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How teachers can get the most from CPD

Professional learning and development is crucial for reigniting a passion for the job, so how can you truly engage with opportunities and maximise their impact, ask Catherine Carden and Virginia Bower…

Catherine Carden Virginia Bower
by Catherine Carden Virginia Bower
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Teaching can be the most exciting and rewarding profession, but it is also incredibly demanding and we can, as teachers, be asked to enact and endorse practices, pedagogies and principles that are not our own; enforced through a top-down hierarchy emanating from often unseen powers.

This can have the effect of diminishing our sense of autonomy and agency, leading to a feeling of disempowerment, ultimately affecting motivation.

Professional learning and development is crucial for reigniting a passion for the job and for providing the opportunity to expand and deepen subject and pedagogical knowledge while interacting with like-minded professionals.

In fact, we firmly believe that everyone working within education has an unwritten commitment to their own development and learning and that this should be at the centre of a teacher’s professional identity.

If this is the case, why do teachers engage so little in development and learning opportunities and when they do, why are they often negatively evaluated or have limited impact?

There are five possible reasons as to why:

  1. Teachers await permission or instruction from senior leaders or the governing body to engage in professional development and learning, rarely seeking it for themselves
  2. The professional development and learning is not relevant or suitable for the teacher or leader or is not taking place at the right time in the academic calendar or indeed in their career trajectory
  3. The learning and development offered or available does not match the aspirations and interests of the teacher
  4. The ‘CPD’ sessions are instructional and mechanistic – a set of ‘you musts’ and ‘to dos’ rather than offering a space to critically engage, debate and think
  5. The development happens in isolation. Teachers receive input rather than having the opportunity to explore topics and create communities and networks

It is important, therefore, that your professional learning and development is suitable, timely and relevant to you – rather than others deciding the agenda and what you ‘need’.

The professional learning and development that you engage with must be of personal, professional interest, inspire you and offer the opportunity to change and challenge your thinking, leading to developments and improvements in your own pedagogy and practice.

At the same time, your learning should consider varying perspectives and enable you to establish a network beyond your immediate school community.

All of the above is achievable but, at times, this might mean sourcing and self-funding your own professional development and learning (particularly if your setting does not have the budget to support you).

Professional development should undoubtedly be an entitlement but, certainly in current times, this is often not a school priority. While this is not an ideal, we would argue that time and money spent on germane and powerful learning experiences will always pay you back over and over again.

Consider the type of professional development and learning that will best suit your current needs. The following questions can ascertain what type of professional development is most suitable and then help you critique the selection on offer:

  • What types of knowledge acquisition does the CPD support – procedural or propositional?
  • Is the principal focus on individual or collective development?
  • To what extent is the CPD used as a form of accountability?
  • What capacity does the CPD allow for supporting professional autonomy?
  • Is the fundamental purpose of the CPD to provide a means of transmission or to facilitate transformative practice?

Traditionally, or most commonly, CPD centres around the delivery of information and is based on a training style model whereby material is presented by the facilitators or expert, the recipient playing a passive role with occasional opportunity for group discussion or sharing a response to a task.

Of course, there are times when this approach is appropriate – when disseminating policy, for example – but, in the main, this format of CPD is reductive and disempowering.

So what does effective teacher development and professional learning look like?

We believe that a model based on teachers exploring their own stories and narratives, and engaging in collaborative learning directly relevant to their classroom lives, has the potential to empower, galvanise and re-energise, while promoting a commitment to lifelong learning.

Transformative professional learning and development creates a space to connect and think, the opportunity to debate, explore and challenge and is based upon research and evidence.

Most importantly, take ownership of your own professional development and learning. Invest in yourself and your career by putting learning and development at the core of your professional identity.


Catherine Carden and Virginia Bower are both consultants with Bowden Education. Find out more at bowdeneducation.org or on Twitter at @bowdeneducation.

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