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Teacher Education Journal of South Carolina

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine the extent to which select Best Practices are used in regular education classrooms and if there was correlation between the frequency of their use and previous professional development attendance. Regular education teachers were the target audience for this study because the average English Language Learner (ELL) spends only three hours a week with a certified ESOL teacher, and the remaining 34 hours with a regular education teacher. Charleston County, SC was selected because of its large ELL population (2,138 students), the fact that there are currently 78 schools serving ELLs and because its expansive demographic includes urban, rural and suburban schools, as well as low and high socio-economic populations. Participants completed an online survey which was analyzed for frequency and impact of professional development. Overall, elementary participants used student pairing and grouping between bi-weekly and daily; manipulatives and visuals weekly to daily; classroom workshops such as choral reading and drama bi-weekly to weekly; and authentic experiences and personal reflective assessments seldom to weekly. In contrast, middle and high school teachers reported that they use all four Best Practice methods between seldom and biweekly. The results to the question concerning a correlation between professional development and frequency of use was inconclusive due to a great discrepancy between the results of the self-rating question and that of the statistical correlation completed.

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