1 / 28

Content

Changing Practice by Enabling Teachers to Change: Reflections from Six Years of Cooperative Curriculum Development by Participatory Action Research (PAR) within Chemical Education. Content. PAR in chemical education Data about the teachers’ PD Framing the development by Grundy’s model.

dewitt
Download Presentation

Content

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. Changing Practice by Enabling Teachers to Change: Reflections from Six Years of Cooperative Curriculum Development by Participatory Action Research (PAR) within Chemical Education

  2. Content • PAR in chemical education • Data about the teachers’ PD • Framing the development by Grundy’s model

  3. Participatory Action Research (PAR) in Chemical Education

  4. Grundy‘s three modes of AR (nach Grundy, in Kemmis/McTaggert Act. Res. Planner 1988; Eilks & Ralle ChemKon 2003)

  5. PAR in chemical education: The frame • Establishing of an Action Research group in August 2000 • The research team in the beginning: • 1 researcher • 8 teachers from middle and grammar schools • Meetings every 4 weeks for one afternoon (3-4 hrs) • Growth of the group until now up to 15 teachers

  6. Our research model

  7. Roles in the team

  8. Projects and intentions • „New ways towards the particulate nature of matter“ • „Alternative methods in science teaching“ • “Conceptions for a socio-critical and problem-oriented approach to chemistry teaching” • …

  9. Data on the teachers view: Minutes, questionnaires and group discussions

  10. Data on the teachers view:Minutes, questionnaires, group discussions Minutes taken from every meeting, monitoring experiences, new ideas, interests, etc.

  11. Data on the teachers view:Minutes, questionnaires, group discussions Minutes taken from every meeting, monitoring experiences, new ideas, interests, etc. Focussed questionnaires monitoring teachers view on applied new modules

  12. Data on the teachers view:Minutes, questionnaires, group discussions Minutes taken from every meeting, monitoring experiences, new ideas, interests, etc. Open questionnaires monitoring teachers view on issues, objectives and their role Focussed questionnaires monitoring teachers view on applied new modules

  13. Data on the teachers view:Minutes, questionnaires, group discussions Minutes taken from every meeting, monitoring experiences, new ideas, interests, etc. Open questionnaires monitoring teachers view on issues, objectives and their role Focussed questionnaires monitoring teachers view on applied new modules Group discussions monitoring teachers view on issues, objectives and their role

  14. Data on the teachers view:Minutes, questionnaires, group discussions Minutes taken from every meeting, monitoring experiences, new ideas, interests, etc. Open questionnaires monitoring teachers view on issues, objectives and their role Focussed questionnaires monitoring teachers view on applied new modules Group discussions monitoring teachers view on issues, objectives and their role

  15. Data on the teachers reflection about their role and professional development Data on the teachers reflection about their role and professional development • Open questionnaires each summer • Group discussions following the questionnaire (60 min.), audio taped and transcribed • Both data are analysed qualitatively • Data collection from June 2001 and to June 2005 analysed Collection and evaluation

  16. Data on the teachers reflection about their role and professional development Data on the teachers reflection about their role and professional development Questions • 1. How do the teachers consider the developed teaching strategies and materials in regards to feasibility, suitability to practical needs, suitability to students’ learning capabilities and authenticity? How do the teachers consider the strategies and materials compared with materials conventionally presented in teachers' journals or on in-service training courses? What had been their experiences in use? • 2. How do the teachers consider this kind of co-operative curriculum development concerning the relationship of research and practice, researchers and practitioners, in-service training, practice development and curriculum development? • 3. (from the 2nd year) Do the teachers feel a change in their role/behaviour during their participation within the team? Is there a change in the relationship between researchers and practitioners?

  17. Results and discussion

  18. Teachers’ role within the project Expectation in the beginning Applying pre-structured teaching modules as basis for evaluation Helping to develop teaching modules that fit the needs and restrictions of practice Change in the first year Being an active part in all steps of the development of new teaching modules Change in year 2/3 Initiating changes, working self-standing within the group Role now

  19. Teachers’ view: Teachers’ role within the project Teachers feel themselves to “become more aware about the needs of change but also to become more open for alternative teaching.” ” ... from a teacher, who wanted to be in-service trained, towards a colleague and convinced promoter of the new concept.” or ” ... from a receiver within a group to an activist”.

  20. Teachers’ view: Benefits for practice ” ... the work [within the project] prevents to become crusted with not reflected views from practice over the years.” ”... a help against blinkered attitude to one's own work". or “... becoming more reflective and critical concerning one's own previous practice".

  21. Teachers’ view: Benefits for practice • Contact to domain specific educational research outcomes in refined form • From their own experiences teachers look on publications in teachers journals now “with another view”. • Long term training in applying new teaching methods • Exchange and shared reflection about ones own practice within the group • The teachers pointed out to have learned about "own [teachers’]misconceptions about students' learning".

  22. Teachers’ view: Change and concepts Consideration in the beginning Careful retention against new didactical structures and methods Growth of acceptance for the need of change Familiarisation with the new concepts Change in the first year Ownership of the commonly developed (“own”) concepts Change in year 2/3 Promoting and implementing the ideas, e.g., school book writing, syllabus commission Role now

  23. Teachers’ view: Modules and materials ” ... effective in-service training is only possibleif it is connected with experiences in applying new approaches". or ”A conviction to change one's own practice only will take place among teachers if based on one's own experiences". (group discussion, after 2 years)

  24. Teachers’ view:On the Action Research approach Using Participatory Action Research is seen as a chance to "connect input from the teachers with input from domain- specific educational research". But it also is seen of potential to bring "practical experiences to the researcher".

  25. Framing teachers’ PD by a re-interpretation of Grundy’ three modes of Action Research

  26. Grundy‘s three modes of AR (nach Grundy, in Kemmis/McTaggert Act. Res. Planner 1988; Eilks & Ralle ChemKon 2003)

  27. A CPD model for AR (Eilks & Markic under review)

  28. Thank you.

More Related