Action Research

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Action

Research
Guide
for Alberta Teachers

PUBLIC EDUCATION WORKS…


for Alberta
ISBN 1-896370-98-5

Copyright © 2000 by the Alberta Teachers’ Association (ATA)


11010 - 142 Street NW, Edmonton, Alberta T5N 2R1
Reproduction of material in this monograph is authorized for classroom and
professional development use, provided that each copy contain full
acknowledgement of the source and that no charge be made beyond the cost
of printing. Any other reproduction in whole or part without prior written
consent of the ATA is prohibited.

One copy of this monograph is available free of charge to all ATA members.
There is a charge for additional copies and also for non-ATA members.
Pricing and ordering information is available on the ATA Website at
<http://www.teachers.ab.ca/services/publications> or from ATA Distribution
at 447-9400 (Edmonton); toll free within Alberta 1-800-232-7208.
Table of Contents

1 Foreword

2 Introduction

3 Action Research as Professional Development

6 Questions of Ethics in Action Research

9 Developing a Research Question

12 The Action Research Process

17 Developing Your Knowledge of the Issue

21 Designing a Data Collection Plan

27 Analyzing the Research Data

30 Reporting on an Action Research Project

33 Facilitating and Supporting Action Research

36 Why Action Research

39 For More Information

40 References



Foreword
The Action Research Guide for Alberta Teachers is intended to assist
classroom teachers and school administrators in the development,
implementation and publishing of an action research project.
Action research is a strategy educators can use to study
educational issues, implement change and document professional
growth.

The idea for this publication came from a model school project on
collaborative action research in which the Association partnered
with Chinook’s Edge School Division. At the conclusion of that
project the facilitators determined that teachers would benefit
from a practical resource for action research focused on the
Alberta educational context.

The Action Research Guide for Alberta Teachers was developed by


Jacqueline Skytt with assistance from Jean-Claude Couture, both
of the Alberta Teachers’ Association Professional Development
program area. Special recognition and thanks are extended to
Dr. David Townsend for his helpful comments and guidance
during the development of this publication. I hope that this
publication will be useful to teachers embarking on an action
research project.

Charles Hyman
Executive Secretary

1
Introduction
Action research is a strategy teachers can use to investigate a problem or
area of interest specific to their professional context. It provides the
structure to engage in a planned, systematic and documented process of
professional growth.

This resource is intended to help you plan a self-guided action research


project. As an educator, you are faced daily with challenges as you
work to provide an effective learning environment for all the students
in your classroom or school. These challenges surface in your
reflections as questions that you attempt to answer to improve your
professional practice.

What can we
do to eliminate
bullying in
the school? Can high school
student achievement be
enhanced through the
How can use of portfolios?
I improve my
students’ spelling
strategies?
Will using a
graphing calculator
improve junior high
students’ understanding
of math?

2
Action Research
as Professional
Development

Action Research is a process of systematic


inquiry into a self-identified teaching or
learning problem to better understand its

complex dynamics and to develop strategies
geared towards the problem’s improvement.
(Hamilton 1997, 3)

The action research process can result in:

★ professional development
Action Research
★ education change can focus on
the teaching
★ enhanced personal awareness
and learning
★ improved practice and process.
★ new learnings

Action research is one form of applied research.


Because action research draws on a range of designs and
Action Research
can be used to
methodologies, it can provide teachers with the opportunity to examine
solve a problem
a practical problem within a classroom or school setting. Action or institute
research has the potential to greatly enhance both teacher professional a change.
development and school improvement initiatives.

The following three forms of action research have been used extensively
in Alberta:
Action Research
1. Individual: an educator works on a personal inquiry can be used to
2. Collaborative: a team or group focuses on an issue document teacher
professional
3. Schoolwide/districtwide: a community of practitioners works to growth.
solve a problem or make a change

3
Quantitative
Research
● Research design is largely predetermined

● Emphasis is on measurement of quantifiable


Qualitative variables
Research ● Often, reliance is on control variables
● Research design is somewhat and one manipulated variable
flexible and adaptable Action ● Results are analyzed statistically
● Emphasis is on describing Research
● Researchers are frequently
observable change external to the context
● Controlling all variables is difficult
● Results are interpreted from a variety
of perspectives
● All participants in the research
have a voice

Action research provides teachers with a systematic process to reflect,


consider options, implement and evaluate potential solutions. Action
research differs from the day-to-day decision making that teachers do.
Consider this example.

During our high school staff meeting in June the vice-

^ principal expressed frustration over the number of discipline


problems that occur over the noon hour. The staff discussed
the issue for 10 minutes and then one staff member made a
motion to reduce the length of the lunch hour from 55 minutes
to 40 minutes. The rationale given for the motion was that it
would reduce the time students had to get into trouble. After
some discussion the motion was put to a vote and was carried.
The 40-minute lunch break was implemented in September and
school was dismissed 10 minutes earlier every day. It now
seems that fewer students participate in intramural and school
clubs. The Students’ Council had to adapt its activities to the
shorter time. No one can really say if there are fewer discipline
problems now because we don’t know what the statistics were
for last year.

