|
We started the class out
understanding the differences between inquiry and research, to then
understanding what drives your research. Where do your questions come from?
As Dana states in the book, "According to Hubbard and Power (1993), wanderings and questions come from real world observations and dilemmas"
(page 30). Once you have studied and evaluated your findings, you work on
collecting the data. You have to put a plan into action to collect data that
is relevant to your inquiry. Once you collect your data, how are you going to
analyze it. Once you have compiled all your data and analyzed it its time to
share your findings with others. In the Dana text, "the process of
preparing your findings to share with others helps you clarify your own
thinking about your work". (page 136) Now it’s important for you to
establish with whom you need to share you work and what the best method in
which to share it is. (Remember this depends on the audience for which your
inquiry is intended, page 141). The end of the book reminds us that inquiry
doesn't stop at solving every problem, Dana states that "its about
finding new and better problems to study and in so doing, leading a
continuous cycle of self and school improvement" (page 172). The
assignments were very comprehensive and lead into very detailed results. Had interviews and questioning to do with
people I did not completely want to work with. However, it did open some
communications that otherwise would not have existed. The discussion board
postings were relevant most of the time. I had a interesting time with my
blog. If it was more to my liking I
would create one for my class to use. It is a good way to share with parents,
staff, other people and the students.
|
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Week 5 reflections
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Week 4 Reflection
I sat down with my site supervisor. Mainly I was informed it going to be a lengthy research project that will require a lot of time and lot of unknown futuristic type elements. For instance, I am relying on using people next year that I know will be back, well contracts have not been assigned and you just do not know what the big bosses are planning to do. They shift people at the last minute especially admin to make sure the schools will function how they see fit. If any of the personnel is changed, I may have a hard time getting the data I need to make a full school wide change. Overall, my action plan did not really need any work and we could not see any areas I might need to change or add to. Over this weekend, I do plan on reviewing and interviewing some people at another campus where they are doing what I am suggesting.
Action Research Template 2
|
Action Planning
Template
|
||||
|
Goal: To reverse
the role that CTE plays as a backup to Core
|
||||
|
Action Steps(s):
|
Person(s) Responsible:
|
Timeline: Start/End
|
Needed Resources
|
Evaluation
|
|
1.
Meet
with principals and counselor to seek approval and answer any questions about
the sample size for the one year trial run.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
April-June
‘12
|
Time
Principal
Asst.
Principal
Counselors
Dept. Heads
|
If I get
the approval, good evaluation, if I do not have to take in account the
reasons why, see if any possibility for a run the following year or another
campus, ask questions and proceed from there.
|
|
2.
Seek
out teachers that will fit the dynamic of what I am proposing.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
May-June
‘12
|
Conference
room
Checklist
of criteria a teacher has to meet
|
Fit closely
to an criteria list
|
|
3.
Master
schedule
|
Dean of
Instruction
|
June ‘12
|
Counselors
Approved
class schedules
Required
classes
|
Does the
new schedule meet the needs of the students and places all essential teachers
in correlation with each other.
|
|
4.
Randomly
pick students from CTE classes that will have to have all the core teachers
or at least 3 out of 4.
|
Counselors
Dean of Instruction
Marcus
Mason
|
June ‘12
|
Registration
Schedules
|
Do all of
the involved teachers have students from just the specified CTE programs?
Will all needs including special needs and accommodations be listed to be
met?
|
|
5.
Meet
with teacher and begin an overhaul, review, and anything deemed necessary to
the curriculum to align CTE and Core standards.
|
All
involved teachers
Dean of
Instruction
Dept Heads
Testing
Coordinator
|
August ‘12
|
Curriculum
binders,
Data or
INOVA binders,
TEKS,
Exam
standards,
Min. score
needed to determine possible success.
|
Do mostly
all stakeholders agree with curriculum, procedures, testing, accommodations,
and
|
|
6.
Meet
with teachers as a whole. Re-explain the roles and what I would like to
accomplish and answer any further questions
|
Marcus
Mason
|
August ‘12
|
Approved
meeting place
Projected
proposal from teachers of what they may need.
|
Before
school begins check with teachers to make sure all they need is accounted for
and that they have what they need to make collaborations.
|
|
7.
Begin
the school year and have bimonthly meetings and disaggregate data.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
August
‘12-Taks testing in April ‘13.
|
Meeting
room.
|
Evaluation
of teachers and students. What’s working and what’s not working. Struggles, road blocks, etc.
|
|
8.
Every
3 weeks after the initial 6 weeks, students begin benchmark, 3 week, 6 week,
and 9 week testing. Test as normal or
more frequent if permitted.
|
Testing
Coordinator
Dean of
Instruction
District
benchmark personnel
|
Starts in
October ’12 and tested at least as normal to more frequently.
|
Benchmark
Assestments
Curriculum
|
Benchmark
results
Assessments
Are the
students scoring better, borderline, or worse than their previous data
entailed?
|
|
9.
Survey
students and teachers at the end of each nine weeks regarding teacher growth
and increases interactive use Core classroom CTE supplementation.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
End of
every 9 weeks
|
Google
Survey
|
Survey
students and teachers if the class is working, suggestions for improvements,
and struggles?
Use
spreadsheets to group results.
|
|
10. Survey teachers about their comfort
levels in the role reversal.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
End of each
semester.
