 1999, How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience and School,
Washington, DC, National Academy Press
Bryk, A, Camburn, E & Louis, KS, 1999, Professional community in Chicago elementary schools: facilitating
factors and organizational consequences, Educational Administration Quarterly, 35 (supplement), 751–81
Bryk, AS & Schneider, B, 2002, Trust in Schools: A Core Resource for Improvement, New York, Russell Sage
Bubb, S & Earley, P, 2010, Helping Staff Develop in Schools, London, Sage
Bubb, S & Earley, P, 2009, What do we know about school workforce development? A summary of findings
from recent TDA-funded research projects, London, Institute of Education
Bubb, S & Earley, P, 2007, Leading and Managing Continuing Professional Development (2nd ed), London,
Paul Chapman
Bubb, S, Earley, P & Hempel-Jorgensen, A, 2009, Staff Development Outcomes Study, London, Institute of
Buck, A & Francis, L, 2011, Teaching Schools: time for schools to take the lead, Professional Development
Today, 14(2), 64-68
Butler, DL, Lauscher, HN, Jarvis-Selinger, S & Beckingham, B, 2004, Collaboration and self-regulation in
teachers’ professional development, Teaching and Teacher Education, 20(5), 435–55
City, EA, Elmore, RF, Fiarman, SE & Teitel, L, 2010, Instructional Rounds in Education, Cambridge, Mass,
Harvard Education Press
Cohen, DK & Hill, HC, 2001, Learning Policy, New Haven, CT, Yale University Press
Coldwell, M, Simkins, T, Coldron, J & Smith, R, 2008, Development of the Whole School Workforce: An
Evaluation of the Testbed Programme, Sheffield, Centre for Education and Inclusion Research
Cordingley, P, Bell, M, Isham, C, Evans, D & Firth, A, 2007. What do specialists do in CPD programmes for
which there is evidence of positive outcomes for pupils and teachers? In: Research Evidence in Education
Library, London, EPPI-Centre, Social Science Research Unit, Institute of Education
Cordingley, P, Bell, M, Rundell, B & Evans, D, 2003, The impact of collaborative CPD on classroom teaching
and learning. In: Research Evidence in Education Library, London, EPPI-Centre, Social Science Research Unit,
Institute of Education
Covey, SR, 1989, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, NY, Free Press.
Darling-Hammond, L, Wei, RC, Andree, A, Richardson, N & Orphanos, S, 2009, Professional Learning in the
9 © National College for School Leadership
10. Learning Profession: A Status Report on Teacher Development in the US and Abroad, Dallas, TX, National Staff
Development Council
Day, C, Sammons, P, Stobart, G, Kington, A & Gu, Q, 2007, Teachers Matter: Connecting Lives, Work and
Effectiveness, Maidenhead, Open University Press
Desimone, L, 2009, Improving impact studies of teachers’ professional development: toward better
conceptualizations and measures, Educational Researcher, 38(3), 181–99
Earl, L, Katz, S, Elgie, S, Jaafar, SB & Foster, L, 2006, How networked learning communities worked,
Nottingham, National College for School Leadership
Earley, P & Porritt, V, 2009, Effective Practices in Continuing Professional Development: Lesson from Schools,
London, Institute of Education
Earl, LM & Timperley, H, 2008, Understanding how evidence and learning conversations work. In LM Earl
& H Timperley (eds), Professional Learning Conversations: Challenges in Using Evidence for Improvement,
Dordrecht, Springer
Easton, LB, 2008, From professional development to professional learning, Phi Delta Kappan, 89(10), 755–59
Fielding, M, Bragg, S, Craig, J, Cunningham, I, Eraut, M, Gillinson, S, Horne, M, Robinson, C & Thorp, J, 2005,
Factors Influencing the Transfer of Good Practice, DfES Research Report RR615, Falmer, University of Sussex
Fishman, BJ, Marx, RW, Best, S & Tal, RJ, 2003, Linking teacher and student learning to improve professional
development in systemic reform, Teaching and Teacher Education, 19, 643–58
Frost, D & Durrant, J, 2003, Teacher-led Development Work, London, David Fulton
Garet, MS, Porter, AC, Desimone, L, Birman, B & Yoon, KS, 2001, What makes professional development
