TY - CHAP
T1 - Utilizing evidence-based practice in teacher preparation
AU - Maheady, Larry
AU - Smith, Cynthia
AU - Jabot, Michael
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Evidence-based practice (EBP) can have a powerful impact on schoolaged children. Yet this impact may not be realized if classroom teachers do not use empirically supported interventions and/or fail to include the best research available when they make important educational decisions about children. Whether classroom teachers use EBP may be influenced, in part, by what they learned or failed to learn in their preservice preparation programs. This chapter describes recent efforts to assess preservice teachers' understanding and use of empirically supported interventions and provides four examples of how such practices were taught to preservice general educators in a small, regional teacher preparation program. We discuss four contemporary educational reform movements (i.e., federal policies mandating EBP, state-level policies linking growth in pupil learning to teacher evaluation, clinically rich teacher preparation, and the emergence of a practice-based evidence approach) that should increase interest and use of EBP in teacher education and offer recommendations for how teacher educators might infuse EBP into their traditional teaching, research, and service functions in higher education.
AB - Evidence-based practice (EBP) can have a powerful impact on schoolaged children. Yet this impact may not be realized if classroom teachers do not use empirically supported interventions and/or fail to include the best research available when they make important educational decisions about children. Whether classroom teachers use EBP may be influenced, in part, by what they learned or failed to learn in their preservice preparation programs. This chapter describes recent efforts to assess preservice teachers' understanding and use of empirically supported interventions and provides four examples of how such practices were taught to preservice general educators in a small, regional teacher preparation program. We discuss four contemporary educational reform movements (i.e., federal policies mandating EBP, state-level policies linking growth in pupil learning to teacher evaluation, clinically rich teacher preparation, and the emergence of a practice-based evidence approach) that should increase interest and use of EBP in teacher education and offer recommendations for how teacher educators might infuse EBP into their traditional teaching, research, and service functions in higher education.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84886501879
U2 - 10.1108/S0735-004X(2013)0000026008
DO - 10.1108/S0735-004X(2013)0000026008
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9781781904299
T3 - Advances in Learning and Behavioral Disabilities
SP - 121
EP - 147
BT - Evidence-Based Practices
A2 - Cook, Bryan
A2 - Tankersley, Melody
A2 - Landrum, Timothy
ER -