Special Report
Professional Development

A Clearer Vision for Teacher Professional Learning

By Liana Loewus — May 14, 2019 1 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Professional development: It happens every year, for every teacher. And yet there’s broad agreement among those who participate that it often—very often—misses the mark. The trainings fail to take teachers’ prior knowledge and experience into account, or use instructional techniques that wouldn’t work with students. The things teachers say they want to learn—how to recover when a lesson goes south, how to recognize their own biases, and design activities that reach all learners—are often overlooked. And even when teachers get PD in topics they know are important, like trauma-informed teaching and suicide prevention, the sessions are crammed in amid a growing list of other training requirements, and can end up feeling shallow.

In some places, teachers are turning their districts’ attention to what have long been blind spots in PD. They’re helping streamline unwieldy requirements and pushing for sessions that respect their expertise and time. Teachers are committing to the hard work of letting go of—or unlearning—long-held beliefs that have hindered them in the classroom. And when the opportunity arises, they’re also jumping into seemingly more radical learning opportunities—including, in one Kansas town, those that take their cues from Disney.

For this special reporting series, we let the ground-level experts lead the way, asking teachers what they saw as PD blind spots and then digging in on causes and solutions. It seems clear there will never be a perfect system for professional development—the needs of schools, teachers, and students are constantly shifting. But by taking a hard, periodic look around, schools can at least work toward a system that’s both manageable and meaningful.

—Liana Loewus, Editor

Related Tags:

A version of this article appeared in the May 15, 2019 edition of Education Week as A Clearer Vision for Teacher Professional Learning

Events

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Professional Development Plan Professional Development That You Would Want to Attend. Here’s How
Educators share tips on what makes professional development engaging and effective.
4 min read
Coaching session between mentor, Claire Steinbronn, Academic Coach FICP Supervisor, and mentee, Amanda James, RSP (Special Education) at Thomas Elementary on Nov. 6, 2025 in Fresno, Calif.
Coaching session between mentor, Claire Steinbronn, Academic Coach FICP Supervisor, and mentee, Amanda James, RSP (Special Education) at Thomas Elementary on Nov. 6, 2025 in Fresno, Calif. Professional development needs to be relevant and attuned to educators' needs to be engaging.
Andri Tambunan for Education Week
Professional Development Do You Have a Favorite PD Book? We Want to Hear It
A handy guide to the latest in professional development—just a few clicks away.
1 min read
A summer scene of sunny blue skies and flowers with several book titles overlayed on top. Titles include: The digital delusion, transforming school culture, rigor unveiled, rigor by design, the anxious generation, the compassionate classroom, rock your literacy block, instructional illusions, braiding sweetgrass, building thinking classrooms in mathematics, the adolescent brain, and it's possible!
Education Week + Canva
Professional Development Practical and Paced: How Principals Like Their PD Served Up
Principal PD must reflect the demands and constraints of the job.
5 min read
A high school principal gives a high-five to an incoming junior at the school, as upper-level students return on their first day of school in Brattleboro, Vt., on Aug. 28, 2025.
A high school principal gives a high-five to an incoming junior at the school, as upper-level students return on their first day of school in Brattleboro, Vt., on Aug. 28, 2025. Principals need access to frequent and relevant professional development opportunities to tackle the rising complexities of the job.
Kristopher Radder/The Brattleboro Reformer via AP
Professional Development Lessons Learned About Effective Professional Development for Principals
The best professional development for principals has a lot in common with the best PD for teachers.
7 min read
4 Principals need PD too DEF
Edmon de Haro for Education Week