Coaches as Critical Consumers of Research Statewide Coaches Meeting Oregon Reading First Center Rachell Katz Jeanie Mercier-Smith April 24, 2008.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reading Recovery: Can School Psychologists Contribute? Ruth M. Kelly, Western Illinois University Kelly R. Waner, Special Education Association of Adams.
Advertisements

PERSONAL LITERACY PLANS AT THE SECONDARY LEVEL December 12, 2003.
Response to Intervention: Linking Statewide Initiatives.
Response to Intervention (RtI) in Primary Grades
Consistent teaching – K-6 Science and Technology
A Guide to Implementation
Standardized Tests: What Are They? Why Use Them?
PAYS FOR: Literacy Coach, Power Hour Aides, LTM's, Literacy Trainings, Kindergarten Teacher Training, Materials.
Using Core, Supplemental, and Intervention Reading Programs to Meet the Needs of All Learners Carrie Thomas Beck, Ph.D. Oregon Reading First Center COSA.
Thinking Smart About Assessment Ben Clarke, Ph.D. Rachell Katz, Ph.D. August 25, 2004 Oregon Reading First Mentor Coach Training © 2004 by the Oregon Reading.
Oregon Reading First: Statewide Mentor Coach Meeting February 18, 2005 © 2005 by the Oregon Reading First Center Center on Teaching and Learning.
Reading First Assessment Faculty Presentation. Fundamental Discoveries About How Children Learn to Read 1.Children who enter first grade weak in phonemic.
Funding Opportunities at the Institute of Education Sciences Elizabeth R. Albro, Ph.D. Associate Commissioner Teaching and Learning Division National Center.
Providing Leadership in Reading First Schools: Essential Elements Dr. Joseph K. Torgesen Florida Center for Reading Research Miami Reading First Principals,
Article Summary – EDU 215 Dr. Megan J. Scranton 1.
NCCSAD Advisory Board1 Research Objective Two Alignment Methodologies Diane M. Browder, PhD Claudia Flowers, PhD University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
Pennsylvania Reading First Leadership Meeting A Pathway For Success Eastern Regional Reading First Technical Assistance Center Florida Center for Reading.
Richland School District 2013 EOY Gains Analysis Data reflects implementation by 7/16/13 export.
Office of Institutional Research, Planning and Assessment January 24, 2011 UNDERSTANDING THE DIAGNOSTIC GUIDE.
1 Evaluating the NYC Core Knowledge Early Literacy Pilot: Year 1 Report September 22, 2009 HIGHLIGHTS Research and Policy Support Group FOR PRESS OFFICE.
Direct Instruction Kadetta Miller
1. 2 K-3 Scientifically Research Based Comprehensive Reading Programs.
Funding Opportunities at the Institute of Education Sciences Elizabeth R. Albro, Ph.D. Associate Commissioner Teaching and Learning Division National Center.
Evaluating a Literacy Curriculum for Adolescents: Results from Three Sites of the First Year of Striving Readers Eastern Evaluation Research Society Conference.
GTEP Resource Manual Training 2 The Education Trust Study (1998) Katie Haycock “However important demographic variables may appear in their association.
English Learner PLC Workshop Grossmont union high school district English Learner Programs September 23, 2009.
A Look at Evidence-Based Literacy Research for Students who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing John Luckner, Ed.D. National Center on Low-Incidence Disabilities.
Instruction, Teacher Evaluation and Value-Added Student Learning Minneapolis Public Schools November,
Making Consistent Decisions About Accommodations for English Language Learners – Research Summit – Texas Comprehensive SEDL Austin, Texas March.
Systems Review: Schoolwide Reading Support Cohort 5: Elementary Schools Winter, 2009.
Applying Research to Reading Instruction: What’s Next? Timothy Shanahan University of Illinois at Chicago
English Language Arts Single Plan for Student Achievement.
School-wide Data Team Meeting Winter NSIF Extended Cohort February 10, 2012.
1 Oregon Reading First Cohort B-ELL Coaches’ Meeting April 25, 2008 © 2008 by the Oregon Reading First Center Center on Teaching and Learning.
IES Evaluations and Data Collection Instruments Lauren Angelo National Center for Education Evaluation and Sally Atkins-Burnett Mathematica Policy Research.
Write To Learn Stephanie Needham J Glenn Edwards Elementary/ Lee County Schools April 25, A Race to the Top Initiative.
Interventions: Research and Review Johanna Cena Dean Richards.
Hastings Public Schools PLC Staff Development Planning & Reporting Guide.
1 The Oregon Reading First Model: A Blueprint for Success Scott K. Baker Eugene Research Institute/ University of Oregon Orientation Session Portland,
National Reading Panel ( NRP) and National Literacy Panel (NLP)
The Four P’s of an Effective Writing Tool: Personalized Practice with Proven Progress April 30, 2014.
OSEP Project Directors’ Conference Washington, DC July 21, 2008 Tools for Bridging the Research to Practice Gap Mary Wagner, Ph.D. SRI International.
1 Instructional Practices Task Group Chicago Meeting Progress Report April 20, 2007.
Projects #9, 17, 29, and 32 Mentor: Helga Bernard, Ph. D. Clark County School District School Improvement and Research.
Maine Department of Education Maine Reading First Course Session #1 Introduction to Reading First.
Reading Improvement Plan Introduction History History –Fall of Reading Program Report Staff Development Staff Development Leave No Child.
Annual Progress Report Data Ankeny Community Schools.
District One Administrator Institute Elementary Literacy Session August 17, 2005.
Where Do You Stand? Using Data to Size Up Your School’s Progress Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia.
Offered by The Florida Center for Reading Research Reading First Assessment “Catch Them Before They Fall”
Single Plan for Student Achievement Cycle Traci Albee, Administrator of State and Federal Programs December 2013.
Literacy Strategies for AIG Readers March 6, 2015 Dana Gillis Mount Mourne IB School, Iredell-Statesville Schools A Race to the Top Initiative NC Department.
English-Language Arts Content Standards for California By Ashleigh Boni & Christy Pryde By Ashleigh Boni & Christy Pryde.
1 Oregon Reading First Institute on Beginning Reading: Evaluating and Planning Spring, 2006 Cohort A (C) 2006 by the Oregon Reading First Center Center.
Evaluation Results MRI’s Evaluation Activities: Surveys Teacher Beliefs and Practices (pre/post) Annual Participant Questionnaire Data Collection.
Prevention to Avoid Intervention Tier 1: the most important tier!
IMPACT OF READ NATURALLY SUMMER AND FALL 2013 ACTION RESEARCH PROJECT AND EDU604 CULMINATION PROJECT DOANE COLLEGE SUE SCHLICHTEMEIER-NUTZMAN, PH.D. By.
The State of the School’s Reading First Program Fall, 2005.
Literacy Portfolios in the Elementary Classroom Presented by Edmund C. Garrison (North Bergen ELA District Supervisor)
Deciphering “Evidence” in the New Era of Education Research Standards Ben Clarke, Ph.D. Research Associate - Center for Teaching and Learning, University.
Middle School Training: Ensuring a Strong Foundation of Supports
Chapel Hill ISD Reading First Initiative
Data-Based Leadership
Model Demonstration Projects
Implementation of Data-Based Decision-Making in an Urban Elementary School Doug Marston Jane Thompson Minneapolis Public Schools March 26, 2009.
Title One Program Evaluation
The Big Picture Teaching Reading Sourcebook 2nd edition
Dr. Phyllis Underwood REL Southeast
Strategies Knowledge Habits of learning
Presentation transcript:

