INTRODUCTION The concept of action research, or practitioner inquiry, as a form of teacher professional development has been around for years (Figure 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Year 2 Formative Progress Review
Advertisements

Coaching Conversations Content adapted from Facilitative Leadership: Tapping the Power of Participation Interaction Associates, Inc.
Speakers: Denise Chilton, Sandra Smele, Christine Wong May 1, 2013
Instructions for Template This is meant to be a resource to help you to plan and prepare for your weekly class. This resource is merely a suggestion of.
REVIEW OF QUALITATIVE RESEARCH AND PRINCIPLES OF QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS SCWK 242 – SESSION 2 SLIDES.
Welcome to Day 3 Please be seated in groups of 4.  Like grade bands  Mixed schools  New faces Introduce yourself to your table members.
Secondary District Professional Development October 14, 2011 Welcome! Please put on a name tag with your name and school, find any open seat and introduce.
 Introduction  Methods  Results  Discussion  What is your research question? This might be phrased as an actual question or simply as a statement.
Socratic Seminars. The Goal of Socratic Seminars Fosters active learning  Participants explore and evaluate a text Ideas Issues Values To learn more.
Everything you need to know in order to set up your Reader’s Notebook
Michigan Merit Examination ELA Assessment Analysis Presented by: Dr. Joan Livingston.
Welcome Back Review of Day 1 Feedback Agenda Review for Day 2.
NCOSP Learning Community Forum March 2007 Science Curriculum Topic Study Examining Student Thinking.
Lesson Design Study Suggestions from our text: Leading Lesson Study.
Science Inquiry Minds-on Hands-on.
Surviving the Data Collection Report. What is a Qualitative Interview?  Qualitative interviews are interviews designed to :  Have the interviewee do.
Chapter 20 Action Research Gay, Mills, and Airasian
Reflective practice Session 4 – Working together.
Looking at Student work to Improve Learning
Communication Skills Anyone can hear. It is virtually automatic. Listening is another matter. It takes skill, patience, practice and conscious effort.
+ What Should I Expect to See During Mathematics Instruction? Helping Secondary Principals Recognize and Support Mathematical Thinking and Reasoning.
Coaching Mentoring and Reflecting Effectively: Creating a Culture of Excellence Through Colleague Collaboration and Reflective Practice Helene Chan, Norman.
Debby Deal Tidewater Team STEM Grades 4-5 August 4, 2011 Action/Teacher Research.
TEMPLATE DESIGN © The Homework Effect: Does Homework Help or Harm Students? Katherine Field EdD Candidate, Department.
Sharon Travers Writing Coach & College Advisor.  Introduction  Personal Statement Basics Purpose Comparing Prompts Writing with Insight Engaging the.
Presentation Five Using Descriptive, Analytical, and Reflective Writing to Analyze Practice.
Teaching with Depth… using Questions Partially Adapted from Polk County, Florida Professional Development Presentation.
GETTING HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT’S BUY-IN: Target Language Only Mandarin Chinese Classes.
Alaska School Leadership Institute Session for New Participants May 27, 2014 Anchorage, Alaska Facilitated By Al Bertani, Senior Design Consultant; Lexie.
1. Housekeeping Items June 8 th and 9 th put on calendar for 2 nd round of Iowa Core ***Shenandoah participants*** Module 6 training on March 24 th will.
The Wisconsin RtI Center (CFDA #84.027) acknowledges the support of the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction in the development of this presentation.
Professionally Speaking : Qualitative Research and the Professions. Using action research to gauge the quality of feedback given to student teachers while.
Leading Innovation 2011: Sanding the Edges - Tuning a Lesson STRUCTURED LESSON REVIEW BEGIN.
Instructional Coaches Academy (ICAD3) 1.  Choose a movie title that describes your school experience and why.  Discuss in your table groups. 2.
Coaching Data Teams JANE COOK LITERACY & TECHNOLOGY COACH, EASTCONN BETH MCCAFFERY SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT COORDINATOR, LEARN.
August 19, The current situation Fall 2008 – incoming college students needing writing remediation: 36.7% of incoming students in 2 year institutions.
Presentation 1 Roles for Discussing Student Work There are four roles for discussing student work: Presenting Teacher Participant Recorder Facilitator.
Literacy Coaching: An Essential “Piece” of the Puzzle.
Secondary District Professional Development October 14, 2011 Welcome! Please put on a name tag with your name and school, find any open seat and introduce.
