Resource teacher
Fairfax County Public Schools
Falls Church, Virginia
I鈥檓 passionate about teacher research. And here鈥檚 why: Five years ago, when my students and I were unhappy with a writing-instruction method I鈥檇 been using, teacher research helped me uncover what was not working, as well as discover and implement what was. Since then, as a K-1 teacher, I鈥檝e routinely used TR to help me 鈥渟ee what I would otherwise not see,鈥 as a colleague once put it.
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Teacher research is a voluntary but systematic means of gathering data, observing, and surveying students for results that can be used to improve your own鈥攁nd your colleagues鈥欌攖eaching. In other words, you鈥檙e not dependent upon an 鈥渆xpert鈥 outsider for research; you do it all in-house.
Many teachers鈥攁lready overburdened with accountability requirements and the day-to-day pressures of running a classroom鈥攎ay question whether they have the time to become researchers. But the observations and documentation I鈥檇 normally collect now serve as the data sources for a focused examination of my teaching practices.
The goal here is to investigate, develop, and implement high-quality practices in actual classrooms. And that fits perfectly with the National Staff Development Council鈥檚 definition of high-quality professional development: It鈥檚 ongoing, data-driven, and job-embedded.
Teacher research gives me ownership of my professional growth. I don鈥檛 need to wait for conference opportunities or district-sponsored workshops that may not match my needs. Because TR involves reflecting upon one鈥檚 practice, it allows me to analyze and improve my teaching all year long.
As a result, I鈥檝e improved in all areas of the elementary curriculum. And, every day, I expand the learning opportunities for my students. That鈥檚 real empowerment.
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