Top Banner
Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick
17

Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Mar 27, 2015

Download

Documents

Jasmine Gray
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Beginning Action Research Learning

Cedar Rapids Community Schools

October, 2004

Dr. Susan Leddick

Page 2: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Everything’s Up-to-Date in Cedar Rapids!

Working at classroom,

building, and

district levels

Page 3: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

What the District Is Doing

• Teaching teams of teachers and administrators to use the tools and processes of Action Research in order to make improvements in all three levels of the district system.

• Emphasizing deployment of school improvement plans – carrying out strategies that have significant impact on student achievement.

• Using Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) as standardized model.

Page 4: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Why Action Research?

• Compatible with adult learning theory

• Compatible with Iowa Professional Development Model

• Combines learning and improving• Works at any system level, in any

setting• Research-based; data-driven;

system-focused

Page 5: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Our Year in Brief – Three P’s

• Purposes– Develop knowledge and skills for

improvement by completing one action research cycle (Plan-Do-Study-Act)

– Introduce the Baldrige framework as an organizer for system improvement

• Preparation– 3 training sessions, with support between

• Presentation– All-district sharing session in April

Page 6: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Alignment: The Starting Point

GOALS GOALS

Page 7: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Apply It

• Examples from last year …Jane

• Getting Started– What are your school goals?– On what goal area will your team

concentrate its learning project this year?

– How would improving the learning system in that area benefit students?

Page 8: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Record the Decision

School Name _____

Team Members - - - - - -*

Goal Area for Our Project ________

Date __________

Page 9: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

An Organizer

Page 10: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

The Guide to Action Research

3 AnalyzeCauses

4 Try OutImprovement

Theory

5 Study theResults

6 StandardizeImprovement

7 PlanContinual

Improvement

1 Definethe

System

2 AssessCurrentSituationPLAN

ACT

STUDY

DO

Page 11: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Flow Chart … the First Tool for Process Management

Page 12: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Deployment Flow Chart

What is it?

A picture of any process ( sequence of events, steps, activities, or tasks) in a system.

Page 13: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

What does it look like?

S ta ff P urchas ing C le rks V endorsR ece iv ingP ersonne l

B us iness D ep t.

S endR equis ition C all S ta ff

R eq. O K ?

G enera teP urchase

O rder

P lace order F ill o rderR ece iveG oods

S endInvo ice P ay B ill

S end G oodsto S taff

R ece iveO rder

E nd

Y es

N o

Page 14: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Deployment Flow Chart

When is it used?

1. Is a picture of a process needed?

2. Is it necessary to show the relationship of the people and the steps in a process?

3. Will the process be pictured as it actually operates? Or as it ought to operate? Or as it might operate?

Page 15: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Deployment Flow ChartHow is it made?

1. Define the process boundaries: first and last steps.

2. Observe the process in operation if you can.

3. Draw a people coordinate/list the actors.

4. List major steps in the process (12-15).

5. Draw the flow chart, using symbols.

6. Study the flow chart for omissions, disconnects, etc.

Page 16: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Baseline Data

• On your key measures…

• Several data points over time…

• Graphed (if you can)

• Disaggregated, if it makes sense

• Analyzed for insights

Page 17: Beginning Action Research Learning Cedar Rapids Community Schools October, 2004 Dr. Susan Leddick.

Assignment for December 8

Complete the background information on your learning project

Do flow chart on key process

Collect, graph, and analyze baseline data