The Ed.D. as Investment in Professional Development: Cultivating Practitioner Knowledge

Authors

  • Margaret Macintyre Latta University of British Columbia Okanagan
  • Edmund T. Hamann University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • Susan A. Wunder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36510/learnland.v9i1.752

Keywords:

professional development, practice, practitioner knowledge

Abstract

As teacher educators and participants in the US-based Carnegie Project for the Education Doctorate (CPED) initiative to differentiate the Ed.D/Ph.D., we have programmatic commitments to the centrality of practitioner knowledge for shaping professional development. Through CPED, we structure opportunities for local educators to develop their professional practices within their graduate studies toward an Ed.D, while maintaining full-time educational work commitments. Concurrently, we examine and document how CPED creates room, alongside concrete practice, to cultivate, promote, and value the voices, sensibilities, and capacities of practitioners engaged in advanced practices. In doing so, we confront marginalization of practitioners’ perspectives in the field and seek conditions and supports that insist on educators’ primary role in the complex project of education worldwide.

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Published

2015-09-01

How to Cite

The Ed.D. as Investment in Professional Development: Cultivating Practitioner Knowledge. (2015). LEARNing Landscapes, 9(1), 177-196. https://doi.org/10.36510/learnland.v9i1.752