Professional Learning Communities Assessment: Adaptation, Internal Validity, and Multidimensional Model Testing in Turkish Context

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Selçuk Dogan
R. Şamil Tatık
Nihal Yurtseven

Abstract

The main purpose of this study is to adapt and validate the Professional Learning Communities Assessment Revised (PLCA-R) by Olivier, Hipp, and Huffman within the context of Turkish schools. The instrument was translated and adapted to administer to teachers in Turkey. Internal structure of the Turkish version of PLCA-R was investigated by using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). After examining four alternative CFA models that have the potential to validate the internal structure of Turkish version of PLCA-R, we decided to retain the six-factor model with correlated residuals because it best explained the perception of teachers in Turkey according to a variety of criteria. After completing the adaptation study, for elementary teachers, we also modeled the relationship between individual, interpersonal, and organizational dimensions of professional learning communities accounting for teacher characteristics and school contextual factors. We found that organizational capacity is a statistically significant predictor for interpersonal capacities. However, professional development, as a personal capacity, was not a statistically significant mediator of this relationship in the model. We provided discussion on the dimensionality, methodological issues, and appropriate use of the translated instrument as well as on how our tested model can be interpreted for directions to future studies.

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Author Biographies

Selçuk Dogan, School of Teaching and Learning, Florida, USA.

He is a researcher at University of Florida and Marmara University, interested in teachers’ professional development, curriculum design (understanding by design), and professional learning communities. He uses large-scale national and international data to examine the intercorrelations and structural relationships among teachers, schools, and instruction from the teacher effectiveness and school improvement perspectives.

R. Şamil Tatık, Atatürk College of Education, Marmara University.

He is a research assistant. He researched about higher education, class size, teacher education, teachers’ professional development, metaphor, distance education, school based management, and accountability.

Nihal Yurtseven, School of Foreign Languages, Yıldız Techninal University.

She researched about teacher education, teachers’ professional development, the relationship between professional development and student achievement, and foreign language learning motivation within the scope of her doctoral dissertation, titled “Action Research Based UbD Practices in EFL Teaching.”