1 / 32

The Strategic Education Research Partnership: A New Approach to Educational Research

The Strategic Education Research Partnership: A New Approach to Educational Research. Catherine E. Snow Harvard Graduate School of Education. A brief outline. The Strategic Education Research Partnership (SERP) Word Generation and how it emerged from SERP And into CCDD.

mahdis
Download Presentation

The Strategic Education Research Partnership: A New Approach to Educational Research

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Strategic Education Research Partnership: A New Approach to Educational Research Catherine E. Snow Harvard Graduate School of Education

  2. A brief outline • The Strategic Education Research Partnership (SERP) • Word Generation and how it emerged from SERP • And into CCDD The SERP Context for this work

  3. The SERP Context for this work • SERP: Design proposed by a National Research Council Committee and incubated at the National Academy of Sciences • Purpose: To build capacity for problem-solving research and development in practice settings to contribute to educational improvement The SERP Context for this work

  4. Why do we need SERP? • Two big questions: • Why has research supported innovation and continuous improvement in medicine, agriculture, and transportation, but not in education? • What can be done about it? • Two telling anecdotes: bottom up and top down failures Why do we need SERP?

  5. Timeline for this work • Bruce Alberts’ dream: 1993-2003 • Convergence in Boston and selecting middle school literacy: 2004 • Word Generation: 2006-2015 • Other efforts in Boston (RISE, SARI, Internal coherence, CCDD): 2006-? • Other SERP Sites: San Francisco, MSAN districts, Oakland Origins of this work

  6. SERP Principles • Establish durable partnerships • Start from urgent problems of practice • Negotiate researchable formulations with practitioners • Incorporate top-down and bottom-up knowledge as appropriate • Attend to student learning, teacher learning, and organizational structure simultaneously • Worry about the ‘last mile’ • Build tools and knowledge simultaneously -- design locally but plan for travel Why do we need SERP?

  7. Word Generation • How did we get to Word Generation? • Payzant’s selection of middle school focus • A year’s worth of honing the focus (PDSA or LEAR) • Convergence on vocabulary as a ubiquitous problem • Selection of academic rather than disciplinary vocabulary • Developing a curricular carrier • Improving the program (studying implementation, working with teachers to revise, talking to students) • Analysis toward on-going improvement of its functioning Research design constraints

  8. Vocabulary as a Central Problem Vocabulary as a Central Problem • Crucial for comprehension • Crucial for writing • Crucial for content-area learning • An area of weakness for poor or reluctant readers • An area of weakness for language minority students • Particularly ‘academic vocabulary’

  9. Academic language is • more than academic vocabulary • Sentence structure • Text structure • Complex messages • Self-presentation as someone with a position on the topic Academic vocabulary is more than words

  10. Word Generation • Design Constraints from Research: • Multiple, recurrent exposures • Need to hear words in varied contexts • Opportunities to use the words in speaking and writing • Some targeted direct teaching • Word learning strategies • Morphological analysis • Attention to polysemy • Attention to etymology/cognates Research design constraints

  11. Word Generation • Design Constraints from Reality: • Share the responsibility across all content area teachers, not just ELA teachers • Limit time taken from “required work” to focus on language or general literacy skills • Ensure disciplinary respectability in math, science, and social studies activities (e.g., by including maps, charts, figures) • Build flexibility into program, to facilitate travel to other sites Reality design constraints

  12. Word Generation Design Features • High interest topic ‘launch’ paragraph with 5 target words • 15 min/day, responsibility rotates in weekly cycle among teachers • Math, science, and social studies use words in a discipline-specific context • Math, science, and social studies activities develop discipline-relevant skills: math problem solving, scientific thinking, debating • Friday: “taking a stand” essay • Three years of materials allow for a whole school implementation • Vocabulary designed as a “Trojan horse” for reading, knowledge, and discourse skills Design features

  13. Word Generation: Instructional Activities Monday Dilemma and words presented Tuesday-Thursday Content-area activities Friday Writing with focus words Organization of the week

  14. Should the government impose a mandatory year of service after high school? Should schools protect kids from cyberbullying? Should the use of transfats in foods be regulated? Should schools require a minimum GPA for participation on a sports team? Should it be mandatory to get a parenting license? Sample dilemmas