University of North Alabama
Teacher Refresher Course Professional Learning Program Program 1 Learning Leaders: Jill Flack Maureen O’Rourke.
Superintendents’ Statewide Mentoring Meeting Thursday, September 24, 2015.
Experience Protocols Tools that provide framework for discussions By Claire Dean.
Collaborative Assessment Conference Protocol Qualitative Data Example Source Protocol recommended group size of: 5-10 people.
Continuing the School Visit: Deepening the Next Level of Work East Boston High School December 9, 2014.
Questioning the Text Teaching American History In Miami-Dade County October 12, 2010 Fran Macko, Ph.D.
Formative Assessment and Feedback to Improve Writing CONVENING III, SECTION I.
Week 2: Interviews. Definition and Types  What is an interview? Conversation with a purpose  Types of interviews 1. Unstructured 2. Structured 3. Focus.
1 Los Angeles New Administrators Leadership Program Unit of Study 9 Conversations with Educators March 17, 2016.
Preparing the Final Group Project (For Group Work Day on April 14 th )
Spelling and beyond – Curriculum
Facilitating Effective Meetings
Superintendents’ Statewide Mentoring Meeting
Developing Thinking Thinking Skills for 21st century learners
Lesson Design Study Leading Lesson Study.
Why bother – is this not the English Department’s job?
Preparing to Teach and Overview of Teaching Assignments
Secondary District Professional Development
Spelling and beyond Literacy Toolkit HGIOS
Developing Thinking Thinking Skills for 21st century learners Literacy
Group Talk Feedback – A focus on the individual
Module 2 Nuts and Bolts of Peer Coaching Peer Coach Training.
Secondary District Professional Development
Group Talk Feedback – A focus on the individual
Core Competencies for Primary School Teachers in Crisis Contexts
Preparing to Teach and Overview of Teaching Assignments
Tier 3 – Our Students are Counting on US
ELLs in Texas: What Teachers Need to Know
Presentation transcript:

INTRODUCTION The concept of action research, or practitioner inquiry, as a form of teacher professional development has been around for years (Figure 1 illustrates the inquiry process). However, we know little about what it takes to coach this process. Yet, the depth of learning that occurs for teachers and the quality of the experience is directly related to the coaching that a teacher receives. This exploratory study sought to provide initial documentation of what professional development coaches might do to help facilitate a quality inquiry experience for teachers. RESULTS The coaches noted four major challenges they faced and identified how they addressed those challenges: Challenge #1: Time Time referred to both finding time to meet and the timing of the meeting (early in the morning, after a long day of school). Within the meetings, coaches in both groups indicated that the use of protocols (See Table 2) helped make the most of time by ensuring focused, deliberate dialogue. Challenge #2: Coaching Wondering Development Coaching the wondering, the burning question teachers have about their practice, was deemed crucial because a good question was essential for the teacher’s learning and in helping the teacher researcher sustain his/her work over time. This required a delicate balance between helping the teacher identify something s/he was passionate about and something doable in the time frame. Challenge #3: Coaching Data Analysis Coaching data analysis was identified as a challenge because it is something the teachers largely do on their own and often are nervous about. The coach’s role is to primarily alleviate teacher insecurities. All coaches found the Data Analysis Protocol to be helpful in this process (See Table 2). Challenge #4: Administration Coaches often had to negotiate between administrative support, mandates, or restrictions and the teacher researchers. When administration was supportive, teacher interest and commitment were heightened. When support was limited or absent, getting teachers involved was often a struggle. For additional information, please contact: Desi Krell, School of Teaching and Learning, University of Florida, Facilitating Action Research: A Study of Coaches, Their Experiences, and Their Reflections on Leading Teachers in the Process of Practitioner Inquiry  Desirae E. Krell, Nancy Fichtman Dana Table 2. Data Analysis Protocol* METHODS We conducted focus group interviews with two groups of professional development coaches who have engaged in inquiry partnerships with the university: An experienced group (6th year) of coaches from a consortium of rural school districts in North Florida A novice group (1 st year) of coaches from a large school district in North Florida The interviews were conducted using a modified version of Seidman’s (1991) phenomenological interviewing process, which categorized questions into three emphases: Focused Life History, Details of Experience, and Meaning of Experience. Though Seidman suggests conducting a separate interview for each emphasis, for our study the three interviews were condensed into one focus group interview. Table 1 summarizes the questions asked in the interviews. Interviews were recorded and transcribed. In addition to interview data, we also collected documentation used in the coaching process that the coaches were willing to provide. We analyzed this data by reading and re-reading the interview transcripts several times, as well as compiling and synthesizing all the documents. Seidman’s