4
In this situation the teachers did not have the opportunity to reflect on
and examine the issue closely. A solution was implemented that focused
on dealing with the “symptom” and as a result there could be a new and
more serious problem to deal with. If they had taken the time to design
and implement an action research study the teachers in this school
would have learned more about the discipline problems, why they were
occurring, what the students thought about the issue as well as other
aspects of the problem. This might have led to a different, perhaps
better, solution.

7 Action research is a valuable form of


inquiry for educators because it is...

Practical: practical improvements are the focus.

Participative: teachers, administrators, teacher assistants, students


and parents can all be involved in meaningful ways.

Empowering: all participants can contribute to and benefit from


the process.

Interpretive: meaning is constructed using participants’ multiple


realities in the situation.

Tentative there are not always right or wrong answers; rather, there
are possible solutions based on multiple view points.

Critical: participants look critically at specific problems and act as


self-critical change agents.

(Schmuck 1997, 29)

5
Questions of Ethics
in Action Research

☞ As action researchers, teachers are knowledge


generators rather than appliers of knowledge.
John Elliot

At its core, action research encourages teachers to share their


experiences about how they have worked through an educational
concern. Anyone who has spent time in schools will immediately
recognize the issues that might emerge. The notion that teachers not
only apply knowledge but produce knowledge can throw teachers into
interesting waters. By its very nature, action research produces data and
information that at times challenge us and our colleagues. Consider the
predicament of these teachers.

It all started when we were reviewing our notes on a

^ technology-integration action research project in our school.


After meeting for over six months, it was clear that, no matter
what we tried, we could not get approval for any further
funding for release time from the school’s PD budget. One day
someone from the school’s PD committee picked up a piece of
paper from the recycling box in the staff photocopy room. On
the back of the paper was a copy of a teacher’s journal entry
that was from one of our action research team meetings. In her
notes, the teacher had written about her personal frustrations
with the lack of PD funding in the school and with the
committee’s decision. When the PD representative asked the
teacher about the notes her response was quite defensive:
“How dare you spy on us. This is our group and you have no
business reading our material.”

This anecdote raises important questions about action research in


schools. First and foremost, teachers are bound by common principles
that guide how they relate to each other as professionals. In Alberta, the

6
Code of Professional Conduct does much to inform teachers about what
constitutes appropriate collaborative relationships and ethical practices.
Yet a code of conduct, or indeed any ethical practice, cannot be viewed
as a simple formula or a checklist of do’s and don’ts. Schools are
complex social environments, and because action research affects the
quality of relations with colleagues, it is important that
we avoid looking for simple rules of thumb
or lists of do’s and don’ts.

A more helpful approach


is to consider examples of ethical questions that might inform
your action research project. These might be questions a critical
friend could pose as you move through your project.

➜ How might the intended changes from your project affect others?

➜ Who has an interest in being informed about your project?

+
➜ Who will own the information generated by the project?

➜ How does the project express an ethic of caring for others?

➜ In whose interest is the change you are proposing being made?

➜ Who will own the success/failure of the project?

As with any teaching practice, questions of ethics


are central to all aspects of action research in schools. The previous
questions can be further informed by four types of ethical practices:

1. Ethics of hope: Action research is motivated by an interest in


making schools better places for students. However, improving
schooling is much more than making technical changes to the ways that
schools deliver curriculum. Action research should be informed by a
concern for the broad range of needs of students and the school
community.

2. Ethics of caring: It is far too easy to see getting the project


done as the central purpose of action research. At all times, the general
welfare of both students and teachers must be kept at the fore.

7
3. Ethics of openness: Action research can unwittingly create
insiders and outsiders in a school. It is important that both the
questions and the ways that teacher-researchers work through them are
made clear to colleagues and school members.

4. Ethics of responsibility: As professionals, teacher-researchers


must be committed to principled action. The welfare of students and
the need to maintain collegiality must be kept in mind at all times.

These four practices, developed by Carson et al (1989), remind us that


ethical issues are often too complex for simple rules or procedures. The
best practice is to be mindful of the ambiguities that confront us in the
complex life of schools.

Teachers must consider The Freedom of Information and the Protection of


Freedom of
Privacy Act (FOIP) as they develop their action research project plans.
Information Most classroom-based action research projects will involve collecting
and the personal information about students, including their demographic and
Protection of achievement data. Parents must give prior approval for this type of
Privacy Act information to be collected and, if necessary, reported or published. The
following questions can serve as a guide for writing a letter to seek
parental permission in light of FOIP:

/ \
\
\
\
Why are you collecting the information?
What information will be collected?
How will the information be used?
Who will be the audience for the information?

Parents must also give prior permission for teachers to use photographs
or video tape students involved in the action research project. Use the
previous guiding questions to write a letter of permission and include
reassurance that neither the child’s identity nor any personal
information will be used in conjunction with the photograph.

For more information about FOIP, consult:

\ your school principal,

\ the school district FOIP coordinator or

\ the Alberta Teachers’ Association website at


www.teachers.ab.ca/publications/monographs/administrators

8
Developing a
Research Question
Where do research questions come from? Simply put, action research
questions originate in a teacher’s reflections. Everyday there are
situations that cause you to reflect later. You might ask yourself...

Why did it What was How can What


happen? different? it be should I
changed? do next?

