Friday, August 3, 2012

Snyder Action Research Plan


Goal: To determine the relationship between the Project-based learning approach and the student academic achievement of our 3rd and 4th graders on our campus.
Action Steps
Person
Responsible
Timeline
Start/End
Needed
Resources
Evaluation
1.Interview campus principal to determine areas of needed improvement in the school
self
June/July 2012
interview questions

time with site supervisor
narrow down areas of needed inquiry to improve our campus

Need: Student achievement through engaging teaching approach that combines significant content with 21st century skills: PBL
2.Gather research articles, books, professional literature on the benefits of PBL on student performance
self
July 2012- Aug 2012
articles
books
blogs
essays
professional literature

research paper at the end of action research project
3.Attend BIE’s PBL training to work with grade-level cohort representatives to develop curriculum-based and integrated projects
self
district admin.
cohort
July 31-August 2, 2012

August 14, 2012
BIE training documents and materials

revised state standards
n/a

4.Obtain permission to access student data, both demographic and testing
self
principal
August 2012
written permission
n/a
5.Obtain permission from 4th grade PBL teacher to observe project results and survey students
self
August 2012
written permission
n/a
6.Select 3rd/4th grade non-PBL sample population
self
principal
August-September 2012
access to student AIES data
similar demographic/gender data to PBL sample population
7.Monitor student achievement throughout 1st semester
-benchmark data
-project evaluations
self
August-December 2012
Campus Benchmark Results and PBL project evaluations
compare/contrast data of PBL group to findings of non-PBL group
8.Obtain student survey of PBL student sample population
self
December 2012
survey
record findings of student engagements and success
9.Monitor student achievement throughout 2nd semester
-Benchmark data
-project evaluations
self
January-June 2013
access to benchmark results and project evaluations
compare/contrast data of PBL group to findings of non-PBL sample populations

compare 1st semester results to 2nd semester results
10.Obtain student survey of PBL sample populations
self
May-June 2013
survey
record findings of student engagement and achievement

compare/contrast 1st semester results to 2nd semester results
11.Obtain teacher surveys of perceived student achievement
self
May-June 2013
survey
record finsings and compare/contrast to results of PBL teachers and non-PBL teachers
12. Disaggregate student scores of STAAR for Math, Reading and Writing
self
principal
October 2013
testing results from state
compare/contrast 2012 STAAR data to 2013 STAAR data and compare testing results of PBL sample group to non-PBL sample group
13.Write research paper presenting findings gathered from August 2012-October 2013
self
October-November 2013
student data
surveys
professional literature and articles
Proof supportive of the inclusion of PBL approaches in classrooms to enhance engagement and improve student achievement, therefore school ratings
14. Present findings to campus administration and other district administrators
self
December 2013 or January 2014
Paper and findings
charts/graphs
Question/Answer





2 comments:

  1. I think your action research is very thorough and comprehensive. You have a great mixture of data sources to support your findings. I will be interested to see the correlation between PBL and student achievement. I look forward to following your research.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I agree with Kristin in that your plan is very thorough. You have some very specific things to accomplish, and you have a great road map as to what you want to accomplish. I like when a goal has a reason why you want to accomplish something. Your goal says what you are going to do, but why are you going to do it? I'm usually too involved in the why and then forget to be complete enough in what I want to accomplish. You totally know what you want to accomplish and have little to improve on there, but there still is no underlying reason as to what you want to accomplish with PBL. Thanks Jacqwelin.

    ReplyDelete