Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Merryl Goldberg Summer Institute 2013.  Kids who CARE about learning,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Merryl Goldberg Summer Institute 2013.  Kids who CARE about learning,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Merryl Goldberg Summer Institute 2013

2  Kids who CARE about learning,

3

4

5

6  Primary Goal: Engaging students in reading through visual arts and theater  Integrating the Arts – the motivating tool for engagement and authentic tool for assessment of student learning

7  DREAM Video DREAM Video

8  Who…  3 rd and 4 th grade teachers received training to integrate visual and theatre arts into their reading instruction.  10 north San Diego County school districts in collaboration with CSUSM, NCPDF and the SDCOE  141 teachers and approximately 3,000 students

9 Evaluation Questions  Which professional development model increases teacher proficiencies in arts integration? How does it increase proficiency?  Which professional development model improves student academic performance in reading? How does it improve performance in reading?

10 Study Design Random assignment to one group:  Two treatment groups Institute-only teachers: Institute (n=25) Coached teachers: Institute & in-school coach (n=25)  One comparison group

11 QUANTITATIVE DATA  Teacher demographics  Teacher pre-test/post- test on arts integration  Institute observation  Post-institute survey  Student arts vocabulary assessment  Arts coach assessment  Lesson plan rubric  Mid-year teacher survey  Standardized test scores QUALITATIVE DATA  Teacher pre-test/post- test on arts integration  Institute observation  Post-institute survey  Arts coach assessment  Focus group/interviews with teacher participants and art coaches

12

13 Coached teachers…  Integrated arts more frequently (particularly theatre) than institute-only or comparison teachers;  Integrated the arts into more areas of the reading curriculum than institute-only or comparison teachers;  Were more confident integrating the arts than institute-only or comparison teachers.

14 Teacher Work Samples  Coached teachers were better able to demonstrate their learning.  Teachers in both treatment groups improved in the quality of their lesson plan work samples over the course of the intervention year.  However, coached teachers made greater improvement than did institute-only teachers.

15 Teachers Integrate the Arts to further:  Character analysis & development  Reading comprehension  Inference  Vocabulary acquisition  Plot  Setting

16 Teacher Engagement  Greater satisfaction and engagement with teaching;  Recognition of need for alternative teaching strategies and assessments;  Greater enthusiasm for and use of arts integration.

17 Impact on Student Learning

18  Vocabulary comprehension  Inference  Visual literacy skills  Visual arts and theater ability

19 Students with teachers in both treatment groups:  Greater student engagement and enthusiasm for learning;  Deeper learning in and retention of reading curriculum; and,  Improved participation and greater focus in class.

20  Creative/innovative thinking  ELL/opportunity  Aligned with Common Core (whew)  Brings excitement to learning!  Brings joy to teaching

21 Standardized Test Scores Year 1: Modest to little impact Year 2: Notable impact on 3 rd grade 3 rd Grade 2010 Mean ELA Score 2011 Mean ELA Score Improveme nt Coached group 278.8036687.20 Institute-only group 299.15339.8640.71 Comparison group 295.58320.8725.29

22 Standardized Test Scores Year 1: Modest to little impact Year 2: Notable impact on 3 rd grade 3 rd Grade 2010 Mean ELA Score 2011 Mean ELA Score Improveme nt Coached group 278.8036687.20 Institute-only group 299.15339.8640.71 Comparison group 295.58320.8725.29 Basic Proficient Below Basic

23 Impact on Standardized Test Scores Year 2: Impact on 4 th grade 4 th Grade 2010 ELA Mean Score 2011 ELA Mean Score Mean Improveme nt Coached group325.21354.5229.31 Institute-only group 281.22334.2353.01 Comparison group 318.73317.83-.90

24 Capability and Test Scores Students Teachers

25  DREAM kids and teachers aren’t particularly talented or special….they did, however, have an opportunity that let them succeed.  How did we all do it?

26 DREAM Team Approach Infrastructure Evaluator Arts Coaches

27 Planning & Reflective Practice Approach to Institute Coaches’ meeting

28 Engaging Teachers as Professionals  Respect  Reflection – blogging  Setting the context for learning  Engaging with authors and artists

29  Coach as vehicle  Coaches Meetings  No recipe for coaching

30  Meteors fly like a fly  Maybe it’s a butterfly  with its wings spread  high in the sky   Butterfly fly like a fly  With its wings spread high in the sky  I don’t know why  But it can fly   I like a fly cause it flys  Like a butterfly  With its wings spread high in the sky  I’d like to be a butterfly   If I could fly  Where would I go?  I would go across the sea and the desert  I’d like to fly with the hawks, the falcons  I’d like to fly

31

32

33

34

35

36

37

38  Madeline Albright  History, politics, geography

39  Reading! Writing!

40  And more questions!

41  Ask for more.  It’s the law.  Merryl: goldberg@csusm.edu


Download ppt "Merryl Goldberg Summer Institute 2013.  Kids who CARE about learning,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google