Title: Student Achievement Through Active Science Learning
1Student Achievement Through Active Science
Learning
- Dr. Michael Klentschy, Superintendent
- El Centro School District
- El Centro, California
2A Field Trip to El Centro, California
3Valle Imperial Project in Science
In partnership with
Imperial Valley Science Project
4Case Study Critical Questions
- What is the context?
- What is the infrastructure?
- What is the evidence?
- What are the implications?
5Context
- Need
- Our Region
- Our Community
- Our Students
6Where is El Centro?
El Centro
7Our Community and Students
- In Imperial County
- Mean income 16,322
- Poorest of all 58 counties
- in California
- 30 unemployment rate
- 22,500 students in 14 Districts
8In El Centro
- 6,500 K-8 students
- 11 Title I, School-wide Project Schools
- 77 Free/Reduced Lunch
- 61 English Language Learners
- 10 Migrant
- 81 Hispanic, 12 Caucasian,
- 4 African-American, 3 Asian
9Five Critical Elements for Reform
Valle Imperial Project in Science
- High Quality Curriculum
- Sustained Professional Development
- Materials Support
- Administrative and Community Support
- Assessment and Evaluation
10High Quality Curriculum
- Developmentally Appropriate
- Researched Based
- Leads to a big idea in Science
- Balanced
- -Physical
- -Earth
- -Life
- 3-4 Units Per Year
11High Quality Curriculum
12High Quality Curriculum
- Provides Opportunities to
- Explore
- Investigate
- Inquire
- Question
- Test Hypothesis
- Collect Data
- Analyze Data
-
13Sustained Professional Development
- University Level - Preservice
- School District Level-Inservice
- Initial Training
- Advanced Training
- Lesson Study Groups
- Institutes
- Debriefing
- In-classroom Support
- Leadership
- Advanced Degrees
14Professional Development Design
Set Goals
Plan
Do
Reflect
Loucks-Horsley (1998)
15Sustained Professional Development
School-Based Professional Development
16Lesson Study
- Focus on lesson
- Design
- Implementation
- Content
- Culture
17School District Level In-Service
18Lessonlab/Lesson Study
- Reflective Teaching Practices
19School District Level Inservice
20Materials Support
- SMRC
- VIPS Offices
- Training Center
- Materials Center
-
21Materials Support
- Training Center
- -University Classes
- -District Inservice
22Materials Support
- Materials Center
- -Order
- -Manufacture
- -Inventory
- -Refurbish
- -Deliver
- Cost Sharing
23Materials Support
- Materials Center Staffing
- Director
- 2 Media Technicians
- Administrative Clerk
24Administrative and Community Support
- Vertical Team
- Administrative Training
- Science Volunteers
- Parent Education
- Periodicals
25Administrative and Community Support
- Vertical Team
- Superintendents
- Central Office
- Curriculum and Instruction
- Business Services
- Principals
- Science Director
- Business and Industry
- University
- Decisions by Consensus
26Administrative and Community Support
- Administrator Training
- -Content
- -Pedagogy
- -Classroom Supervision
- -Teacher Evaluation
- -Assessment
27Administrative and Community Support
- Volunteer Scientists
- Recruitment Strategies
28Administrative and Community Support
- Volunteer Scientists in El Centro come from
- Cal Tech
- Agriculture
- Veterinarians
- Pharmacists
- El Centro Regional Medical Center
- San Diego State University
- University of California
- Water and Power Company
- El Centro Naval Air Station
- Union Pacific Mining
29Administrative and Community Support
- Science Volunteers
- Training
30Administrative and Community Support
31Administrative and Community Support
- Parent Education
- Family Science Nights
- School Board Meetings
32Assessment and Evaluation
- Performance Tasks/Products
- Standardized Tests
- Notebooks
33Evidence
- SAT 9
- TIMSS Released Science
- Science-Literacy Connections
- Science-Mathematics Connections
34(No Transcript)
35 Assessment and Evaluation
- Stanford Achievement Test Science Scores
- 1998-99 NPR
- Gr4 Gr6
- Tested 630 638
- Mean NPR 36 40
- Participating 43 49
- n393 n358
- Non-Participating 25 31
- n237 n280
36 Assessment and Evaluation
- Stanford Achievement Test Science Scores
- 1998-99 NPR - Sorted by Years in Program
- Years Gr4 Gr6
- CUM 36 40
- 0 21 27
- n137 n174
- 1 32 32
- n 150 n121
- 2 38 42
- n141 n132
- 3 47 50
- n111 n107
- 4 53 64
- n91 n104
37Student Achievement
38Student Achievement
39Assessment and Evaluation
- TIMSS Released Multiple Choice Science Scores
- 2000-2001 Mean Raw Scores- Sorted by Years in
Program - Years Gr7 Gr8 Gr7/8
- CUM 9.4 11.1 10.2
- 0 8.7 10.0 9.5
- n48 n107 n155
- 1 8.9 10.5 9.7
- n 136 n103 n239
- 2 9.0 10.7 9.8
- n168 n112 n280
- 3 10.4 11.1 10.7
- n125 n90 n215
- 4 11.0 13.3 12.7
- n84 n93 n177
- plt.023 plt.001 plt.01
40 Assessment and Evaluation
- TIMSS Released Multiple Choice Science Scores
- 2000-2001 Mean Raw Scores- Sorted by Units
Completed -
- Grade 7 Mean SD
- High (4 units) 10.335 3.998
- Low (3 or less units) 8.892 3.435
- plt.001
- Grade 8
- High (4 units) 12.137 4.319
- Low (3 or less units) 10.558 3.551
- plt.001
41UC Eligibility Rate for Underrepresented Students
42For additional information on this research
Amaral, O., Garrison, L. and Klentschy, M.
