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Title: RePresenting Teaching: Perspectives on the Illusive Notion of Quality


1
(Re)-Presenting Teaching Perspectives onthe
Illusive Notion of Quality
  • UMCP/MCPS Partnership Study of
  • High Quality Teaching in
  • Mathematics Reading
  • Supported by a grant from
  • Interagency Education Research Initiative
  • a combined effort of
  • the USDE, NIH, and NSF

2
Background of the HQT Study
  • Assumption importance of teachers and teaching
  • Context
  • lack of foundational skills
  • 4th grade slump
  • achievement gap

3
Research Focus
  • What do teachers do to
  • help students achieve above expectations in
    reading and mathematics?
  • close the achievement gap?
  • How do they change their pedagogical practices?
  • What is the influence of education policies and
    organizational factors?
  • What is the correspondence between high quality
    teaching constructs and student learning?

4
Description of Study Site Participants
  • Montgomery County Public Schools
  • 19th largest school system in US
  • 136,000 students
  • Over 100 different languages represented in ESOL
    population
  • 1/3 of schools have poverty enrollments over 40
  • Participating Schools and Teachers
  • 76 4th 5th grade teachers
  • 18 schools (30-85 FARMS enrollments higher
    than expected student performance)

5
Data Sources for Symposium Papers
  • Observation Instrument
  • Time sampling protocol focuses on Instructional
    Practices. Its completed by trained observers,
    entered on lap top. Over 10,000 episodes for
    reading and for mathematics.
  • Daily Log
  • Focuses on Curriculum Coverage. Completed by
    teacher, data on time and content for one student
    from class roster entered into PDA. Over 3,300
    daily log entries in reading and in mathematics
    (average length 74 class minutes per entry)
  • Principal Interviews
  • With 16 principals focused on support for
    high-quality teaching and student learning in
    Grades 4 5 and how the achievement gap was
    addressed.

6
Time Sampling Coding Screen
7
(No Transcript)
8
Representing Reading Teaching Through Classroom
Observations and Daily Logs
  • Marilyn Chambliss, Robert Croninger,
  • John Larson, Anna Graeber
  • and Linda Valli

9
What is Good Reading Instruction?
  • Promoting IRA NCTE Standards?
  • Matching state and school district goals and
    prescriptions?
  • Practices that produce high standardized test
    results?
  • Practices of nominated high-quality teachers?
  • How is it studied and measured?

10
Synthesis of Findings High quality reading
instruction
  • Allows students to have choice about interesting
    challenging text of a variety of genres and
    encourages them to respond personally to those
    texts
  • Promotes dialogue about reading and writing
  • Creates a balance between comprehending and
    reasoning about texts and necessary skill
    instruction

11
High Quality Teaching in Reading Math Common
Constructs
  • How teachers understand and represent subject
    matter
  • The existence of a classroom discourse community
  • Level of cognitive demand of activities and
    context

12
Most Frequent Teacher/Student Activity
  • Teacher
  • Manages Activity
  • Poses Low Order
  • Listens to, Watches
  • Reads Student Work
  • Student
  • Management
  • Responds Simple Answer
  • Listens, Watches

13
Least Frequent Teacher/Student Activity
  • Teacher
  • Extrinsic Reward
  • Posts Outline
  • Redirects Conversation
  • Student
  • Writes Outline
  • Performs Speech (Extemporaneous)
  • Questions Another S
  • Performs Play
  • Views Video, DVD

14
Most and Least Frequent Content
  • Most
  • Management/Activity
  • Story/Poetry Elements, Text Design
  • Reading Text
  • Least
  • Fluency
  • Conventions
  • Writing about Genre

15
Cognitive Demand
  • The degree to which a teacher
  • presses for or evokes reasoning, reflection on
    learning, and higher order thinking, and
  • Engages students in demanding content using
    challenging genres.

16
Teacher Activity Cognitive Demand
  • Low Demand
  • Poses low order task, question, problem
  • Elaborates low order task, question, problem
  • Manages an activity if students are in
    transition, socializing
  • High Demand
  • Requests student reflection on learning
    alternative answer student self-assessment
    elaboration of student response attention to a
    response
  • Poses high order task, question, problem
  • Elaborates high order task, question, problem
  • Manages an activity if students are on task

17
Student Activity Cognitive Demand
  • Low Demand
  • Responds with or states simple answer/statement
  • Writes exercises, brief writing, or notes
  • Views video
  • Illustrates
  • High Demand
  • Responds with or states hypothesis, prediction
    explanation, justification alternative answer/
    statement elaborated answer/statement
  • Writes extended writing, graphic organizer,
    outline
  • Performs preplanned student composed speech,
    extemporaneous speech, author composed play