Coaches as Critical Consumers of Research Statewide Coaches Meeting Oregon Reading First Center Rachell Katz Jeanie Mercier-Smith April 24, 2008

Objectives Scientifically Based Reading Research Consumer’s Guide Scientifically Validated/ Researched Instruction What Works Clearinghouse “Look fors” in research studies Follow up on Tim Shanahan Resources to keep us up to date on research

The Challenge in Education No “Food and Drug Administration” for Education Medical profession has a rigorous process for researching drugs and surgical procedures before they can be used on people. In education we rely on publishers to produce core programs and interventions that will result in improvements in students’ skills.

Research Based vs Proven Effective by Research “Until an instructional practice has been implemented, evaluated and found to produce better results than its alternatives, there is no research basis for recommending it.” (Grossen, 1996) What are some challenges for practitioners about this statement?

Scientifically Based Reading Research Reading Instruction is based on the science of reading- the five big ideas that have been identified by an extensive review of the research to be critical in reading development. National Reading Panel Lots of programs are using the buzzwords, but may not actually teach them. Effective instructional strategies (modeling, explicit instruction, multiple opportunities to respond, systematic error correction).

Evaluating Core Programs 1. Does it teach all the relevant essential elements? 2. Are the design and delivery adequate for the majority of learners?

The “Consumers Guide” provides a common metric for evaluating: 1.Scope of review and prioritization of skills 2.Quality and nature of the delivery of instruction Examining Program Content

Examining Scope of Review & Prioritization The reading program’s scope and sequence should provide evidence of breadth and depth of coverage on essential skills. High Priority Items in Kindergarten

High Priority Items: Grade 1 Phonics Instruction

Scientifically Researched/ Validated Interventions Studies that have carefully controlled implementation of practices or programs to show that the program has resulted in an increase of students skills when compared to another instructional approach.

