I am getting closer with refining where I want to go with my Driving Question, but I can't stop thinking about the ultimate goal, that capstone. I have some visions of how I want it to look, but the biggest thing is I want it to useful for daily practice. Currently my driving question is: What is the impact of focused language instruction when leveraging the feedback of a comprehension tool?
The backstory to that is many of the ELL students in are district are not progressing with AMAO 1, growth of more than one level each year on the CELDT. Compounded by the fact that at the end of 2nd grade they are scoring below grade-level on the RI (Reading Inventory). These are the students that fall further and further behind. How can we support them with their language acquisition, give them the tools to access more complex texts, and keep them moving forward. I think of a third grade team of teachers I was working with a few weeks back. They have a majority of their class reading at 1st grade/2nd grade level. When they looked at the Reading claim and targets for third grade students, their first response was this will "crush" these students. Immediately I thought, if we don't do it now, then when? These students are capable of accessing complex text, we can use scaffolds to support them in accessing and understanding the structure and ideas. It almost feels urgent, if we don't begin now then these students will fall further and further behind. Tim Shanahan has debunked much of the research behind teaching students at their "instructional level", in fact he has reams of research that states students are stimulated when reading at the "frustration level". Students like a challenge, and well, "dumbing down the text" isn't doing us any favors. So with all that said, what further action research can I do to support this idea. The goal of this program is Innovative Learning..."innovative" can look very different, it doesn't have to be just technology. That said, our education system needs to CHANGE, and in thinking of the TPAC an SAMR model, I want to push my practice into the areas of augmentation and modification. I add this as fuel to my burning capstone fire. How to bring in technology in a meaningful way? I began to look at how I might support these students with language and feedback as they attempt to negotiate the complexity of language in reading? Hattie's work comes to mind, which focused me on the idea of multi-tiered feedback. I am currently reading for our book study, Visible Learning for Literacy, by Fisher, Frey and Hattie. Think Literacy Gurus meet Meta-Researcher, a match made in this Literacy fanatic's heaven. Effect site for feedback 0.75. The feedback we give students falls into four levels: Feedback about the task, feedback about the process, self-regulatory feedback, feedback about self. When thinking about my action research, I am really focused on the Feedback about the process (strategies that are needed to perform the task), and Self-Regulatory Feedback (self-monitoring, directing the processes and tasks). How might I leverage a technology tool to support in guiding students with this feedback? That is my current quest. I have some strong ideas, but working through the best tools to do this. This quote from Visual Learning for Literacy brings all these musings together for me. "Learners who are resilient can come back from failures and incorporate challenges into their growing sense of who they are." (p. 104). Going back to the third grade team of teachers I am working with, I think about how important it is to provide students the levels of feedback that help guide them through these challenges.
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So much to consider at this point in my learning. I spent a lot of time this week reflecting on how best to enhance my Driving Question so that my action research is meaningful and useful. First, I saw Tim Shanahan (http://www.shanahanonliteracy.com) last week. Needless to say, I am a ShanaFAN. If you haven't seen him, he is masterful. He was on the architects of the CASS Language Arts Standards, and the drum he is beating these days is all about Text Complexity. We NEED to have students reading more complex text, even if they can't decode it themselves. We are doing our students no favors by continuing to give them text at or below their instructional level. But what resonated most with me was his quote: "Reading is more verbal than visual, student must negotiate the language". That's it, the focus I wanted with my action research. We have a large amount of language learners in our district that need support in accessing complex text. It is more than just a lexile or reading level that indicates what a student should be able to read and comprehend, it is all about the verbal LANGUAGE. We have to give students a chance to interact with rich, complex text. In order to do that we have to more strategically choose the vocabulary we teach, and provide more explicit instruction around sentence structure. They have to understand how language is structured so they can understand what it is saying. How can we support that by explicitly teaching speaking and listening. I am working on enhancing my driving question to say something like this: What is the impact of focused language instruction when leveraging the feedback of a comprehension tool(?) My focus right now is finding a technology tool that will truly provide tiered feedback: both for teacher and student. Hattie's work, which highlights that feedback is within the top 5 highest influences on achievement, is driving this enhancement. All that said, in thinking about how best to share this information with my colleagues. Baggio and Clark's books have provided a great amount of fodder and background for my thinking on Instructional Design. Specifically, Baggio's Chapter 7 titled very appropriately, "If it doesn't go in, it can't come out". She states "Learning is not about your information. It is not about how you know. It is all about what you can get the learners to take in." (p. 63). This goes to support the instructional design model I read this week, Pebble in the Pond, which begins with looking at the whole problem or task, and then breaking it down by identifying the learning progression that is needed (building in rigor), and then identifying the knowledge and skill required to complete the task. This support what our district has focused on with Project/Problem based learning. It begins with the end in mind, focusing a task or problem that faces us. As I think about my Driving Question an action research, that is the way I need to design my instructional outline. Begin with Data that identifies that problem, a group of students that have not met AMAO 1 (growing 1 or more levels on the CELDT), and also are below basic on the Reading Inventory. Also thinking about some case study examples that might better contextualize that data-grounding the need for the learning. Next, in thinking about Clark, I focused on her Chapter 6, which is on How to Teach Process. I find this extremely relevant to what I want to achieve in sharing my action research. Understanding of the process can support learning job tasks. Where does it fit in the process, and what makes it relevant? This will be my focus area when I think about how to structure my Capstone learning. Lastly, I spent a fair amount of time this week understanding the SITE model, and specifically how I might as a designer highlight ALL aspects of Context: Sociocultural (factors that motivate the learner), Informational (skills and knowledge do learners/users need that will help them access), technical ("ways and means" by which learners can accomplish their goals), and lastly the all encompassing E-Educational context. Specifically, how might my learners (colleagues) recognize opportunities offered by tools and techniques and how might they support their goals and values? To me this is essential, otherwise why bother? |
AuthorKarly Miller: Archives
April 2017
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