Followers

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Revision to the plan?

I spent much of my time with my mentor ( and one of his associates) in the making of my research plan. They were very instrumental in its production. Due to this fact, it was lined out in a way that they felt was the most productive.

Upon reading the comments of my posting, I realize how many schools are moving towards uniforms. My research is not directing the type of policy we have, rather the adjustments that we should make to improve learning. With that being said, I am going to use our data this year to help make the necessary changes for next year. The final part of my research will be to get next fall's data to compare results (hopefully improvement).

Once that is complete, I am personally going to extend my personal interest into researching the numbers from schools with uniforms. I hope to find even more positive data to present to the administration. I would love for our campus to be uniformed. I have high hopes of usiog my research to improve our schools policy, while aspiring to take that positive gain into a rebuttal for the possibility of uniforms.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Dress Code Research

Action Planning Template

Goal: To discover the correlation between dress code violations that result in missing class time and student's academic success in his/her overall grades. The administration will then use the findings to solidify, or modify, the dress code policy in a way that it is beneficial to all.

Action Steps(s):

Person(s) Responsible:

Timeline: Start/End

Needed Resources

Evaluation

Review current dress code policy.

David Tarver

Jim Yancey

Mary Laigle

May 2013

MWHS Student Handbook

None

Survey Faculty, Staff, and random classes of students.

David Tarver

May 2013

Survey Questionnaire

Use survey questions to gain insight on the opinions of others, regarding the effectiveness and/or perceived flaws in the current dress code policy.

Collection of Data


 


 


 


 


 

David Tarver

Jim Yancey

Mary Laigle

Office personnel

May 2013 -

June 2013

Discipline referrals and any other paper, or electronic record, of violations.

Categorize data from discipline referrals into the various forms of violations.

Collection of Data


 


 


 


 


 

David Tarver

Office personnel


 

June 2013

Final reported grade records.

Get access to the overall grade records for students that meet the criteria of dress code violations.

.

Review Data Analysis


 


 


 


 


 

David Tarver

Jim Yancey

Mary Laigle

June 2013

All Data Collected

Develop a report for EDL class as a halfway point in research. Interpret findings and information learned from project.

Collection of Data

David Tarver

Jim Yancey

Mary Laigle

Office personnel

August 2013 – January 2014

Discipline referrals and any other paper, or electronic record, of violations that meet the criteria of dress code violations under the new policy.

Review the data received under the new dress code policy to compare the results from the previous year.

Collection of Data


 


 


 


 


 

David Tarver

Office personnel


 

January 2014

Final reported grade records.

Get access to the overall grade records for students that meet the criteria of dress code violations.

.

Complete Report of Data Analysis

David Tarver

Jim Yancey

Mary Laigle

Office personnel

February 2014

All Data Collected

Develop Action Research Report on all findings describing correlation of dress code violations and student's overall grades.

Meet with site supervisor and discuss how research findings have shown the effectiveness, or lack thereof, of the new dress code policy.

David Tarver

Jim Yancey

Mary Laigle

February 2014

Action Research Results/Artifacts

Feedback from Supervisor

Report findings to Campus Improvement Committee

David Tarver


 

CIC

March 2014

Action Research Results/Artifacts


 

Action Research Report


 

Introduce and present Action Research Report with CIC, and discuss whether the current policy is functioning in the best interest of the students.

Revisit my action research plan, post on educational blog for continual improvement and ideas.

David Tarver

April 2014

Action Research Results/Artifacts


 

Educational Blog

Review comments and feedback from site supervisor, teachers, and grad school colleagues.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

    I learned an abundance of information this week as I sought my topic for action research. As the readings, videos, and discussions were very helpful, it was the time I spent with my mentor that I really enjoyed. I had a great conversation with him that opened my eyes to a small portion of his working life. There is so much about the principalship of which I am completely oblivious. There is so much to learn. This makes me realize the importance of the opportunity that I have to learn throughout the duration of this program. I have been working hard in these first two classes, and have  had the full intention of working hard throughout. But now, after seeing some things through his eyes, I will be even more dedicated to the learning opportunity that I have at this time.
    My mentor started his career as an ag teacher. He then got into the coaching field, along with his new teaching assignment as a science teacher. It was not until his daughters reached high school that he became a principal. A few years later, he would climb the career ladder to the office of the superintendent. After doing this for many years, he retired. It was after a couple of years into retirement  that he came to our school as an assistant principal. I have a tremendous amount of respect for this man, as does our entire campus. He is a wealth of knowledge from which I am going to truly enjoy learning.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

How might educational leaders use blogs?



    Educational leaders can use blogs as journals. This allows them to capture their thinking. It essentially provides a tool for reflecting on one’s own thought process. But with a blog, unlike a journal, you can combine text, images, and links to other blogs. Not only is this beneficial personally as a leader, but it can also be used to share with others in such a way that you model the type of atmosphere that you want.

What I have learned about action research and how I might be able to use it.



    Action research, in my opinion, must be a tool that is used by all administrators. I have sat through many staff developments throughout my seventeen years of teaching. I have grown more and more frustrated each year as we paid people to come speak to our staff. These people brought us their models of how to fix our school.
    Over and over again, ideas were infused into our daily rigor. But before we could get one implemented in an effective way, here came another. We did not change from one plan to the other, yet we added one and were doing multiple tasks half heartedly. Obviously, staff interest and morale were not at their best.
    As time has gone on, a question has resonated in teacher’s minds: “what are you going to add to our plate now?” As we moved on to a new year, a new presenter, and a new program, teachers became less and less determined to “buy in” to the new agenda. Now, the chances of success began to slip away. So many dollars, hours, and positive attitudes were lost throughout this process.
    Action research takes an active approach at fixing “our problems.” And if taken on correctly, presents teachers with something worth working towards. It involves everyone. It holds personal interest to the people in our district. We become the presenter, researcher, implementer, and solution to what we cherish in our community.
    Action research is a way to seek change and reflect on practice by posing questions (wonderings), collect data to gain insight into wonderings, analyze the data and read relevant literature, make changes based on new understanding, and share findings. I plan on using this process to continuously challenge myself to seek out the “problem areas” in my school to keep moving forward towards the most productive learning environment that I can provide.