My action research plan is coming along well. I was initially working toward a plan that would change the way students and teachers organize their classes and, therefore, lead them toward greater success, but I found that I would find greater resistance to change in that area (Force Field Analysis, anyone?) so I decided to switch toward school safety and security, focusing on our closed-campus policy and how it's enforced. Along with that research topic comes the inevitable look at our hallways, bathrooms, and entrances and exits.
One problem my school regularly faces is students who leave campus for lunch, bring lunch back to campus after participating in a school program that gives them off-campus privileges, and student who roam the halls when they are supposed to be in class.
In my opinion, the reason addressing this problem would be beneficial to our school is that our overall culture needs to be one of equal enforcement and equality for all students, yet there are students who are allowed to break these rules because they have developed a rapport with certain teachers or office workers, or participate in off-campus programs.
A school operates best when the staff is on the same page and when all people in leadership positions treat all student equitably.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Action Research Plan
After
reviewing my action research plan I thought the 7.1 template better suited my
needs, hence the change in format .I also added a step for going over my
compiled data with current administrators and discussing changes to policy that
might make us more effective.
Tool
7.1 Action Planning Template
Goal: To study current campus policy and
recommend changes to better suit the needs of students and teachers and support
classroom instruction and organizational culture.
Action Step
|
Person Responsible
|
Timeline
|
Resources Needed
|
Evaluation
|
Get principal approval for
study
|
Jason Braddy
|
January 2013
|
Current MHS policy
|
Whether or not the study
is approved
|
Interview ten teachers
about the current policy. Focus on teachers who normally teach around
lunches. Talk to at least 3 teachers with a split lunch
|
Jason Braddy
|
January 2013
|
Master Schedule
|
Compile data for later use
|
Interview ten different
students about current policy and how it is enforced. Focus on students in
off-campus programs, like PALS for Ready-Set-Teach
|
Jason Braddy
|
January 2013
|
Master Schedule
|
Compile data for later use
|
Interview ten students who
do not have off campus access about current policy and how it’s enforced.
|
Jason Braddy
|
January 2013
|
Master schedule
|
Compile data for later use.
|
Compile the information
collected during the student and teacher interview process to be looked at
after studying the policy during the 1st quarter of the Fall 2013 school year
|
Jason Braddy
|
February 2013
|
Complied data
|
Create a professional report for the administrators
|
Present the compiled data
to the building principal and associate principal and make recommendations
about changes to the current policy and how that policy is communicated where
needed
|
Jason Braddy
|
March 2013
|
Professional Report
|
List of changes to policy enforcement or recommendations for
further study
|
Observe students and their
campus access twice per week during the 1st quarter. Record how
many students left campus and returned with food and how many students had
fast food brought to them by parents or guardians
|
Jason Braddy
|
Aug – Oct 2013
|
Observation check sheet with ways to record observations
|
Observation check sheet
|
Compile observation data
into a report
|
Jason Braddy
|
Oct – Nov 2013
|
Compiled data
|
Data report
|
Interview the same ten
teachers (when possible) about how the policy was enforced this quarter,
whether it was better or worse then before
|
Jason Braddy
|
November 2013
|
Compiled data report
|
Teacher observations and recommendations
|
Interview the same two
sets of ten students (where possible) about how the policy was enforced this
quarter and whether it was better or worse than before
|
Jason Braddy
|
November 2013
|
Compiled data report
|
Student observations and recommendations
|
Compile data and
student/teacher observations into final report for administrators
|
Jason Braddy
|
February 2014
|
Final report
|
Administrators receive recommendations and give instruction for
either changes, further research, or choose to continue with current
policies.
|
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Week 2: Action Research Topics
Looking into action research topics is exciting because I've always considered myself more of a doer than a thinker (not a great trait for an educator, but I'm able to make it work). At first my principal mentor and I were intrigued by all the possibilities available at my school. As we drilled down to the action research topic that would give me the best change to affect positive change at our school we went through the gamut of possible topics. Our fist idea was analyzing common assessments at our school and how different teachers might give different formative assessments that led to the same common unit assessments. The questions we asked ourselves: Why is this happening? Is it actually wrong? What would be the benefit of having each classroom on the same content everyday? From there we looked at school safety and security. How accessible is our building? If we have a closed campus, why are students walking around with fast food cups at lunchtime? Is it necessary to have a closed campus? We also looked at ways to more effectively communicate with students and parents and ways to get each student organized through standard classroom procedures.
We eventually decided on analyzing safety and security in our building as the most effective use of our time, the best possibility for realistic administrative experience, and something that would be beneficial to the school without requiring a change in school policy.
We eventually decided on analyzing safety and security in our building as the most effective use of our time, the best possibility for realistic administrative experience, and something that would be beneficial to the school without requiring a change in school policy.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)