2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 16
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-12:00 PM

SUCCESSFUL ASPECTS AND ACTIVITIES OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION'S GK-12 PROGRAM


CORMAS, Peter C.1, BARUFALDI, James P.1 and BANNER, Jay L.2, (1)Science and Mathematics Education Center, The University of Texas at Austin, SZB 340, Austin, TX 78712, (2)Jackson School of Geosciences and Environmental Science Institute, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, pcc@mail.utexas.edu

This study investigates the successful aspects and activities of the National Science Foundation's GK-12 Program; a professional development program that supports graduate and advanced undergraduate students in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics and partners them with cooperating teachers in the k-12 classroom. Final evaluations from 26 of 31 GK-12 sites from the program's inception year in 1999 were analyzed with a priori and emergent content analyses which included rigorous inter- and intra-reliability testing. The a priori portion was based on research-based effective characteristics of professional development linked to student learning. The results of the analysis demonstrate that the GK-12 program incorporates all of the effective characteristics of professional development, but to drastically varying degrees. The a priori characteristics that appeared most often were “treats Fellows as professionals”, “involves collaboration between Fellows and others”, and “professional development is on-going”. The two emergent characteristics derived from the analysis included “improves communication skills” and “has real world application”. Implications of the study include that GK-12 educational leaders and principal investigators need to be aware that research-based effective characteristics of professional development that are linked to student learning exist, and should be used to guide GK-12 endeavors.