Strategies you can use to develop


a research question

Keep a journal for at least one week, preferably two



Set aside 10 minutes to write at the end of each day.

At the end of two weeks, read your journal, looking for


c
significant ideas and themes.

✐ Brainstorm a list of things that you would like to investigate.

✐ Review the list and write a first draft of your question.

✐ Write a paragraph of supporting rationale for your question.

✐ Reflect on your question.

(Patterson et al 1993, 23–25)

Sentence Stems

Focus on your classroom or role in the school and complete the


following sentence stems.
{ ?}
One thing I would like to change is...

9
My practice could be improved by...

The students I work with need...

I would like to know...

I wonder why...

The most important thing about teaching is...

The best learning environment for students is...

I need to learn how to...

My students would do better if...

Affinity charting (for collaborative action research)


➜➜
➜➜

➜ Brainstorm issues of concern or interests relating to your


educational context. Record each item on a separate note.

➜ Group your items using affinity charting. Place the most diverse
statements on the table in a row. Place items that have a common
theme or focus in each column.

➜ Review and reflect on the placement. Do some items fit better in


a different column?

➜ Develop a draft research question that reflects the key issue in


each column.

➜ Choose the question that most interests you and is possible to


study.

10
?
Points to consider in
developing a good question
1 Studying this question will enhance my professional practice.

2 This question will be of value to my classroom, school and/or


colleagues.

3 The climate of my classroom and school will be supportive of this


question.

4 The question focuses on an important issue.

5 The question can be studied in the time available.

6 I can access literature or other resources that will provide


background information.

7 The data needed to answer this question is accessible.

8 The question is of personal interest to me.

Reflect on Your Question...


Which of the following words best describes your research question?

Problem Issue Trigger

Curious Wish

+
What does this word say about your assumptions regarding the question?

Limiting OR Enabling
Indifferent OR Committed
Status Quo OR Change

11
The Action
Research Process
The action research process can generally be described as a series of
four steps: planning, action, observing and reflecting on the
results of the action. Depending on the research question, purpose of
the study and number of researchers involved, each of these steps can
be expanded. A single teacher researcher studying a classroom issue
may work through the steps of the process in a relatively short time. In
contrast, a collaborative group of researchers focusing on a school
improvement initiative may engage in an in-depth study taking the
entire school year to complete.

The action research process lends itself to a spiral of cycles, with the
researcher reflecting on each stage of the process. When the results of
the first action have been studied, the researcher then plans the next
series of actions. Each reflective phase yields more information about
the issue and increases the researcher’s understanding. Sometimes the
information gained leads the researcher to refine the question with a
different focus. The most important skill the researcher needs in action
research is the ability to engage in reflection. Reflection moves the
practitioner from one stage to the next; thus, action is based on
reflection. The diagram below illustrates the notion that the action
research process is a series of steps or actions, propelled by reflection.
Y
T
I
V
I
T
C
A

T I M E

12
One of the first tasks in your project should be to develop an outline to
guide your activities and describe the various steps in your action
research process. The process you design will depend on the nature of
your research question and the context of your study. For instance, if
your project is to study the impact of two different computer-based
math programs, you will not need to spend much time reviewing the
research that supported the development of computer-based math
programs. You are primarily interested in which program will give the
best results in your school. However, if your study is to increase student
achievement in mathematics, your research design will need to include
an extensive review of different teaching and learning strategies to
identify the strategies most likely to have a positive impact in your
classroom. Engaging in an extensive literature review and seeking out
expert information will help to ensure that the interventions you choose
to implement will have a positive impact.

I
n 1996, the Ontario Public School Teachers’ Federation Approach
sponsored the Common Curriculum Innovation Fund Project,
which brought together teachers, principals and superintendents
from four boards of education. Their action research projects focused
on the implementation of the Common Curriculum. These teachers
used the following key questions to help guide their action research.

1 ➢ What is the problem?


\ 1

2 ➢ What are some possible solutions?


Solutions may be self designed, learned from colleagues or from reviews
of educational literature.

3 ➢ What is the possible solution I want to investigate?

4 ➢ How do I make the solution work?


Test the proposed solution and modify it as needed.

5 ➢ How do I record data and reflect on it?


Keeping a journal and discussing it with a critical friend are
effective methods.

6 ➢ How do I share my experiences with others?


This is how the practitioner demonstrates and models his or her

13
professional development and contributes to the improvement of
educational practice. Holding a meeting, conducting a workshop,
or writing a paper are possible ways of fulfilling this responsibility.

7 ➢ What is next?
Action research is an open-ended, ongoing, cyclical process. The
solution one develops to the initial problem will generate the next
problem to be addressed. This is the catalyst to continuous
professional improvement. (Halsall and Hosack 1996, 16)

D
Approach r. David Townsend, a professor in the Faculty of Education

\
at the University of Lethbridge, has made extensive use of
an 11-step process with teachers in Alberta.

2 1 ➢ Define the Focus or Problem


• Ask the right questions.
• Reflection begins.

2 ➢ Collect Information
• Read the literature, consult colleagues, talk to experts.
• Reflection continues.

3 ➢ Make Sense of the Information


• What is relevant?
• What is doable?
• What can be modified and adapted to suit the circumstances?

