College of Education Inaugural Research Symposium April 13, 2007 ESEARCHING EFORMING ECLAIMING R.
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Transcript of College of Education Inaugural Research Symposium April 13, 2007 ESEARCHING EFORMING ECLAIMING R.
College of Education
Inaugural Research Symposium
April 13, 2007
ESEARCHING
EFORMING
ECLAIMINGR
Greetings,
It should come as no surprise to anyone that Grambling State University’s first college-the College of Education-has chosen to hold an Inaugural Research Symposium to promote the scientific endeavors (in education) of faculty and candidates within and outside the college.
Many of our colleagues (and prospective colleagues) are engaged in prolific and noteworthy observations and queries that deserve recognition and attention; not to scrutinize, but to inform and to evoke critical thought. Individuals often perceive the notion of research-based inquiry as a mystical, esoteric process that few HBCU professionals have seriously mastered or obtained proficiency.
Yet the term research, at its core, connotes repetition, review, and revision of scholarship and academic experiences. Aside intellectual grooming, conversancy in a specific content-area requires a commitment to the idea of perpetual visitation to what one has read, written, and learned inside and outside of the classroom. Without that, the pursuit of greater depth and breadth of understanding related to the subject is mute.
Symposium, derived from a combination of Greek words which mean “to engage in lively (mutual) discussion”, captures the essence of what the collegiate environment should promote and perpetuate. Thus, the notion of a Research Symposium is seemingly congruent with the university’s mission and President’s Judson vision of reclaiming our legacy by constructing (new) knowledge and practices that challenge, refute, and inform long-standing paradigms and models that shape our thinking.
Seemingly, the College of Education Research Symposium creates the right milieu within which to facilitate the optimal exchange and critique of ideas, perspectives, and notions and we look forward to your participation in this perennial affair. Thank you
Enjoy the conference…
Sean WarnerDean of the College of Education
College of Education Research SymposiumApril 13, 2007
Colonel (COL) Henry M. Martin completed his bachelor’s degree in History and Math Education at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff in 1972. Colonel Martin had the distinction of being selected All-American in Golf during his college years. He started teaching high school math in Arkansas when the US Army drafted him during the Vietnam War in 1972.
After his training, he served two years on active duty while simultaneously earning a Master’s Degree from Kansas State University. COL Martin went on to earn a Ph.D. in Adult & Occupational Education from Kansas State University while continuing his career in the Kansas Army National Guard.
COL Martin’s military awards include the Meritorious Service Medal, the Army Commendation Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, The Army Achievement Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Good Conduct Medal, The National Defense Service Medal with Bronze Star, and the Army and Reserve Component Overseas Medal and many more. His other awards include the Adjutant Generals Outstanding Company Grade Officer Award and the National Guard Bureau’s Minute Man Mike award for Exceptional Education Services to Kansas and the Nation.
COL Martin is currently the Director of Information Management for the Kansas Army National Guard. COL Martin resides in Topeka with his wife Major Judith Martin and their five children.
GUEST SPEAKERDr. Colonel Henry Martin
College of Education Research SymposiumApril 13, 2007
STRANDS
Research on Cultural Diversity in Education
* Educating citizens in a multicultural society
* Teaching students in a pluralistic society
* Infusing multicultural education
Research on Teacher Education Programs
* Response to Levine’s attack on programs in teacher education
* Innovation and technology in teacher education programs
* Enhancing professional development for k-12 settings
Research on Instructional Leadership
* Visionary leadership
* Ethical and moral issues in leadership
* Preparing instructional leaders for diverse k-12
Research on Assessment and Evaluation
* Data driven decision making
* Instructional improvement and assessment
* Program evaluation
PROGRAM SCHEDULE
Friday, April 13, 2007
12:00 p.m. to 12:25 p.m. Registration
Faculty research productivity has become an important criterion for academic personnel decisions in numerous universities. Faculty members are expected to comply with the university’s tripartite, which includes: teaching , research and service. The balancing of the three can be cumbersome and many faculty find it difficult to make time for the researchable moments. Dr. Martin will diverge how researchable ideas are found in daily activities and how to find that researchable moment.
Presider: Dr. Sean Warner
Guest Speaker: Dr. Colonel Henry Martin
12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. Black and Gold Room
TOPIC:
Finding Researchable Moments at work
College of Education Research SymposiumApril 13, 2007
12:25 p.m. to 12:30 Welcome –
Dr. Dixon
Dr. Sean S. Warner
PROGRAM SCHEDULE
College of Education Research SymposiumApril 13, 2007
2:20 p.m. – 2:50 p.m. Poster Session
Making a Paradigm Shift in English Education by InvolvingStudents in Field Experiences in Non-School Settings
PICTURE
PICTURE
Commonly Used Statistical Analysis and What They Inform
The presentation will have various statistical analyses with explanations of what the data represent. There will be SPSS
analysis using those statistical analyses that will be displayed using PowerPoint, pointing out the outputs and their meanings.
