Think Aloud Videos of Art Course Students
Posted by Linda Whitney on May 12, 2010 in Faculty Inquiry Groups (FIG), Learning to Learn, Literacy, Metacognition, Reading, Revised Inquiry Plans, Think Alouds with No Comments
You are welcome to view the first Think Aloud video from our East Los Angeles College FIN team. This post is a revised version of a post on May 12,2010 by Linda Whitney. First, we explain our project and the background to this video.
At East Los Angeles College, our Reading Apprenticeship FIG is a re-conception of our original project. This year, rather than examine a lower-level reading course, we are now looking at how Reading Apprenticeship methods can inform us and allow us to help students as they tackle reading in a wide array of disciplines. The areas of our FIG members include Literature, Basic Skills composition, Basic Skills Reading, Child Development, Politics, Art and Chemistry. We kicked off with a taping of think-alouds of two students from an ART103 course. Kevin teaches this course at a sister community college, although his full-time job is with East as our Web 2.0 facilitator. Two key advantages to Kevin being the first of our group to tape a think-aloud: 1) his ease and enthusiasm for technology and 2) no other FIG members hold expertise in his content area. Two key disadvantages: 1) Kevin, unlike other FIG members, is not trained yet in Reading Apprenticeship, and 2) Kevin’s students, prior to the evening of the videotaping, had not practiced metacognitive reading techniques.
As you watch the tape, you will see that Student A does little previewing. She pretty much sticks to silent, rapid, reading, and then reacting to specific pieces of text. Katie Hern, upon viewing this tape, noticed neither student verbalized misunderstandings. In the case of Student A, however, Kevin was pleased to see that she specifically paused at the parts of the text he had stressed in that night’s lecture.
At this point, she may have decided to concentrate on the areas of understanding, and delay looking at areas of misunderstanding until a future re-reading. Student B, whose video is not posted, appears to do little more than read and then paraphrase. However, Kevin reports that Student B displayed a more reflective process during the practice session that night, and that his nervousness about the camera apparently flawed his true abilities. Katie is likely correct that the student’s nervousness reflects his need “not to appear stupid.”
Our group never settled on how much prior preparation to provide the students for Think Aloud and how we might assure that students use an array of techniques as they use Think Alouds. Most of our Think Aloud videos did not involve much prior preparation except for some modelling by the instructor.
We posted the Art text pages, this video, and many resources related to our FIG Reading Apprenticeship exploration on our group facebook page. Eventually we found that facebook postings were too technically challenging and we reverted to emails.
Door Number One
Posted by Sean McFarland on March 8, 2009 in Equity, Fear, Identity, Learning Communities, Learning to Learn, Making Visible, Metacognition, Multimedia, Student Confidence, Student Voice, Video Evidence with No Comments
Door Number One offers introductory profiles of a dozen of the many Programs and Services offered at Chabot College. Students, Staff, and Faculty share their experiences and offer their perspectives about why these Programs and Services are so vital, and what students can expect if they just “Pick One.” And along the way, we see what it takes to successfully repel a Zombie Student Attack on Chabot College!
The creation of Door Number One was generously supported by:
* SPECC (Strengthening Pre-collegiate Education in Community Colleges), a joint project of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
*Chabot Student Services Funding for Retention Initiatives
*Chabot Enrollment Management Committee (CEMC)
*CLPCCD Office of Public Information and Marketing
Going The Distance
Posted by Sean McFarland on March 5, 2009 in Acceleration, Equity, Making Visible, Student Interviews, Student Voice, Technology, Video Evidence with No Comments
In Going The Distance, Chabot College students and faculty share their experiences in taking — and teaching — Distance Education courses. They speak candidly and with insight about: “How the availability of DE courses plays a crucial role in their college matriculation” “What it takes to succeed in the online setting” “How the workload compares with more traditional classroom settings” “How student interactions compare with traditional classroom settings” “What it is like to interact with a teacher in the online environment” and more! Edited in a visual style inspired by the world of technology, Going The Distance offers an engaging, fresh discussion of the promise and challenges of Distance Education.
The creation of Going The Distance was generously supported by: SPECC (Strengthening Pre-collegiate Education in Community Colleges), a joint project of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.
(FIN employee Monique Williams made this film while a student at Chabot College.)
