Teaching and learning, professional development and computer technology: an action research case study of five classroom environments

Similar documents
Knowledge management styles and performance: a knowledge space model from both theoretical and empirical perspectives

HDR Presentation of Thesis Procedures pro-030 Version: 2.01

Higher Education / Student Affairs Internship Manual

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN QUEENSLAND

Quality teaching and learning in the educational context: Teacher pedagogy to support learners of a modern digital society

CHALLENGES FACING DEVELOPMENT OF STRATEGIC PLANS IN PUBLIC SECONDARY SCHOOLS IN MWINGI CENTRAL DISTRICT, KENYA

Rotary Club of Portsmouth

Field Experience and Internship Handbook Master of Education in Educational Leadership Program

University of Toronto Mississauga Degree Level Expectations. Preamble

Guidelines for Incorporating Publication into a Thesis. September, 2015

Conducting the Reference Interview:

ACADEMIC AFFAIRS POLICIES AND PROCEDURES MANUAL

IMPROVING STUDENTS SPEAKING SKILL THROUGH

PROFESSIONAL TREATMENT OF TEACHERS AND STUDENT ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT. James B. Chapman. Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Virginia

Advanced Grammar in Use

Philosophy in Literature: Italo Calvino (Phil. 331) Fall 2014, M and W 12:00-13:50 p.m.; 103 PETR. Professor Alejandro A. Vallega.

VTCT Level 3 Award in Education and Training

Procedures for Academic Program Review. Office of Institutional Effectiveness, Academic Planning and Review

Exemplar Grade 9 Reading Test Questions

Midterm Evaluation of Student Teachers

Kentucky s Standards for Teaching and Learning. Kentucky s Learning Goals and Academic Expectations

University of Arkansas at Little Rock Graduate Social Work Program Course Outline Spring 2014

Unit 7 Data analysis and design

Evidence to inform effective physical education policy, pedagogy and practice in New South Wales secondary schools

General study plan for third-cycle programmes in Sociology

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS BUS 261 BUSINESS COMMUNICATIONS. 3 Credit Hours. Prepared by: Cindy Rossi January 25, 2014

ED : Methods for Teaching EC-6 Social Studies, Language Arts and Fine Arts

ABET Criteria for Accrediting Computer Science Programs

Presentation Advice for your Professional Review

Technical Skills for Journalism

THREE-YEAR COURSES FASHION STYLING & CREATIVE DIRECTION Version 02

Master Program: Strategic Management. Master s Thesis a roadmap to success. Innsbruck University School of Management

SPRING GROVE AREA SCHOOL DISTRICT

Submission of a Doctoral Thesis as a Series of Publications

Knowledge-Based - Systems

Maximising transparency in a doctoral thesis: The complexities of writing. about the use of QSR*NVIVO within a Grounded Theory study

A Model to Predict 24-Hour Urinary Creatinine Level Using Repeated Measurements

THE INFLUENCE OF COOPERATIVE WRITING TECHNIQUE TO TEACH WRITING SKILL VIEWED FROM STUDENTS CREATIVITY

Every curriculum policy starts from this policy and expands the detail in relation to the specific requirements of each policy s field.

Accounting 380K.6 Accounting and Control in Nonprofit Organizations (#02705) Spring 2013 Professors Michael H. Granof and Gretchen Charrier

New Programs & Program Revisions Committee New Certificate Program Form

User education in libraries

ED487: Methods for Teaching EC-6 Social Studies, Language Arts and Fine Arts

eportfolio Guide Missouri State University

General rules and guidelines for the PhD programme at the University of Copenhagen Adopted 3 November 2014

MASTER OF ARTS IN APPLIED SOCIOLOGY. Thesis Option

MBA 5652, Research Methods Course Syllabus. Course Description. Course Material(s) Course Learning Outcomes. Credits.