18
Reading Content Cognitive Demand
  • Lower Demand
  • Reading comprehension literal response
  • Fluency
  • Decoding
  • Spelling
  • Conventions
  • Viewing, listening
  • Illustrating
  • Higher Demand
  • Reading comprehension genre, theme or main idea,
    expository text design, poem elements, personal
    response, strategy
  • Writing related to reading genre, theme or main
    idea, expository text design, poem elements,
    strategy
  • Writing unrelated to reading prewriting,
    composing, editing, revising

19
Reading Observation Part Scores for T/S
Interaction
  • Higher Cognitive Demand
  • Teacher 10 Student 10
  • Lower Cognitive Demand
  • Teacher 17 Student 19
  • Any Instruction
  • Teacher 65 Student 86

20
Reading Observation Part Scores for Content
  • Higher Content 30
  • Lower Content 10
  • Any Reading 46
  • Any Writing 17
  • Any Usage/Conventions 6

21
Cognitive Demand T/S Interaction
  • Higher cognitive request with higher student
    response (r .53)
  • Higher cognitive request with lower student
    response (r .22)
  • Lower cognitive request with lower student
    response (r .57)

22
Cognitive Demand and Classroom Organization
  • Ts request higher or lower in mixed
  • (r. . 23, r. .25)
  • Ss respond higher or lower in mixed
  • (r .22 r. .20)
  • Higher content in independent
  • (r. .16)
  • Lower content in whole group
  • (r. .15)

23
Cognitive Demand in Log Data
  • Percent Class Time
  • Exposition 32.3
  • Narrative 35.2
  • Poetry 3.5

24
Time Spent on Various Genres
  • Most Time
  • Exposition
  • Newspaper articles
  • Essays
  • Trade books
  • Narrative
  • Realistic Fiction
  • Historical Fiction
  • Science Fiction
  • Least Time
  • Speeches
  • Letters
  • Journals
  • Plays
  • Mythology
  • Mysteries

25
HQT Reading Instruction
  • Promotes a balance of exposition and narrative
    chosen by the teacher to be personally relevant
    to students lives.
  • Promotes dialogue about reading primarily in
    teacher-led small groups.
  • Creates a balance between comprehending and
    reasoning about texts and necessary skill
    instruction with the majority of the instruction
    being neither higher nor lower cognitive demand.

26
Synthesis of Findings High quality reading
instruction
  • Allows students to have choice about interesting
    challenging text of a variety of genres and
    encourages them to respond personally to those
    texts
  • Promotes dialogue about reading and writing
  • Creates a balance between comprehending and
    reasoning about texts and necessary skill
    instruction

27
Representing Mathematics Teaching Through
Classroom Observations and Daily LogsSome
Views of Cognitive Demand
  • Anna Graeber, Robert Croninger, John Larson,
  • Linda Valli and Marilyn Chambliss

28
Perspective of Cognitive Demand
  • Important aspect of instruction
  • Defined in numerous ways in mathematics education
    literature
  • In this paper, the terminology, higher and lower
    cognitive demand is used
  • Each perspective gives some insights

29
Time Spent on Math
  • District guidelines 60 minutes
  • Sample average 66 minutes
  • (Daily log data)
  • National average, (Mahlzahn, 2001)
  • Grades 3-5 61 minutes

30
Classroom Organization
  • Whole Class 54
  • Independent Work 25
  • Small Group (12) and
  • Mixed Group Indep. 20

31
Major Coding Categories Teacher Activity
  • Requests (H)
  • Poses (H,L)
  • Elaborates on (H, L)
  • Responds/States
  • Models
  • Defines
  • Posts
  • Lectures
  • Reads Aloud from Text
  • Listens/Watches
  • Manages (Activity, Materials, Behavior)
  • No Obvious Instruction

32

Percent of Lesson Time in Various Teacher
Activities

33

Percent of Lesson Time Teacher Calls for Higher
and Lower Order Cognitive Responses
  • Requests, Poses or Elaborates on Problem,
    Question or Task that is High Order -- 11
  • Poses or Elaborates on Lower Order Question or
    Routine Task --20

34
Major Coding Categories Student Activity
  • Responds/States (H,L)
  • Works on (H,L)
  • Formal Assessment
  • Asks a Question,Reads from Text,Writes on Board
  • Listen/Watch
  • Management
  • Mixed
  • No Apparent Academic Behavior

