Sustaining Effective Teacher Practice: The Impact of the EL Education Language Arts Curriculum and Professional Development on Teachers’ Instruction

Sustaining Effective Teacher Practice: The Impact of the EL Education Language Arts Curriculum and Professional Development on Teachers’ Instruction

Published: Nov 02, 2018
Publisher: Washington, DC: Mathematica Policy Research
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Associated Project

EL Education Schools and Teacher Professional Development

Time frame: 2013-2019

Prepared for:

EL Education

Authors
Key Findings

Key Findings

  • Significantly more TPP teachers encouraged students’ higher-order thinking skills— such as inference, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation.
  • Significantly more TPP teachers asked students to cite evidence from texts in discussions and their writing.
  • Students taught by TPP teachers engaged significantly more often in reading, writing, and speaking about texts in the second year of TPP.

To address the need for high quality and lasting professional learning for teachers, EL Education developed the Teacher Potential Project (TPP), which includes a Common Core State Standards (CCSS)-aligned EL Education Language Arts Curriculum in combination with intensive PD. In an independent study funded by a U.S. Department of Education Investing in Innovation (i3) grant, Mathematica Policy Research examined a range of teachers’ CCSS-aligned instructional practices after one and two years of TPP engagement. The Mathematica study team found that a significantly greater proportion of TPP teachers demonstrated and sustained a range of CCSS-aligned instructional practices compared with teachers who used the curriculum and professional development provided by their districts.

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