Cost. That would seem to be the most fundamental aspect of crafting a professional-development program. But as a number of researchers have discovered, school districts rarely have a good fix on how much they actually spend on such training—or on what that spending buys in the way of teacher or student learning.
Because districts tend to characterize professional development as programming, they typically underestimate other investments in teachers’ knowledge and skills—such as how much they spend on salaries during hours teachers attend in-service workshops, according to experts who study district budgeting on professional development.
What’s more, few professional-development activities are linked to outcome measures of whether a teacher has increased his or her capacity to instruct students, they say.
“There’s a sense that teacher effectiveness matters, and we’ve got to help teachers improve in effectiveness, but we don’t necessarily know how,” said Marguerite Roza, a scholar at the Center on Reinventing Public Education at the University of Washington, in Bothell. “But districts are operating as though they do know how.”
Professional Development: Sorting Through the Jumble to Achieve Success | ||||||||||||||
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Finer-grained analyses of the costs of training and what it leverages are critical for districts to use such funding productively, she and other scholars assert.
“What we can safely say is that most urban districts are spending a lot more than they realize, between $6,000 to $8,000 a year per teacher, on the in-service days and on training,” said Allan R. Odden, a professor of educational leadership and policy analysis at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who has studied the issue of professional-development spending. “But it’s a mile wide and an inch thick. And until recently, districts were spending it on anything rather than on how to teach reading and how to teach math.”
Complex Accounting
No national data exist on how much districts spend to support teacher training, partly because there is no national definition of the term “professional development.” Analyses of specific urban districts’ budgeting practices, in the meantime, show that activities financed as part of professional development tended to be fragmented rather than supportive of learning goals, according to Karen Hawley Miles of Education Resource Strategies, which contracts with districts to analyze their expenses.
“Districts spend a lot more than they actively manage or that they think strategically about organizing,” said Ms. Miles, the president of the Newton, Mass.-based nonprofit organization. “You get lots of departments trying to do little pieces of professional development, but most of them are too shallow and spread apart to make a big difference.”
As just one example, her group documented that the Philadelphia district, in the 2007-08 school year, spent nearly $58 million on professional-development initiatives, primarily for teacher coaches and release time for lead teachers to work with peers in schools.
But those investments were being overseen by as many as nine separate offices or entities. And the analysis revealed a number of weaknesses in how that time was spent. For instance, activities that coaches and lead teachers were permitted to engage in were broadly defined and not audited for quality, the ERS report found.
Since the report was issued, Superintendent Arlene Ackerman has made changes to the district’s training system. But district officials did not respond to several requests seeking comment.
In addition, Ms. Miles’ group found that Philadelphia spent an additional $41 million when counting the time set aside in the district calendar for mandated professional learning. As the ERS analyses show, in-service days are a significant professional-development cost, equal to the proportion of salary paid to teachers on those days.
Those costs can vary widely by district: Of the 100 largest school districts’ most recent calendars, the number of days teachers were expected to be at school for reasons other than instructing students ranged from no days in Albuquerque, N.M., to 17 in Little Rock, Ark., according to a database maintained by the Washington-based National Council on Teacher Quality.
Scheduling Time
The issue of teacher time and its cost is only now starting to attract attention from districts, researchers, and practitioners.
Multimedia: Teacher Voices

These mini-profiles—including video interviews—are meant to provide insight, but not to serve as representative examples of the districts in which they teach or programs in question. Their diverse experiences highlight the challenges districts face in providing high-quality training matched to each teacher’s needs.
View Teacher Profiles >>>
“We just don’t recognize time as a resource, just as we didn’t use to recognize teachers as a resource,” said Jennifer King Rice, a professor of education policy at the University of Maryland College Park who has studied professional-development spending. “We are locked into traditions of how we use time, and we allocate it across districts in ways that may be unproductive.”
For instance, the traditional mode of scheduling scatters teachers’ daily preparation at different times from colleagues’ in the same subject or grade level, making it much harder for them to work together to improve practice.
Timothy Knowles, a former deputy superintendent of teaching and learning for the Boston school district, recalled a visit to the district by a British school-inspectorate team in 2002.
“It came home to me when Her Majesty’s Inspectorate said to us, ‘You have more time [for teacher learning] built into the fabric of the day than any schools we’ve ever seen anywhere, and you’re not using it,’” he said.
