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Join the Bethlehem Moravian College Education Department for an interactive workshop on action research in education. Learn how to conduct systematic inquiries to improve teaching and learning, gather information about schools' operations, and enhance students' learning experiences.
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Bethlehem Moravian College Education Department Action Research Workshop Presentation Abrilene Johnston-Scott, EdD Research Coordinator September 11, 2014
Action Research • Any systematic inquiry conducted by teacher researchers, principals, school counselors, or other stakeholders … • in the teaching/learning environment … • to gather information about how their particular schools operate, how they teach, and how well their students learn. • Research done by teachers for themselves
Goals of Action Research • To improve the lives of children • To learn about the craft of teaching
Informed Consent • Ensures that research participants • enter the research of their free will • understand the study • are aware of any possible dangers • Intended to reduce the likelihood that participants will be exploited • Ongoing dialogue between participants and teacher-researcher • Written permissions if necessary
Freedom from Harm • Students must not be exposed to risk • anonymity: researcher does not know identity of participants • confidentiality: researcher does not release personally identifiable information • There is no place for deception in action research!
Parental Permission • Required if • students are underage • data identify students • Not required if • school personnel have “legitimate educational interest” • records are anonymous • Request must specify • what data may be disclosed • for what purposes • to whom
Deciding on an Area of Focus • Clarify your area of focus. • Do reconnaissance. • Review related literature.
Clarifying an Area of Focus • General idea: statement that links idea to action and refers to a situation to change or improve • Area of focus: explicit question or problem to investigate • involves teaching and learning • focuses on your own practice • within your locus of control • something you feel passionate about • something you want to change or improve
Reconnaissance • Preliminary information gathering • Taking time to reflect on your own beliefs • Taking time to understand the nature and context of your general idea • 3 forms • self-reflection • description • explanation
Self-reflection • Reflect on • theories that affect your practice • educational values you hold • historical contexts • how your work in schools fits into the larger context of schooling and society • historical contexts
Descriptive Activities • What evidence do you have that this is a problem? • Which students are affected? • How is the content currently taught?
Explanatory Activities • Develop a hypothesis • focus on the why • try to account for critical factors that have an impact on the general idea
Review of Related Literature • Systematically identifying, locating, analyzing documents related to the topic/area of focus • major themes • promising practices
Data Collection • Largely determined by the nature of the problem • qualitative • quantitative • mixed method
Using and Making Records • Archival documents • attendance and retention rates • discipline referrals • standardized test scores • Journals • Maps, video and audio recordings, photos, film • Dictation software • Other artifacts
Quantitative Data Collection Techniques • Teacher-made tests • Standardized tests • School-generated report cards • Questionnaires • etc
Triangulation • Use of multiple sources of data • “multi-instrument” approach
Realigning Your Focus • Other directions appear more interesting, relevant, or problematic • That’s fine — • Action research is intimate, open-ended, unforeseen • Action research is done to benefit you and the students
Validity • Degree to which data collection methods measure what they are supposed to measure
Reliability • Degree to which a test consistently measures whatever it measures • expressed numerically, usually as coefficient • high coefficient (near 1.00) indicates high reliability • no test is perfectly reliable
Reliability in Qualitative Action Research • Degree to which data would be consistently collected • same techniques utilized repeatedly • same techniques used by different researchers
Generalizability • Degree to which behavior of one group can be used to explain the behavior of a wider group • Generalizability is not the goal of action research. Instead, it is to: • understand what is happening in your school or classroom • determine how to improve things in that context
Ongoing Analysis & Reflection • Is your research question still answerable and worth answering? • Are your data collection techniques catching the kind of data you want and filtering out unwanted data? • Conduct interim analysis • Avoid premature action
Analysis & Interpretation • Data analysis • summary of data • technique determined by type of data • Data interpretation • finding meaning in the data
Organizing Qualitative Data • Reading/Memoing • record initial thoughts • Describing • include context, actions, interactions • Classifying • develop themes
Data Analysis Techniques • Identify themes • work inductively • Code surveys, interviews, questionnaires • try to find patterns, meaning • Analyze interviews • annotate and identify themes • Ask key questions
Data Analysis Techniques • Concept map
Data Analysis Techniques • Display findings • matrixes, charts, concept maps, graphs, figures, audiovisual media • State what’s missing • avoid makingunwarranted assertions
Analyzing & InterpretingQuantitative Data • Descriptive statistics • shorthand way of giving lots of information about a range of numbers
Analyzing & InterpretingQuantitative Data • Descriptive statistics • central tendency • mean (average) • median (middle) • mode (most frequent) • variability • standard deviation (spread)
Qualitative Data Interpretation • Extend the analysis • raise questions • note implications that might be drawn, without actually drawing them • Connect findings with personal experience • Seek advice of “critical” friends • take time to build relationships
Qualitative Data Interpretation • Contextualize findings in literature • Turn to theory • link to broader issues • provide rationale, sense of meaning
Developing Action Plans • Reflect: “Based on what I have learned from this investigation, what should I do now?”
Steps to Action • Summarizing findings • Recommending action • Determining responsibilities • Sharing findings with colleagues • Ongoing monitoring (data collection) • Creating timeline • Developing resources
Levels of Action Planning • Individual • curriculum development, implementation • instructional & assessment strategies • classroom management strategies/plans • community involvement • Team • teachers, administrators, parents • Schoolwide
Action Should Be Ongoing • Taking action is a regular part of teaching • based on formative feedback • often intuitive and informal
Reflection • What were the intended and unintended effects of your actions? • What educational issues arise from what you have learned about your practice?
Challenges Facing Teacher Researchers • Lack of resources • Resistance to change • Reluctance to interfere with others’ professional practices • Reluctance to admit difficult truths • Finding a forum to share what you learned • Making time for action research
Format and Style • Format: general pattern of organization and arrangement • Style: rules of grammar, spelling, capitalization, punctuation, and word processing
APA Style Manual • Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association • most widely accepted by colleges, universities, journals
Outline, Action Research Report • Area-of-focus statement • Related literature • Definition of variables • Research questions • Description of intervention or innovation