DQ 1 for two people
Guided Response: Locate and respond to two classmates’ posts which contain differing perspectives on the value of action research or that which is different than your own. What new or different perspectives regarding action research do you now have as a result? Provide specific feedback regarding their ideas to improve their practice and how their concepts will impact students. *It is expected for you to follow up by the last day of the week to provide a secondary response to any comments or questions your instructor may have provided. This is part of the grading criteria as a demonstration of critical thinking.
# 1 response I need answer
Brianna McPhatter
6/11/2015 10:57:23 AM
Discussion One
Part One: According Eileen Ferrance (2000) in Themes in education: Action research, action research “involves people working to improve their skills, techniques, and strategies. Action research is not about learning why we do certain things, but rather how we can do things better. It is about how we can change our instruction to impact students” (p. 9). Considering this perspective as well as the information in Chapter 1 of Action Research: A Guide for the Teacher Researcher, factors that bring value to action research, differentiating it from traditional educational research are having decision-making authority, more commitment to continuous professional development and school improvement, information gathered will help teachers with reflection and creating better action plans (Mills, 2014).
Part Two: Ferrance (2000) adds, “One of the drawbacks of individual research is that it may not be shared with others unless the teacher chooses to present findings at a faculty meeting, make a formal presentation at a conference, or submit written material to a listserv, journal, or newsletter” (p. 9). Considering that my final project will be an action research proposal presentation, this will lead me to improve my practice and make changes to instruction to positively impact students by using research to better inform myself about what needs to be done to improve the development of students.
Part Three: The article addresses additional comparisons between action and traditional research. The article stated that, “is a powerful tool for (…) education and promotion practitioners who want to focus on improving the quality of their programs and services” (Acosta & Golts, 2014).
References
Acosta, S., & Goltz, H. H. (2014). Transforming practices: A primer on action research.
Health Promotion Practice, 15(4), 465-470. doi:10.1177/1524839914527591
Ferrance, E. (2000). Themes in education: Action research. Providence, RI: LAB at
Brown University. Retrieved from http://www.brown.edu/academics/education-alliance/sites/brown.edu.academics.education-alliance/files/publications/act_research.pdf
Mills, G. E. (2014). Action research: A guide for the teacher researcher (5th ed.).
Boston, MA: Pearson Education, Inc.
# 2
Julie Danks
6/10/ ...
9548086042 for call girls in Indira Nagar with room service
DQ 1 for two peopleGuided Response Locate and respond to two cl.docx
1. DQ 1 for two people
Guided Response: Locate and respond to two classmates’ posts
which contain differing perspectives on the value of action
research or that which is different than your own. What new or
different perspectives regarding action research do you now
have as a result? Provide specific feedback regarding their ideas
to improve their practice and how their concepts will impact
students. *It is expected for you to follow up by the last day of
the week to provide a secondary response to any comments or
questions your instructor may have provided. This is part of the
grading criteria as a demonstration of critical thinking.
# 1 response I need answer
Brianna McPhatter
6/11/2015 10:57:23 AM
Discussion One
Part One: According Eileen Ferrance (2000) in Themes in
education: Action research, action research “involves people
working to improve their skills, techniques, and strategies.
Action research is not about learning why we do certain things,
but rather how we can do things better. It is about how we can
change our instruction to impact students” (p. 9). Considering
this perspective as well as the information in Chapter 1 of
Action Research: A Guide for the Teacher Researcher, factors
that bring value to action research, differentiating it from
traditional educational research are having decision-making
authority, more commitment to continuous professional
development and school improvement, information gathered
will help teachers with reflection and creating better action
plans (Mills, 2014).
Part Two: Ferrance (2000) adds, “One of the drawbacks of
individual research is that it may not be shared with others
unless the teacher chooses to present findings at a faculty
2. meeting, make a formal presentation at a conference, or submit
written material to a listserv, journal, or newsletter” (p. 9).
Considering that my final project will be an action research
proposal presentation, this will lead me to improve my practice
and make changes to instruction to positively impact students
by using research to better inform myself about what needs to
be done to improve the development of students.
Part Three: The article addresses additional comparisons
between action and traditional research. The article stated that,
“is a powerful tool for (…) education and promotion
practitioners who want to focus on improving the quality of
their programs and services” (Acosta & Golts, 2014).
References
Acosta, S., & Goltz, H. H. (2014). Transforming practices: A
primer on action research.
Health Promotion Practice, 15(4), 465-470.
doi:10.1177/1524839914527591
Ferrance, E. (2000). Themes in education: Action
research. Providence, RI: LAB at
Brown University. Retrieved
from http://www.brown.edu/academics/education-
alliance/sites/brown.edu.academics.education-
alliance/files/publications/act_research.pdf
Mills, G. E. (2014). Action research: A guide for the teacher
researcher (5th ed.).
Boston, MA: Pearson Education, Inc.
# 2
Julie Danks
6/10/2015 10:43:01 PM
I truly believe in the power of reflective thinking; and in the
3. case of the classroom - reflective teaching. I see a strong
correlation between reflective teaching and action research.
Reflective teaching means looking at what you are doing in the
classroom, thinking about why you do it, and how it works.