The situation, Mr. Knowles surmised, reflects the cultural norms of teaching in the United States. American education continues to prize teacher autonomy above the notion of teaching as a collaborative enterprise, in contrast to practices in higher-performing countries.
In fact, according to a study commissioned in 2009 by Learning Forward, a Dallas-based membership organization formerly known as the National Staff Development Council, teachers in Asian and European countries generally spent fewer minutes instructing students and more time working on their lessons with other teachers, compared with teachers in the United States.
Lesson planning in the United States averages between three and five hours a week, but in most European and Asian countries, teachers spend 15 to 20 hours a week on those activities and generally perform them in collaboration with their peers, the study found.
And such work is considered part and parcel of a teacher’s professional expectations, noted Thomas R. Guskey, a professor of educational psychology at the University of Kentucky, in Lexington.
“There is this perception [in the United States] that if a teacher isn’t in front of kids teaching, then it’s a waste of their time,” Mr. Guskey said. “In China, teachers are basically in school from 8 to 5 every day, they have a significantly longer day than our teachers do, but ... a portion of the day is spent lesson-planning with other teachers, writing extensive comments on student work, and those things are built into their schedule.”
Reallocations
In 2007-08, Philadelphia spent a total of $162 million on all professional development.

Note: Figures predate change in leadership.
Source: Education Resource Strategies
Have case studies been able to determine whether districts invest enough in their current teacher corps when all the costs of professional development are accurately accounted for? Some scholars say yes.
“For most big districts, it’s not that they need more money for professional development. It’s capturing what they spend and refocusing the whole professional-development system,” Mr. Odden of the University of Wisconsin contended. But similar analyses of rural and suburban districts’ spending are sparse, making it more difficult to talk about their investments, he acknowledged.
Ms. Miles of Education Resource Strategies isn’t convinced districts now spend enough on professional development. She points out that, among districts studied by the ERS, money spent on initiatives and programming amounted to only 2 percent of Philadelphia’s total operating budget in the year studied, compared with a high of about 5.5 percent in another district, Rochester, N.Y. (Those figures don’t take into account salary costs for district-mandated in-service days.)
“We felt they plain weren’t spending enough,” Ms. Miles said about Philadelphia.
The bottom line, experts say, is that truly focusing professional development requires administrators to figure out where their dollars are spent, whether those patterns align to strategic goals for teacher improvement, and if not, institute changes to the spending.
The Union Factor
Such changes generally require delicate union-management partnerships. Collective bargaining contracts, for instance, specify whether some of the daily preparation hours teachers are entitled to could be appropriated by building administrators for collaborative teacher learning.
Breaking those logjams can be tricky, but the number of districts that have done it shows it is not impossible. Beginning in 2004, administrators and union officials in Flint, Mich., for instance, used the collective bargaining process to institute a different school calendar, resulting in more than 20 late-start Wednesdays freeing up 75 minutes for teacher collaboration. The trade-off: slightly longer school days and a reduction of several half-days formerly spent on district-directed professional development.
Mr. Odden favors a more radical restructuring of school schedules that gives teachers time for collaboration in the regular school day and doesn’t detract from other in-service opportunities.
The 38,000-student Beaverton, Ore., district is now using such a model in several of its eight middle schools.
Cedar Park Middle School, for instance, uses a schedule that adds collaboration time for teachers in the same grade without lengthening the school day or taking away from instructional minutes.
Eighth grade-level content teachers have a period that’s used on alternate days for small-group student interventions or for collaborative teacher learning. Their students take electives, like physical education or foreign language, during that time. Then, in the afternoons, the core-content teachers instruct in double-length classes.
The schedule comes with its own trade-off: somewhat larger class sizes.
Accountability Question
The final task for school districts is to better tie their professional-development spending to student outcomes and other measures of teacher improvement, something that has been lacking in nearly all the extant literature on the topic.
That isn’t an easy task, especially because the culture of professional-development funding hasn’t emphasized accountability—a problem that starts at the top. The U.S. Department of Education continues to give out nearly $3 billion a year in federal aid for professional development under Title II-A, its largest teacher-quality program by far, even though it has never fully studied the effects of that spending.