4 ➢ Share the Information


• Share your preliminary conclusions with your team.
• Be prepared to deal with conflicting information.

5 ➢ Plan Action
• Share individual intentions with members of the team.
• Build personal commitment and group support.
• Develop a plan of action.

6 ➢ Take Action
• Start putting your plan into effect.
• Begin to think otherwise about what is happening and why.
• Reflection in action and on action will make your efforts more
purposeful.

14
7 ➢ Collect Information
• Let your students see you as a learner.
• Gather data to answer your research question and document carefully.
• Meet regularly to share your experiences and re-focus as necessary.

8 ➢ Analyze
• Use the collective knowledge of your group to make sense of what’s
happening and why.
• Compare the pre- and post-intervention data.

9 ➢ Assess Your Achievements


• Think about evidence-based practice.
• Your conclusions are supported by the data collected.

10 ➢ Publish
• Commit yourself to making conclusions about the impact of your efforts.
• Share these conclusions with the group.
• Be prepared to disseminate your report beyond your group and beyond
the school.

11 ➢ Future Action
• Celebrate. Relax. Reflect.
• Take time to consolidate your learning and your gains before you start
something new.

S
chool districts across Alberta have organized school Approach

\
improvement projects on a range of topics. Action research
can be applied to many of these initiatives. J. Glanz (1998) in
Action Research: An Educational Leader’s Guide to School Improvement
describes a four-step process for action research to examine
3
educational problems in school settings.

Steps in Action Research

1 ➢ Select a Focus
Includes three steps: a) know what you want to investigate, b) develop
some questions about the area you’ve chosen; and c) establish a plan to
answer the question. As you focus on a problem, begin to pose some
questions that will serve to guide your research. Developing guiding
questions will eventually lead to specifying research questions and/or
hypotheses. Selecting a focus also includes developing a research design.

15
2 ➢ Collect Data
Once you have developed the research question you can begin to collect
data that will provide evidence of the effectiveness of the intervention.
You may administer tests, conduct surveys and interviews and examine
documents. Collected data must be transformed into a useable form.

3 ➢ Analyze and Interpret Data


Once the relevant data is collected, you need to begin the process of
analysis and interpretation in order to arrive at a decision.

4 ➢ Take Action
The research question is answered based on the data collected and a
decision is made. Three possibilities exist: a) continue the intervention,
b) disband the intervention, c) modify the intervention in some way(s).

Action research is cyclical – the process doesn’t necessarily have to


stop at any particular point. Information gained from previous
research may open new avenues of research. (Glanz 1998, 24–26)

Before
you plan the steps...
in your action research process, consider the context of your project.
You will need to take many factors into consideration. For example:

● What is the purpose of the research project? Are you trying to solve a
problem, implement a change or make an improvement?

● To what degree are different stakeholders aware of the issue?

+
● How much time is available to engage in the various aspects of the project?

● What financial resources are available to support the project?

● What is the desired impact of your project? Will the project be replicated in
other classrooms or schools?

● How manageable is the project? What is the scope? How many


people are involved?

● Who else has a legitimate right to be involved or


should be involved in the project?

16
Developing Your
Knowledge of the Issue
Once the research focus has been identified, the next step is to learn
more about the issue. The amount of time spent on this initial review
will vary depending on the amount of information available and how
specifically the issue has been defined. People experienced in action
research say that time spent on this activity is time well spent.
Developing your knowledge of the issue and finding out what others
have experienced will help you to refine your research question and to
focus on the most likely solutions or interventions.

There are three strategies to use in


developing your background knowledge.

Talking Seek out expert knowledge from every available

RE
G
IN

AD
source. Begin your search in your school district.

LK

IN
TA
Who has taken courses, attended conferences or applied this

G
information in the classroom? Contact the universities and ask for the
LEARNING
names of professors or graduate students working in the area. Contact
staff at the Alberta Teachers’ Association and regional consortia in your
area to ask for names of people who have offered workshops on the
topic. Contact these people by telephone or e-mail to arrange a meeting
or to ask for advice.

Reading Accessing published material can be a challenge


because of the volume of reference material. Your
teacher librarian or the library services at the Association can assist you
in designing an efficient search of print and web-based materials. Refer
to the bibliographies of material you find valuable to identify additional
sources of information, such as writers working in the field.

Learning Conferences, workshops and courses are


excellent networking opportunities. These
events can provide skills training and valuable materials to assist you in
implementing your intervention or strategy. Just as valuable, however, is
the experience of being immersed in the topic and discussing the issues
with others interested in the same topic.

17
✐ During the learning phase develop a plan to save time and focus your
research activities. Use the mindmap format below and brainstorm to
identify potential sources of background information related to your
research question.

Sources of
background
knowledge

Networking
opportunities

Published
material

Expert
knowledge

18
A standard format makes it easier to compare materials and share
information with others involved in the project. Many action researchers

use recipe cards to collect and organize information. Use the following
template to summarize the information; note three or four points under
each heading.

Topic:

Title

Author

Date

Publisher

Information Highlights — What did the author say about this issue?

Implications — What action do you recommend based on this information?

Further Investigation — Is further investigation required in relation to this information?