“Research Shows…” NCITE Tool: Evaluating Trustworthiness in Educational Research That is Used to Support a Change in Teaching or School Practice. Is the statement the result of a single study that was conducted with 40 students? Is the statement the result of a research review? Lots of research converging on the same conclusion Meta-analysis

Mathematica Policy Research Inc. Findings that are not causal often are stated as causal

Mathematica Policy Research Inc. The correlation prompts a causal recommendation But.. The study showed a correlation It did not measure the extent to which reducing class size will reduce expulsions

Mathematica Policy Research Inc. What does “effective” mean? Program 3 appears to be most effective

Mathematica Policy Research Inc. What would have happened without the program matters Program 1 appears to be most effective

Mathematica Policy Research Inc. Observations Showing causality is hard Common for findings that are not causal to be stated as causal Syntheses help to see a bigger picture but often present selective findings

What Works Clearinghouse “What’s Been Well Researched Clearinghouse” Review of the research that has been conducted on various educational issues Only reading programs involved in rigorous research studies of the highest quality were given a positive rating. Therefore a strong program that has not been tested in a high quality research study is not going to receive an endorsement by WWC.

WWC Ratings Improvement Index- difference between the percentile rank of the average student in the intervention group and the percentile rank of the average student in the comparison group. (range of -50 to +50 with positive numbers indicating results favorable to the intervention group) Evidence Rating- considers four factors Quality of the research design Statistical significance of the findings Size of the difference between participants in the intervention and comparison conditions Consistency in the findings across studies Extent of Evidence- how much evidence was used to determine the intervention rating, focusing on the number and size of the studies. Two possible categories: 1. small 2. medium to large

Purpose of What Works Clearinghouse Implementation and feasibility of implementing programs is not the focus Focus is on reviewing the research that has been conducted to prove effectiveness of programs

“Look Fors” in Research Studies Random assignment to conditions Equality of groups at start No confounds ( i.e. teachers with more experience teach intervention group, practicum students teach control group) Limitations Type of population Length of the Study Others? ____________________________________________

Practice Identify one potential problem with this research study. Discuss with a partner. Within a school, 30 students are randomly assigned either to a teacher who uses a new reading intervention or a teacher who uses the standard curriculum. The outcome used in the analysis is the spring score on a standardized reading test.

More Practice Identify one potential problem with this research study. Discuss with a partner. The teachers identified 31 children whose mean score on the fall Metropolitan Achievement Test was at about the 10 th percentile. Twelve children who did not have conflicts with other requested enrichment classes were scheduled for the fall reading intervention class (intervention plus tutoring group), and seven children were scheduled for the spring class (intervention only group). The remaining 12 children made up a control group.

Be a Critical Consumer of Strategies Example Oregon Reading First Brown Bag Presentation with Timothy Shanahan (March 17th, 2008)

Be a Critical Consumer of Strategies Example Article referenced by Tim Shanahan in Oregon RF Brown Bag Presentation : Effect of Difficulty Levels on Second-Grade Delayed Readers Using Dyad Reading; Journal of Educational Research (2000) Possible take home message that I heard: Practice in frustration- level material may result in more reading gains What assumptions could I make? Practice = Fluency Practice? Reading gains = Increased ORF Reading gains = Increased Comprehension? Let’s look at the research…

Summary/Abstract “The authors investigated how far above a poor reader’s instructional level dyad reading should be used to promote the greatest growth in reading level, word recognition, comprehension, and rate. Fifty-one poor readers were identified and randomly assigned to 1 of 3 instructional groups: a) dyad reading at their instructional reading level; b) dyad reading 2 grades above their instructional reading level; and c) dyad reading 4 grades above their instructional reading level. For 95 days/sessions, all groups read 15 min daily during their classroom recreational reading time. They all improved with dyad reading regardless of the difficulty level of materials. Results suggest that the difficulty level of materials used for dyad reading may make a difference in student progress.” Effect of Difficulty Levels on Second-Grade Delayed Readers Using Dyad Reading; Journal of Educational Research (2000)

Be a Critical Consumer of Strategies Is there converging evidence? How many studies? What is the quality of the research? For each study: What was the intervention/instructional strategies? How many participants? Who were the participants? Does the analysis make sense? What were the results? What were the limitations?

Coaches as Consumers of Research Where can we go for a summary of independent research of programs? What Work’s Clearinghouse Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD) Professional Journals Exceptional Children, The Reading Teacher Others? _____________________________________ Other resources: National Reading Panel National Literacy Panel on ELLs Florida Center for Reading Research

Other Resources… Teaching All Students to Read in Elementary School: A Guide for Principals [K-3] Effective Instruction for Adolescent Struggling Readers: A Practice Brief [4-12] Effective Instruction for Adolescent Struggling Readers: A Practice Brief A Synopsis of Writing Next: Effective Strategies to Improve Writing of Adolescents in Middle & High Schools [4-12] The Secondary Literacy Instruction and Intervention Guide [6-12] More….

ngK5/TopicLevel/el_practice_guide.pdf

Oregon Reading First Website Research summaries posted: Assessment, Coaches, Administrators Project Data & Norms Does phonemic decoding skill predict reading proficiency for English Learners? Three Year Report on Oregon Reading First: Impact and Implementation Oregon Reading First Teacher Report ( ) (relation between DIBELS and SAT-10)

Steps to take when you hear “Research Shows…” Research based or validated by a controlled study? How many studies have supported the claim? Check for the “look fors” when reading a study.