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Can virtual replace in-person coaching? Experimental evidence on teacher professional development and student learning

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Abstract

Virtual communication holds the promise of enabling low-cost professional development at scale, but the benefits of in-person interaction might be difficult to replicate. The authors report on an experiment in South Africa comparing on-site with virtual coaching of public primary school teachers. After three years, on-site coaching improved students' English oral language and reading proficiency (0.31 and 0.13 SD, respectively). Virtual coaching had a smaller impact on English oral language proficiency (0.12 SD), no impact on English reading proficiency, and an unintended negative effect on home language literacy. Classroom observations show that on-site coaching improved teaching practices, and virtual coaching led to larger crowding-out of home language teaching time. Implementation and survey data suggest technology itself was not a barrier to implementation, but rather that in-person contact enabled more accountability and support.

Author
Cilliers, Jacobus
Fleisch, Brahm
Kotzé, Janeli
Mohohlwane, Nompumelelo
Taylor, Stephen
Thulare, Tshegofatso
Year of publication
2021
Pages
70
Series
RISE working paper
Linguistic region
Country (Geographical area)
Level of education
Source database
library
Language
Project
Research on Improving Systems of Education, RISE