Abstract
It is widely accepted in the literature that follow-up is critical to effective professional development, particularly in developing countries. However, very little empirical research has been conducted which supports this view, illuminates the follow-up processes used or demonstrates the effectiveness of particular follow-up strategies. This article begins to address this gap. It emerged from a three-year research study of a professional development programme for mainly unqualified Namibian primary teachers. The article begins with a summary of this programme and its role within the newly reformed Namibian education system. It summarises the associated research study and discusses the literature relevant to follow-up. It then explores and illuminates effective follow-up strategies used within the professional development programme. They are divided into two broad areas: trainer follow-up strategies and teacher follow-up strategies. The trainer strategies were lesson observation, learner assessment, progress meetings, checklists, trainer role and demonstration lessons. The teacher strategies were workshop handouts, diaries, self-evaluation forms and peer coaching. The article concludes with an examination of the effectiveness of these strategies. © 2002 by Taylor nad Francis Group, LLC.
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CITATION STYLE
O’sullivan, M. C. (2002). Effective follow-up strategies for professional development for primary teachers in Namibia. Teacher Development, 6(2), 181–203. https://doi.org/10.1080/13664530200200164
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