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This study explores the use of web-based observational technology to enhance professional development in targeted reading intervention. It focuses on utilizing technology for consultation delivery and teacher-student observations. The research design includes a series of randomized control trials in rural school districts. The study aims to improve literacy skills and promote rapid reading growth in struggling learners.
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The Targeted Reading Intervention: Utilizing Web-Based Observational Technology to Foster Professional Development Targeting instructional match in every interaction… Amy Hedrick Lynne Vernon-Feagans Marnie Ginsberg University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The TRI Team • Kirsten Kainz • Peg Burchinal • Tim Wood • Jeanne Gunther • Mandy Peters • Iris Padgett • Sandra Garcia • Amanda Bock • Tom Leggett • Steve Amendum • Kelley Mayer • Jason Rose • Kate Gallagher • Pam Winton • Gina Harrison • Jennifer Baucom • Sally Meehan • Reid Adams Funded by IES as part of the National Research Center on Rural Education Support --NRCRES -- www.nrcres.org/TRI
Use of Technology for Professional Development and Classroom Observations • Increase in the use of technology (e.g., on-line discussion boards, email correspondence, webcam technology, on-line consultation) as a tool for providing access to professional development resources (Gentry, Denton, & Kurtz, 2008; Pianta, Mashburn, Downer, Hamre, & Justice, 2008;Russell, Kleiman, Carey, & Douglas, 2009) • Importance of classroom observations for myriad purposes, including teacher training and empirical studies of education and child development (Pianta & Hamre, 2009)
Overview • The TRI Framework and Research Design • Technology to Facilitate Consultation Delivery • Technology to Facilitate Teacher-Student Observations • Challenges and Benefits
General Framework of theTargeted Reading Intervention • Collaborative consultation for K-1 teachers’ professional learning • Serving struggling K-1 students • Intensive, diagnostic reading instruction • Daily • Given by the classroom teacher • One-on-one small groups • Rapid reading growth
The Research: A Series of Randomized Control Trials in Rural School Districts • Study 1: Piloting a one semester TRI intervention kindergarten and first grade • Study 2: Two semester TRI intervention in kindergarten and first grade • Study 3: Two semester TRI intervention in Texas and New Mexico in kindergarten and first grade, using distance technology • Study 4: Four semester TRI intervention in Nebraska and North Carolina, using distance technology
Research Design • Schools were pair matched on free and reduced lunch, % minority, school size, and Reading First status • Schools were then randomly assigned to experimental or control conditions • Within each classroom: • 5 focal children were randomly selected from those children identified by the teacher as struggling learners (i.e., below expectations for literacy skills) • 5 non-focal children were randomly selected from those children identified by the teacher as progressing typically (i.e., meeting or exceeding expectations for literacy skills)
Professional Development for Experimental Teachers • Training begins with multi-day summer institute at UNC-Chapel Hill • During school year, work one-on-one every day with a struggling reader and up to 5 across the course of the year • Collaborative consultation bi-weekly with UNC literacy consultants via webcam • Focus on problem solving and diagnostic thinking to equip teachers with needed instructional tools in bi-weekly team meetings via webcam
TRI Session Re-Reading for Fluency (2+ minutes) Word Work (8+ minutes) Guided Oral Reading (5+ minutes) TRI Extensions
TRI: Primary Word Work Strategies • Segmenting Words • Change One Sound • Read, Write, & Say • Pocket Phrases Word Work (~8+ minutes)
Utility of Technology • Allows for observation of teacher-student interaction in the TRI session • Opportunities for coach-teacher dialogue post-session • Continued discussions via email and text-chat
Observational Data • Whole Class Observations: focus on teacher context and teacher behaviors - methods of instruction, instructional focus, use of questions, reinforcement, relationship characteristics • Challenge with webcam technology • One-on-One Observations: focus on specific instructional strategies and behaviors – methods of instruction, use of questions, reinforcement, relationship characteristics • Utility of webcam technology
One-on-One Observations • All teachers, both experimental and control, participated in a guided oral reading session with three randomly selected focal children • Total observation time was 5 minutes, divided into 10 30-second blocks • Observations of behaviors/practices were coded on a presence/absence basis
Individualized Instruction Codes • Literacy Focus: describe the specific literacy skills introduced, reinforced, or emphasized by the teacher (e.g., listening to text, vocabulary, phonological awareness, comprehension) • Teacher Strategies: describe specific instructional methods employed by the teacher (e.g., modeling, coaching/scaffolding, redirection) • Behaviors: describe the affect and quality of interactions between the dyad (e.g., teacher engagement, child negative affect, shared positive affect)
Practical Considerations Challenges Benefits Cost-effective and more scalable Less invasive Teacher autonomy Video record of observational data • School capabilities: technology support, bandwidth, security firewalls • Teacher facility with technology • Ethical considerations: privacy, consent, use of video data
Summary • Technology can be used to foster teacher professional development and to carry out classroom observations for research purposes • Various considerations and improvements needed for more widespread use of such technological innovations