effective? Results from a national sample of teachers, American Educational Research Journal, 38(4), 915–45
Grundy, S & Robinson, J, 2004, Teacher professional development: themes and trends in the recent Australian
experience. In C Day & J Sachs (eds), International Handbook on the Continuing Professional Development of
Teachers, Maidenhead, Open University Press
GTC, CUREE & LSIS, 2011, Report of Professional Practitioner Use of Research Review: Practitioner Engagement
in and/or with Research, London, General Teaching Council for England
Guskey, T, 2000, Evaluating Professional Development, Thousand Oaks, CA, Corwin Press
Handscomb, G & MacBeath, J, 2003, The research-engaged school, Chelmsford, Essex County Council Forum
for Learning and Research Enquiry
Hargreaves, DH, 2011, Leading a self-improving school system, Nottingham, National College for School
Harris, A, 2011, Distributed leadership: current evidence and future directions, Journal of Management
Development, 30(10), 20–32
Harris, A & Jones, M, 2011, Professional Learning Communities in Action, London, Leannta Publishing
Harris, A & Jones, M, 2010, Professional learning communities and system improvement, Improving Schools,
13(2), 173–82
Hattie, J, 2009, Visible Learning: A synthesis of over 800 meta-analyses relating to achievement, London,
Hemsley-Brown, J & Sharp, C, 2003, The use of research to improve professional practice: a systematic review
of the literature, Oxford Review of Education, 29(4), 449–70
Hord, SM, 1997, Professional Learning Communities: Communities of Continuous Inquiry and Improvement,
Austin, TX, Southwest Educational Development Laboratory
10 © National College for School Leadership
11. Husbands, C, 2011, Towards a framework for professional learning, Professional Development Today, 14(2),
Kaser, L & Halbert, J, 2009, Leadership Mindsets, London, Routledge
Kelchtermans, G, 2004, CPD for professional renewal: moving beyond knowledge for practice. In C Day & J
Sachs (eds), International Handbook on the Continuing Professional Development of Teachers, Maidenhead,
Open University Press pp217-237
Kolb, DA, 1984, Experiential Learning: Experience as the Source of Learning and Development, Upper Saddle
River, NJ, Prentice Hall
Little, JW, 2006, Professional Community and Professional Development in the Learning-centered School,
Arlington, VA, National Education Association
Little, W & Horn, IS, 2007, ‘Normalizing’ problems of practice: converting routine conversation into a resource
for learning in professional communities. In L Stoll & KS Louis (eds), Professional Learning Communities:
Divergence, Detail and Difficulties, Maidenhead, Open University Press pp79-92
Loucks-Horsley, S & Matsumoto, C, 1999, Research on professional development for teachers of mathematics
and science: the state of the scene, School Science and Mathematics, 99(5), 258–71
McCormick, R, Fox, A, Carmichael, P & Procter, R, 2007, Learning through networking. In M James, R
McCormick, P Black, P Carmichael, M-J Drummond, A Fox, D Frost, J MacBeath, B Marshall, D Pedder, R
Procter, S Swaffield & D Wiliam, 2007, Improving learning how to learn: classrooms, schools and networks,
London, Routledge
Mourshed, M, Chijioki, C & Barber, M, 2010, How the World’s Most Improved School Systems Keep Getting
Better, London, McKinsey & Co
Ofsted, 2006, The Logical Chain: continuing professional development in effective schools, HMI 2639, Ofsted,
Opfer, VD & Pedder, D, 2011, The lost promise of teacher professional development in England, European
Journal of Teacher Education, 34(1), 3–24
Opfer, VD, Pedder, D & Lavicza, Z, 2008, Schools and Continuing Professional Development (CPD) in England:
State of the Nation research project (T34718), London, Training and Development Agency for Schools
Rickinson, M, Sebba, J & Edwards, A, 2011, Improving Research Through User Engagement, London,
Robertson, J, 2009, The 3Rs for coaching learning relationships, Professional Development Today, 11(2), 6–11
