The Impact of a Multi-Year,Multi-School District K-6 Professional Development Programme Designed to Integrate Science Inquiry and Language Arts on Students' High-Stakes Test Scores |
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Authors: | James A Shymansky Tzu-Ling Wang Leonard A Annetta Larry D Yore Susan A Everett |
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Institution: | 1. Division of Teaching &2. Learning , University of Missouri-St. Louis , St. Louis , MO , USA jshymansky@umsl.edu;4. Graduate Institute of Mathematics &5. Science Education , National Hsinchu University of Education , Hsinchu , Taiwan;6. Graduate School of Education , George Mason University , Fairfax , VA , USA;7. Department of Curriculum &8. Instruction , University of Victoria , Victoria , Canada;9. School of Education , University of Michigan-Dearborn , Dearborn , MI , USA |
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Abstract: | This paper is a report of a quasi-experimental study on the impact of a systemic 5-year, K-6 professional development (PD) project on the ‘high stakes’ achievement test scores of different student groups in rural mid-west school districts in the USA. The PD programme utilized regional summer workshops, district-based leadership teams and distance delivery technologies to help teachers learn science concepts and inquiry teaching strategies associated with a selection of popular science inquiry kits and how to adapt inquiry science lessons in the kits to teach and reinforce skills in the language arts—i.e. to teach more than science when doing inquiry science. Analyses of the school district-level pre-post high-stakes achievement scores of 33 school districts participating in the adaptation of inquiry PD and a comparative group of 23 school districts revealed that both the Grade 3 and Grade 6 student-cohorts in the school districts utilizing adapted science inquiry lessons significantly outscored their student-cohort counterparts in the comparative school districts. The positive school district-level high-stakes test results, which serve as the basis for state and local decision making, suggest that an inquiry adaptation strategy and a combination of regional live workshop and distance delivery technologies with ongoing local leadership and support can serve as a viable PD option for K-6 science. |
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Keywords: | Visualization Technology education Literature review |
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