Sharing is an important component in action research if change is the expected outcome. According to Nancy Dana (2001) Clarifying, pushing, and extending thinking helps lead to informed, positive change in traditional school practices-the critical action part of action research and the reason you began this whole inquiry journey in the first place (p. 136). I plan on sharing my action research with administration and my campus teachers. Based on the outcome, I hope to instill the effectiveness of fluency practice and it’s powerful impact on increasing reading levels. The sharing would be done during faculty meetings through presentations on data collected, blogging and teacher surveys.
Followers
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Purpose of Sharing
Action Research
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Goal Goal:
The
purpose of this action research is to determine the gains students can make in reading levels through
explicit reading fluency practice. I will focus on 2 groups of 4-5 2nd
graders. These students will be
selected using the RTI process and DRA kit and will be receiving out of
classroom intervention in addition to in classroom intervention. Through this action research I will be
able to intervene and provide students with the opportunity to read fluently,
as a result enter 3rd grade reading on level as expected by the
district.
Action
Step(s)
|
Person(s)
Responsible
|
Time
Line: Needed
|
Needed
Resources
|
Evaluation
|
1. Determine students who are at risk
|
RTI
committee; Campus Intervention Teacher for Reading (CIT) –Denise Ayala
|
4-6
weeks
September
2-October 11, 2013
|
Developmental
Reading Assessment Kit
|
Students
who are reading significantly below grade level as 2nd graders
will become the target group for this research. Students are expected to be on Level 18 by this point and
reading 60 wpm. Students who are
Level 14 or below at this point will become the target group. Students who have already been
identified as RTI II the 2012-2013 school year will start fluency
intervention immediately.
|
2. Based on DRA, begin guided fluency practice
on instructional levels
|
CIT
to conduct running record and check for understanding; CIT to conduct lesson
for improving fluency
|
By
October 11, 2013 Week 1 Day 1
|
Fluency
Practice Kit (reading passage); student tracking sheet; recording devise;
sight word cards, chunking phrases, word reading strategies
|
Complete a
cold read running record(recorded) at the beginning of the week-based on
instructional DRA; students will track reading fluency, DRA Level, and
comprehension evaluation using 5 questions to check for understanding. Begin small group fluency instruction.
|
3. Reread and practice same story;
guided reading group
|
CIT
to monitor students on computer then move into guided lesson
|
Week
1 Day 2
|
Reading
Fluency Passage, Itunes, headphones, sight word cards, chunking phrases, word
reading strategies
|
Upon
entering the classroom, the students will use Itunes and listen to the same
passage from day one. They will
listen and follow along 3 times and then read to self 1 time. Begin small group fluency
instruction.
|
4.
Reread and practice same story; guided reading group
|
CIT
to monitor students on computer then move into guided lesson
|
Week
1 Day 3
|
Repeat
Day 2 using same story (no recording); sight word cards, chunking phrases,
word reading strategies
|
Repeat
Day 2 using same story; Begin
small group fluency instruction.
|
5. Complete running record of story of
the week
|
CIT
to conduct running record and check for new understanding
|
Week
1 Day 4
|
Fluency
Practice Kit (reading passage); student tracking sheet; recording devise
|
Complete
a recording running record tracking fluency and comprehension. Students will use tracking sheet to
document end of week fluency and compare to Day 1 tracking. Review progress with students.
|
6. Repeat Days 1-4 for the 6 week
grading period
|
Same
as above
|
Same
as above
|
Same
as above
|
Complete
same process for days 1-4. First
two weeks will be same reading level. If comprehension is seen by week 2 day
4, then move on to next reading level.
|
This practice takes approximately
8-10 minutes once students are trained in the process. After fluency action plan is completed
in 8-10 minutes; students will receive explicit instruction in fluency
including sight word reading, chucking phrases.
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Action research in action
This week, I have learned there are numerous places I can go to help develop my inquiry question. The Nine Passions target the most critical components to any campus. It is nice to know there are research plans and resources already available to use. With the leg work done I can focus my energy towards my own campus improvement.
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Educational Leaders and Blogs
Blogging for educators is a
powerful tool because of the ability to collect data and the ability to receive
responses to your blogs on a worldwide platform. Reflection is a rigorous way
of learning; the ability to blog naturally lends itself to reflecting on what we practice. Blogging also
allows educators to serve as role models because they can display journaling
and blogging to students.
What have I learned about action research...
Action research is a tool, which administrators can use to
investigate and solve issues with students, teachers, or themselves. When a concern has been
identified and action research is implemented to resolve the problems, then the
campus can learn and grow together. After the concern is identified, the
action research consists of posing
a question, collecting data to analyze, and making necessary changes to ensure
improvement. This process will
provide administrators with complex yet productive results due to its power and
generation of knowledge. Conducting action research also allows
principals to tackle problems at their schools and make informed decisions to
solve the problem. Through collaboration amongst leaders, change will take
place for the school.
Action research will allow me to move forward with
a reading concern I have. I have
seen a correlation between low comprehension and low fluency, yet there is little time to fit fluency
instruction and practice into the schedule. I would
like to know how fluency impacts the comprehension skills of these two grade
levels and what impact explicit fluency instruction has on reading
comprehension and reading levels. Through
this action research I can then share my research data and work with teachers
on implanting various fluency activities in the classroom.
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