Robinson, V, 2011, Student-centered Leadership, San Francisco, Jossey-Bass
Saunders, W, Goldenberg, C & Gallimore, R, 2009, Increasing student achievement by focusing grade level
teams on improving classroom learning: a prospective quasi-experimental study of Title 1 schools, American
Educational Research Journal 46(4) pp1006-1033
Schleicher, A (ed), 2012, Preparing teachers and developing leaders for the 21st century: Lessons from
around the world, Paris, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Schleicher, A, 2011, Building a high-quality teaching profession: lessons from around the world, Paris,
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Sebba, J, Kent, P & Tregenza, J, 2012, Powerful professional learning: a school leader’s guide to joint practice
development, Nottingham, National College for School Leadership and University of Sussex
Sharp, C, Eames, A, Sanders, D & Tomlinson, K, 2006, Leading a research-engaged school, Nottingham,
National College for School Leadership
Sharp, C, Eames, A, Sanders, D & Tomlinson, K, 2005, Postcards from Research Engaged Schools, Slough,
National Foundation for Educational Research
11 © National College for School Leadership
12. Sharp, C & Handscomb, G, 2007, Making Research Make a Difference: Teacher Research: A small-scale study
to look at impact, Slough, National Foundation for Educational Research, Department for Education and Skills
and Essex County Council
Spillane, J, 2006, Distributed Leadership, San Francisco, Jossey-Bass
Stoll, L, 2012 (in press), Stimulating learning conversations, Professional Development Today, 15(1)
Stoll, L, Bolam, R, McMahon, A, Wallace, M & Thomas, S, 2006, Professional learning communities: a review
of the literature, Journal of Educational Change, 7(4), 221–58
Timperley, H, 2011, Realising the Power of Professional Learning, Maidenhead, Open University Press
Timperley, H, Wilson, A, Barr, H & Fung, I, 2008, Teacher Professional Learning and Development: Best
Evidence Synthesis Iteration, Wellington, NZ, Ministry of Education and University of Auckland
Watkins, C, Carnell, E, Lodge, C, Whalley, C & Wagner, P, 2000, Learning about Learning, London,
Wei, RC, Darling-Hammond, L & Adamson, F, 2010, Professional development in the United States: trends and
challenges, Dallas, TX, National Staff Development Council
Vescio, V, Ross, D & Adams, A, 2008, A review of research on the impact of professional learning communities
on teaching practice and student learning, Teaching and Teacher Education, 24(1), 80–91
Wiliam, D, 2007/8, Changing classroom practice, Educational Leadership, 65(4), 36–42
Wilkins, R, 2011, Research Engagement for School Development, London, Institute of Education
With thanks to other members of the research team and Peter Earley for their helpful feedback and
12 © National College for School Leadership
13. The National College exists to develop ©2012 National College for School Leadership –
and support great leaders of schools All rights reserved. No part of this document may
be reproduced without prior permission from the
and children’s centres – whatever their National College. To reuse this material, please contact
context or phase. the Membership Team at the National College or
email [email protected].
• Enabling leaders to work together
to lead improvement
• Helping to identify and develop
the next generation of leaders
• Improving the quality of leadership
so that every child has the best
opportunity to succeed
Membership of the National College
gives access to unrivalled development
and networking opportunities, professional
support and leadership resources.
Triumph Road
Nottingham NG8 1DH
T 0845 609 0009
F 0115 872 2001
PB1069/theme-two
E [email protected] We care about the environment
www.education.gov.uk/nationalcollege We are always looking for ways to minimise
our environmental impact. We only print where
necessary, which is why you will find most
An executive agency of the of our materials online. When we do print
Department for Education we use environmentally friendly paper.