  15. WHEREAS ESTIMATE INFLUENCE ESTABLISH FACTORPREDOMINANT DECLINE SPECULATEFORTHCOMING OUTWEIGH INTRINSIC DURATION STRATEGIES PRESCRIBE FACILITATE COMPONENT DESIGN PURSUE RELYUNMONITORED COMPILEANONYMOUS INSTITUTE ECONOMIC PLAUSIBLE BANNEDINTERACTMEDIATE ACQUIRE APTITUDEDISTRIBUTION CIVIC ORIENT MAINTAIN DENY APPROACHSUSTAIN POLICY ATTRIBUTE CORPORAL PREREQUISITE REINFORCE REGULATE PREDICT EVALUATE DISCRIMINATEVARIABLE Sample words

  16. Word Generation Goals • Student level: Build knowledge of high frequency academic words, skills at academic discourse, and world knowledge • Teacher level: Promote regular use of effective strategies usable in everyday instruction • School level: Facilitate faculty collaboration across grades, across departments Word Generation Goals

  17. Year 1 Pilot Schools • Westfield • Middle School • 80 % Black • 16% Hispanic • 1.8 White • 1.6 Asian • 29% Special Education • MCAS • Reilley • Middle School • 62% Black • 18.1 % Hispanic • 9.3% White • 8.9 % Asian • 25% Special Education • MCAS Year 1 Pilot Schools

  18. Multiple Choice Test Results Multiple Choice Test Results

  19. Multiple Choice Test Results Multiple Choice Test Results

  20. Intervention Effect Sizes by Grade, all words (using pooled SD) Westfield Reilley Grade 6: 0.45 0.25 Grade 7: 0.57 0.33 Grade 8: 0.71 0.45 Intervention Effect Sizes by Grade, all words

  21. Wednesday/Thursday: debate Tuesday/Wednesday: informal assessment, group work relating words to world Monday/Tuesday: informal assessment, theories of word meaning, reading of passage, talk about topic, scanning of text/annotation Friday: essay writing

  22. Top 3 Words Mystic Students Learned % correct

  23. In other words • Effects were significant both statistically and educationally • Furthermore, teachers liked the program and chose to do it again • So we expanded in 2007-2008 to five implementation and three comparison schools, in 2008-2009 to eight and five. • And launched a cluster randomized trial in three cities In other words

  24. English-only and Language Minority Students in Word Generation and Comparison Schools, 2007-2008 English-only and Language Minority Students Language Minority comparison Language Minority treatment

  25. Evidence of learning – what about maintenance? • 11 words retested fall and spring, following year • General pattern: Learning, maintenance, consolidation

  26. Learning, maintenance, consolidation for English-only vs. language-minority students

  27. Working with Teachers on WG • Focus groups to brainstorm topics • Teacher academy to review initial materials • Intensive feedback on weeks 1-5 • Weekly reviews from interested teachers • Improvements in teacher materials • Redesign of math problems • Teacher-contributed materials • Teacher participation in website development Research design constraints

  28. Word Re-Generation • Changes made during year one • Math problems: MCAS adapted • Teacher materials: streamlined • Changes made in year two • Website designed (Matt Ellinger) • Much more focus on academic discussion (Cathy O’Connor) • Changes made in year three • Science activities upgraded Research design constraints

  29. Word Generation • We conceptualized the vocabulary curriculum as • a benign bacterium • a Trojan horse • smuggling student engagement, opportunities for talk , and school-level coherence into schools Reality design constraints

  30. But we discovered that discussion was the active ingredient • Teachers are impressed by the sophistication of students’ ideas • Students value the opportunities for discussion, especially of more student-centered topics • Students care about making their points effectively • Good discussion can (under ideal circumstances) get recycled into good writing Research design constraints

  31. Along came RFU • Focus on reading comprehension • Band of at least 4 grades • Three tasks • Identify malleable factors • Design intervention(s) • Evaluate • Our proposal  this DRP

  32. www.wordgeneration.org www.serpinstitute.org

More Related