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Course
Description
The
purpose of this course is to provide teachers with the knowledge
and skills to integrate Action Research as a teaching and
problem solving methodology, as well as teaching students
to use Action Research to achieve lesson objectives.
Action
Research is a specific process for problem solving, verification,
and discovery. The process can be used by an individual, teacher
or student, but experience indicates the process works best
through cooperation and collaboration. This course will be
taught by employing the attributes of the Action Research
process:
Problem definition…the question
A plan to answer or resolve the problem
Use of objective data
Collection of data
Data recording
Reporting
After
presenting the attributes and having participants demonstrate
competency in their use, the participants will employ the
process to answer prescribed questions, and discover solutions
to persistent problems. Following these activities, participants
will develop strategies for teaching students to use Action
Research to complete assigned lessons. The participants may
elect to field-test the process in one of the following ways:
1. Teach the strategy to a class and report on the results
to the instructor.
2. Address a real issue in their classroom, school, or district
using Action Research and report on
the results to the instructor.
3. Taylor an application activity to their specific needs,
test the process, and report on the results
to the instructor.
All options will be assessed by prescribed criteria.
Objectives
Establish a conceptual framework for action research
Differentiate between "formal" and action
research
Develop basic concepts of research
Design action research projects
Select assumptions that can be verified by action research
Apply basic concepts to generated experimental ideas
Organize data for verification
Analyze and interpret data
Report results in prescribed formats
Strategies to use Action Research to resolve persistent
classroom problems
Curriculum Design
& Time Requirements
Action research is a 3 credit graduate level or forty-five hour
professional development course taught on weekends or over five full days. The primary teaching
methodology is to present a conceptual framework within which
teachers may define operationally the knowledge and skills
to successfully use action research in the classroom. Action
research is a teaching methodology and that methodology will
be used throughout the course. Participants will complete
and field-test an Action Research project and report results
to the instructor.
Course Materials
The required textbook for this course is Action Research: An Educational
Leader's Guide to School Improvement, by Jeffrey Glanz,
published by Christopher-Gordon Publishers, Inc., Norwood,
MA.
Session Outline
Session 1: Establishing a Conceptual
Framework for Action Research
Objective: To provide
an orientation to action research and identify the four stages
of action research.
Contents:
1. Overview
2. History of Scientific Research
3. Action Research Defined
4. Different Research Approaches
5. Research Terminology
6. The Research Process
Session 2: Differentiation Between
Formal and Action Research
Objective: To develop
the concept of here and now research; define action research;
and introduce a glossary of research terms
Contents:
1. "Here and Now" Research For Immediate
Application
2. A Systematic Method of Inquiry versus the Pragmatic
Use of Research Tools
3. Topic Selections
4. What If
?
5. The Problem and Its Setting
6. The Focus of Action Research
Session 3: Basic Principles of Experimental
Design and Data Analysis
Objective: Improve problem
selection for the action research process; to name problems
specifically related to teaching and learning in the classroom.
Contents:
1. Developing Basic Concepts
2. Applying Basic Concepts
3. Generating Experimental Ideas
4. Describing Experimental Procedures
5. Constructing Tables and Graphs
6. Writing Reports
Session 4: Major Concepts
Objective: To define the
concept of research design and to identify the experimental
approach to action research.
Contents:
1. The Concept of Control (Central Idea in Research)
2. Time Series Experiments
3. The Sample and Selecting the Sample
4. The Hypothesis
5. Claims
and Proof - Truth and Validity
6. Baseline Data
7. Replication
Session 5: The Design
Objective: To define the
parts of descriptive survey method and to begin a design based
on the four steps of the descriptive survey method..
Contents:
1. The Proposal
2. Research Symbols to Facilitate Design
3. Overview of:
a. Historical Design
b. Descriptive
c. Analytical
4. Emphasis - the Experimental Design
Session 6: The Data
Objective: Review methods
for collecting data; identify bias in action research; recognize
the use of and need for field tests.
Contents:
1. Related
Literature
2. Collecting Data - What Data do we Collect?
3. Sources of Data for Action Research
4. Analysis and Interpretation of Data
Session 7: The Data Continued
Objective: Define data
analysis and data interpretation and identify a data analysis
and data interpretation for your action research.
Contents:
1. The
Role of Statistics
2. Constructing Data Gathering Instruments
3. Taking Action
4. Reporting Results - Why and To Whom?
Session 8: Integrating Action Research
and Teaching
Objective: Name the questions
your project answer and identify ways to display your data.
Contents:
1. Rationale
for Student Research
2. Strategies for Classroom and Independent Research
3. Parental Support
4. Scheduling Student Research
5. Assessing Student Research
6. Maximizing Student Research
Session 9: Related Topics
Objective: Identifying
student research problems and how to assess student research.
Contents:
1. Critical
Thinking
2. Logic
3. Constructivism and Action Research
4. Utilization of Technology
5. Unleashing Imagination - Preparation, Incubation,
Persistence
6. Creativity - Finding New Ways, Making Associations,
Discovering Unexpected Solutions
Session 10: The Research Process
Objective: Review the
purpose of action research; add the final steps in the action
research process.
Contents:
1. Research
as an Integrated Process
2. The Problem Related to Method and Analysis
3. Student Action Research Safely
4. Student Action Research and the Prescribed
Curriculum
5. Relevant Case Studies of:
a. Teacher Action Research
b. Student Action Research
6. Review, the Cycle of Research
7. The Action Research Lesson
8. Synthesis
Grading
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Assignment |
Points |
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Grading
Scale |
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Attendance |
10 |
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100
93 |
A |
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Demonstrate
Competency Using Action Research Attributes |
25 |
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92
85 |
B |
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Collaboration
and cooperation on group projects |
25 |
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84
77 |
C |
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Field-test
reports based on prescribed criteria |
25 |
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Final Exam |
15 |
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Total
Points |
100 |
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Student
Academic Integrity
Participants
guarantee that all academic class work is original. Any academic
dishonesty or plagiarism (to take ideas, writings, etc. from
another and offer them as one's own), is a violation of student
academic behavior standards as outlined by our partnering
colleges and universities and is subject to academic disciplinary
action.
Register
To register to take TEI's Action Research in the Classroom
graduate course, go to the Course
Registration page.
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