Educational leaders can use blogs in a variety of ways. They could create a blog for parents to
communicate information about upcoming school events. They could create a blog to share the books
they are currently reading, either to share educational philosophy with
teachers and parents, or to share literature with students. They could create an internal blog for
teachers in order to raise questions or reflect on recent changes in practices.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Action Research 101
I’ve learned that action research is a targeted, systematic,
local way of examining and improving instructional and administrative
practices. It looks at problems that are
specific to a campus or classroom and examines the data to determine how best
to solve them. One comforting thing I learned
is that, usually, most of the data required for action research is already
being collected. We just have to be sure to capture that data and then examine
it in a meaningful way.
I realized through the course of the reading that I’d
already participated in action research at my campus and in my district on a
fairly regular basis. I just didn’t have that particular vocabulary to describe
it. In my classroom, I called it
triage. When essays were submitted, I’d
keep track of where students were having the most trouble, and then I’d look
for ways to improve those skills in my classroom. Then I’d look at the next essay, paying
special attention to the areas addressed, and look for the next major
concern. On our campus, we examined
various standardized testing data to determine what issues might need cross
curricular intervention. We implemented short answer questions in all classes
in order to improve student performance on that part of the ELA test.
As an administrator, I’ll emulate the example of my
principal, and work collaboratively with staff, to identify issues, gather data,
and implement improvements to instructional practices.
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