Name:

Name

Position

Phone / Email

Date

Key Points

Consideration

Follow-up

19
If you are working on a collaborative action research project, share the
background research activities with members of the team. Plan to meet
as a team every one to three weeks to share the information you have
gathered. At these meetings take a critical stance in the discussion and
challenge the information. Frequently you will discover conflicting
information that you will have to evaluate. Your research plan may need
to be modified to address the new knowledge you have gained.

7 Documenting your information is


important for a number of reasons:

● It creates a permanent record for future reference.

● It helps to build continuity for the project if the participants change.

● This information is valuable if you plan to share your work with

others.

● It can be used to support applications for funding.

20
Designing a Data

=
Collection Plan
Now that you have learned more about the issues relating to your
research question you are ready to develop a plan of action. The plan of
action will describe the interventions to be implemented, the data to be
collected and who is responsible for each aspect of the plan.

In action research, data is gathered for different purposes at different


The Principle of
steps in the process.
Triangulation
Researchers remind us
How big is What is the
current that it is important to
the problem?
situation? use a variety of data
sources. Triangulation
Baseline data determines the extent of a problem and clarifies the refers to the use of
existing situation. three (or more) types
of data related to the
same question.
Am I making Is the
situation Corroboration can be
a difference?
changing? achieved by involving
different people to
Research data measures the impact of the intervention. interpret the data.
Triangulation and
corroboration, or
Cornering Your Question/Problem verification, increase


✔ Match data sources to the research question. the credibility of the
information. In other

✔ Collect data from as many sources as possible. words, the researcher

✔ Keep a data log that includes the date, time and data information can say that the
collected. information is more
trustworthy because it

✔ Organize your data around themes, key issues or topics.
comes from multiple
(National Staff Development Council 2000, 2) sources and through
multiple channels.
(Grady1998, 33)

21
Sources There are many sources of research data available to the researcher.
However, you must ensure that the data relates to your research
of Research question.
Data

e
Use this list to identify your data sources.

Document analysis

❏ student achievement data ❏ diagnostic assessment


❏ samples of student work ❏ attendance records
❏ anecdotal records ❏ files
❏ behavior records ❏ literature review
❏ web research ❏ journal
❏ lesson plans ❏ portfolio
❏ activity reports ❏ pre-test and post-test
❏ self-evaluation ❏ standardized test scores
❏ ______________________ ❏ ______________________
❏ ______________________ ❏ ______________________
❏ ______________________ ❏ ______________________

Observations

❏ checklists ❏ anecdotal records


❏ sociograms ❏ rubrics
❏ video tapes ❏ photographs
❏ ______________________ ❏ ______________________
❏ ______________________ ❏ ______________________

Interviews

❏ students ❏ teachers
❏ administrators ❏ parents
❏ experts ❏ focus groups
❏ surveys ❏ questionnaires
❏ ______________________ ❏ ______________________
❏ ______________________ ❏ ______________________

22
Survey and Questionnaire Tips
Surveys and questionnaires are useful tools for collecting data from a
large number of people.

■ Questions must be limited to the research question and design.

■ Field test the questions with three to five people.

■ Provide a short explanation of the research study, explain the


purpose of the questionnaire and how the data will be used.

y
■ The formats of different questions will yield different types of data.
Sur
vey
■ Using a computer may save time in organizing and analyzing Que s an
d
stio
the data. nna
TC ire
har
t


✔Advantages ■
✗ Disadvantages

✔ Efficient means of gathering large amounts ■
✗ Not a good source of quantitative data; best
of data used to identify trends or themes


✔ Respondents can be anonymous ■
✗ Can lack the richness of personal interviews
or direct observation


✔ Rating scales yield data that can be ■
✗ Open-ended questions are time consuming
displayed in tables and charts to analyze


✔ Useful for pre- and post-intervention data ■
✗ Questions must be worded clearly to avoid
gathering misinterpretation

23
Interview Tips
Interviews are purposeful conversations between the respondents and
researcher.
■ Plan the interview by developing a set of questions that focus on the
research problem you have identified.
■ Field test the interview questions with three to five people not
involved in the study.

y
Group interviews can work well with students, depending on the
research question.
■ During the interview, take time to develop a rapport with
rview
Inte t
respondents.
har ■
TC Consider taping the interview (with the permission of your
participants).


✔Advantages ■
✗ Disadvantages

✔ Provides the opportunity for indepth ■
✗ Interviews and data analysis can be time
conversation with respondents consuming


✔ Can yield rich data ■
✗ If the interview is poorly planned, the data
may be difficult to analyze


✔ Questions can be clarified if necessary ■
✗ Respondents do not have anonymity


✔ Researcher can ask additional questions ■
✗ Possibility of interviewer bias


✔ Useful for gathering data from younger ■
✗ Data does not lend itself easily to
students quantification

24
Observation Tips
Observation is looking with a purpose (Grady 1998, 23–24). Observations are
very effective when combined with other data-collection methods.

■ Develop an observation plan and a data-collection template.

■ Conduct observations at different times of the day.

■ Consider asking a colleague to conduct the observation.

