Introduction to Action Research

75
Robert Croker NUFS Grad School [email protected]

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Transcript of Introduction to Action Research

Page 1: Introduction to Action Research

Robert Croker NUFS Grad School

[email protected]

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What is action research?

What?

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look

think do

What is action research?

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What is action research?

LOOK: notice an opportunity or problem, then systematically collect information about your classroom and your students

THINK: reflect about that information - by yourself, or with your students or other teachers

DO: use these new understandings to change your teaching - this is the ACTION

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What is action research?

action research

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What is action research?

outcomes (to publish)

processes (to improve)

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How do you do action research?

How?

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look

think do

How do you do action research?

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look

think do

What do you look at in the classroom?

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What do you look at in the classroom?

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Activities Students Students

Students Materials

Teacher

What do you look at in the classroom?

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Ways to understand your classroom

ask:  ask your students to write comments about your class

 give your students a questionnaire

 interview your students

watch:  observe yourself and make notes / record yourself

 observe your students / record your students

 keep a ‘teaching portfolio’

read:  get students to keep a ‘learning portfolio’

 give students ‘learning tests’

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Ways to understand your classroom

Ask ask:  ask your students to write comments about your class

 give your students a questionnaire

 interview your students

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ask students to write comments about class

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reflect on today’s class –or the semester!

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ask students to answer a questionnaire

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English

or 日本語?

what language should students write in?

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interview some of the students

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ask some students to do a ‘think-aloud’

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Ways to understand your classroom

Watch watch:  observe yourself and make notes

 observe your students

 record yourself / record your students

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observe yourself and make short notes

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make notes about your class

Lesson Plans (before class)

Comments (in class)

Reflections (after class)

1.

2.

3.

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observe your students

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observe some students only …

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… or observe the whole class

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make notes about your class and students

Lesson Plans / Tasks Notes about the Class Notes about Student 1 Notes about Student 2

1.

2.

3.

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make audio or visual recordings

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take pictures of your white board

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take pictures of your white board

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take pictures of your class

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take pictures of your class activities

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keep a teaching portfolio

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Ways to understand your classroom

Read read:  get students to write a language learning history

 get students to keep a ‘learning portfolio’

 give students ‘learning tests’

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ask students to write a learning history

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ask students to keep a learning portfolio

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give students ‘learning tests’

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Ways to understand your classroom

ask:  ask your students to write comments about your class

 give your students a questionnaire

 interview your students

watch:  observe yourself and make notes / record yourself

 observe your students / record your students

 keep a ‘teaching portfolio’

read:  get students to keep a ‘learning portfolio’

 give students ‘learning tests’

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Ways to understand your classroom

Triangulation

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look

think do

How do you think about your classroom?

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Ways to think about your classroom

write:  reflect about your lesson plans

 write structured and unstructured reflections

 keep a teaching journal

analyze: analyze the information that you have created

talk:  talk with a friend or colleague

present: make presentations here at NUFS or at conferences

 write up your research for the NUFS report

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Ways to understand your classroom

Write write:  reflect about your lesson plans

 reflect about your class – unstructured and structured

 keep a teaching journal

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reflect about your lesson plans

Lesson Plans (before class)

Comments (in class)

Reflections (after class)

1.

2.

3.

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reflect about your class –unstructured reflection

Note: Just write generally about how your feel the class went, and note any ideas that you have. You could look at your class notes as you do this.

Example: Today’s class went well. I was feeling relaxed, and fully prepared. All of the students had done their homework, so we could start the speaking activity immediately …..

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reflect about your class –structured reflection

Note: You could write your answers to a list of questions.

Example questions:

What went well in the class today?

What didn’t go well?

What will I do differently next time?

What did I learn about my students?

What did I learn about my teaching?

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reflect about your class –structured reflection

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keep a reflective journal

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Ways to understand your classroom

Analyze steps: manage your data

display your data

analyze your data

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steps in analyzing your data

manage display analyze

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Ways to check and develop your ideas

Talk

talk:  talk with a friend or colleague

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talking helps you to check in with reality!

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talk with a friend or colleague

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check back with your teaching portfolio

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look again at the pictures of your class

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Ways to share your ideas and get feedback

Present

present: make presentations here at NUFS or at conferences

 tell your colleagues what you’re learning

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make presentations here at NUFS

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write up your action research into a report

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Why do action research?

outcomes

processes

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look

think do

How do you think about your classroom?

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How do you do action research?

not researching ON students …

but researching WITH students …

and researching about YOURSELF

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Ways to understand your classroom

Analyze steps: manage your data

display your data

analyze your data

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steps in analyzing your data

manage display analyze

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managing your data

write research numbers eg S1Q1, S1Int1

keep different data in separate folders

make photocopies – and store originals

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displaying and analyzing numerical data

displaying data: summarize on a master sheet

do quickly as soon as possible

create simple visual graphs

use simple charts to help you understand your data

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Pie graph – shows proportions (few groups)

Time in Class

Listening

Reading

Writing

Sleeping

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Bar chart –shows many groups of data

0  

10  

20  

30  

40  

50  

60  

70  

80  

90  

1970 1980 1990 2000

Changes in U.S. Family Structure,1970-2000

2 parents

mother

father

no adult

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Line graph – shows changes over time

0  

10  

20  

30  

40  

50  

60  

70  

80  

90  

1970 1980 1990 2000

Changes in U.S. Family Structure, 1970-2000

2 parents

mother

father

no adult

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displaying and analyzing numerical data

analyzing data: descriptions – describe basic facts

comparisons – compare groups of information

relationships – explain relationships

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displaying and analyzing textual data

displaying data:

number each piece of text

cut each piece out, ready for analysis analyzing data:

put data in groups

label each group, and write a description

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first cycle: from text to groups

first

step

• grouping the data

second

step

• labeling the groups

third

step

• defining the groups

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first step: grouping data

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first step: grouping data

• It’s easy!

• Group data together that is similar …

• … and separate data that is different.

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second step: labeling groups

• giving each group a label = a ‘code’

• these codes are:

• usually a WORD or A PHRASE

• concrete

• describes the group’s data

• created by the researcher(s), or using words from the data (in vivo coding)

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third step: defining groups

• define each group • write one or two sentences to define each

group – to explain what data is in each group (and perhaps what is not!).

• use your own words, but try to include some words or phrases that the participants wrote.

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second cycle: from groups to themes

first

step

• putting similar groups together into ‘themes’

second

step

• labeling these themes

third

step

• defining these themes

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second cycle: finding patterns

• grouping and labeling • Group similar groups together …

… and separate different groups.

• Label these new, larger groups using words or phrases.

• These labels are usually more abstract, like STUDENT MOTIVATION, LEARNING GOALS.

•  Define them.

• Note: these new groups are called ‘themes’.