Professional Inquiry: Action Research

Due Date: (to be set by instructor)

What about this Action Research Project?

Here is the Big Picture

  1. You have a "concern" derived from your Practicum.
  2. You plan and make informed changes in your teaching during the practicum to address your concern.
  3. You communicate your findings, including an evaluation of your learning.

The Details

1. Identify a Concern in your Teaching Practice. Typically, as part of your school practicum, you will record your observations, reflections, questions, and feelings, as well as understandings, in some sort of journal, as you attempt to make sense of your practicum experiences. These observations and questions will enable you to identify your “concern.”  Try to connect your concern to issues  that you identified in your reading and courses here.

There are as many examples as there are classrooms. Many of you may decide to focus your inquiry on classroom management issues and concerns. Typically, your topic will come from your own practicum, but will be something that will likely recur in another setting.

2. Plan your research process.  Understand the ethical concerns, as well as the procedures you need to follow, before you begin your Action Research project. Be clear about the parameters of your project, as well as the assessment rubric your Instructor will be using to evaluate your work. You must have attended the Ethics Guidelines presentation, and have read and understood the Ethical Guidelines handout. Procedurally, you need to identify your topic and narrow it to a manageable level. You need to read the list of possible information sources for your examination of possible ways to deal with your concern (see handout Action Research Proposal and Consent Form). Note the methods you are expected to use to assist in your research, and the methods you are not to use. Your form will guide your work, and you will return it, signed by your Faculty Liaison, Associate Teacher and yourself, when you hand in your completed Action Research paper. You will need to discuss your plans with your Faculty Liaison as well as your Associate Teacher.

3. Develop a Brief Proposal

Develop a brief proposal that indicates your concern, and the sorts of actions you intend to take and resources you intend to examine in conducting your inquiry and preparing your essay.

Your action research plan will be approved and signed by your Prof 190 Instructor.

You will also need to ask your Associate Teacher to read and sign your proposal.

4. Explore various information sources as you implement your plan. You need to use data from your own observations about your practice, as well as from the professional literature. Take advantage of the wealth of on-line journals and other professional literature that can guide your work. Use all or most of these sources of information: observation of students; conversations with students; analysis of student work; written feedback from students submitted anonymously through the Associate Teacher; your notes on classroom or playground events; notes on your own work; journal notes and reflections; notes from conversations with your peers, Faculty Liaison and Associate Teacher; professional readings. Please note that you may not use information obtained through interviewing, conducting surveys, videotaping, audiotaping, photographs, notes naming individuals or identifying your school or any students.

Be sure to take a critical stance toward all the resources you consult.

5. Write and submit a reflective paper that meets these criteria:

  1. 6 to 10 pages, double-spaced using appropriate and consistent referencing
  2. clear description of your concern, without identifying people or places
  3. steps you took to address your concern
  4. discussion of the concern from the point of view of the data you gathered and the resources you consulted, including critical comments about the resources
  5. steps you intend to take to deal with this concern in your own professional practice
  6. reflections on your own learning about this concern
  7. reflections on the process of conducting Action Research

All candidates completing Action Research will hand in their completed, signed Proposal and Consent Form along with their completed essay, to their instructor. Instructors will send the Proposal and Consent Forms to the Coordinator to be held for audit by the Education Ethics Research Board.

For further information about how your paper will be assessed by your Instructor see attached action research rubric.