Online Research Training for Improving Public School Teachers' Action Research Competencies

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Online Research Training for Improving Public School Teachers' Action Research Competencies
Language: English
Authors: Alvin Odon Insorio
Source: International Journal of Research in Education and Science. 2026 12(1):116-139.
Availability: International Society for Technology, Education, and Science. e-mail: ijresoffice@gmail.com; Web site: https://www.ijres.net/index.php/ijres
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 24
Publication Date: 2026
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Education Level: Elementary Education
Secondary Education
Elementary Secondary Education
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Research Training, Research Skills, Action Research, Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers
Geographic Terms: Philippines
ISSN: 2148-9955
Abstract: Public school teachers have low research competencies, which contributes to poor action research production. Furthermore, few studies have been conducted to improve the action research competencies of public school teachers in the Philippines. As a result, this study improved the action research competencies of public school teachers through online research training, including research templates, coaching, and mentoring sessions. A practical action research method was used, with sixty-four public school teachers freely participating in and completing a five-day training program. Action research competencies were assessed before and after training using a validated questionnaire developed by field specialists, and semi-structured interviews were performed to elicit feedback. Statistical analyses such as median, interquartile range, Wilcoxon signed-rank test, and rank biserial were performed using Jamovi (v 2.4.14), while interview transcripts were analyzed thematically. The findings revealed that participants' action research competencies improved, as evidenced by a statistical difference between before and after participating in the online research training. However, suggestions were made, including extra writing time for peer review exercises, face-to-face training with more examples of each section of research articles, and a longer proposal presentation period. As a result, twelve action research proposals were presented to their supervisors for feedback. The study was conducted in one location and focused solely on public school teachers. Therefore, DepEd authorities may continue to improve public school teachers' action research competencies through online or in-person research training to generate more action research addressing educational problems in the classroom.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2026
Accession Number: EJ1494211
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:Public school teachers have low research competencies, which contributes to poor action research production. Furthermore, few studies have been conducted to improve the action research competencies of public school teachers in the Philippines. As a result, this study improved the action research competencies of public school teachers through online research training, including research templates, coaching, and mentoring sessions. A practical action research method was used, with sixty-four public school teachers freely participating in and completing a five-day training program. Action research competencies were assessed before and after training using a validated questionnaire developed by field specialists, and semi-structured interviews were performed to elicit feedback. Statistical analyses such as median, interquartile range, Wilcoxon signed-rank test, and rank biserial were performed using Jamovi (v 2.4.14), while interview transcripts were analyzed thematically. The findings revealed that participants' action research competencies improved, as evidenced by a statistical difference between before and after participating in the online research training. However, suggestions were made, including extra writing time for peer review exercises, face-to-face training with more examples of each section of research articles, and a longer proposal presentation period. As a result, twelve action research proposals were presented to their supervisors for feedback. The study was conducted in one location and focused solely on public school teachers. Therefore, DepEd authorities may continue to improve public school teachers' action research competencies through online or in-person research training to generate more action research addressing educational problems in the classroom.
ISSN:2148-9955