1 / 25

Research Experiences For Teachers: The Impacts on Their Students and the Economy

Research Experiences For Teachers: The Impacts on Their Students and the Economy. Jay Dubner Columbia University Summer Research Program for Science Teachers. 2006 AGU Fall Meeting December 11, 2006. “ Practice What You Teach ”.

fell
Download Presentation

Research Experiences For Teachers: The Impacts on Their Students and the Economy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Research Experiences For Teachers:The Impacts on Their Students and the Economy Jay Dubner Columbia University Summer Research Program for Science Teachers 2006 AGU Fall Meeting December 11, 2006

  2. “Practice What You Teach” Columbia’s Summer Research Program for Science Teachers was established in 1990 to contribute to the improvement of science achievement of students by providing New York metropolitan area middle and high school teachers with experiences in the practice of science. Teachers become members of research teams for 2 consecutive summers.

  3. Summer Research Program1990-2006 • 186 middle and high school science teachers + 30 placed at other NYC academic research institutions • 87% public schools • 60% women • 46% minorities

  4. Student Outcome Studies 1. Columbia’s Summer Research Program (1993-2006) • Collected data on the Program’s largest cohort of participants – NYC public high schools 2. NSF-supported SWEPT Multi-site (1998-2002) • 8 science teacher research programs from around the United States • New York, Arkansas, Georgia, Texas, Idaho, Washington State, Oregon & California Acronyms SWEPT – Science Work Experience Programs for Teachers RET – Research Experience for Teachers

  5. Instruments AdministeredSummer Research Program1993 – 2006 • Pre-program survey • Post-program survey • Mentor survey • Spring implementation survey

  6. Instruments AdministeredMulti-site SWEPT Study1999-2000 • Pre-program survey* • Post-program survey* • Mentor survey* • Student Attitudinal Survey* • Student Cognitive Tests • Biology & Chemistry * Surveys available at www.SweptStudy.org

  7. (1)Data for 32 SWEPT teachers and 32 Control teachers participating in NSF-sponsored Multi-site Study 1998 – 2002

  8. Findings • Program has engaged teachers intellectually • Provided teachers with new avenues of professional & personal growth • Increased their appreciation for the process of scientific discovery • Enhanced their ability to converse the excitement and vitality of science to their students and fellow educators

  9. 2006 Teacher Survey Data • 95% reported increasing hands-on activities in their classrooms and/or new laboratory exercises in response to their experiences at Columbia. • 90% reported developing new or revised content to lessons and/or labs since participating in Columbia’s Program*. • 85% reported increased requirements for formal written reports and/or oral presentation requirements. • 80% reported introducing new technologies in their classroom instruction (e.g.; chromatography, pipetting, PowerPoint). • 70% reported discussing science careers and related job requirements with their students. • 55% reported reading scientific journals more frequently. • 50% reported assuming new leadership roles/responsibilities in their school/district/region. • * 280 Lesson & lab plans referencing the National Science Standards on Program’s Web site • www.ScienceTeacherProgram.org

  10. Teacher Retention & Program Impact Study Study conducted with IISME participants1 1Weisbaum, K. and Huang, D., IISME Teacher Retention and Program Impact Evaluation 1985-2000. Cupertino, CA: Industry Initiatives for Science and Math Education, 2001

  11. Research shows that teacher expertise is one of the most important factors in raising student achievement1 • A review of 60 studies found that investing in support for teacher expertise was the most cost-effective way to increase student achievement. • Effective professional development programs stimulate teachers to work with one another. 1Ohme, P. & Rayford, J.,Innovative Program Allows Georgia Teachers to Bring Real-World Work Experiences into the Classroom, The Journal, October 2001

  12. Self-reported Changes in Attitudes and Classroom Practices of SWEPT and Control Teachers (Academic Year Following Program Participation)

  13. Columbia’s Summer Research Program has been collecting quantitative student data from NYC public high schools (1993 was first data set) - Study Group -- Students in science classes of Program teachers (Prior to program participation through completion of two summer program) - Comparison Group -- Students in science classes of non-participating teachers from the same schools

  14. New York City Science Regents Pass Rate: 55% Statistically significant at p <.01

  15. NYC Economic Impact • Regents Diploma – Must pass 5 Regents including 1 Science Exam1 • NYC spends $12,930 per public school student2 • Student takes 5 courses/year = $2,586 per course • On average, each teacher will teach for 10 more years after participating in the Program • 11% more passing Regents = ~110 students • 110 students X $2,586 = $284,460 (11 times the cost to train one teacher) 1 New York State Education Department, New York State Total Public Report Card, 2005 2 The New York Sun, New York Outpacing Other States in School Spending, April 4, 2006

  16. National Economic Impacts • High School dropouts earn ~$270,000 less over a lifetime than a high school graduate thereby paying less taxes1. At a tax rate of 20%, loss of $54,600 in local and federal revenues. • High School graduates are less likely to commit crimes. Increasing HS completion by just 1% of the males would reduce criminal justice system costs by as much as $1.4 billion per year • High School graduates receive higher salaries thereby not needing food stamps, housing assistance, etc. Estimated annual savings are $8 billion per year 1 Cantu, R., Texas Labor Market Review, Labor Market Information Department, Texas Workforce Commission, December 2003

  17. 2006 Summer Research Program Funding Sources • Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation • Howard Hughes Medical Institute • Mellam Family Foundation • National Institutes of Health • National Science Foundation • New York Times Company Foundation

  18. Columbia University’sSummer Research Program for Science Teachers www.ScienceTeacherProgram.org

More Related