Tags: challenges, college students, distance education courses, experiences, faculty share, Filming, going the distance, insight, Metacognition, Metacognition Self-Efficacy Inquiry, Persistence, Progress to Transfer, student interactions, Success, traditional classroom settings, Video, visual style, workload
The Sorceress’s Apprentices
Posted by Sean McFarland on March 3, 2009 in Acceleration, Fear, Identity, Learning to Learn, Literacy, Making Visible, Metacognition, Reading, Student Confidence, Student Interviews, Student Voice, Video Evidence with No Comments
In this video, Chabot College Basic Skills students demonstrate and discuss effective reading strategies they have learned over the course of the semester. English Instructor Alisa Klevens discusses how she adapts Reading Apprenticeship concepts to meet the needs of these students.
Cerritos College Detailed Inquiry Plan Feb 09
Posted by Jan Connal on February 28, 2009 in Fear, Identity, Learning to Learn, Math, Metacognition, Pre/Post, Revised Inquiry Plans, Student Interviews, Student Voice, Surveys, Writing with No Comments
Summary of Inquiry
The Cerritos College inquiry project will combine two complementary collaborations to develop a deeper understanding about how developmental learners acquire the academic habits of mind needed to succeed in college. Too often, students at risk remain on the margins of the academic community and this project will investigate ways of moving them to the center. The Cerritos College team has a hunch that by improving meta-cognitive functioning and by understanding identity development, students can be helped to adopt a “learner identity,” acquire academic habits of mind, and improve their learning.
Team Leader:
Dr. Jan Connal / Counselor, Developmental Education Chair
562-860-2451 x 2143
jconnal@cerritos.edu
Team Members:
Cheryl Shimazu / Chemistry – Delete
Frank Mixson / English
Lydia Alvarez / English
Mojdeh Nikdel / Math
Marvelina Barcelo/ Counseling
Plans for Data Collection and Analysis
A. Zoom-Lens Data: Focusing on Students
Spring 2009
Instructional faculty will assess students’ metacognition, using a self-reported inventory of actions (included in our previous proposal), at both the beginning and end of the term for their sections of Math 40 (Pre-algebra), ENGL 20 (Basic Writing – two levels below Freshman Composition), and ENGL 52 (Intro to College Composition – one level below Freshman Composition). Likewise, they will also assess students’ Academic Habits of Mind, using a self-reported inventory of actions (included in our previous proposal).
Sustained, embedded metacognition skills-building classroom activities will be focused on increasing the following self-reported behavors:
MATH
1. When I do not understand something I ask for the help of others.
2. When I am solving a problem I ask myself questions in order to concentrate my attention on the problem.
ENGLISH:
1. While I am writing I wonder if I am communicating what I intend to communicate to my audience.
2. After I finish my work I know how well I performed on it even before it is evaluated.
Faculty will deliberately engage students in thinking and writing about the above behaviors; these reflections will be the basis of the FIG’s discussions at its biweekly meetings in March and April. Faculty will be using the reflections and discussions to better understand the development of metacognitive skills and construct a rubric to capture levels of functioning.
At the 6th week of the term faculty will identify students at risk for dropping out or failing; these students will be invited to participate in a Counselor led focus group.
Counseling faculty will also examine the students’ self-reported actions from the initial administration of the two inventories (surveys) in the above classes and identify a cohort of “at risk” students for a videotaped focus group about their academic self-perceptions, attitudes, goals and behaviors (focus group protocol to be developed).
Student Co-investigators will conduct an in-class activity in other sections of MATH 40, ENGL 20 and ENGL 52 to capture student responses on video as they respond to prompts about their identity (prompts currently in development).
Fall 2009
Instructional faculty will again assess students’ metacognition, using a self-reported inventory of actions (included in our previous proposal), at both the beginning and end of the term for their sections of Math 60 (Pre-algebra), ENGL 20 (Basic Writing – two levels below Freshman Composition), and ENGL 52 (Intro to College Composition – one level below Freshman Composition). Likewise, they will also assess students’ Academic Habits of Mind, using a self-reported inventory of actions (included in our previous proposal).
Faculty will continue the sustained, embedded metacognition skills-building activities and reflections in class. Faculty will also incorporate the Student Focus Group video and the Identity video, developed from the Spring 09 investigation, into classroom instructional activities (i.e., using metacognition to understand identity issues around math) to generate student work products which the FIG will use to examine the relationship between metacognition and identity at its biweekly meetings.
At the 6th week of the term faculty will use the metacognition rubric, developed Spring 09, to identify students who demonstrate minimal metacognitive skills; these students will be invited to participate in a Counselor led focus group. Counseling faculty will again examine the students’ self-reported actions from the initial administration of the two inventories (surveys) in the above classes and identify a cohort of “limited metacognition” students for a videotaped focus group about their academic identity, self-perceptions, attitudes, goals and behaviors (focus group protocol to be developed). This video will contribute to development of a “learner identity” rubric in Spring 10.