Even as new forms of teacher training, such as collaborative teacher teams, have grown popular, districts have done little to prove their efficacy.
“Educators have yet to demonstrate that, across many different contexts, they are using [professional learning communities] to improve their performance or that of their students,” said M. Hayes Mizell, a distinguished senior fellow at Learning Forward. “School systems have yet to demonstrate that they can or will collect data necessary to demonstrate that PLCs are achieving such results.”
The group supports proposed new language in federal law that would require recipients of federal professional-development funding to evaluate the effectiveness of school-based teacher-learning activities.
Ms. Rice of the University of Maryland cautions that it will entail painstaking work to make sure such measures are accurate.
“I worry a lot about ‘gaming,’ that there are ways to overgeneralize the effects of a particular initiative, or that we’ll demonstrate impact on outcomes that are too narrowly defined,” she said.
“From an ideal perspective, I think that’s the right direction,” she said of greater accountability for professional development’s effectiveness. “From a realistic perspective, I worry that districts just don’t have the capacity.”

Assistant Managing Editor, Education Week
Stephen Sawchuk is an assistant managing editor for Education Week, leading coverage of teaching, learning, and curriculum.
Coverage of leadership, human-capital development, extended and expanded learning time, and arts learning is supported in part by a grant from The Wallace Foundation.
A version of this article appeared in the November 10, 2010 edition of Education Week as Cost of Teacher Training Lost in District Budgets
FAQs
What does it mean to complete professional development? ›
Professional development is the act of taking steps to get ahead in your career. This could be learning practical skills to help you perform better or becoming active in your industry through networking and attending events. Improving yourself professionally is a continual process.
What is the importance of professional development? ›Professional development can help to bolster employees' confidence in their work. Greater confidence can, in turn, translate into higher overall job satisfaction, employee performance, productivity, and overall morale.
How might you contribute to your own professional development and that of your colleagues? ›- Managing bigger budgets, more people or larger projects.
- Attending professional training or gaining sought-after qualifications.
- Volunteering as a buddy or taking on corporate charity work.
- Taking on a role to gain specific experience, knowledge or skills.
- Focus on Objectives. ...
- Manage Obstacles and Distractions. ...
- Make Learning a Habit. ...
- Set Boundaries. ...
- Make Every Minute Count. ...
- Learn at Your Best. ...
- Find Your Own Learning Style.
- Continuing Education.
- Participation in professional organizations.
- Research.
- Improve job performance.
- Increased duties and responsibilities.
- Approaches to professional development:
- Skill Based Training.
- Job Assignments.
Professional development refers to all training, certification and education that a worker needs to succeed in his or her career. It's no secret that different jobs require different skills. Even if a worker currently has the necessary skills, he or she may need additional skills in the future.
What is effective professional development? ›We define effective professional development as structured professional learning that results in changes in teacher practices and improvements in student learning outcomes.
What's another word for professional development? ›apprenticeship | externship |
---|---|
staff development | professional training |
workplace training | professional education |
career growth | ongoing training |
continuing professional development | continuous professional development |
The goals you set in your professional development plan should be SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant and Timely).
How do you answer a professional development question? ›- Think about your overall career goals. ...
- Consider what development opportunities can help you achieve your goals. ...
- Discuss your professional journey. ...
- Outline both your short-term and long-term goals. ...
- Explain your plan. ...
- Align your plan with organizational goals.
What are your goals for further professional development? ›
- Develop a new skill set. ...
- Develop your workplace skills. ...
- Take up leadership responsibilities. ...
- Expand your professional network. ...
- Level-up your credentials. ...
- Consume media in your field. ...
- Find other ways to deepen job satisfaction. ...
- Take a relevant course.
Three themes in the areas for improvement — confidence, knowledge, and communication — were in the top 10 for most of the jobs we studied.
What are the 5 areas of professional development? ›...
Below are the top five.
- Management and leadership training. ...
- Professional certifications. ...
- Technical skills training. ...
- Teamwork and interpersonal skills training.
The top three types of teacher professional development are periodic workshops, in-class observation, and single-session seminars.
How do you write an individual professional development plan? ›- State your professional activities and roles. Identify your current roles and responsibilities as a graduate student. ...
- Assess Skills and Knowledge. List your skills and knowledge. ...
- Set Goals. ...
