Attrition, (De)motivation, and “Effective” Music Teacher Professional Development: An Instrumental Case Study
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-2021
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to explore why and how a prototypically “effective” teacher professional development (PD) effort, reciprocal peer coaching (RPC), fell short. Despite RPC’s conformity with long-espoused best practices in PD—content-specificity, extended duration, collaboration, inquiry, and self-direction—only two in eight music teachers who began the 5-month coaching and observation trajectory completed it. We used instrumental case study analysis to understand teachers’ decisions to continue in or prematurely withdraw from RPC. Findings revealed motivational factors such as collaboration and affirmative support, growth-in-practice learning, and content relevance were, for the majority of participants, overcome by demotivational factors related to participants’ perceived lack of agency in shaping their work context and the incoherence and insufficiency of their policy environments. We advance implications for PD providers, researchers, and policymakers.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education
First Page
7
Last Page
28
Recommended Citation
West, J., Stanley, A., Bowers, J., & Isbell, D. (2021). Attrition, (De)motivation, and “Effective” Music Teacher Professional Development: An Instrumental Case Study. Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education (229), 7-28. https://doi.org/10.5406/BULCOURESMUSEDU.229.0007