50 research outputs found
Level models of continuing professional development evaluation: a grounded review and critique
Continuing professional development (CPD) evaluation in education has been heavily influenced by âlevel modelsâ, deriving from the work of Kirkpatrick and Guskey in particular, which attempt to trace the processes through which CPD interventions achieve outcomes. This paper considers the strengths and limitations of such models, and in particular the degree to which they are able to do justice to the complexity of CPD and its effects. After placing level models within the broader context of debates about CPD evaluation, the paper reports our experience of developing such models heuristically for our own evaluation practice. It then draws on positivist, realist and constructivist traditions to consider some more fundamental ontological and epistemological questions to which they give rise. The paper concludes that level models can be used in a number of ways and with differing emphases, and that choices made about their use will need to reflect both theoretical choices and practical considerations
Designing accredited continuing professional development for the Children's Workforce: challenges and opportunities facing higher education in England
There is no doubt that education services and welfare policy are now seen as key drivers within the highâpriority social policy arena of Childrenâs Services that has become the dominant reform of local authorities throughout England. This article considers questions surrounding the issue of how an effective continuing professional development framework can be developed for the Childrenâs Workforce, linked to higher education accreditation. This is explored within the current context of an emergent Integrated Qualifications Framework for the UK Childrenâs Workforce that is also aligned to the same levels within the European Qualifications Framework