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What's the Use of Research? How Teac...
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Snyder, Christine.
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What's the Use of Research? How Teachers Use Research to Plan for Linguistically and Culturally Diverse Classrooms.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
What's the Use of Research? How Teachers Use Research to Plan for Linguistically and Culturally Diverse Classrooms./
作者:
Snyder, Christine.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2020,
面頁冊數:
282 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 81-12, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International81-12A.
標題:
Multicultural education. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=27994688
ISBN:
9798617066779
What's the Use of Research? How Teachers Use Research to Plan for Linguistically and Culturally Diverse Classrooms.
Snyder, Christine.
What's the Use of Research? How Teachers Use Research to Plan for Linguistically and Culturally Diverse Classrooms.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2020 - 282 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 81-12, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Claremont Graduate University, 2020.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
This study addresses two important gaps. First, a persistent achievement gap between culturally and linguistically diverse students and their typically more-resourced, English-proficient peers threatens students' success in K-12 and beyond (Dabach & Callahan, 2011). Fortunately, there is a large body of research on teaching in diverse classrooms from which teachers can draw (Faltis & Valdes, 2016; Ladson-Billings, 1995; Lucas & Villegas, 2013; Menken & Antunez, 2001). But teachers are not confident users of this research, expressing lack of confidence and preparation for teaching emergent bilinguals (EBs) (Gandara, Maxwell-Jolly, & Driscoll, 2005). This ties to the second gap-the "research/practice gap" between researchers and practitioners generally (Farley-Ripple, May, Karpyn, Tilley, & McDonough, 2018; Penuel, Allen, Coburn, & Farrell, 2015).One policy solution is to mandate greater use of evidence in decision-making-a feature of the 2016 Every Student Succeeds Act (WestEd, 2020). But the literature on the processes by which practitioners' use research is thin (Nelson & O'Beirne, 2014); the practice of research use is ill-defined (Farley-Ripple et al., 2018) and transforming research knowledge into pedagogical knowledge is undertheorized (Cain, 2015a) (pp. 504-5). To date, much research on this gap focuses on how district and school leaders use research (Penuel et al., 2015) or on teachers' beliefs, attitudes, and approaches to reading research (Kennedy, 1997; Zeuli & Tiezzi, 1993). Little research exists on the micro-processes (Little, 2012) and practices (Farley-Ripple et al., 2018) of research use. Without a better understanding of "the complexity of the research-practice link," leveraging the professional knowledge base to improve practice will remain an elusive goal (van Ingen et al., 2016, p. 187).The purpose of this qualitative case study is to close the first gap by also closing the second. Until we better understand how teachers engage with their professional knowledge base, we have little hope of supporting evidence-based practices for teaching in diverse classrooms.To conceptualize my inquiry, I draw from the sociocultural perspective (Rogoff, 2003; Vygotsky, 1978) of activity theory (Engestrom, 1999). This helps me predict that research use is defined by the interaction between teachers (and their working knowledge), tools (including research), and other contextual elements (e.g. school community, etc.). But the practices of research use-the specific practices involved when teachers, tools, and other contextual elements interact-are undefined (Farley-Ripple et al., 2018). To define them, I draw from collective sensemaking theory (Coburn, 2001) and empirical work on planning (McCutcheon & Milner, 2002) and teacher knowledge (Hiebert et al., 2002; M. Kennedy, 1982). These help me predict that the interaction between teachers, tools, and other contextual elements involves teachers' sensemaking, gatekeeping, and complex planning decisions.From March-October 2019, I collected evidence of how 21 K-adult education teachers used research to plan for diverse classrooms. I collected 13 data sources across five collection events, including a "think aloud" where I observed how teachers made sense of and then used (or did not) research on teaching in diverse classrooms. The data subset analyzed here totaled 1,549 minutes of audio/video recording (yielding 285 pages of transcripts) and 160 pages of teachers' notes, planning artifacts, and written responses to their readings. Data were coded qualitatively in a multi-stage process drawing from Corbin and Strauss (2015) as well as using a priori codes from activity theory (Engestrom, 1999).Through this micro-process analysis (Little, 2012), I find research use when planning for diverse classrooms consists of three co-occurring subprocesses: Sensemaking, Gatekeeping, and Concretizing. I define sub-elements, properties, and dimensions of each. Though the first two processes have been explored in previous work (e.g. Coburn, 2001), my definition of Concretizing is an original contribution that highlights the complexity of research use.Another contribution of my study is, although I observed some patterns in use by years' teaching experience and institutional contexts (ex: school-based accountability Rules around planning), use also shared similarities across contexts. This is significant because much literature focuses on organizational context as a factor in teachers' evidence use (e.g. Goertz et al., 2009). My research design does not permit claims about the degree to which context did or did not "matter," but patterns across individuals and organizations may suggest that individual- or organizational-level variables may not be the only factors influencing use. Patterns across significantly diverse teaching contexts may suggest research use (also) reflects norms, practices, and values shared by much larger communities of practice (Chaiklin & Lave, 1993), for example the broader professional teaching community.Finally, scholars note teachers' relative lack of engagement in their professional literature (Goldacre, 2013; Hannan et al, 2000; Latham, 1993), and it is true that my participants varied in the quality and degree to which they comprehended and used the research. But contrary to what might be inferred from dire statistics, 19/21 of my participants at least entertained the possibility of using the research for instruction. This suggests lack of practitioner engagement may reflect not lack of teacher interest, but rather inadequate support for this complex work.
