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Teacher-Leaders

Teacher-Leaders. BEING ALL YOU CAN BE. Teacher-Leaders learn To Engage Students With Research-based Instructional Strategies. Keller’s ARCS of TRIUMPH. A ttention – arouse & sustain R elevance to learner’s needs C onfidence -capable of success S atisfaction – proud of what

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Teacher-Leaders

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  1. Teacher-Leaders BEING ALL YOU CAN BE

  2. Teacher-Leaders learn To Engage StudentsWith Research-basedInstructionalStrategies

  3. Keller’s ARCS of TRIUMPH • Attention – arouse & sustain • Relevance to learner’s needs • Confidence-capable of success • Satisfaction – proud of what they do

  4. Changes will ALWAYS need to be Made! Teacher-Leaders ARE • “Change Agents” • Creating New Knowledge together Builds Relationships • There is a Moral Imperative to help the entire organization grow

  5. Teacher-Leaders • Grow in a Community of Professional Learners • If need be they Change the Context easier to change behavior

  6. Teacher-Leaders… • Establish a Mutual Vision – High Expectations for All • Use Disciplined Inquiry in Data-driven Decision-making • Have Moral Purpose—do the right thing & want to make a difference

  7. Teacher-Leaders • Understand the Responsibility to Collaborate with other Teacher-Leaders Team Players

  8. When Things Need to Change… • “A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudices.” William James

  9. When Things Need to Change… • “Life is change. Growth is optional. Choose wisely.” Karen Kaiser Clark

  10. When Things Need to Change… • “I can’t understand why people are frightened of new ideas. I’m afraid of the old ones.” John Cage

  11. When Things Need to Change… • “All progress is precarious, one solution to a problem brings us face to face with another problem” Martin Luther King, Jr.

  12. When Things Need to Change… • “It isn’t that they can’t see the solution. It is that they can’t see the problem.” G.K.Chesterton

  13. When Things Need to Change… • “I never give them hell. I just tell the truth and they think its hell.” Harry S. Truman

  14. When Things Need to Change… • “You must be the change you wish to see in your world.” Gandhi

  15. When Things Need to Change… • “Example is not the main thing in influencing others, it’s the only thing.” Albert Schweitzer

  16. When Things Need to Change… • “I not only use all the brains I have, but all I can borrow.” Woodrow Wilson

  17. When Things Need to Change… • “You can’t jump a twenty-foot chasm in two ten-foot leaps.” American Proverb

  18. Are You Ready to Take the Leap?

  19. Scientific Based Research:Doing What Works Wendy Russell and Emily Crandall Region III Comprehensive Center May 8, 2003

  20. Today’s Outcomes • To raise awareness of the importance and relevance of research for student achievement

  21. Necessary Skills • To develop skills in research to identify what works. • Define Scientific-Based Research (SBR) • Assess research quality • Use research in your decision making

  22. NCLB Shifts Emphasis • The push towards scientifically-based research is the federal government’s most visible effort to shift education practice in a different direction.

  23. How do you make decisions about programs and practices? External evidence Professional Wisdom

  24. Where Are You On the Research Road?

  25. Why SBR? • Schools have largely based their practice on “tradition, superstition, professional wisdom, and anecdotal stories.”

  26. Too much money has been invested in education and wasted in programs that do not get the intended results. • Valerie Reyna, Deputy Director Office of Educational Research and Improvement

  27. Primary Goal of SBR • Ensure that programs have been proven effective and are more likely to benefit students when used.

  28. NCLB Legislation Goals • One hundred percent proficiency for ALL students in 12 years. • The method for achieving this goal is data-driven decision-making and transforming education into an evidence-based profession that utilizes SBR.

  29. NCLB Defines Scientific Inquiry • Use scientific method with an emphasis on experimental control (or comparison) groups • Replication of results, using multiple studies by different investigators What makes research scientific is not the motive for carrying it out, but the manner in which it is carried out.

  30. Before you Request a PO • Know Your Research! • http://www.arp.sprnet.org/default/admin/FORMS/materials_requested.htm

  31. Ability to generalize results from one sample to others in the general population • Fulfillment of rigorous standards with an emphasis on peer review (Peer Reviewed Journals) • Convergence (or consistency) of results between studies.

  32. Research 101 • Two types of research • Collecting numbers – quantitative • Collecting observations – qualitative • Three purposes for research • To assess the implementation and replicability of the reform practice or program. • To test a theory behind a practice or program. • To measure impact, effectiveness of the practice or program.

  33. HINT • The abstract will tell you the type and purpose of the study.

  34. Different Research Designs for Different Purposes • Implementation and replicability • Type – Quantitative or Qualitative • Theoretical Base • Type -- Quantitative or Qualitative • Evidence of Effectiveness • Type -- Quantitative

  35. Implementation and Replicability • Asks: • How was practice or program implemented? • In what setting? • Under what conditions?

  36. Theoretical Base • Asks: • What is the theory behind this practice or program? • What are the theory’s guiding principles? • What does the theory explain?

  37. Evidence of Effectiveness • Is there evidence showing that this practice or program improves student achievement? • Really, the only method approved by NCLB --Core of SBR

  38. Hierarchy of Evidence Randomized Trial Quasi- experimental Correlational study with statistical controls Correlational study without statistical controls Case Studies Valerie Reyna, OERI

  39. Systematic Rigorous Methodology • Gold Standard • Random Assignment (Experimental) • Silver Standard • Control Group-Non Random (Quasi-experimental) • Bronze Standard • Case Study • Lead Standard • Testimonial, opinion, Intuition, Small sample, Selective criteria

  40. Scientifically Based Research:Gold Standard • Experimental study • Research Type – Quantitative • Determines potential between practice or program and student achievement

  41. Controls all of the following: • Environment • Intervention (practice or program) • Subject selection (random sampling) • Shows change in outcome as a result of treatment

  42. Promising Research:Silver Standard • Quasi-experimental study • When it is not possible to control for at least one of the three elements of experimental design: • Environment • Intervention • Assignment to experimental or control groups • Cannot determine causality

  43. Bronze StandardSupplemental Research • Reports the way things are • Includes both quantitative and qualitative data

  44. Bronze StandardSupplemental Research • Descriptive – data summarized and simplified. • Effects on student achievement cannot be attributed directly to the intervention. • Hey! But this is More Fun to Read!

  45. Whose Research Findings Should I Use? • Findings/Conclusions Based on: • Multiple studies • Independent studies • Peer Reviewed • Published • Strong criteria for SBR

  46. Available Evidence Become a savvy consumer of research. Only 5% or less of available research evidence is at Gold SBR Standard

  47. Quality and Quantity Challenge • Where you go to find research is important. • Debate, discussion and the review process are important.

  48. Peer Reviewed Journals Not Joe Bob’s Blog • Find quality of works while using the research currently available. • Context matters. • Need for accumulation of studies in order to establish scientific certainty.

  49. Components of all Research Studies • Abstract • Objective (problem/purpose) • Research procedure/methodology • Findings • Discussion Section • Conclusion

  50. Professional Wisdom “…school leaders will need to rely on the best available empirical evidence and some degree of professional judgment in creating their programs.” CSR Program Guidelines

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