Creating a Better World : The International Baccalaureate and the Reproduction of Social Inequality in Australia

ELS LanguagE CEntrES CurriCuLum OvErviEw & PEDagOgiCaL PhiLOSOPhy

SSIS SEL Edition Overview Fall 2017

BENG Simulation Modeling of Biological Systems. BENG 5613 Syllabus: Page 1 of 9. SPECIAL NOTE No. 1:

Contract Language for Educators Evaluation. Table of Contents (1) Purpose of Educator Evaluation (2) Definitions (3) (4)

SAMPLE AFFILIATION AGREEMENT

State of play of EQF implementation in Montenegro Zora Bogicevic, Ministry of Education Rajko Kosovic, VET Center

Final Teach For America Interim Certification Program

e-learning Coordinator

TEACHER LEARNING AND LANGUAGE:

Conditions of study and examination regulations of the. European Master of Science in Midwifery

Personal Project. IB Guide: Project Aims and Objectives 2 Project Components... 3 Assessment Criteria.. 4 External Moderation.. 5

The University of Texas at Tyler College of Business and Technology Department of Management and Marketing SPRING 2015

Delaware Performance Appraisal System Building greater skills and knowledge for educators

1 Use complex features of a word processing application to a given brief. 2 Create a complex document. 3 Collaborate on a complex document.

Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes, Platinum 2000 Correlated to Nebraska Reading/Writing Standards (Grade 10)

Economics 201 Principles of Microeconomics Fall 2010 MWF 10:00 10:50am 160 Bryan Building

22/07/10. Last amended. Date: 22 July Preamble

The FHES Thesis Guide. Doctor of Philosophy AK3518

GENERIC SKILLS DEVELOPMENT: INTEGRATING ICT IN PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION

SER CHANGES~ACCOMMODATIONS PAGES

Texas Woman s University Libraries

PIRLS 2006 ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORK AND SPECIFICATIONS TIMSS & PIRLS. 2nd Edition. Progress in International Reading Literacy Study.

TEACHING QUALITY: SKILLS. Directive Teaching Quality Standard Applicable to the Provision of Basic Education in Alberta

Business. Pearson BTEC Level 1 Introductory in. Specification

MASTER S THESIS GUIDE MASTER S PROGRAMME IN COMMUNICATION SCIENCE

PROGRAM REVIEW REPORT EXTERNAL REVIEWER

MSc Education and Training for Development

COMM370, Social Media Advertising Fall 2017

GOING GLOBAL 2018 SUBMITTING A PROPOSAL

Matrix for the evaluation of teaching skills in the Faculty of Medicine

EDUC-E328 Science in the Elementary Schools

Conventions. Declarations. Communicates

content First Introductory book to cover CAPM First to differentiate expected and required returns First to discuss the intrinsic value of stocks

You said we did. Report on improvements being made to Children s and Adolescent Mental Health Services. December 2014

Colorado State University Department of Construction Management. Assessment Results and Action Plans

Additional Qualification Course Guideline Computer Studies, Specialist

HMS 241 Lab Introduction to Early Childhood Education Fall 2015

Cambridge NATIONALS. Creative imedia Level 1/2. UNIT R081 - Pre-Production Skills DELIVERY GUIDE

Section I: The Nature of Inquiry

DOCTORAL SCHOOL TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME

Education for an Information Age

Qualitative Site Review Protocol for DC Charter Schools

Instructor: Khaled Kassem (Mr. K) Classroom: C Use the message tool within UNM LEARN, or

INDIAN STATISTICAL INSTITUTE 203, BARRACKPORE TRUNK ROAD KOLKATA

University Library Collection Development and Management Policy

Copyright Corwin 2014

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136

School Inspection in Hesse/Germany

M.S. in Environmental Science Graduate Program Handbook. Department of Biology, Geology, and Environmental Science

Number of students enrolled in the program in Fall, 2011: 20. Faculty member completing template: Molly Dugan (Date: 1/26/2012)

Instrumentation, Control & Automation Staffing. Maintenance Benchmarking Study

Transcription:

University of Wollongong Research Online University of Wollongong Thesis Collection 1954-2016 University of Wollongong Thesis Collections 2001 Teaching and learning, professional development and computer technology: an action research case study of five classroom environments Glen Patterson University of Wollongong Recommended Citation Patterson, Glen, Teaching and learning, professional development and computer technology: an action research case study of five classroom environments, Doctor of Education thesis, Faculty of Education, University of Wollongong, 2001. http://ro.uow.edu.au/ theses/979 Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: research-pubs@uow.edu.au

TEACHING AND LEARNING, PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY: AN ACTION RESEARCH CASE STUDY OF FIVE CLASSROOM ENVIRONMENTS. A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the degree DOCTOR OF EDUCATION From UNIVERSITY OF WOLLONGONG By Glen Patterson Dip Teach, BEd, MEd Department of Education 2001