■ Consider using a camera or video tape when ethically appropriate.

y
■ Be aware that the observer’s presence can affect the process.
Obs
erv
atio
T n
Cha
rt


✔Advantages ■
✗ Disadvantages

✔ Provides a holistic picture ■
✗ It might be difficult to isolate specific
behaviors


✔ Is effective in classroom and playground ■
✗ Must use multiple observations for validity
situations


✔ Can document non-verbal behaviors ■
✗ Time consuming and labor intensive


✔ Increases the researcher’s sensitivity to ■
✗ May be distracting to participants
multiple variables

25
A Data Collection Plan
^ A team of teachers from an elementary school designed an
action research project to determine if “Brain Gym,” when
used as an academic tool, will improve reading achievement in
Grade 2/3 students. Their data collection plan included a
variety of data sources:
➺ pre and post student reading surveys
➺ pre and post Alberta Diagnostic Reading Tests
➺ dominant-brain profile testing
➺ teacher observations
➺ student work samples
➺ student reflections
The data from each of these sources was collected over the
course of the project and analyzed at the end of the project.
Using these multiple sources of data the teachers were able to
determine the overall impact of using “Brain Gym,” which
students showed the greatest improvement in reading and how
the program fit within each teacher’s classroom practice.

Reflect on
your data collection plan.
Why are you collecting the data?
Who is going to collect it?
What exactly are you collecting?
Where are you going to collect it?

+
When are you going to collect it?
How will the data be collected and
reported?
(National Staff Development Council 2000, 5)

26
Analyzing the
Research Data
Most of the data collected in an action research project is qualitative,
which means that the researcher must use his or her intellect to analyze
and interpret the collected information. The intellectual process of
qualitative analysis includes critical reading, finding connections
between data, forming judgments and determining answers to complex
research problems. The processes described below are strategies that
others have used to organize and analyze qualitative data.

P W
amela Adams, an instructor at the University of Lethbridge and
classroom teacher, has developed a process of analyzing data
from participant interviews. She has found this process valuable
for research questions for which you need to gather the opinions of the
participants. Pamela described the process as a combination of selective
note-taking and the use of visual organizers to gather and sort the data. How to analyze
The process is outlined below. qualitative data
❶ Conduct three interviews using broad questions based on your
① Gather all the data
research questions. Take as many notes as possible during these in a clear, readable
interviews. form.

❷ Reflect on these interviews to identify repetitive themes. Draft new


② Sort the data
interview questions related to these themes. according to the
research
❸ Conduct the remaining interviews. Use selective note-taking. After
a group of interviews, reflect on the process. How effective is your question(s).
interview facilitation? Are the themes you have identified still
③ Create analytic
valid? files.

❹ When all the interviews are complete, analyze the data in broad
④ Code the data.
categories or groups. Color code comments in each category using
highlighter pens. (Grady 1996, 29–30)

❺ Regroup the data and analyze it using the themes.

❻ Use the trends from your category and theme analysis as a basis
for reflection. What are your conclusions based on your
interpretation of the data?

27
# B
e systematic and objective as you examine your data. Joan
Richardson (NSCD 2000, 2) offers a rough outline to follow when
analyzing data.

❶ Jot down the themes, patterns and big ideas in the data you’ve
collected.
Teachers may
want to consider
❷ Pare down your list to the essential points.
the use of ❸ Label information according to relevant themes, creating sub-
mindmapping themes as appropriate.
computer software
for organizing,
❹ Make notes as you go along.
sorting and ❺ Review your information. Identify the points that occur more
analyzing frequently and are the most powerful.
qualitative data.
❻ Write up your major points. Match collected data with each
major point.

Computer software can reduce some of the time needed to record,


tabulate and analyze data. In addition, it helps in the production of
graphs and charts to explain the results.

Action research teams in three elementary schools were

^ interested in whether a guided-reading program would


improve the reading comprehension, word accuracy and
fluency of emerging readers in a small group setting. This
project involved 12 teachers and more than 350 students in
three schools. To make the data collection and analysis more
manageable, these teachers developed a template using
database software. The database included 35 different fields
and allowed for tabulation and graphing of the data collected.

28
Depending on the style of question used, survey data can be organized
and analyzed as numerical results. Survey questions that ask the
respondent to select one answer out of a list of alternatives lend
themselves to quantifiable results.

A high school action research team was interested in


increasing student achievement by implementing a study
skills program. The first thing this team did was develop a
survey, which all students completed. The results were
^
tabulated using spreadsheet software and then graphs were
developed to illustrate the information. Representing the
data in this form made it quite easy to see what study skills
students were already using and which ones they would like
to learn more about.

29
Reporting on an
Action Research Project
Teacher researchers should prepare some kind of final documentation
and share the results of their study. This activity will

★ encourage reflection,
★ help to organize thoughts,
★ conclude the research process and
★ contribute to professional knowledge.
When action research is used as part of your professional growth plan
or in a school improvement project, the final report will serve to
summarize the project activities and highlight the results of your study.

Deciding
How to Report
Your Research
The answers to these questions will help you to decide
how to report your research.

Purpose – what motivated you to do this project?


– who else is interested in this project?

+ Product

Process
– does the product relate to the purpose of the project?
– is a particular format required?

– does the process by which you share the


results of your study also relate to the purpose?
– have you considered presenting and/or
publishing your study?

Text Video Portfolio Poster Presentation Web-based

30
Sample Outline for a Report
No matter what method you use to report your project, the following
outline can be used to organize the material for sharing with others.

