2016
DOI: 10.1080/19345747.2016.1270378
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Effectiveness of Large-Scale, State-Sponsored Language and Literacy Professional Development on Early Childhood Educator Outcomes

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Cited by 74 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…Participation was open to all early childhood educators who registered for the state professional development, directly taught preschool‐aged children, agreed to complete research study activities, and provided informed consent. Notably, the original evaluation project showed no impacts of the professional development on measures of educators' knowledge, no impacts on any child outcomes, and no impacts on the overall quantity or quality of classroom practices (Piasta et al, ; Piasta et al, ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Participation was open to all early childhood educators who registered for the state professional development, directly taught preschool‐aged children, agreed to complete research study activities, and provided informed consent. Notably, the original evaluation project showed no impacts of the professional development on measures of educators' knowledge, no impacts on any child outcomes, and no impacts on the overall quantity or quality of classroom practices (Piasta et al, ; Piasta et al, ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Empirically, a growing body of literature has focused on educators' knowledge as it pertains to supporting early language and literacy (e.g., Hindman & Wasik, ; McCutchen, Abbott, et al, ; McCutchen, Harry, et al, ). Moreover, considerable efforts aim to strengthen educators' knowledge to support early language and literacy via professional development (e.g., Cunningham, Etter, Platas, Wheeler, & Campbell, ; Neuman & Cunningham, ; Piasta et al, ). The underlying logic model on which this work is premised is that educators' knowledge informs their practice and is thereby associated with children's learning (Desimone, ; Markussen‐Brown et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to examining the quantity and quality of support for vocabulary occurring in early childhood classrooms, researchers have endeavoured to understand preschool educators' knowledge about supporting vocabulary development. Traditionally, knowledge about supporting language development has been measured through static measures that assess a variety of types of knowledge for teaching (Shulman, ), often focusing on what Hindman and Wasik () call “conceptual and procedural knowledge” (p. 353; e.g., Hindman & Wasik, ; Neuman & Cunningham, ; O'Leary, Cockburn, Powell, & Diamond, ; Piasta et al, ). These measures generally seek to understand educators' broader knowledge about supporting language and literacy in early childhood settings, with embedded items specific to vocabulary.…”
Section: Introduction and Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These measures generally seek to understand educators' broader knowledge about supporting language and literacy in early childhood settings, with embedded items specific to vocabulary. Across studies that have employed such measures, early childhood educators tend to accurately answer 60–70% of items (see Cash, Cabell, Hamre, DeCoster, & Pianta, ; Piasta et al, ).…”
Section: Introduction and Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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