(Summer 2002). Helping english learners increase
achievement through inquiry-based science
instruction. Bilingual Research Journal, 262,
213-239.
http//brj.asu.edu/content/vol26_no2/pdf/ART2.PDF
43(No Transcript)
44Science/Literacy
- Chapter 10
- Focus on
- - Coherence
- - Context
- - Real World Experiences
45Coherent Instruction
- is teaching that connects. It connects the
students reading skills to writing. It connects
reading and writing to content. It links content
learning to student interests. Coherent teaching
makes it easy for students to learn because it
combines the strange-new with the familiar-old.
When the classroom is coherent, teachers help
students make connections among reading, writing
and content. - (Guthrie, 2000)
46Evidence from Imperial County, California
- Stanford Achievement Test Reading Scores
- 1998-99 NPR Grade 4 Sorted by Years in Program
- Years LEP EO
- CUM 33
- 0 21 30
-
- 1 22 39
-
- 2 39 51
-
- 3 34 57
-
- 4 49 64
-
47Evidence from Imperial County, California
- Stanford Achievement Test Reading Scores
- 1998-99 NPR Grade 6 Sorted by Years in Program
- Years LEP EO
- CUM 40
- 0 23 38
-
- 1 28 42
-
- 2 34 46
-
- 3 35 56
-
- 4 51 69
-
48Evidence from Fresno, California
- Stanford Achievement Test Reading Scores
- Study found that students who received 4 years of
exposure to a systemic science program
(1998-2001) scored significantly higher on the
SAT 9 Reading subtest compared to students who
did not receive the science instruction - Opportunity to learn in the systemic science
program produced achievement results that closed
the reading achievement gap between ethnic groups - In all cases, a positive relationship was found
between the number of years of participation in
the systemic science program and SAT 9 Reading
Score gains
49Evidence from Dade County, Florida
- Stanford Achievement Test Reading Scores 1996
- Study found that students ( n 2420) in grades 3
and 5 who received instruction in a systemic
science program (1996) scored significantly
higher (10 percentile points in both grade
levels) on the SAT 9 Reading subtest compared to
students - (n 4145) who did not receive the systemic
science instruction. - The same students also scored significantly
higher - (11 and 14 percentile points) in Mathematics
Application on the same SAT 9 test.
50Science - Literacy
51Things to Consider About Notebooks
- Best Record of
- Lesson/Unit Implementation
- Student Performance
- Quality of communication
- Conceptual and/or procedural understanding
- Teacher Feedback
Ruiz-Primo, Li and Shavelson, 2002, Looking Into
Student Science Notebooks
What Do Teachers Do With Them? CRESST
Technical Report 562.
52Additional Things to Consider About Science
Notebooks
- Writing may enhance thinking
- Writing demands the learner to
- organize knowledge
- link evidence to claims
- draw conclusions
- Transfer effect to student achievement
- Opportunity for student voice
Klentschy, M. and Molina-De La Torre, E. (2004).
Students science notebooks and the inquiry
process. In W. Saul (Ed.). Crossing Borders in
Literacy and Science Instruction Perspectives on
Theory and Practice. Newark, DE International
Reading Association Press.
53What Others Have to Say
- Writing provides a status of our thoughts and
forces us to grapple with what we know and what
we dont know. - Santa and Havens (1991)
- If you cannot in the long run tell someone
what you have been doing, your doing has been
worthless. - Nobel laureate Edwin Schrodinger (1951)
54What should a science notebook contain?
55Components and Criteria
- Question/Problem/Purpose
- Prediction
- Planning
- Data/Observations
- Claims and evidence
- What have you learned?
- Next steps/New questions
56 57(No Transcript)
58Stages of Teacher Development - 1
59Stages of Teacher Development - 2
60Stages of Teacher Development - 3
61Stages of Teacher Development - 4
62Stages of Teacher Development - 5
63Getting Started
- Today I (or we) __________________
- (description of activity)
- Today I learned__________________
- I noticed________________________
- I wonder________________________
- Questions I have now______________
For additional writing stems visit
www.vipsscience.com
64Science Literacy ConnectionsImperial County, CA
- District Writing Proficiency
- Grade 6
- Spring 1999 Results
- Cumulative Pass 64
- n636
- Participating Classes 82
- n357
- Non Participating Classes 41
- n279
65 Science Literacy ConnectionsImperial County,
CA
- District Writing Proficiency
- Grade 6 Spring 1999
- Cumulative Pass 64 n636
- Years Pass n
- 0 23 174
- 1 68 119
-
- 2 71 132
-
- 3 90 107
- 4 89 104
-
66Implications
- Project design which is data driven
- Project design which develops a local and
regional K-16 collaborative partnership between
districts, business, volunteer scientists and the
university - Project design resulted in improved student
achievement in science and other core areas of
the curriculum -
67This work is supported, in part, by National
Science Foundation Grant ESI-9731274. The
opinions expressed in this work are those of the
authors and not necessarily those of the National
Science Foundation.