University of Wollongong Abstract Teaching and Learning, Professional Development and Computer Technology: An Action Research Case Study of Five Classroom Environments. by Glen Patterson Supervisory Committee: Professor Barry Harper & Dr Ted Booth Abstract: This study documents the evolving form of the collaboratively designed professional development programs and the changes that took place in five classrooms when computers and related technologies were available and integrated into the teaching and learning environment. It also investigates the impact that this had on the teacher's view of how students "learn best" and what implication this has for future learning. Furthermore, the study investigates changes in student learning outcomes and tracked changes in classroom climate and student/student and student/teacher interactions within the classroom. It was anticipated that this data would assist as a further indicator of changes in teaching practice and how these changes impact on classroom practices. This study encouraged teachers to look at how students learn best and what the role was as an educator in this process. The introduction of computer technology into the learning environment provided rich data across each of the classrooms involved in the study. Some of the issues that affected this process included such things as: * Years of teaching experience (reflected in developed teaching strategies in classroom and an understanding of student learning); i

* An individual's pedagogy and a commitment to evaluation and continued improvement of teaching practice; Issues within the learning environment (including school culture and class climate); * A classroom and school climate that promoted and supported learning for sta and students; * A teacher's involvement in a negotiated development program that met specif identified needs; * Engagement in a training and development program that was situated in the participants' own classrooms (with components of computer skill sessions and sessions that directly related to teaching practice); * The teacher's initial level of personal computing skills. Yocam & Wilmore (1995), found professional development approaches that had the most impact did the following: * involved small-group collaborations between teachers; * took place in working classrooms; * built on teachers' existing knowledge about curriculum and practice; * provided opportunities to experiment and reflect on new experiences; * provided ongoing support to help implement change and innovation. Literature reviewed and data collected from this study enhanced Yocam and Wilmore's findings. Programs also need, to: * be twofold, with discrete in-class and individual training sessions for teachers; * be collaboratively designed; * be part of a whole school program that focuses on constant improvement and evaluation; * take place in a school that has a climate and culture conducive and supportive of change and innovation; * be longitudinal with a minimum of one school year; ii

6. place participants in close proximity to each other to maximise the possibility of the exchange of ideas and the development of support structures. If the integration of computers into classrooms is to be successful, current practices in professional development in some schools must change. This change must be supported from the highest level with schools being equipped to carry out meaningful change monitored over substantial time periods. iii

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The author wishes to acknowledge the support of my wife Leanne and two children Matthew and Caitlin through the "life" of this study. Thanks also extended to the two supervisors, Professor Barry Harper and Dr. Ted Booth. CERTIFICATION I, Glen P. Patterson, declare that this thesis, submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of Doctor of Education, in the Department of Education, University of Wollongong, is wholly my own work unless otherwise referenced or acknowledged. The document has not been submitted for qualifications at any other academic institution. Glen P. Patterson 20 April 2001 iv

Table of Contents Page Glossary List of Figures List of Tables ix x xi 1 Introduction 1.1 The Background of the Study 1 1.2 Significance of The Study 3 1.3 Research Questions 4 1.4 Methodology Issues 5 2 Literature Review 2.1 Characteristics of Effective Professional 7 2.2 Development School-Based Professional Development 11 2.3 The Role of Professional Development in Introducing Computers into the Classroom 12 2.4 Classroom Computer Usage and its Relationship to Curriculum 19 2.5 Action Research 21 2.6 Summary 22 Professional Development Context of School 3.1 Context of The School 25 3.2 Context of The Study 26 3.3 Individuals Involved 29 4 Methodology 4.1 Theoretical Framework for the Investigation 32 4.2 Data Gathering 33 4.3 Data Organisation and Analysis 41 4.4 Summary 42 v

5 Findings- Teacher Case Studies Overview of Findings 5.1 Galletea 5.1.1 Background Information 5.1.2 Teaching Philosophy in Practice 5.1.3 First Observations 5.1.4 Initial Computer Usage 5.1.5 Galletea Case Analysis 5.1.6 Summary 43 44 45 46 48 48 71 5.2 Maree 5.2.1 5.2.2 5.2.3 5.2.4 5.2.5 5.2.6 Background Information Teaching Philosophy in Practice First Observations Initial Computer Usage Maree Case Analysis Summary 72 73 74 76 76 91 5.3 Debbie 5.3.1 5.3.2 5.3.3 5.3.4 5.3.5 5.3.6 Background Information Teaching Philosophy in Practice First Observations Initial Computer Usage Debbie Case Analysis Summary 93 93 94 96 97 109 5.4 Josephine 5.4.1 Background Information 5.4.2 Teaching Philosophy in Practice 5.4.3 First Observations 5.4.4 Initial Computer Usage 5.4.5 Josephine Case Analysis 5.4.6 Summary 110 111 113 114 115 133 5.5 Amber 5.5.1 5.5.2 5.5.3 5.5.4 5.5.5 5.5.6 Background Information Teaching Philosophy in Practice First Observations Initial Computer Usage Amber Case Analysis Summary 135 136 137 139 140 154 vi

