Monday, March 25, 2013

Final Reflection



          The two texts for the class, Leading with Passion and Knowledge: The Principals as Action Researcher by Nancy Dana and Examining What We Do To Improve Our Schools: 8 Steps to Improve Our Schools by Harris and Combs were very useful resources as I began my research quest. There were many areas of interest in the readings, lectures, reflections, assignments, activities, discussion boards, and especially the blogs.
          The readings enlightened me on the research process:  nine different areas of passion where I may find my wondering (s), how to develop a data collection plan, the four steps of analyzing data, and ways to share my work with others.
          The lectures, through the videos, described purpose for conducting action research.  Dr. Johnny Briseno discussed ways to better assist struggling students.  He stated sharing ideas that work in the classroom with colleagues at campus staff meetings are very effective.  His statement, “Why recreate the wheel” was very impressive, yet true.  Dr. Kirk Lewis' lecture advised us to take whatever information or data we’ve collected and make sure it’s practical and useful for our particular environment. By doing so, we will be more interested in it, students will benefit from it, and we will be more focused on the outcome.
          Reflection is an important aspect of action research because learning is formed from our own professional experiences rather than from another person's point of view. By using it, you learn ways to improve weaknesses which builds continuous opportunities for success.  Elliot (1988) speaks of the continual spiral of reflection:  clarifying and diagnosing a situation or problem that needs to be improved, forming strategies for resolving the problem, implementing and evaluating the effectiveness of the problem, clarifying the situation or area of improvement, and then moving to the next spiral of reflection and action.   The goal of reflection is to learn what to add and what to take away from one’s experiences to enable us to make sense of and attribute values to the events of our lives (Rogers, 2002).
          The discussion boards helped me collaborate with my peers and discuss ways to improve each others assignments.  The blog were also exceptionally helpful. Receiving feedback from my peers helped me to revise my research and make it better.
          Overall, this class was very well organized. With the aid of the syllabus, web conferences, weekly overviews, chat logs, templates, examples in the resource section, and explicit example of each weekly assignment, I was able to understand the nature and purpose of inquiry and action research, as well as, the benefit of action research for my  campus.  I learned how to identify and analyze the common steps or format to design an action research plan: methods for data collection/analysis, research tools needed, etc. and was able to reach consensus with my site supervisor on an action research plan to be implemented: “How Can Technology Increase Fluency.”
                                                      
                                                        
                                                  References

Elliot, J. (1988). Educational research and outsider-insider relations.  Qualitative Studies in Education, 1(2), 155-166.
Rogers, C. (2002).  Defining reflection: Another look at John Dewey and reflective thinking. Teachers College Record, 104(4), 842-866.

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