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Teachers’ perceptions of less successfully organized professional development practices in mathematics: A study of nine secondary schools in Shanghai, China

Teachers’ perceptions of less successfully organized professional development practices in mathematics: A study of nine secondary schools in Shanghai, China
Teachers’ perceptions of less successfully organized professional development practices in mathematics: A study of nine secondary schools in Shanghai, China

Professional development (PD) for mathematics teachers in China, especially in Shanghai, has received growing international attention. However, most of available research concerning Chinese PD has focused on successful practices, and far too little attention has been paid to less successfully organized PD practices, particularly for mathematics teachers in Shanghai. This study aims to examine key aspects and underlying reasons for less successfully organized PD practices in Shanghai from teachers’ perspectives. The data were collected from 132 mathematics teachers in 9 randomly selected secondary schools in Shanghai through a questionnaire survey and follow-up interviews. The results show that Shanghai mathematics teachers perceived “time, duration and frequency”, “assessment and management” and “objective” as the three most unsatisfactory aspects in less successfully organized PD they attended, and they considered that organized PD practices were less successful mainly due to lack of assessment for the PD organizers and of necessary coordination between PD organizers at different levels. In addition, there were statistically significant differences in teachers’ perceptions of various specific problems in different aspects about less successfully organized PD between teachers with different demographic features, such as length of teaching experience and gender. Implications of the findings of the study to Chinese educational settings and beyond are discussed at the end of the paper.

Chinese mathematics education, Mathematics teachers’ in-service training, Shanghai secondary schools, Teacher perception, Teacher professional development
1386-4416
667-697
Fan, Lianghuo
28afe582-cd04-4ddc-9acb-a12494af79e0
Xie, Sicheng
827155a0-055c-4646-86c6-c446ac5ca619
Luo, Jietong
10a6fe9d-27c9-4873-8f71-cbddaad9707f
Li, Lingzhu
a50b7fff-1f57-4c75-a36f-aacc85f04154
Tang, Jiali
ed69a0b0-7b1e-44d7-9191-9f0f0043da1f
Li, Shuhui
43a12d71-ad43-4633-ad7b-b242068b64a9
Fan, Lianghuo
28afe582-cd04-4ddc-9acb-a12494af79e0
Xie, Sicheng
827155a0-055c-4646-86c6-c446ac5ca619
Luo, Jietong
10a6fe9d-27c9-4873-8f71-cbddaad9707f
Li, Lingzhu
a50b7fff-1f57-4c75-a36f-aacc85f04154
Tang, Jiali
ed69a0b0-7b1e-44d7-9191-9f0f0043da1f
Li, Shuhui
43a12d71-ad43-4633-ad7b-b242068b64a9

Fan, Lianghuo, Xie, Sicheng, Luo, Jietong, Li, Lingzhu, Tang, Jiali and Li, Shuhui (2023) Teachers’ perceptions of less successfully organized professional development practices in mathematics: A study of nine secondary schools in Shanghai, China. Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 26 (5), 667-697. (doi:10.1007/s10857-023-09591-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Professional development (PD) for mathematics teachers in China, especially in Shanghai, has received growing international attention. However, most of available research concerning Chinese PD has focused on successful practices, and far too little attention has been paid to less successfully organized PD practices, particularly for mathematics teachers in Shanghai. This study aims to examine key aspects and underlying reasons for less successfully organized PD practices in Shanghai from teachers’ perspectives. The data were collected from 132 mathematics teachers in 9 randomly selected secondary schools in Shanghai through a questionnaire survey and follow-up interviews. The results show that Shanghai mathematics teachers perceived “time, duration and frequency”, “assessment and management” and “objective” as the three most unsatisfactory aspects in less successfully organized PD they attended, and they considered that organized PD practices were less successful mainly due to lack of assessment for the PD organizers and of necessary coordination between PD organizers at different levels. In addition, there were statistically significant differences in teachers’ perceptions of various specific problems in different aspects about less successfully organized PD between teachers with different demographic features, such as length of teaching experience and gender. Implications of the findings of the study to Chinese educational settings and beyond are discussed at the end of the paper.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 June 2023
Published date: October 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: This study was jointly supported by three research grants, two by East China Normal University, one from its “Happy Flowers” Strategic Research Fund (Award No: 2019ECNU-XF2H004) and the other from the Asian Centre for Mathematics Education (Award No: 92900-120215-10514), and one by the Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality (Award No: 22DZ2229014). Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).
Keywords: Chinese mathematics education, Mathematics teachers’ in-service training, Shanghai secondary schools, Teacher perception, Teacher professional development

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480615
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480615
ISSN: 1386-4416
PURE UUID: 8bf38a5b-c136-49bd-806a-ec9f949f21dd

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Date deposited: 07 Aug 2023 16:55
Last modified: 05 Jun 2024 18:07

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Contributors

Author: Lianghuo Fan
Author: Sicheng Xie
Author: Jietong Luo
Author: Lingzhu Li
Author: Jiali Tang
Author: Shuhui Li

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