Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J....

22
Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University

Transcript of Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J....

Page 1: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research

and Prospects for Future Research

Victoria J. RiskoIRA President

Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University

Page 2: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Presentation Overview

• Background of the studies• Findings focusing on beliefs, knowledge,

and pedagogy • Patterns across studies• Conclusions and recommendations

Page 3: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

References

Clift, R. T., & Brady, P. (2005). Research on methods courses and field experiences.

In M. Cochran-Smith & K. Zeichner (Eds.). Studying

teacher education: The report of the AERA panel on research

and teacher education. (pp. 309-424). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

Cochran-Smith, M., & Zeichner, K. (Eds.). (2005). Studying teacher education: The

report of the AERA panel on research and teacher education. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

Hathaway, J. I., & Risko, V. J. (in press). On becoming teachers: Knowing and

believing. In K. Hall, T. Cremin, B. Comber, & L. Moll (Eds.), International handbook

of research on children’s literacy, learning,

and culture. West Sussex, England: Wiley-Blackwell.

Risko, V. J. (Fall, 2006). Facing teacher education challenges as an insider. Journal of

Reading Education, 2-18.

Page 4: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

ReferencesRisko, V. J. (2009). Reading teacher education: Building an evidence base. Journal of Reading Education, 35(1), 5-11. Risko, V.J., Roller, C., Cummins, C., Bean, R., Block, C. C., Anders, P., &Flood, J. (2008). A critical analysis of the research on reading teacher education. Reading Research Quarterly, 43 (3), 252-288.Wideen, M., Mayer-Smith, J., & Moon, B. (1998). A critical analysis of the research on learning to teach: Making the case for an ecological perspective on inquiry. Review of Educational Research, 68(2), 130-178.

Wold, L., Young, J., & Risko, V. J. (2011). Qualities of influential literacy teacher educators, Reading Research and Instruction,

50,150-172.

Page 5: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Background

• Global interest in teacher education research & policy

• In U.S., requirement for highly qualified teachers in every classroom

• Common goal - How to improve teacher preparation to enable quality education in multicultural, multi-linguistic, urban, rural, & diverse settings

Page 6: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Synthesis and Analysis of Empirical Research, 1990-

2011• Typically, have not produced robust, multi-

site data trails

• Yet value in small localized studies, when careful analysis of situated information (Zeichner, 1999).

• Convergence across studies provides a rich set of budding indicators of impact.

Page 7: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

What we Learn about Teacher Learning from Teacher Education Research?

•Teachers’ beliefs are disrupted and new beliefs are adopted

•Teachers acquire substantial content and pedagogical knowledge

•Students’ performance in local contexts are affected positively

Page 8: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

What we Learn about Teacher Education from Teacher

Education Research?

Teacher education

•Requires a long term commitment

•Is intensive, requiring prolonged engagement

•Requires multiple educative events and settings

•Requires explicit teaching and guidance

Page 9: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Three Areas

• Beliefs• Knowledge• Pedagogy

Page 10: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Much to be Learned about Beliefs

• Why beliefs matter• Uncovering personal beliefs is difficult

• Identifying beliefs as self, one’s identity

• Replacing beliefs, through indoctrination,is inadequate (Hathaway, 2009)

• Effectiveness requires approaching beliefs to reconcile differences, work through dissonance

Page 11: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Beliefs

•Beliefs can be disrupted – when instruction addresses congruence– with instruction that involves teachers in pupil data collection/analysis and/or guided interactive sessions with pupils

Page 12: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Findings

• Beliefs changed in positive direction– when strategies viewed as useful for personal

learning– when constructing interpretations of pupil

data and/or observing positive responses to instruction

– when deriving cross-cultural connections

Page 13: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Findings

• Mixed findings– when course content was distanced away

from application and personal or disciplinary connections

Page 14: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Knowledge

Two primary areas of research• Learning content and methods of teaching• Pedagogical analytical and reflective

reasoning

Page 15: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Findings

• Knowledge gains in course content when viewed as relevant and contextually appropriate

• Knowledge gains in pedagogical content and reasoning– with procedural knowledge – with guidance and explicit referents supplied

• Less progress with – causal reasoning– abstract information– higher level reflective thinking

Page 16: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Pedagogy

Issue of application of beliefs and knowledge

Page 17: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Findings

Under certain conditions (contextual coherence, guided applications)

• Learning and beliefs changed when applied to teaching or when collecting/analyzing pupil data

• Knowledge and beliefs most strongly affected within methods courses

Page 18: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Findings

• Stronger impact within “learning and doing” approaches to teacher education

• Several “tools” appear to be useful– Pupil assessment tools– Examining personal uses of reading strategies– Writing narratives about personal literacies– Writing pupils’ family histories– Peer collaboration and coaching– Teacher inquiry projects– Video/interactive case studies

Page 19: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Across Studies: Pedagogical Knowledge Building and

Explicitness • Apprenticeship and guided learning– Learning by doing is consistently associated

with impact– Strong correlation between explicit teaching

in methods course and applications to pedagogy

– Explicitness involves developing shared knowledge of examples, demonstrations and thinking aloud, practice with peers and with students associated with (constructive) feedback.

Page 20: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Recommendations for Teacher Educators and Policy Leaders

• Support for prolonged engagement in authentic teaching situations and collaborative discussions

• Support for sustained preparation across college programs and induction years

• Support for one-to-one teaching assignments as part of the whole for professional development

• Support for importance of teacher educator/professional development leaders as mentors with caring and supportive roles (taking the time) as related to working through beliefs, teaching in multicultural settings, when lack of congruence

Page 21: Making Sense of Reading Teacher Education Research and Prospects for Future Research Victoria J. Risko IRA President Professor Emerita, Vanderbilt University.

Recommendations for Future Research

• Multi-site research that accounts for multiple layers of instructional events and settings

• A crucial need for future research in the area of diversity, with – Studies to inform our decisions about teaching

diverse students: culture, ethnicity, language, and socio economic diversity

– Studies to describe, inform and respond to inequalities