Interview Categories Focus Group Interview Questions Focused Life History (How participants became involved in education and inquiry) Tell me about your background. What brought you to the field of education? What teaching positions have you held? What other positions, if any, have you held? How did you develop an interest in teacher professional development? How did you develop an interest in the teacher inquiry model? Details of Experience (How participants came to understand and coach inquiry) Describe the process of teacher inquiry as you understand it. How did you obtain your understandings of the teacher inquiry process? Tell me a little bit about the school(s) you were assigned to coach inquiry in. How many teachers did you coach in the process, and how were they selected? Describe the meetings you had with these teachers over the course of the school year. What were the purposes of each meeting, when in the year was it held, and what did you do with the teachers at these meetings? Meaning of Experience (What successes and challenges they faced) What do you think was the most productive meeting you had with the teachers you coach? What made this meeting the most productive? What aspects of the inquiry process would you consider the most difficult to coach? Why? Describe the preparation you had to coach the process of inquiry. What would have been helpful to know more about before you started coaching the process? What were the most rewarding aspects of coaching this school year? What were the most challenging aspects of coaching this school year? What advice would you offer future inquiry coaches? Figure 1. Inquiry Cycle. Data Analysis Protocol: Helping Your Colleagues Make Sense of What They Learned Suggested Group Size: 4 Suggested Time Frame: 25 – 30 MINUTES PER GROUP MEMBER Step One: Presenter Shares His/Her Inquiry (4 Minutes) – Presenter briefly shares with his/her group members the focus/purpose of his/her inquiry, what his/her wondering(s) were, how data were collected, and the initial sense that the presenter has made of his/her data. Completing the following sentences prior to discussion may help presenter organize his/her thoughts prior to sharing: The issue/dilemma/problem/interest that led me to my inquiry was... Therefore, the purpose of my inquiry was to... My wondering(s) was... I collected data by... So far, three discoveries I’ve made from reading through my data are... Step Two: Group Members Ask Clarifying Questions (3 Minutes) – Group members ask questions that have factual answers to clarify their understanding of the inquiry, such as, “How long did you collect data for?” “How many students did you work with?” Step Three: Group Members Ask Probing Questions ( Minutes) - The group then asks probing questions of the presenter. These questions are worded so that they help the presenter clarify and expand his/her thinking about what he/she is learning from the data. During this 10-minute time frame, the presenter may respond to the group’s questions, but there is no discussion by the group of the presenter’s responses. Every member of the group should pose at least one question of the presenter. Some examples of probing questions might include: a)What are some ways you might organize your data? b)What might be some powerful ways to present your data? c)Do you have any data that doesn’t seem to “fit?” d)Based on your data, what are you learning about yourself as a teacher? e)What is your data telling you about the students you teach? f)What are the implications of your findings for the content you teach? g)What have you learned about the larger context of schools and schooling? h)What are the implications of what you have learned for your teaching? i)What changes might you make in your own practice? j)What new wonderings do you have? Step Four: Group Members Discuss The Data Analysis (6 Minutes) - The group talks with each other about the data analysis presented, discussing such questions as, “What did we hear?,” “What didn’t we hear that we think might be relevant?,” “What assumptions seem to be operating?, ” “Does any data not seem to fit with the presenter’s analysis?,” “What might be some additional ways to look at the presenter’s data?” During this discussion, members of the group work to deepen the data analysis. The presenter doesn’t speak during this discussion, but instead listens and takes notes. Step Five: Presenter Reflection (3 Minutes) - The presenter reflects on what s/he heard and what s/he is now thinking, sharing with the group anything that particularly resonated for him or her during any part of the group members’ data analysis discussion. Step Six: Reflection on the Process (2 Minutes) - Group shares thoughts about how the discussion worked for the group. Table 1. Focus Group Interview Questions. Teachers engaging in a protocol. *Data Analysis Protocol from The Reflective Educator’s Guide to Professional Development (Dana & Yendol-Hoppey, 2008). CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS Our preliminary study is merely a starting point. More research must be done to further explore the role of coach, the relationships coaches develop with coachees, and the impact coaching has on the quality of inquiry work and professional development. Through such study, the promise, problems, and possibilities associated with inquiry facilitation will be revealed, and in turn, the quality of inquiry done by teachers across the nation will be enhanced.