This research was a narrative study of the professional learning of workshop leaders, that is, senior teachers whose professional growth prepared them to share their learning with other teachers. Six participants in this study made up three cases. Case 1 included three workshop leaders in an IB-PYPschool. Case 2 was two workshop leaders who were previous IB-PYP workshop leaders but then worked in two separate non-IB private schools. Case 3 was a non-IB workshop leader who taught in a private religious-affiliated school. All participants took ownership of their growth, which motivated them to share their learning with other teachers. Sharing what they had learned with others increased their professional development as well. In all three cases, professional learning was motivated by varied institutional support. In Case 1, the progressive pedagogy and professional development of the IB-PYP school supported these teachers’ professional learning. In Case 2, the two participants also were provided professional development opportunities within an IB-PYP school to become workshop leaders; after 4-5 years they moved to two different private elementary schools as a senior teacher and a principal; they continued offering workshops for teachers in non-IB schools. They were anxious to share the progressive best practices learned in their IB programs. In Case 3, the participant benefitted from reflective practices in his religious high school and he conducted extensive workshops, wrote for numerous newspapers, offered lectures at university, and published many books to share what he had learned. In all three cases, these workshop leaders learned a great deal that they then felt committed to share with other teachers. They all embodied an expression provided by the Case 3 teacher, namely nemo dat quod non habet (Latin), one cannot give what one does not have. Based on their own learning, all of these workshop leaders felt strongly motivated to help teachers in ways that would provide more progressive teaching and better learning for students.This study revealed three shared elements of these teachers’ professional learning, (a) their professional development occurred within sustainable support structures, (b) they took ownership of own growth, and (c) they engaged in cycles of growth and sharing, and reflection and action, that extended their development. This study also revealed different levels of engagement in critical thinking that has implications for Indonesian education more broadly.
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Narratives of teacher professional learning in Indonesia