Key Learnings on Designing and Measuring High-Quality Educator Training Programs
May 10th, 2021
The Educator Professional Development Initiative also included a learning aspect. Rosov Consulting designed and implemented an emergent learning framework in which the ten program directors were convened to form a cohort of their own, a professional learning community that guided the evaluation with timely and relevant questions. These questions, for example, asked about the pacing and content of their programs and about the mix of participants they tried to include in cohorts. The learning community also provided space for them to network (many of them had never met each other before). They connected and strengthened their network by sharing common challenges and themes of program design, recruitment, and unfortunately, navigating the pandemic. Being in a learning cohort also gave the program directors a window into the experiences of their program’s participants and enabled them to see themselves as part of the field of Jewish education.
The evaluation has proven fruitful for the field of Jewish educator professional development (see here for full reports and case studies). Common instruments such as a participant audit to explore the demographics and motivations of incoming educators and a shared outcomes survey were developed with the input of the program directors. These instruments will be introduced to the broader field this summer. The instruments are noteworthy because the ten programs were intentionally diverse in their topics and intended audiences. The fact that a set of shared outcomes could be distilled and measured across the programs compelled the Foundation to begin thinking about common outcomes to measure across the Jewish educator professional development programs it supports.
Evaluation work with ten very different programs over a three-year period also revealed the extent to which powerful professional development involves designing experiences that take shape around a series of productive tensions: creating experiences with utility and ultimate meaning, space and structure, and a balance of work and play; and providing opportunities for personal growth and professional belonging in groups that include participants with both sufficient diversity and commonality.
The outcomes yielded by such experiences are strongly related to the professional profiles and personal goals with which participants arrive. Those outcomes gain significance over time, sometimes many months after a program’s conclusion, as participants gain opportunities to apply their learnings and newfound understandings in their places of work.
Lastly, professional development is not synonymous with professional advancement. It is possible to embark on a meaningful journey of professional development without moving up, or seeking to move up, the career ladder; “staying at home” was an especially appropriate metaphor for this process offered by one participant given how most people have experienced the past 14 months.
These learnings and instruments can benefit all in the field who want to create and implement effective educator training programs, whether virtual or in person. With these new resources, we can continue this learning journey together.
Stacie Cherner is Director of Learning and Evaluation at the Jim Joseph Foundation. Alex Pomson is Principal and Managing Director at Rosov Consulting. Click here to access all of the reports and case studies related to the professional development initiatives. Click here to go directly to The Jim Joseph Foundation Professional Development Initiative: A Picture of Learning Coming Together: Year 3 Learnings