Tool 7.1 Action Planning Template Goal: To determine what body of teacher practices and classroom assignments and activities best promotes the rapid acquisition of academic English in a classroom of Mandarin-speaking students, as well as to better understand how well current ESL techniques geared towards speakers of Romance and Germanic languages translate to instruction for Sino-Tibetan speakers. Additionally the research hopes to discern what cross-cultural activities and practices can be put into place to best support the learning described above?
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Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Sunday, July 25, 2010
This week was incredibly challenging for John and I as we attempted to complete our coursework while simultaneously packing the last of our belongings, moving out of our home, repairing our roof in the middle of the process, and driving from outside of Houston, Texas to outside of Los Angeles, California. It has been utterly exhausting. And yet, amongst the hurry, the "emergencies" the craziness and overall feeling of off-kilter"ness" I have still enjoyed reading about the many different ways that action research can be incorporated into bettering the educational environment for many schools across the globe. I particular enjoyed the video interview with Dr. Brisneros and enjoyed analyzing his comments in the assignment. I also have to admit that in the readings, I was struck again and again by how Principal Donnan Stoicovy used not only action research, but a flexible and open mentality as she worked to use all at her advantage to make a better learning environment for her students and working environment for her staff. She is an administrator I would truly like to know and work with in an effort to better understand how creativity and thinking outside the box can help students.
Overall, though this week has been a struggle personally, it has been very enlightening in terms of the course, and I feel that I continue to add to my body of knowledge. Though I have a very strong background in research coming from a BA in History, seeing how research can be best utilized in educational settings has been helpful, and new ideas have sprung to life.
Sunday, July 18, 2010
Action Research - As it should be
Action research, in many ways, seems so far in the realm of common sense that to think of it as something the educational community had to come to slowly is difficult. As a history major and political science minor my collegiate days were spent elbows deep in research attempting to not only retell a story or research an issue, but bring to it something new, inventive, and fresh. using research of what exists to create that which does not yet exist is one of the great joys I find in academia and I am thankful that its place in the educational setting seems secure. Allowing teachers and administrators to actively seek out a body of knowledge, then applying that to their own unique situation to resolve an issue in their own community, attack a problem or promote an endeavor is the incredible value of action research. It should be alive in all that we do as educators and administrators. I know, in fact I am sure that even before it had a name, great teachers and administrators were already using this technique everyday. To see what is out their in the world, harness it for the good of our students and staff and create something new that directly aligns with our goals for our campus is what action research is all about. That is the value, and I know it is common and should continue to be so.
In describing how administrators can use actiona research, numerous areas of need come to mind: ways to engage various subgroups into more meaningful academic discourse, improving test scores, creating staff loyalty, enhacing community buy-in, improving visions, increasing communication, and an unlimited number of other issues and administrator concerns all scream for the benefit of action research.
In describing how administrators can use actiona research, numerous areas of need come to mind: ways to engage various subgroups into more meaningful academic discourse, improving test scores, creating staff loyalty, enhacing community buy-in, improving visions, increasing communication, and an unlimited number of other issues and administrator concerns all scream for the benefit of action research.
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