政策与实践相联系:州和地方政策环境如何与教师教学相关

Meghan Comstock, A. Edgerton, Laura Desimone
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景/背景:教学政策旨在改变教与学的本质。几十年的政策研究强调了这些目标所固有的挑战,以及支持这种变革的必要条件,包括支持教师学习的强大基础设施。此外,教师自己必须感知和体验他们的政策环境,以支持转移教学的呼吁。目的/目标/研究问题/研究重点:在本研究中,我们在大学和职业准备(CCR)标准实施的背景下,研究教师对政策环境的看法与他们的教学实践之间的联系。虽然是在标准实施的背景下进行的,但我们的研究结果更广泛地适用于通过政策支持教学变革。环境:我们在两个独特的州背景下研究CCR标准的实施:德克萨斯州和俄亥俄州。随着时间的推移,这些州在人口统计和实施CCR标准的方法方面存在重大差异。研究设计:我们采用融合的混合方法设计,利用两个时间点的州代表性教师调查数据(允许趋势分析以了解教师的看法和经验如何演变),与州教育领导人的纵向访谈数据,以及与每个州一个案例研究区的教育工作者的访谈数据。数据收集和分析:调查测量了教师对其政策环境的看法,以及他们自我报告的教学实践。访谈的重点是了解州和地区层面的政策、指导和资源,以及教育工作者制定的标准。调查分析包括随时间变化的模式描述性分析和分层线性建模。为了解开基础广泛的调查模式,我们对定性数据进行编码,并基于紧急模式开发断言。发现/结果:我们发现德克萨斯州的教师比俄亥俄州的教师更强烈地认同他们的政策环境有一致的、具体的和稳定的资源,以及问责机制。标准实施的指导和资源的特殊性预示着教师在2019年使用以标准为重点的教学。这些模式反映了每个州执行政策的方法:德克萨斯州有健全的州级基础设施来指导和支持,而俄亥俄州的国家开发资源较少,有利于地方控制。然而,教师的地方背景方面——特别是缺乏持续的嵌入式专业学习的基础设施——限制了教师参与国家制定的指导的能力。结论/建议:我们的研究为如何建立必要的政策条件来支持教师改变教学提供了持久的经验教训。研究结果表明,各州需要开发资源,明确教师的教学转变,各地区必须平衡这些自上而下的资源与教育工作者不断调整资源以适应学生需求的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Connecting Policy to Practice: How State and Local Policy Environments Relate to Teachers’ Instruction
Background/Context: Instructional policy aims to shift the nature of teaching and learning. Decades of policy studies have highlighted the challenges inherent in these aims and the conditions necessary to support such change, including a robust infrastructure to support teacher learning. Further, teachers themselves must perceive and experience their policy environment to be supportive of calls to shift instruction. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: In this study, we examine the connection between teachers’ perceptions of their policy environments and their instructional practices over time, in the context of college-and-career-readiness (CCR) standards implementation. While conducted in the context of standards implementation, our findings apply to supporting instructional change through policy more broadly. Setting: We examine implementation of CCR standards in two unique state contexts: Texas and Ohio. These states represent important differences in demographics and in their approaches to CCR standards implementation over time. Research Design: We use a convergent mixed-methods design that draws on state-representative teacher survey data at two points in time (allowing for a trend analysis to understand how teachers’ perceptions and experiences evolve), longitudinal interview data with state education leaders, and interview data with educators in one case study district in each state. Data Collection and Analysis: Surveys measured teachers’ perceptions of their policy environments, as well as their self-reported instructional practices. Interviews focused on understanding state- and district-level policies, guidance, and resources, and educators’ enactment of standards. Survey analysis included descriptive analysis of patterns over time and hierarchical linear modeling. To unpack broad-based survey patterns, we coded qualitative data and developed assertions based on emergent patterns. Findings/Results: We found that Texas teachers agreed more strongly than Ohio teachers that their policy environment had aligned, specific, and stable resources, as well as accountability mechanisms in place. Specificity of guidance and resources for standards implementation predicted teachers’ use of standards-emphasized instruction in 2019. These patterns reflected each state’s approach to policy implementation: a robust state-level infrastructure for guidance and support in Texas, compared with fewer state-developed resources in Ohio in favor of local control. Still, aspects of teachers’ local context—in particular, lack of infrastructure for ongoing, embedded professional learning—limited teachers’ ability to engage in state-developed guidance. Conclusions/Recommendations: Our study offers enduring lessons about how to establish the policy conditions necessary to support teachers to change instruction. Findings suggest a need for states to develop resources that clarify instructional shifts for teachers, and districts must balance these top-down resources with ongoing opportunities for educators to adapt resources to suit their students’ needs.
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