ISBN: 9798617066779Subjects--Topical Terms:
526718
Multicultural education.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Diverse classrooms
What's the Use of Research? How Teachers Use Research to Plan for Linguistically and Culturally Diverse Classrooms.
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This study addresses two important gaps. First, a persistent achievement gap between culturally and linguistically diverse students and their typically more-resourced, English-proficient peers threatens students' success in K-12 and beyond (Dabach & Callahan, 2011). Fortunately, there is a large body of research on teaching in diverse classrooms from which teachers can draw (Faltis & Valdes, 2016; Ladson-Billings, 1995; Lucas & Villegas, 2013; Menken & Antunez, 2001). But teachers are not confident users of this research, expressing lack of confidence and preparation for teaching emergent bilinguals (EBs) (Gandara, Maxwell-Jolly, & Driscoll, 2005). This ties to the second gap-the "research/practice gap" between researchers and practitioners generally (Farley-Ripple, May, Karpyn, Tilley, & McDonough, 2018; Penuel, Allen, Coburn, & Farrell, 2015).One policy solution is to mandate greater use of evidence in decision-making-a feature of the 2016 Every Student Succeeds Act (WestEd, 2020). But the literature on the processes by which practitioners' use research is thin (Nelson & O'Beirne, 2014); the practice of research use is ill-defined (Farley-Ripple et al., 2018) and transforming research knowledge into pedagogical knowledge is undertheorized (Cain, 2015a) (pp. 504-5). To date, much research on this gap focuses on how district and school leaders use research (Penuel et al., 2015) or on teachers' beliefs, attitudes, and approaches to reading research (Kennedy, 1997; Zeuli & Tiezzi, 1993). Little research exists on the micro-processes (Little, 2012) and practices (Farley-Ripple et al., 2018) of research use. Without a better understanding of "the complexity of the research-practice link," leveraging the professional knowledge base to improve practice will remain an elusive goal (van Ingen et al., 2016, p. 187).The purpose of this qualitative case study is to close the first gap by also closing the second. Until we better understand how teachers engage with their professional knowledge base, we have little hope of supporting evidence-based practices for teaching in diverse classrooms.To conceptualize my inquiry, I draw from the sociocultural perspective (Rogoff, 2003; Vygotsky, 1978) of activity theory (Engestrom, 1999). This helps me predict that research use is defined by the interaction between teachers (and their working knowledge), tools (including research), and other contextual elements (e.g. school community, etc.). But the practices of research use-the specific practices involved when teachers, tools, and other contextual elements interact-are undefined (Farley-Ripple et al., 2018). To define them, I draw from collective sensemaking theory (Coburn, 2001) and empirical work on planning (McCutcheon & Milner, 2002) and teacher knowledge (Hiebert et al., 2002; M. Kennedy, 1982). These help me predict that the interaction between teachers, tools, and other contextual elements involves teachers' sensemaking, gatekeeping, and complex planning decisions.From March-October 2019, I collected evidence of how 21 K-adult education teachers used research to plan for diverse classrooms. I collected 13 data sources across five collection events, including a "think aloud" where I observed how teachers made sense of and then used (or did not) research on teaching in diverse classrooms. The data subset analyzed here totaled 1,549 minutes of audio/video recording (yielding 285 pages of transcripts) and 160 pages of teachers' notes, planning artifacts, and written responses to their readings. Data were coded qualitatively in a multi-stage process drawing from Corbin and Strauss (2015) as well as using a priori codes from activity theory (Engestrom, 1999).Through this micro-process analysis (Little, 2012), I find research use when planning for diverse classrooms consists of three co-occurring subprocesses: Sensemaking, Gatekeeping, and Concretizing. I define sub-elements, properties, and dimensions of each. Though the first two processes have been explored in previous work (e.g. Coburn, 2001), my definition of Concretizing is an original contribution that highlights the complexity of research use.Another contribution of my study is, although I observed some patterns in use by years' teaching experience and institutional contexts (ex: school-based accountability Rules around planning), use also shared similarities across contexts. This is significant because much literature focuses on organizational context as a factor in teachers' evidence use (e.g. Goertz et al., 2009). My research design does not permit claims about the degree to which context did or did not "matter," but patterns across individuals and organizations may suggest that individual- or organizational-level variables may not be the only factors influencing use. Patterns across significantly diverse teaching contexts may suggest research use (also) reflects norms, practices, and values shared by much larger communities of practice (Chaiklin & Lave, 1993), for example the broader professional teaching community.Finally, scholars note teachers' relative lack of engagement in their professional literature (Goldacre, 2013; Hannan et al, 2000; Latham, 1993), and it is true that my participants varied in the quality and degree to which they comprehended and used the research. But contrary to what might be inferred from dire statistics, 19/21 of my participants at least entertained the possibility of using the research for instruction. This suggests lack of practitioner engagement may reflect not lack of teacher interest, but rather inadequate support for this complex work.
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https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=27994688
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