Reflective teaching can often times lead to changes and
improvements in our teaching. Action research is the gathering
of information within our classroom or school with the goal of
gaining inside, developing reflective practices, effecting
positive changes and/or improving student outcomes. Both
action research and reflective teaching enable teachers to
improve their practices, while at the same time gaining
knowledge and understanding of the practice itself.
There are several factors that bring value to action research. In
addition to the benefits and creditability, these factors
differentiate action research from traditional educational
research. Factors such as natural classroom life, real world
classroom situations, and teacher-led research have enormous
benefits and validity. Action research support teachers
in studying their teaching practice and to actually take action to
improve what they are doing in their classrooms (Miller,
Rosendale, Shanks, 2012).
Action Research can benefit teachers in countless ways; from
taking positive action, improving teaching practices to goal
development and increasing teacher confidence and competence.
Action research can bring together colleagues, teacher
candidates, and administrators. More importantly and
personally, with action research can offer valuable insight and
data leading to action and professional growth. Thus, making
me a more marketable teacher and valuable school asset.
Reference
Miller, L., Rosendale, S., Shanks, J. (2012). Action Research in
Professional Development School Setting to Support Teacher
Candidate Self-Efficacy, SRATE Journal, v21 n2 p26-32 Sum
4. 2012. Retrieved from http://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ990633
DQ 2
Guided Response: Respond to at least two of your classmates,
one with a different topic idea than your own. Ask a question
that will encourage them to expand their thinking, consider
another point or perspective, or explain more deeply what is
appealing about the topic. Make a recommendation to help
them narrow their focus or expand their scope. *It is expected
you follow-up by the last day of the week to provide a
secondary response to any comments or questions your
instructor may have provided. This is part of the grading criteria
as a demonstration of critical thinking.
Two response from two people are as following
#1
Antoinette Simms
6/11/2015 7:59:55 PM
1 .Current Work Setting
· I currently am on summer vacation from the Fulton County
School District. I co-teach second grade AU SPED. I have a
class of six Autistic boys, level 3, and one EBD. The upcoming
school year beginning on August 10, 2015, I will have three
different grades, kindergarten, first grade, and now third grade
curriculum to teach. This class falls on my summer break, so I it
will not factor into my AR plan.
2. Potential Population Effected
· I am currently unemployed, so a family friend’s son will be
benefiting from a potential intervention.
· I will be using a close friend, and consent will not be
necessary, but I will get it from her for a formality basis.
Informed consent is more of a process, not a form. It keeps the
person or a person informed, involves them in your research,
5. shows the benefits, and gives an ethical point of view.
2. Area of Focus
· The purpose of my study might be increased reading level. I
have worked with this child before and only saw a slight
increase which seems to retract over long periods of breaks. I
would like to see either a stability or growth of a break from
formal education.
3. Explanation of Problem
· This particular student I have tutored in the past due to lack of
focus in class, and comprehension issues which led to a
decrease of grades in not just ELA, but Social Studies and his
advanced math class. The factor is interest, being able to focus
in a group setting and comprehend materials in that setting.
4. Define Variables
· Single, male student, entering eight grade in the fall, highly
motivated by technology, and I have chosen him because I have
tutored him in the past, saw growth, and as well saw the growth
decrease over periods of breaks. I feel that finding an interest in
something that he will he likes and enjoys to read, related to
what his physical interest are will be a key factor in retention
and continued enjoyment of reading.
5. Research question(s)
· What do you wonder? I wonder what would keep his interest.
Consider your area of focus statement. What do you hope to
answer? Why the decrease in comprehension, and it’s relation to
interest of reading for enjoyment or understanding.
# 2
Lisa Carbone
6/11/2015 9:40:06 PM
1. Current Work Setting
6. o 2nd grade general education teacher at a public school in San
Diego. My class consists of 14 girls and 14 boys, at varying
cognitive and academic levels. I also have three students with
an IEP, who are pulled out of class daily to go to our Resource
specialist.
2. Potential Population Effected
o 28 2nd grade, general education students (7-8 years old).
o I would feel comfortable having consent forms signed before
conducting my study because I am at a public school, and I want
to keep my administrators and parents of my students up to
date, and involved with what is going on in the classroom. If I
am using data and research involving their child, I would like
them to sign a consent form.
3. Area of Focus
o Integrating technology effectively into the classroom on
daily basis.
4. Explanation of Problem
o I have chosen this topic because in my last three years of
teaching, I have seen a huge push for the integration of
technology across our district, and at my school in particular.
o How can I effectively use technology as a meaningful,
integrated educational tool to enhance my students’ academic
experience? Do I take small steps and focus mainly on
integrating technology into one specific subject such as reading
or math? Should I generalize more and focus on integrating
technology in my classroom across all subjects.
5. Define Variables
o Students’ skill level with technology compared to teacher’s
skill level.
o Times that technology (i.e. iPad carts, laptop carts) are
available to the classroom.
o If the technology is working or not that day.
6. Research question(s)
o How often throughout the day should technology be used to
improve student learning and teacher instruction?
o Is there a specific academic subject that benefits the most
7. from integrating technology into specific instruction or
activities?
o What type of technologies and programs should I be using to
enhance student engagement in their learning?