Degree Name

EdD (Doctor of Education)

Program

Educational Leadership

Date of Award

5-2025

Committee Chair or Co-Chairs

Virginia Foley

Committee Members

Pamela Scott, William Flora

Abstract

The increasing complexity of 21st century education has heightened the demand for professional development (PD) that effectively support educators in adapting to evolving standards and diverse student needs. Despite extensive investment in PD, significant gaps remain in its design, implementation, and evaluation, often leading to ineffective outcomes. This qualitative, phenomenological study explored the processes involved in identifying, developing, implementing, and evaluating professional learning programs in PK-12 education, with the goal of identifying key factors that contribute to their effectiveness. Grounded in the design thinking framework, this study employs five phases: empathy, define, ideate, prototype, and test, to investigate how PD initiatives can be designed.

Through semi-structured interviews with educational leaders, the collaborative effort that shapes PD programs, addressing educators’ needs while aligning with contemporary educational standards were examined. Additionally, strategies used for PD implementation as well as evaluation mechanisms that assess the impact of PD were reviewed. Findings revealed that data-driven decision-making, strategic planning, collaboration with implementation, and the evaluation of professional development are essential components of effective professional development.

By integrating design thinking into PD development, this study contributes to the broader discourse on effective professional development, offering a model that emphasizes empathy to understand the needs, define key challenges, ideate solutions, prototype strategies, and test the effectiveness through continuous evaluation and refinement. The results provide insights for school administrators and educators enabling them to create professional learning experiences that not only support teacher development, ultimately enhancing student achievement.

Document Type

Dissertation - unrestricted

Copyright

Copyright by the authors.

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