Research On Research

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Language Arts Revision Committee Presented by Patti Stevenson Kristin Groninger Terry Morriston December 13, 2007

Transcript of Research On Research

Page 1: Research On Research

Language Arts Revision Committee

Presented by Patti Stevenson

Kristin GroningerTerry Morriston

December 13, 2007

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Four Essential Questions

Why teach information literacy, particularly in Language Arts?

What is the best approach for teaching information literacy?

What should be taught and when?

What else is the research telling us?

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“School library services exert a 10.6% statistically significant impact on student achievement…. The relationship between school library services and student achievement was not negated by other school or community demographics.”

Quantitative Resources LLC, 2003

Why teach information literacy….

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Library factors alone accounted for an increase on state assessments of

3.2%-3.4% at the elementary level

9.2% at the middle school level

7.9% - 19% at the high school level

Smith 2006

Why teach information literacy….

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Iowa reading test scores rise with the development of school library programs. This relationship can not be explained by other school or community conditions (class size, socioeconomic factors, etc.) at the elementary level.

Rodney, Lance & Hamilton-Pennell, 2002

Why teach information literacy….

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In Pennsylvania schools, there is a “positive and statistically significant” relationship between PSSA reading scores and the staffing of the school library.

Lance, Rodney and Hamilton-Pennell, 2000

Why teach information literacy….

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What explains the positive influence of librarians?

Research shows scores increase because librarians…

•Promote reading and a love a reading•Expose students to a variety of resources•Partner with teachers to create assignments•Encourage critical thinking•Select and direct students to quality sources•Teach information processing skills•Train teachers and help with curriculum development

Research Foundation Paper, 2008

Why teach information literacy….

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How should information literacy be taught?

The research is adamant.

Collaboration is the key.

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How to teach information literacy….

http://www.k12library.info/toolkit/Templates/Levels%20of%20Collaboration%202.PDF

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“This study shows that integrated information skills instruction appears to have had a significant positive impact on students’ mastery….” Todd, 1995

Research on Collaboration’s Effect

Elementary students who had teachers who collaborated closely with librarians scored 21% higher on the state reading exams than those students who had teachers who didn’t collaborate with librarians.

Lance, et. al., 1993, 2000

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Collaboration at this deep level of thinking will have the most impact on student learning outcomes because it develops critical teaching, which results in critical thinking on the part of students. It also brings together a rich array of resources to enhance the learning of all involved. Collaboration that integrates curriculum is complex and necessitates schoolwide decision making.

Montiel-Overall, 2005

Research on Collaboration’s Effect

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Critical factors in collaboration

The Media Center must have flexible scheduling

Students from elementary schools with flexible scheduling scored 10% higher in reading and 11% higher in writing than schools without

flexible scheduling. HS students showed a 5% improvement.

Lance, Rodney and Hamilton-Pennell, 2005

Classes are 4 times more likely to use the library if there is

flexible scheduling. Lance, Rodney and Hamilton-Pennell, 2003

“… overwhelming evidence that flexible schedules are more conducive to learning than fixed library hours (Haycock 1998; Callison 1999; Donham, van Deusen, and Tallman 1994) Montiel-Overall, 2005

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Critical factors of collaboration

Research projects must be integrated into the curriculum

“[Library media] collections only make a positive difference when they are part of a school wide initiatives to integrate information literacy ….”

Lance, Rodney and Hamilton-Pennell, 2005

“…must be more than a laundry list of isolated skills such as …writing drafts and…searching…the World Wide Web.”

Eisenberg, 2002

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Students must be taught an information literacy process that is used consistently throughout the district

“A disciplined approach to research ….rewards participants with greater search precision, razor-sharp filtering…., credible analytical techniques and…presentation methods.”

Solomon, 2005

Research methods that include reflection have also been effective in helping students improve reading and gives teachers a framework to discuss plagiarism. Long, 2007

Critical factors of collaboration

Research evidence proves that a process approach improves student mastery of content.

Todd, 2002

After a one-year implementation of the Big 6 approach, the percentage of students in one class passing the NY Regents History test went from 53% to 91%. Berkowitz, 2003

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Building principals must support and promote collaboration.

Principals can improve collaboration in these ways:

•Informing new staff of collaboration’s importance

•Encouraging present staff to collaborate

•Seeking additional funding for library

•Gathering staff feedback to share with librarian Henri, et al. , 2002

Critical factors of collaboration

“Better-performing schools” have principals who placed a higher value on the library media specialist and collaboration. Lance, Rodney and Russell, 2007

Collaboration cannot be successful without a supportive principal.

Montiel-Overall, 2005

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What areas of Information Literacy should be taught and when?

Standards for the 21st Century Learner

•Inquire, think critically and gain knowledge

•Draw conclusions, make decisions, apply knowledge to new situations and create new knowledge

•Share knowledge and participate ethically and productively

•Pursue personal and aesthetic growth American Association of School Librarians, 2007

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What else can we learn from the research?

Libraries & Literacy Support

“Clear evidence that active reading programs encouraged by the school library can foster higher levels of reading…Research evidence shows that providing opportunities for voluntary reading impacts positively on reading comprehension scores (Elley, 1991; Foertsch, 1992; Krashen, 1993, 2001; Lipscomb,

1993; Digiovanna, 1994; Halliwell, 1995 McQuillen, 1997).”

Todd, 2002In 8 out of 10 studies of SSR programs lasting at least 12 months, students who read recreationally outperformed those who didn’t. Krashen, 2006

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What else can we learn from the research?

Libraries & Critical Thinking Development

In the research process, students “are guided through a process of intellectual construction that enables them to build on what they already know and to come to a deeper understanding.” Kuhlthau, 1999

“Kuhlthau’s research establishes the cognitive, behavioural and affective dimensions of the search process…these stages are critical to ..knowledge construction rather than students merely manipulating …final products. Learners acquire the intellectual scaffolds to engage with multiple perspectives….” Todd, 2003

Success is dependent upon connecting relationships so that

the “magnificence exceeds the sum of its parts.” Pink, 2006.

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Overall findings…

Students whose teachers used collaboratively developed information literacy projects as a teaching method had….

•Greater satisfaction with school and their work

•Higher Reading Scores

•Greater gains on achievement tests in content areas

•Fewer instances of plagiarism

•More developed critical thinking skills

•More focused writing and higher writing skills

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In a nutshell…

Research proves that libraries and librarians can be lifesavers as we strive to increase student achievement.