- Create an Action Plan. ...
- Document Your Development.
- Prepare Your Mind.
- Look Back on Your Performances.
- Make Your Goals SMART.
- Create a Strategy.
- Make Time for Your Goal.
- Follow Up with Yourself.
- The Vision of the Future.
- Helps You Become Better.
Job-specific goals have to do with tasks that are part of an employee's job responsibilities. Skill-set goals are broader than job-specific goals, but are still related to what a person does.
What is a professional development statement? ›A professional development plan documents the goals, required skill and competency development, and objectives a staff member will need to accomplish in order to support continuous improvement and career development.
How do you maintain professional growth and development? ›Professional growth in a career requires the continuous acquisition of knowledge and skills through study, instruction, investigation, and practice. It is an on-going process. Career planning involves visualizing what you want to be doing in the future within your profession.
Who is responsible for professional development? ›Career development is the responsibility of both the employee and the manager: it must be a collaborative effort because it cannot be done unilaterally. The employee is responsible, ultimately, for career management and development—and reading The Start-up of You is an excellent guide.
What is high quality professional development? ›
High-quality professional development is defined by several interacting factors. It implies rich content that is specifically chosen to deepen and broaden the knowledge and skills of teachers, principals, administrators, paraprofessionals, and other key education staff.
What makes a good professional development session? ›Consider starting your meeting by providing participants with time to reflect in writing and share with colleagues. Good opening possibilities include asking each teacher to reflect on a challenge from their day, or to list the traits or skills they want their students to have as adults.
What part of speech is professional development? ›PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT (noun) definition and synonyms | Macmillan Dictionary.
What is another word for personal development? ›self-empowerment | personal empowerment |
---|---|
development | progression |
flourishing | maturation |
emergence | transformation |
coming-of-age | improvement |
career path | career map |
---|---|
career plan | career trajectory |
career development | career growth |
professional advancement | 10-year-plan |
5-year-plan |
...
How to build your personal development plan?
- Step 1: Clear out your vision. ...
- Step 2: Outline your strengths and areas for improvement. ...
- Step 3: Build your personal development plan.
The key features of effective PD include (a) content, (b) active learning, (c) coherence, (d) duration of programs and (e) collective participants (see Birman et al., 2000; DeMonte, 2013; Desimone, 2009; Sokel, 2019).
How do you respond to further development opportunities? ›- Understand why employers ask this question. ...
- Define your career goals. ...
- Talk about your journey. ...
- List your short-term and long-term goals. ...
- Be realistic and professional. ...
- Align your goals with the company's. ...
- Show loyalty.
- Have a positive attitude. ...
- Take responsibility. ...
- Request extra time. ...
- Ask for help. ...
- Double your effort. ...
- Check in regularly. ...
- Talk with your team. ...
- Set your own goals.
...
If you're ready to start setting SMART goals, follow this five-step process.
- Specific. ...
- Measurable. ...
- Attainable. ...
- Relevant. ...
- Time-bound.
What are professional goals examples? ›
- Take a course to sharpen your skills.
- Learn a new tool (or 5)
- Improve your public speaking and presentations.
- Research other departments.
- Improve team collaboration and communication skills.
- Build your network.
- Research a competitor.
- Get better at time management.
- Specific: SMART goals should be specific, narrow, clear and easy to understand. ...
- Measurable: Goals should include clear metrics that make it easy to measure progress. ...
- Attainable: It's important that goals are attainable to help avoid burnout and stay motivated.
- 1) Time management. Time management is crucial to your business's success. ...
- 2) Organization. Organization can make time management much easier. ...
- 3) Interpersonal communication. ...
- 4) Customer service. ...
- 5) Cooperation. ...
- 6) Conflict resolution. ...
- 7) Listening. ...
- 8) Written communication.
- Time management. The better people can multitask, meet deadlines and manage their time, the more productive they will be at work. ...
- Customer service. ...
- Teamwork. ...
- Interpersonal skills. ...
- Communication. ...
- Writing. ...
- Organization. ...
- Flexibility.
Understanding the process
Career development is an ongoing process consisting of four main recurring steps: self knowledge, exploration, decision-making, and action.
A personal development plan, which is also known as a PDP, is an action plan that you can use to identify: Your individual goals and what you want to achieve. Your strengths and weaknesses. The areas you need to improve and develop to meet your goals.