January of
’13 and June of ’13.
|
Google
Survey
|
Was it
worth the trouble to change the way CTE and Core have been taught? Several
different questions concerning the change and spreadsheets would be used to
make final report to present to stakeholders.
|
|
11. Survey students about their comfort
levels and the role they played in the role reversal.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
End of year
after testing May ‘13
|
Google
Survey
|
Did the
instruction being taught seem to be aimed more at your career pathway and
relevant to what you planned on doing? Ask varying questions of the overall
process, implementation, resources, and recommendations. Use spreadsheet to
share data with stakeholders.
|
|
12. Examine student data form the
current year’s benchmark and determine with stakeholders what impact did the
role reversal have.
|
Marcus
Mason
Dean of
Instruction
Dept Heads
|
May’13
|
Data from
results
|
Did it
work?
Spreadsheets,
binders, grouping, and everything we normally do with data interpretation.
|
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Week 3 Reflection
I hope my assignment posted correctly. I can say somewhat struggled with this weeks assignment. In my mind I had it all planned out, but putting it on paper was whole other story. I would have preferred to have seen an example of this assignment that scored all the points only to make sure I followed the direction correctly. I kept looking for ways for the project not to fail instead focusing on the good that will come from it. This was a detailed and thorough look of what could be. After talking to several individuals I was surprised for a moment at some folks that would like to see this project fail because they mainly do not want to change what they are doing. However, talking to some people who like and almost love the idea can't wait to take part in it, as long as they don't have to do any extra work. Funny how some people can be especially when they are professionals.
Action Research Plan
|
Action Planning
Template
|
||||
|
Goal: To reverse
the role that CTE plays as a backup to Core
|
||||
|
Action Steps(s):
|
Person(s) Responsible:
|
Timeline: Start/End
|
Needed Resources
|
Evaluation
|
|
1.
Meet
with principals and counselor to seek approval and answer any questions about
the sample size for the one year trial run.
|
Marcus Mason
|
April-June ‘12
|
Time
Principal
Asst.
Principal
Counselors
Dept. Heads
|
If I get
the approval, good evaluation, if I do not have to take in account the
reasons why, see if any possibility for a run the following year or another
campus, ask questions and proceed from there.
|
|
2.
Seek
out teachers that will fit the dynamic of what I am proposing.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
May-June ‘12
|
Conference
room
Checklist
of criteria a teacher has to meet
|
Fit closely
to an criteria list
|
|
3.
Master
schedule
|
Dean of
Instruction
|
June ‘12
|
Counselors
Approved
class schedules
Required
classes
|
Does the
new schedule meet the needs of the students and places all essential teachers
in correlation with each other.
|
|
4.
Randomly
pick students from CTE classes that will have to have all the core teachers
or at least 3 out of 4.
|
Counselors
Dean of Instruction
Marcus
Mason
|
June ‘12
|
Registration
Schedules
|
Do all of
the involved teachers have students from just the specified CTE programs?
Will all needs including special needs and accommodations be listed to be met?
|
|
5.
Meet
with teacher and begin an overhaul, review, and anything deemed necessary to
the curriculum to align CTE and Core standards.
|
All
involved teachers
Dean of
Instruction
Dept Heads
Testing Coordinator
|
August ‘12
|
Curriculum
binders,
Data or INOVA
binders,
TEKS,
Exam
standards,
Min. score
needed to determine possible success.
|
Do mostly all
stakeholders agree with curriculum, procedures, testing, accommodations, and
|
|
6.
Meet
with teachers as a whole. Re-explain the roles and what I would like to
accomplish and answer any further questions
|
Marcus Mason
|
August ‘12
|
Approved
meeting place
Projected
proposal from teachers of what they may need.
|
Before school
begins check with teachers to make sure all they need is accounted for and
that they have what they need to make collaborations.
|
|
7.
Begin
the school year and have bimonthly meetings and disaggregate data.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
August ‘12-Taks
testing in April ‘13.
|
Meeting
room.
|
Evaluation
of teachers and students. What’s working and what’s not working. Struggles, road blocks, etc.
|
|
8.
Every
3 weeks after the initial 6 weeks, students begin benchmark, 3 week, 6 week,
and 9 week testing. Test as normal or
more frequent if permitted.
|
Testing
Coordinator
Dean of
Instruction
District
benchmark personnel
|
Starts in October
’12 and tested at least as normal to more frequently.
|
Benchmark
Assestments
Curriculum
|
Benchmark
results
Assessments
Are the
students scoring better, borderline, or worse than their previous data entailed?
|
|
9.
Survey
students and teachers at the end of each nine weeks regarding teacher growth
and increases interactive use Core classroom CTE supplementation.
|
Marcus Mason
|
End of
every 9 weeks
|
Google
Survey
|
Survey
students and teachers if the class is working, suggestions for improvements, and
struggles?
Use
spreadsheets to group results.
|
|
10. Survey teachers about their comfort
levels in the role reversal.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
End of each
semester.
January of ’13
and June of ’13.
|
Google
Survey
|
Was it
worth the trouble to change the way CTE and Core have been taught? Several
different questions concerning the change and spreadsheets would be used to
make final report to present to stakeholders.
|
|
11. Survey students about their comfort
levels and the role they played in the role reversal.
|
Marcus
Mason
|
End of year
after testing May ‘13
|
Google
Survey
|
Did the
instruction being taught seem to be aimed more at your career pathway and
relevant to what you planned on doing? Ask varying questions of the overall
process, implementation, resources, and recommendations. Use spreadsheet to
share data with stakeholders.
|
|
12. Examine student data form the
current year’s benchmark and determine with stakeholders what impact did the
role reversal have.
|
Marcus
Mason
Dean of
Instruction
Dept Heads
|
May’13
|
Data from results
|
Did it
work?
Spreadsheets,
binders, grouping, and everything we normally do with data interpretation.
|
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