One of the major things I realized with the action
research is how flexible and beneficial it is for all educators to use. It is an amazing way to personalize his/her
professional development through finding topics of interest and researching
about it. What a great way to be
actively involved in a professional development that actually interests
you. From my experience of
professional development, it has always been droll and mind-numbing without
much information that I felt was relevant to my campus and student
demographic. With this idea, I can
tailor my research to actual problems focused for my students and
campus.
With my first action research, I have chosen the
flipped classroom concept. This is a
topic of interest to me. I was already
planning to attempt a little implementation, but can now use this for
research and put data with my implementation.
With this I can see how it affects my students learning. If the research works the way I hope, I
will see some improvement in student learning versus traditional teaching.
|
Quote of the week
"I have learned that courage was not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it. The brave man is not he who does not feel afraid, but he who conquers that fear."~Nelson Mandela
Sunday, September 29, 2013
5301 reflection
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Revised Action Research Plan
Here it is. Let me know what you guys think. :) ~Josh
Action Planning Template
|
||||
Goal: How does the flipped classroom concept
affect student performance, knowledge acquisition, and productivity?
|
||||
Action Steps(s):
|
Person(s) Responsible:
|
Timeline: Start/End
|
Needed Resources
|
Evaluation
|
1.
Research ideas and possible implementation strategies for flipped classroom
concept
2.
Research apps, equipment needed for concept
3. Interview and observe teachers using concept
|
Josh
Hadley
Valerie
Parenica
David
Henson
teacher in Mansfield ISD
|
September
16, 2013
September
30, 2013
|
Variety
of articles and books outlining concept and implementation
Edshelf.com
|
-Summary
of ideas learned from articles and technology researched
Interview
over experience
|
3.
Outline major topics to implement concept over with other teacher
4.
Create a rubric to grade student sample work for different tasks within
topics
|
Josh
Hadley
Valerie
Parenica
Josh
Hadley
Algebra
2 level
|
October
1, 2013
October
15, 2013
October
20, 2013
October
30, 2013
|
Curriculum
guides
&
reference materials
Technology
apps loaded
|
Survey
of Algebra 2 teachers for most needed topics
Rubric
created
|
5.
Conduct first unit using flipped classroom concept
6.
Analyze results from first unit
|
Josh
Hadley
Valerie
Parenica
|
January
7, 2014
January
31, 2014
|
Videos
created and uploaded
USB drives & CDs loaded with videos
Unit
plans
various
materials for lessons
|
Assessments
and
student
work samples in both classes with and without concept used
|
7. Conduct second unit using flipped classroom
concept
6.
Analyze results from second unit; compare to first set of results
8.
Report findings to PLC group; site supervisor and other admin interested.
|
Josh
Hadley
Valerie
Parenica
|
March
10, 2014
May
2, 2014
|
Videos created and uploaded
USB drives & CDs loaded with videos
Unit plans
various materials for lessons
|
Assessments
and
student
work samples in both classes with and without concept used
|
Sunday, September 15, 2013
My Action Research Plan
Action Planning Template
|
||||
Goal: How does the flipped classroom concept
affect student performance, knowledge acquisition, and productivity?
|
||||
Action Steps(s):
|
Person(s) Responsible:
|
Timeline: Start/End
|
Needed Resources
|
Evaluation
|
1.
Research ideas and possible implementation strategies for flipped classroom
concept
2.
Research apps, equipment needed for concept
|
Josh
Hadley
Valerie
Parenica
David
Henson
|
September
16, 2013
September
30, 2013
|
Variety
of articles and books outlining concept and implementation
Edshelf.com
|
-Summary
of ideas learned from articles and technology researched
Interview
over experience
|
3.
Outline major topics to implement concept over with other teacher
4.
Create a rubric to grade student sample work for different tasks within
topics
|
Josh
Hadley
Valerie
Parenica
Josh
Hadley
Algebra
2 level
|
October
1, 2013
October
15, 2013
October
20, 2013
October
30, 2013
|
Curriculum
guides
&
reference materials
Technology
apps loaded
|
Survey
of Algebra 2 teachers for most needed topics
Rubric
created
|
5.
Conduct first unit using flipped classroom concept
6.
Analyze results from first unit
|
Josh
Hadley
Valerie
Parenica
|
January
7, 2014
January
31, 2014
|
Videos
created and uploaded
Unit
plans
various
materials for lessons
|
Assessments
student
work samples
|
7. Conduct second unit using flipped classroom
concept
6.
Analyze results from second unit; compare to first set of results
8.
Report findings to PLC group; site supervisor and other admin interested.
|
Josh
Hadley
Valerie
Parenica
|
March
10, 2014
May
2, 2014
|
Videos
created and uploaded
Unit
plans
various
materials for lessons
|
Assessments
student
work samples
|
Sunday, September 8, 2013
5301 week 2 reflection
This week, I learned more about action research and what all it can cover for an administrator. I still go back to say it is important to teachers to use this concept as well in more purposeful, meaningful ways. I know I will take this idea back to my PLC for areas we want to improve on and look at the facts and data to support what we do. The key thing I took away from this is that isn't about the numbers. You need to look more qualitative and into individual students.
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Action Research
What I learned about action research?
As my head is currently on nuclear meltdown with tons of information I have read and pondered this week, action research is something I think most educators do in some form. It isn't the traditional "sit-n-get" professional developments where some expert is paid to shell out his or her knowledge about best practices.
Here is what it is: a dynamic way to research and reflect on a question you have in your classroom or school. It gives you a buy-in to this type of professional development because you choose what you will research and create a plan of action for in your class/school. As teachers, we do this quite a bit. We have a question, "How can I do better with...?" So, we go out and Google information, school and curriculum resources, and talk with colleagues to find what we feel would make the best impact. Then, we take what we find and implement. At the end, you reflect back and see how the idea worked. You may use students' work for analysis or informal observations during the class time, but we analyze how it was effective. If it worked, then we keep it and maybe try to maintain little changes to keep it working. If it didn't work, then you go back through the process for another strategy that works.
Action research is tailored to your class or school. It creates buy in for all educators involved with the process. It gives them a unique, personal learning experience where they can share the successes and failures, creating dialogue with other professionals.
How educational leaders might use blogs?
Blogs are a great way to collaborate with other colleagues. Blogging allows us to share our thoughts and reflections at anytime. You can share and have your colleagues make comments. This allows you to receive quick feedback without waiting for an actual meeting where you are all together to share. You can also collaborate with others more globally. Now, you can connect with other educators from all countries. With that wealth of knowledge at a global level, this technology now brings this to us in our own homes. We do not have to wait for some amazing conference meeting to talk with our fellow colleagues.
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