1:45 p.m. to 2:!5 p.m. Ouachita Room
Speaker: Dr. Reubenson Wanjohi
Presider: Jennifer Laws
Speaker: Dr. Doris Williams-Smith
PROGRAM SCHEDULE
College of Education Research SymposiumApril 13, 2007
Speaker: Dr. Kathryn Newman
Presider: Perry Boler
Speaker: Dr.. Felicie M. Barnes and Dr. Elaine Foster
Presider: Martez Stevens
PICTURE
A great deal of research has been conducting into how children learn. Researchers are continually exploring how students from preschool through secondary encode process and retrieve information in an effort to improve learning and maximize the educational process.
2:55 p.m. to 3:25 p.m. Rapides Room
Preliminary Research into the
Multiple Intelligences of Teacher Education Candidates
PICTURE
Interest in Teaching Survey
3:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
This action research study was conducted to determine candidate interest in teaching and to compare these findings to previous findings at other institutions. Results from the two sections were compiled and compared to results found in the Kauchak and Eggen study. Findings in the current study were similar to Kauchak and Eggen (2003) study.
PICTURE
PROGRAM SCHEDULE
College of Education Research SymposiumApril 13, 2007
PICTURE
The presentation is designed to elucidate the impact of the 2007 Grambling State University LA GEAR UP Summer Learning Camp on the academic performance and self-esteem enhancement of the 7th -10th grade participants.
4:40 p.m. to 5:20 p.m. Ouachita Room
CSI: GramblingThe Impact of a Summer Learning Camp on Academic Performance, Leadership and Self-Esteem
Speaker: Dr. Loretta Walton Jaggers and Dr. Nanthalia McJamerson, Dr. Anthony Johnson, Dr. Elaine Foster
Presider: Marquita Waites
PICTURE
The Creative Use of Autobiographical in Developmental Psychology: Enhancing Knowledge and Disposition of Teacher Candidates
4:05 p.m. to 4:35 p.m. Rapides Room
This action research study was conducted to determine the effectiveness of an autobiographical case study approach. Effectiveness was measured by candidate outcomes on a reconstructing lives project.
The reconstructing lives project is a major assessment of candidate knowledge in developmental psychology course at Grambling State University.
Speaker: Dr. Nanthalia McJamerson, Dr. Felicie Barnes, Dr. A. Kadir Nur-Hussen
Presider: Winston Sims
PICTURE
PICTURE
PICTURE
PICTURE
PICTURE
PROGRAM SCHEDULE
College of Education Research SymposiumApril 13, 2007
PICTURE
Teaching the African American Child
5:25 p.m. to 6:05 p.m.
This presentation is designed to elucidate the psychological development of the African American child, highlight the potency of teacher self-efficacy and list ways to improve the achievement divide. This presentation will show actual teaching
Speaker: Dr. Chevelle Hall, Dr. Sean Warner, Dr. Anthony Johnson
Presider: EuMarcus Hicks
PICTURE
The purpose of this presentation is to identify the faculty perceptions of the critical dimensions of leadership for
college of education deans at two NCATE accredited institutions of higher learning in
north Louisiana; distinguishing those skills,
6:10 p.m. to 6:40 p.m. Ouachita Room
Faculty Perceptions of the Critical Dimensions of Leadership Among College of Education Deans
behaviors, and dispositions considered to be crucial for College of Education deans.
Speaker: Dr. Patricia Johnson
Presider: David Pierre
methods used for African American students and seeks to be interactive.
PICTURE
PICTURE
PROGRAM SCHEDULE
College of Education Research SymposiumApril 13, 2007
PICTURE
The ability to read with fluency and comprehension while engaging in analysis, inference and associations is fundamental to the privileges of an educated person in the United States. The presentation is designed to address five main objectives:
6:45 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. Ouachita Room
Speaker: Dr. Kathryn Newman
Presider: Genese Lavalais
Strategies for Improving Reading Skills Across the Content Areas in Special Needs PK - 12 Populations using Differentiated Instruction
Closing 7:15 to 7:30 p.m.
Dr. Sean Warner
specialized needs of diverse and/or weak readers, various instructional strategies and differentiating instruction to enhance the literacy skills of diverse and/or struggling learners at all levels, effective literacy instruction, literacy acquisition, creating semantic maps of instructional strategies
Research Symposium
Committee
Reviewers
Moderators
RESEARCHING
EFORMING
ECLAIMING
College of Education Research SymposiumApril 13, 2007
Dr. Sean WarnerDr. Chevelle HallDr. Vernon FarmerDr. Evelyn Wynn Dr. Doris Smith
Dr. Wilton BarhamDr. Anthony JohnsonDr. Kathryn NewmanDr. Frances Staten Dr. Stacey DuhonDr. Raymond HicksMs. Gloria RabonDr. Olatunde Ogunyemi
Dr. Willie Daniel, Dr. William White,Dr. Janet Guyden