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Presentation from the CEEDAR Cross-State Convening focusing on connecting teacher preparation, practice, and student outcomes through quality clinical placements. Includes criteria for placements, instructional assistants program, peer tutoring, and peer coaching studies.
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Collaboration for Effective Educator Development, Accountability and Reform Partnerships and Change Strategies for Ensuring High Quality, Clinical Placements that Promote Teacher and Leader Collaboration H325A120003
Collaboration for Effective Educator Development, Accountability and Reform(CEEDAR) H325A120003
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Partnerships and Change Strategies for Ensuring High Quality, Clinical Placements that Promote Teacher and Leader Collaboration Larry Maheady, Ph. D. Exceptional Education Department SUNY Buffalo State maheadlj@buffalostate.edu June 24, 2015 Presentation for the CEEDAR Cross State Convening, Arlington, Virginia.
All New York State teachers must be prepared to teach effectively, students with disabilities, English Language Learners, and individuals from poverty environments (New York State DOE, 1989). “The effect of teacher preparation on eventual student outcomes is necessarily mediated by teachers’ actual practice. It is, therefore, impossible to know the effect of teacher preparation on student outcomes without fully understanding teaching practice” (Goe & Coggshall, 2007).
Purposes • Describecriteriafor quality clinical placements • Share three ways to connectteacherpreparation, teaching practice, and student outcomes • Created & sustained collaborative relationships with P-12 partners • Taught pre-service teachers to use Evidence-Based Practices (EBP) & assess effects on student learning • Provide “evidence” on what “worked” • How student learning was impacted • How teacher practice was impacted • How teacher preparation – teaching practice – student outcomes were linked
Criteriafor Quality Clinical Placements • Inclusivesettings(i.e., physical, academic, & social integration) with multiple sources of diversity • Effectiveteachers • good instructional models (e.g., use EBP) • nice enough to work with us Clinicalexperienceswere • linked to required courses for all teachers • practice-based & driven by teacher- and student-needs • highly structured (i.e., required formal teaching and outcome assessments) • conducted in pairs
Instructional Assistants Program • First formal teaching experience • Freshmen & Sophomores • 8- to 10-week field experience & partnership with P-12 schools • Pre-service teachers assigned in pairs • Twice per week; 3 hours per day • Teaching/Learning Contracts • 3 to 5 routine instructional roles • Taught two formal lessons • Pre- & post-test lessons • Graph results for whole class, small groups, and/or one target student • Use EBP in one lesson as intended
Descriptive Study (Maheady, Jabot, Rey, & Michelli-Pendl, 2007). • Instructional Assistants Program • 422 pre-service general educators over 4 semesters • Almost 17,000 hours of in class assistance (15 years) • 78% in high need schools • Taught over 800 formal lessons • Implemented variety of EBP with high degree of accuracy • Students made marginal and noticeable gains in 83% of sampled lessons • Students and teachers provided positive evaluations of program and EBP • Lessons Learned • Pre-service teachers can use “simple” EBP as intended & help students • In-service teachers used IA primarily for instructional purposes • School-university partnership has persisted for almost 20 years
Peer Tutoring Program • Second clinical experience • Sophomores & Juniors • Linked to Introduction to Special Education course • 8- to 10-week, after-school tutoring program for students with disabilities and ELL • 2:1 instructional arrangement • Pre-service teachers alternated teaching, observing, and data collecting roles • Collected data on how well they used selected teaching practices • Monitored student performance on brief, end-of-session assessments • Worked in small cooperative learning groups on campus • Shared EBP using Jigsaw format • Modeled content enhancements & use of varied motivation systems
Peer Coaching Study (Mallette, Maheady, & Harper, 1999) • Randomly selected 3 tutor pairs • Taught them to use adapted version of PALS(multi-component training, “peer tutoring” package) • Examined effects of coaching on • How well students coached? • How well pre-service teachers used PALS • What happened to students’ reading fluency and comprehension • Lessons Learned • Pre-service teachers learned to peer coach but not well • Coaching improved accuracyin using PALS • Improved accuracy produced better student outcomes • Teachers and students gave positive favorability ratings • Pair Tutoring Program sustained for 24 years
Graduate Research Sequence • 9-hour TE research sequence • Second course, teachers…… • Identifyimportant problems • Complete illustrative literature reviews • Design research-to-practice studies & get approval to do them • Research-to-practice studies • Target important problems in P-12 settings • Conduct study under “existing” conditions • Compare student performance under existing (baseline) versus intervention conditions • Within-teacher comparisons
Improving Homework Completion & Accuracy (Landy, Budin, Maheady, Patti, & Rafferty, in press) • Problem • Low homework completion and accuracy • Pupil disinterest and some disruptive behavior • Students and settings • 20, 7th graders; 12 students with IEPs • Co-taught math inclusion class (19 & 34 years experience) • Student Outcomes • Percent homework completed (i.e., % of items completed divided by total assigned) • Percent homework accuracy (i.e., % correct or completed items) • Teaching Practice • Three Jars
20 paper slips 15 (material, activity, & novel rewards) 5 (mystery motivator slips) WHAT? WOW ! WHO? 26 paper slips 1 “whole class” 5 “rows 1 to 5” 20 pupil names 11 paper slips 5 “completion” 5 “accuracy” 1 “both” criteria 80% to 100%
Closing The Gap Percent Completion Percent Correct
Takeaways • Some practices are more effective than others in improving student outcomes (EBP) • We need more teachers, pre-service & in-service, to use more EBP more often • Teacher educators can • teachthesepractices (and others) • provide structured opportunities to use them (early & often) & via P-12 partnerships • include “tools” to evaluate impact on students • conduct research on teacher practice & student learning • SEAprofessionals • promote and implement policies that support use of EBP • encourage use of instructional coaching to help teachers use them • support accountability policies & procedures that focus on teaching improvement over evaluation
References Goe, L., & Coggshall, J. (2007, May). The teacher preparation – teacher practices – student outcomes relationship in special education: Missing links and necessary connections. NCCTQ Research and Policy Brief. Washington, DC: National Comprehensive Center for Teacher Quality. Available from www.ncctq.org Landy, K., Budin, S., Maheady, L., Patti, A., & Rafferty, L. (in press). The effects of Three Jars on the homework completion and accuracy of a 7th grade math inclusion class. Education and Treatment of Children. Maheady, L., Harper, G. F., Mallette, B., & Karnes, M. (2004). Preparing pre-service teachers to implement Class Wide Peer Tutoring. Teacher Education and Special Education, 27, 408-418. Maheady, L., Jabot, M., Rey, J., & Michelli-Pendl, J. (2007). An early field based experience and its effects on pre-service teachers’ practice and student learning. Teacher Education and Special Education 30, 24-33. Mallette, B., Maheady, L., & Harper, G. F. (1999).The effects of reciprocal peer coaching on pre-service general educators' instruction of students with special learning needs. Teacher Education and Special Education, 22, 201-216.