Exploring candidate interaction with a high stakes teacher performance assessment: The KPTP and the Kansas laboratory

Authors

  • Connor K. Warner University of Utah

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.28.5037

Keywords:

performance assessment, teacher education, teacher education policy, teacher portfolio assessments, teaching, teacher licensure assessments

Abstract

This qualitative study explores the experiences of a cohort of pre-service teachers completing a high-stakes teacher performance assessment (HSTPA), the Kansas Performance Teaching Portfolio (KPTP), during their final year of teacher preparation. The inquiry asks whether the act of completing the assessment modified candidate conceptualizations of good teaching, and, if so, in what ways. Data were gathered via in-depth interviews and content analysis, and data were analyzed via constant comparison. The study found that completing the KPTP was having some impact upon participant conceptions of good teaching, prodding them to broaden their understanding of the work of teachers to include not just dispositional and relational aspects of teaching, but elements of technical teaching practice. The article concludes with recommendations for policy, research, and practice.

 

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Author Biography

Connor K. Warner, University of Utah

Connor K. Warner, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor in the Urban Institute for Teacher Education at the University of Utah.  His scholarship focuses on teacher preparation program design, teacher education policy, and teacher candidate assessment.   

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Published

2020-09-21

How to Cite

Warner, C. K. (2020). Exploring candidate interaction with a high stakes teacher performance assessment: The KPTP and the Kansas laboratory. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 28, 138. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.28.5037

Issue

Section

Articles