Introduction

– what was the research question?


C
– why is this question important to me?

– what was the context of the study?

Review of the Literature

– what did I learn from my investigation of the topic?

Methodology

– what was my research plan?

– what data collection methods were used?

Results and Conclusions

– summarize the data collected.

– discuss your conclusions based on the data collected.

Implications and Recommendations

– what have you learned from doing this study?

– how can this information be useful to others?

– if you repeated the study, what would you do


differently?

31
Share Your Results

< Organize a meeting of several colleagues.

< Present your final report during the year-end review of your
professional growth plan.

< Share your study with the school council or school board.

< Talk to your students about your study and what you learned.

< Talk to parents about your project.

< Summarize your results and share them with the participants of
your project.

< Prepare an article for a specialist council journal or another


educational publication.

< Present the results of your study at a conference or a workshop.

< Include the results of your study in your school’s improvement


project report.

< Submit your report for publication on an appropriate website.

<
32
R
Facilitating and
Supporting Action
Research
The success of action research initiatives can be significantly enhanced
by the support and facilitation of others not directly involved in the
project, for example a school administrator, district consultant,
university professor, teacher experienced in the process or a critical
friend. These people can help to keep the project moving forward,
encourage reflection and problem solving, provide feedback and
generally lend support. Action research can be frustrating when things
don’t turn out the way you had expected or hoped for. The process is
not linear—the action plan often has to be modified in light of new
information.

^
Rarely, did anything turn out to be “absolute.” It was
“messy” not “tidy ,” “usually” not “always” allowing for
continued creativity and reflective thinking.

Teachers working alone or in teams may find it helpful to identify


someone to act as their critical friend in the action research process. A
critical friend is a trusted person who asks provocative questions,
provides a different perspective on data to be examined and offers a
critique of the person’s work. (Costa and Kallick 1995) A collaborative
working relationship with a critical friend is built on trust.

The teacher-researcher needs to feel assured that the critical friend will

★ be a good listener,
★ offer value judgments upon request,
★ respond to the project with integrity and
★ advocate for the success of the project.

33
Our critical friend encouraged self-evaluation and

^ reflective thinking. He listened, heard at a higher level,


and encouraged us to take the next step. He asked three
pertinent questions that empowered us and encouraged
accountability: What have we done? What are we going to
do next? How are we going to do it? He was a very
effective facilitator.

In action research, a critical friend

★ provides another set of eyes,


★ is a trusted friend who asks proactive questions,
★ encourages and supports reflection,
★ offers suggestions and advice when requested,
★ spends time with the researcher throughout the project,
and
★ does not impose personal judgments or evaluations.

Education Leadership and Action Research


Strategies that those in leadership and facilitating roles can use to help
sustain the project and provide support to the researcher are

★ encouraging risk taking,


★ developing a school culture that honors professionalism,
★ providing time to prepare the project plan and write the
final report,
★ demonstrating genuine professional curiosity about the
project,
★ supporting the project with resources,
★ providing feedback on the design,

34
★ assisting with problem solving during the study,
★ expressing interest in the progress of the study,
★ promoting the publication and dissemination of the study,
★ identifying useful resources,
★ sharing literature related to the project,
★ advocating for teachers involved in the study,
★ organizing inservice workshops that support the research
process and give teachers access to new knowledge,
★ letting others know about the work teachers are doing,
and
★ attending meetings and workshops related to the action
research project.

The Principal’s Role


As instructional leader in the school, the principal strives to develop a
school culture that is supportive of professional growth and risk taking.
Collaborative action research is an effective tool for curriculum
implementation, problem solving and school improvement and for
developing a culture of teamwork and continuous improvement.

Hossack (1997) notes that principals have the opportunity to engage in


action research as

v
★ practitioners conducting a project,
★ participants in a collaborative project,
and
★ promoters to support and encourage
all types of action research.

35
Why Action Research
Teacher professional development and school improvement are a
priority for the Alberta Teachers’ Association. As the professional voice
of teachers, the Association has allocated significant resources to the
professional growth and improvement of its members.

The Association is not unique in these efforts. Indeed, many other


professional organizations across North America have also focused on
staff development as a priority, knowing that the key to school
improvement is teacher improvement. Recent developments in the field
of education have contributed to how we think about professional
development.

RESULTS DRIVEN EDUCATION ••• decisions about curriculum and instruction should be driven by
what we want students to know and be able to do as a result of
instruction.

SYSTEMS THINKING ••• systems thinkers see the interconnectedness of all things and
understand that causality is circular rather than linear.

CONSTRUCTIVISM ••• learners create their own knowledge rather than receiving it
from others.

Action Research and School Improvement


Whole staffs can engage in action research focused on school
improvement, curriculum development, student behavior and staff
development. Whole-staff collaborative action research has the potential
to increase teamwork, improve staff morale and increase student
achievement.

School-based action research can engage the entire staff in studying the
same research question or the staff may volunteer to work in smaller
groups to study several different questions related to a common theme.

One example of this might be the challenges associated with integrating


technology across grade levels and subject areas. Another might be the
processes used in building a safe and caring school environment.

