Thursday, May 2, 2013

Week 4: Revised Action Plan

After meeting with my site supervisor, and receiving comments on my week 3 post, I found a couple places to revise my action plan. First, I will be adding data from the 2011-2012 science STAAR to compare the 2012-2013, and hopefully the 2013-2014 result with. There is a possibility that the results from 2013-2014 may not arrive in time for me to disseminate and add to my action research finding, so I want to have enough data to compare. Through collaboration and visiting with colleagues on my campus, I decided to have 3 scheduled science community nights instead of 1. I am hoping for a great turnout and to get as many community members as possible involved with my plan. By inviting parents and community members throughout the school year, I hope to find people who have great things to offer our students in the field of science. I would love to have classroom volunteers, guest speakers, and help with my new science club on campus. I am anxious to see what my results will be. Please let me know what you think by commenting below:


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Science Achievement
Goal:  Effectively implement a new science lab on campus to increase student achievement on the science STAAR.
Action Steps(s):
Person(s) Responsible:
Timeline: Start/End
Needed Resources
Evaluation


Disaggregate and analyze STAAR data from 2011-2012, 2012-2013 school years



Vicki Dibler, Leigh Anderson, Maria Lucero



May 2013


2011-2012, 2012-2013 Science STAAR data


Disseminated STAAR data by science objective and student expectation

Provide professional development training with teachers to explain standard operating procedures of the new science lab


Vicki Dibler, Ellen Baumler

August 2013

All teachers, Vicki Dibler

Survey giving feedback on professional development training

Create a science focus group of teachers to communicate science needs






Christina Razura, Connie Campos, Chris Rodriguez, Anita Romero, Lisa Hernandez, Cathy Collins, Leigh Anderson, Maria Lucero

August 2013- Ongoing

Quarterly meeting time, meeting location

Meeting notes, agenda

Create a weblog to communicate science information with the school community


Vicki Dibler

August 2013- Ongoing

Available computer to participate in blog

Blog postings, feedback from school community members

Conduct a Community Science Nights at R.E.L. Washington Elementary




Entire campus, parents and students



September 2013, November 2013, March 2014

Science Club members, Science data to provide meaningful activities, gymnasium, cafeteria, community members, science supplies, volunteers


Sign-in Sheet to document attendance, surveys from parents to provide feedback

Collect student surveys




Vicki Dibler



May 2013


Students of each grade level attending science lab weekly


Survey results from students

Disaggregate and analyze STAAR data from 2013-2014 school year



Vicki Dibler, Leigh Anderson, Maria Lucero



May 2014


2013-2014Science STAAR data


Disseminated STAAR data by science objective and student expectation

Compare results from 2011-2012, 2012-13 and  2013-14 STAAR data

Vicki Dibler, Leigh Anderson, Maria Lucero


May 2014

2011-2012, 2012-13, 2013-2014 Science STAAR data

Report on implications of data from 2-3 schools years
 

 
Format based on Tool 7.1 from Examining What We Do to Improve Our Schools
(Harris, Edmonson, and Combs, 2010)

3 comments:

  1. The suggestions and revisions to your plan are good ones! Hands on learning is incredibly important for learners and the more labs... the better! Community meetings have been difficult for my current district... I commend you and your initiative to get everyone involved!

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  2. Hi Vicki,

    I think this research project is great! I feel like the focus group and web log you will create are the most important things that will give you feedback along with your student data. I think hands on learning is the most effective way for most students to learn. Their learning becomes concrete, and therefore increases there understanding ten fold. I also think the student surveys will be good information. Students tend to be honest when it comes to surveys, it's their opportunity to be heard and give input. Good luck with your project. I look forward to following you and see what you find out.
    Lourdes

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  3. Vicki,

    Way to go! I think your action research project is fantastic, and I am very excited to see you including community involvement. It is sometimes challenging to find the time to involve the community, so I commend you for making this a non-negotiable part of your plan! Once the community and parents see the wonderful things that you're doing, you will be their favorite teacher!

    Rachel

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