5.6 Overview of Case Studies 156 6 Finding - Themes 6.1 How do Students Learn Best? 165 6.2 Changes in the Learning Environment 170 6.3 Changes in teaching practice when computers were integrated into the teaching/learning environment 174 6.4 Teacher Attitudes towards Computers and Related Technologies 176 6.5 Student-teacher and student-student interaction in classroom activities 177 6.6 The Use of Computer Technology to Achieve Curriculum Outcomes 181 6.7 Changes in Teacher Programming of Lessons and Units Throughout the Study 182 6.8 Professional Development 183 6.9 Personal Skills 188 6.10 Stress and Pressures in Teaching 191 6.11 Changes in Organisation 192 6.12 Skills Required by Students 193 6.13 Wiggleworks Usage 194 6.14 Summary 200 7 Discussion 7.1 Introduction 203 7.2 The Nature of Student Learning 203 7.3 The Role of the Teacher 205 7.4 The Learning Environment 207 7.5 The Role of Professional Development in Initiating and Supporting Change 209 7.6 The Relevance of In-school Training and Development 214 7.7 Conclusions 216 8 Recommendations and Summary 8.1 Introduction 217 8.2 Training and Development Issues 217 8.3 Implications for Teaching and Learning 219 8.4 Special Education 220 8.5 Further Study 221 vii

Appendixes Appendix 1 - Training and Develop Sessions Advertised for All Staff 222 Appendix 2 - School Layout Appendix 3 - Sample of Teacher's Journal 224 Appendix 4 - Sample Teacher Interview Transcript 2 31 Appendix 5 - Sample of Student Work Samples 2 33 Appendix 6 List of Nodes from NUD*IST -6.1 May 1998 242-6.2 June 2000 243 Appendix 7 Diagram of Classroom Layout - Galletea 247 Appendix 8 Debbie's Work-booklet on Wiggleworks 248 223 References 256 viii

GLOSSARY ESL - English as a Second Language STLD - Support Teacher Learning Difficulties LBOTE - Language Background Other Than English NESB - Non English Speaking Background ADHD - Attention Deficit Hypoactivity Deficit SSP - School for Special Purposes RFF - Release From Face To Face KLA - Key Learning Area Sci Tech - Science and Technology Key Learning Area HSIE - Human Society and Its Environment Key Learning Area IM - Intellectually Moderate IO - Special Education Class for Intellectually Disabled Children CD-ROM - Computer Device Read Only Memory QSR - Quality Solutions and Research (makers of NUD*IST) NUD*IST - Non-Numerical and Unstructured Data Indexing Searching and Theorising (Computer Software) ACOT - Apple Classroom of Tomorrow TILT - Technology in Learning and Teaching Living Books - Interactive Computer Reading Software Wiggleworks - Interactive Computer Based Reading Resource including on computer and off computer resources. Distributed by Scholastic Inc. (1994) ix

LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1.1 Shifts in Teachers' Views of Teaching and Learning 20 Figure 1.2. The Action Research Spiral 22 Figure 4.1. Model for Case Study of Five Classroom Environments 32 Figure 4.2. Data Collection Matrix 34 Figure 5.1.1 Photographic Evidence of Student Work on the Walls of Galletea's Classroom 53 Figure 5.2.1 Photograph of Maree's Classroom 81 Figure 5.4.1 Photographic Evidence of Increased Student/Student Interaction During One Of Josephine's Lessons 123 Figure 5.5.1 Amber's Classroom During a Whole Class Demonstration 138 Figure 6.1 Photograph of Galletea's Blackboard Decembers* 167 Figure 6.2 Classroom Layout Debbie's Room 169 Figure 6.3 Classroom Layout Maree's Room 30/6/97 171 x

LIST OF TABLES Table 5.1 Overview of Case Studies 156-164 Table 6.1 Matrix of Coded Text Units Intersecting at Change and Teaching Practice 174 Table 6.2 Matrix of Coded Text Units Intersecting at Change and Personal Skills 188 XI