What is professional development based on? ›In essence, professional development relies on a two-part transfer of knowledge: It must inculcate in teachers new knowledge and skills such that they change their behavior, and those changes must subsequently result in improved student mastery of subject matter.
What are models of professional development? ›DIRECT TEACHING/TRAINING giving or receiving topic specific information at appropriate readiness levels: 1) awareness; 2) skill-building; 3) program improvement; and/or 4) strategic planning/systems thinking.
What are my areas of growth? ›- Mental growth. Mental growth focuses on the development of your mind, such as the way you think and learn. ...
- Social growth. Social growth involves improving your communication skills. ...
- Spiritual growth. ...
- Emotional growth. ...
- Physical growth.
- Read often.
- Adopt a new hobby.
- Sign up for a training session.
- Identify in-demand skills.
- Try a new schedule.
- Commit to an exercise routine.
- Set big goals.
- Change your mindset.
What is the difference between training and professional development? ›
In contrast to training, which is considered to be focused, formal, and linear, professional development may be less formal and have several possible outcomes, formats, and foci (Herbert-Smith, 2019).
What are your goals for professional development? ›- Develop a new skill set. ...
- Develop your workplace skills. ...
- Take up leadership responsibilities. ...
- Expand your professional network. ...
- Level-up your credentials. ...
- Consume media in your field. ...
- Find other ways to deepen job satisfaction. ...
- Take a relevant course.
...
Below are the top five.
- Management and leadership training. ...
- Professional certifications. ...
- Technical skills training. ...
- Teamwork and interpersonal skills training.
In essence, professional development relies on a two-part transfer of knowledge: It must inculcate in teachers new knowledge and skills such that they change their behavior, and those changes must subsequently result in improved student mastery of subject matter.
What are models of professional development? ›DIRECT TEACHING/TRAINING giving or receiving topic specific information at appropriate readiness levels: 1) awareness; 2) skill-building; 3) program improvement; and/or 4) strategic planning/systems thinking.
What are 4 different ways you could participate in professional development? ›- See if your company is willing to support your professional development. ...
- Find a mentor or shadow a colleague. ...
- Attend conferences and workshops. ...
- Volunteer. ...
- Join an online community. ...
- Take an online course.
Training is mostly provided to teach new skills while development focuses on improving existing skills. Training and development initiatives are educational activities within an organization that are designed to improve the job performance of an individual or group.
What is the importance of training and development? ›Training and development helps companies gain and retain top talent, increase job satisfaction and morale, improve productivity and earn more profit. Additionally, businesses that have actively interested and dedicated employees see 41 percent lower absenteeism rates, and 17 percent higher productivity.
What is the difference between learning and development? ›What is the difference between learning and development? Learning is concerned with the acquisition of knowledge, skills, and attitudes. Development is the broadening and deepening of knowledge in line with one's development goals.
What are the 5 smart goals for work? ›...
If you're ready to start setting SMART goals, follow this five-step process.
- Specific. ...
- Measurable. ...
- Attainable. ...
- Relevant. ...
- Time-bound.
What are professional goals examples? ›
- Take a course to sharpen your skills.
- Learn a new tool (or 5)
- Improve your public speaking and presentations.
- Research other departments.
- Improve team collaboration and communication skills.
- Build your network.
- Research a competitor.
- Get better at time management.
- Specific: SMART goals should be specific, narrow, clear and easy to understand. ...
- Measurable: Goals should include clear metrics that make it easy to measure progress. ...
- Attainable: It's important that goals are attainable to help avoid burnout and stay motivated.
- Think about your overall career goals. ...
- Consider what development opportunities can help you achieve your goals. ...
- Discuss your professional journey. ...
- Outline both your short-term and long-term goals. ...
- Explain your plan. ...
- Align your plan with organizational goals.
- 1) Time management. Time management is crucial to your business's success. ...
- 2) Organization. Organization can make time management much easier. ...
- 3) Interpersonal communication. ...
- 4) Customer service. ...
- 5) Cooperation. ...
- 6) Conflict resolution. ...
- 7) Listening. ...
- 8) Written communication.
The top three types of teacher professional development are periodic workshops, in-class observation, and single-session seminars.