35
Percent of Time for Various Student Activities
36

Percent of Lesson Time Students Productions Are
of Higher and Lower Order
  • Responds with conjecture, explanation, or
    alternative method or does extended writing or
    works on problem or task--17
  • Responds with simple answer or works on routine
    exercises --33

37

Mathematics Content Coding Categories
  • Conceptual
  • Procedural
  • Linking Conceptual and Procedural
  • Learning Strategies - Conceptual , Procedural
  • Management
  • Mixed
  • Non-Instructional

38
Percent of Time on Various Mathematics Content
39
Teacher Calls for Higher Order Student
Production of Higher Order Over Time

40
Mathematics Lesson Content Over Time

41
Convergences Across Classroom Observations
A Multilevel Exploration of Teachers Requests
Students Oral Responses
by Robert Croninger, John Larson Clare VonSecker
42
Background for Exploration
  • One representation of high-quality teaching is
    the extent to which teachers deeply engage
    students in subject matter.
  • A form of engagement is the extent to which
    teachers solicit (and receive) cognitively
    demanding oral responses from students.
  • What do classroom observations in reading and
    mathematics say about this form of high-quality
    teaching?

43
First Set of Questions
  • Does the quality of students oral responses
    (higher v. lower cognitive demand) vary across
    lessons, classes, schools?
  • What characteristics of instructional practices,
    classes schools might help to explain any
    variation that exists in the quality of students
    oral responses?

44
Second Set of Questions
  • Does the quality of students responses vary with
    the quality of teachers requests (higher v.
    lower for cognitive demand)?
  • Does the effectiveness of teacher requests (i.e.,
    the covariance of requests and responses) vary
    between classes schools?
  • What characteristics of classes schools might
    help to explain any variation that exists in the
    effectiveness of teachers requests?

45
Analytic Sample
  • Reading observations
  • 412 observed lessons (7 per class)
  • 62 4th 5th grade classes (4 per school)
  • 17 elementary schools
  • Mathematic observations
  • 434 observed lessons (7 per class)
  • 66 4th 5th grade classes (4 per school)
  • 18 elementary schools

46
Dependent Primary Independent Variables
  • Dependent variable
  • Higher v. lower cognitively demanding responses
    by students.
  • Primary independent variable
  • Higher v. lower cognitively demanding requests by
    teachers.

47
Explanatory Control Variables
  • Average instructional practices across lessons,
    classes or schools (e.g., use of more v. less
    demanding lesson content, more v. less
    instructionally focused management activities,
    organization of students for instruction).
  • Composition of classes schools (e.g., average
    proportion of at-risk students per class
    (free-reduced price lunches, English-language
    learners, special education students), school
    average of proportion of at-risk students per
    class).

48
Analytic Strategy
  • Use multilevel modeling (HLM) to
  • Partition variance in student responses between
    lessons, classes schools.
  • Partition variance in the effectiveness of
    teacher requests between lessons, classes
    schools.
  • Develop class-level school-level models to
    explain variability at each level.

49
Quality of Student Responses
  • Reading
  • Mathematics

50
Variability Between Lessons
  • The more cognitively demanding the requests by
    teachers, the more cognitively demanding the
    responses given by students during lessons.
  • Average effects of teacher requests similar in
    reading mathematics, .48 SD .46 SD
    respectively.

51
Variability Between Classes
  • More cognitively demanding responses in classes
    where teachers requested more cognitively
    demanding responses across lessons (.18 SD,
    reading .13 SD, mathematics).
  • Less demanding responses in mathematics classes
    with higher levels of procedural content (v.
    conceptual linking) across lessons (-.21 SD).
  • Less demanding responses in reading classes with
    higher proportions of English-language learners
    (-.24 SD) less demanding responses in
    mathematics classes with higher proportions any
    at-risk students (-.12 SD).

52
Variability Between Schools
  • More cognitively demanding responses in schools
    where more cognitively demanding content focus of
    lessons across reading classes within schools
    (.14 SD).
  • Less demanding responses in schools with higher
    proportions of any at-risk students across
    mathematics classes within schools (-.12 SD).

53
Effects of Teacher Requests
  • Effects of teacher requests vary significantly
    between classes schools in reading
    mathematics.
  • Estimate of potential range of effects across
    classes is similar for reading mathematics,
    roughly 0 to .95 SD.
  • Estimate of potential range of effects across
    schools is also similar, roughly .19 SD to .75
    SD.

54
Variability Between Classes
  • Effects of more cognitively demanding requests
    are greater in reading classes where management
    focuses on instructional activities more than
    materials or student behavior (.13 SD).
  • Effects of more demanding requests are greater in
    mathematics classes that use more small-group and
    mixed forms of classroom organization (.13 SD).

