Professional Development Access, Participation Persistence, and Completion Readiness among Education Personnel
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.21423800Keywords:
completion readiness, education personnel, participation persistence, partial least squares structural equation modeling, professional development, professional learningAbstract
This study addressed the conditions that enabled education personnel to access professional development, sustain their participation, and prepare for successful completion. A cross-sectional explanatory-predictive latent-variable design was employed among education personnel in the DepEd Schools Division Office of Apayao. Data were gathered using a validated researcher-developed questionnaire and analyzed through descriptive statistics, partial least squares structural equation modeling, bootstrapping, mediation analysis, PLSpredict, and importance-performance map analysis. Results showed that professional development access was moderate, while participation persistence and completion readiness were high. Schedule and workload accommodation, financial and logistical support, technology and connectivity, recovery after interruption, and organizational support for completion emerged as the main areas of concern. The measurement model demonstrated acceptable reliability, convergent validity, and discriminant validity. Professional development access significantly predicted participation persistence and completion readiness, while participation persistence also significantly predicted completion readiness. Mediation analysis confirmed that participation persistence partially transmitted the effect of access on completion readiness. The model demonstrated moderate explanatory and predictive power, indicating that access and persistence were important but not exclusive determinants of readiness. Importance-performance analysis identified schedule accommodation, supervisory support, and financial assistance as priority areas for intervention. The findings underscored that providing professional development opportunities was insufficient without sustained organizational support. Protected learning time, flexible recovery arrangements, reliable technology, logistical assistance, and continuous facilitator guidance were recommended to strengthen participation and completion outcomes.
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