36
Schmuck (1997, 141–142) refers to six conditions that foster effective
school-based action research:

••• Openness to weakness: Administrators and staff members


speak honestly to each other about the parts of the school program
that need improvement.

••• Chances for creativity: Administrators provide staff members with


opportunities to brainstorm and analyze inventive ideas about
alternative future practices.

••• Support for trial and error: Administrators provide staff


members with support, resources and materials to initiate and test
alternative processes.

••• Cooperative staff relations: Administrators and staff members share


norms and skills that support cooperative problem solving about their
own group efforts.

••• Value data collection: Administrators and staff members believe they
should go beyond casual inquiry to collect systematic data about their
processes and school outcomes.

••• Time for improvement: Administrators create ways to release staff


members from regular duties so that they can engage in professional
reflection, action research and staff problem solving.

Action Research and Staff Development


The Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development
published a handbook entitled A New Vision for Staff Development
(Sparks and Hirsh, 1997). This new vision for staff development is
characterized by a shift
A
••• from individual development to a combination of individual
development and organization development;

••• from fragmented, piecemeal improvement efforts to staff


development driven by a clear, coherent strategic plan for the
school district, schools and the departments that serve the schools;

37
••• from district-focused to school-focused approaches to staff
development;

••• from a focus on changes in adult needs and satisfaction to a focus


on student needs and learning outcomes, and changes in on-the-
job behaviors;

••• from an orientation toward the transmission of knowledge and


skills to teachers by “experts” to supporting teachers’ own studies
of the teaching and learning processes;

••• from a focus on generic instructional skills to a combination of


generic and content-specific skills;

••• from staff developers who function primarily as trainers to those


who provide consultation, planning and facilitation services as well
as training;

••• from staff development provided by one or two departments to


staff development as a critical function and major responsibility
performed by all administrators and lead teachers;

••• from staff development directed toward teachers as the primary


recipients to continuous improvement in performance for
everyone who is involved with student learning;

••• from staff development as a frill that can be cut during difficult
financial times to staff development as an indispensable process
without which schools cannot hope to prepare young people for
citizenship and productive employment.

38
For more information
Listed below are a number of Canadian websites which teachers may
find helpful. These websites are accurate at the time of publication.

Action Research in Alberta, http://www.edu.uleth.ca/arnia/


The website, developed by David Townsend of the University of Lethbridge,
provides an invaluable overview of action research in the Alberta context.
It includes references to projects undertaken by teacher researchers in
recent years.

Alberta Initiative for School Improvement (AISI),


http://ednet.edc.gov.ab.ca/sib/aisi/
This website contains an annotated bibliography of print materials that
support action research aimed at school improvement.

Action Research at Queen’s University, http://educ.queensu.ca/~ar/


As well as links to useful introductory sites that will help you get started, this
web page contains one of the most comprehensive lists of the latest on-line
resources and institutions active in action research.

The Ontario Action Researcher,


http://www.unipissing.ca/oar/index.htm
This website promotes the development of educational knowledge through
action research for elementary, secondary and post-secondary teachers.
One section provides links to action research projects focused on working
with new teachers.

Networks: An On-line Journal for Teacher Research,


http://www.oise.utoronto.ca/~ctd/networks/
This website is one of the first on-line journals dedicated to teacher research
and includes an on-line discussion form and links to other useful sites.

For more information on Action Research or to plan a workshop for


your school, contact Professional Development staff at The Alberta
Teachers’ Association.

39
d
References
Carson, T. B. et al. 1989. Creating Possibilities: An Action Research Handbook.
Edmonton: University of Alberta.

Costa, A. and B. Kallick, 1995. Assessment in the learning organization.


Alexandria, Va: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Glanz, J. 1998. Action Research: An Educational Leader’s Guide to School


Improvement. Norwood, Mass: Christopher-Gordon Publishers.

——. 1999. “Action Research.” Journal of Staff Development. 20:3 (Summer):


22–23.

Grady, M. P. 1998. Qualitative and Action Research: A Practitioner Handbook.


Bloomington, Ind: Phi Delta Kappa Educational Foundation.

Hamilton, D. and L. Zaretsky. 1997. “Building Professional Communities of


Inquiry in Schools.” Orbit 28:3: 44–47.

Halsall, N. D. and L. A. Hossack. (Eds). 1996. Act, Reflect, Revise, Revitalize:


Action Research: Moving Beyond Problem-Solving to Renewal. Mississauga, Ont:
Ontario Public School Teachers’ Federation.

Hossack, L. A. 1997. “An Action Research Primer for Principals.” The Canadian
School Executive 16:7 (January): 9–13.

Kemmis, S. and R. McTaggart. 1990. The Action Research Planner. Victoria,


Australia: Deakin University.

National Staff Development Council. February/March 2000. Tools for Schools.


Oxford, Ohio.

Patterson, L., C. Minnick Santa, K. G. Short and K. Smith (eds). 1993. Teachers
Are Researchers: Reflection and Action. Newark, Del: International Reading
Association.

Schmuck, R. A. 1997. Practical Action Research For Change. Arlington Heights,


Ill: IRI/Skylight Training and Publishing.

Sparks, D., and S. Hirsh. 1997. A New Vision For Staff Development. Alexandria,
Va: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

40

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