55
Variability Between Schools
  • Models failed to explain any variability in
    effectiveness of teacher requests between
    schools.
  • Neither average class instructional practices nor
    average class compositions accounted for the
    variance.
  • Small number of schools (17 for reading, 18 for
    mathematics) makes it difficult to model
    variation in effects between schools.

56
Conclusions
  • Quality of student responses varied mostly
    between lessons, but some classes schools
    displayed greater tendency to engage students
    through demanding oral exchanges.
  • More demanding teacher requests led to more
    demanding student responses, regardless of
    subject matter a possible representation of
    high-quality teaching.
  • But effectiveness of teacher requests varied
    across classes schools a possible
    representation of contextual effects.

57
Conclusions Continued
  • Higher-levels at-risk populations associated with
    lower-levels demanding student responses, though
    no indication higher-levels at-risk populations
    influence effects of teacher requests.
  • Evidence greater focus on demanding content
    associated with more demanding student responses
    may represent unmeasured aspects of classrooms
    schools, teacher knowledge or pedagogical
    skills and/or school-level curricular decisions
    (e.g., in reading).

58
Conclusions Continued
  • Effects of teacher requests associated with other
    practices may represent unmeasured aspects of
    classrooms and schools, teacher knowledge or
    pedagogical skills.
  • More fine-grained measures about school policies
    derived from qualitative data may help to reveal
    possible sources of variation in the effects of
    teacher requests between schools.

59
Principals and the Organization of Students and
Teachers in an Era of High-Stakes Accountability
  • Jeremy Price, Daria Buese,
  • and Caroline Eick

60
Overview
  • We look at ways that 16 principals, during the
    2003-2004 school year, approach the challenge of
    organizing students and teachers in their
    schools.
  • We consider principals responses to federal,
    state and district instructional policy
    initiatives.
  • We pay attention to how principals use data to
    allocate human resources to meet the learning
    needs of various categories of students.

61
Factors Influencing Organizational Design
  • Mediating Effects
  • Organic Controls
  • Distribution of Resources
  • Access to Knowledge
  • Assessment Practices

62
Policy Context
  • Curriculum revised to meet the expectations of
    the State Core Learning goals.
  • Multiple assessments identified as significant in
    monitoring student progress towards AYP (e.g.,
    MSA, CTBS, MCPS-AP).
  • Collaboration promoted among teachers,
    principals, specialists and staff.

63
Using Data to Increase Instructional Capacity
  • We talk about this whole instructional piece as
    a continuous cycle that goes on between planning
    instruction and assessmentThis cycle is
    becoming something that drives the program here.
    (Young)
  • Im moving in a way to have teachers be the
    collectors of data and them sharing with me what
    the data is telling them about the performance of
    youngsters and how its going to drive their
    instructionbuilding their capacity to use data.
    (Edwards)

64
Data Avalanche
  • Data to diagnose learning needs.
  • You should have the data dripping off the
    ceiling. (Young)
  • Data to identify student achievement level in
    mathematics and reading.
  • "Well, okay, you have Joe in your classroom
    reading/language arts, he scored a two this time.
    What can we do more with him so we can get him
    to that three the next time? (Moore)

65
Organizing Human Resources to Address Student
Learning Needs
  • Red-flagging
  • Plug-in or Pull-out
  • Double-Dipping

66
Teacher Organization and AYP
  • Principals routinely spoke of bringing together
    specialists and classroom teachers in
    collaborative teams.
  • Principals varied in how they used specialists in
    working teams.
  • Principals exerted different degrees of
    flexibility in determining duration, frequency,
    and content of team meetings.

67
Data Analysis and Working Teams
  • they meet to look at the student work.
    (Consuelos)
  • looking at student work is important. (Bauer)
  • Teachers are encouraged to discuss their
    students in terms of what the students learned
    (Hansen)
  • looking at student work to drive instruction.
    (Fry)
  • and they're looking at best practices with how
    children are doing and really doing a good review
    of student work. (Moore)
  • Were looking at student work inteamwork.
    (Brooks)
  • looking at student work and trying to figure
    out what we needed to do next. (Greene)

68
Conclusion
  • Principals perspectives about the organization
    of teachers and students suggest that data and
    data analysis play a central role in
    instructional decision making. Data and data
    analysis are used for
  • Determining students learning needs
  • Assigning resources to particular categories of
    students
  • Organizing teams of specialists and teachers
  • Shaping the focus and content of working team
    meeting
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