Student Co-investigators will again conduct an in-class activity in other sections of MATH 60, ENGL 20 and ENGL 52. This time, however, they will capture student responses on video as they respond to prompts about their Academic Habits of Mind (to be developed). This video will be used Spring 10 for instructional activities and also contribute to the development of the “learner identity” rubric.
B. Mid-Range Shots: Focusing on the Classroom
We will conduct a Lesson Study on a lesson given by Lydia Alvarez in ENGL 52 about the importance of “considering your audience” in communication. The classroom activity will basically engage students in writing to evoke a particular response attached to an opportunity for them to see if the intended response occurred. This lesson is directly related to our inquiry because of the metacognitive processes involved in thinking about what one intends, checking the response against what one intended and identifying improvements needed for achieving what on intends. This lesson study provides a unique opportunity to observe metacogniton in action and will inform our development of a metacognition rubric.
We will plan the lesson and identify each observer’s task at our April 14th FIG meeting. The in class lesson will be observed by Jan Connal, Frank Mixson, Mojdeh Nikdel and Marvelina Barcelo on April 22nd. The FIG will debrief and analyze data captured during the lesson on April 28th.
During the lesson observation, we will initially be looking for signs of student engagement and identifying the types and numbers of questions/comments exchanged between the instructor and students and between students. During the student activity portion of the class period, observers will be assigned a particular quadrant of the class to observe and will be noting students’ “metacognitive” statements (i.e., “I don’t think I did this right.”). Although we do not plan to video tape any portion of the Lesson Study, we will be using our observation notes and the students’ post-activity reflections for our debriefing and rubric building activities.
C. Wide-Angle Lens: Focusing on Trends in Institutional Data
The Institutional Research Office will supply Jan Connal the college Spring 09 MIS data in August, 2009. Jan will then compare the FIG sections with comparable sections (according to section duration and time of day offered) for initial enrollment, 1st census enrollment, retention and grade. Determining student persistence into Fall 09 can be determined in February 2010 once the Fall 09 MIS data has been supplied. Perhaps the institutional data will reveal a difference between the FIG sections and their comparison groups, but we do not believe valid conclusions could be drawn. Not only are our “interventions” in the formative stages (it would be too early in the implementation process), our inquiry is of a “thin slice” of learning and not course grade.
We could use coaching to find better ways of using institutional research, given the fact that we would be limited to using existing data (the IR office is seriously under-staffed and backlogged with other institutional priorities).
D. Additional Video Footage
Our student Co-investigators will be collecting video footage in three classes in Spring 09 and Fall 09. The Counseling faculty will be collecting video footage from two, possibly four, focus groups. Both of these activities will generate footage that is integral to our inquiry by providing direct student evidence for building our understanding of student metacognition, identity and academic habits of mind.
We are depending on FIN leadership for equipment and training to developed “finished” video to be used by instructional faculty in their classrooms and by the FIG in developing rubrics.
E. Inclusion of Student Voices
Students have been hired to conduct the in-class video activities. They will also play a role with the FIG faculty in identifying promising instructional and counseling activities for improving students’ Academic Habits of Mind.
Team Timeline/Calendar – Spring 09 & Summer 09
Feb 09 – Instructional faculty assess students metacognitive functioning and Academic Habits of Mind using the self-assessment inventories.
Feb – April 09 – FIG meets biweekly to examine student work and videotapes, collaborate on lesson plan, and develop a metacognition rubric.
March 09 – Student Co-investigators conduct classroom video activity in three classrooms.
March 09 – Student Co-investigators videotape Counselor led focus groups.
April 09 – FIG conducts Lesson Study in ENGL 52.
May 09 – Instructional faculty assess students metacognitive functioning and Academic Habits of Mind using the self-assessment inventories.
May 09 – End of the Semester Retreat to bring faculty and student investigators together for dialog and celebration.
June 09 – FIN Summer Institute
June – Aug 09 – Final editing of videos
Aug 09 – Analysis of the institutional research student performance data
Tags: Cerritos, Habits of Mind, Identity, Metacognition
About FIN
The Faculty Inquiry Network’s (FIN) purpose is to support professional development which includes: conducting faculty inquiry; revisiting basic skills assumptions; interpreting and integrating data; accessing student voices; developing students as co-inquirers; making visible; using technology for teaching and learning; creating and supporting new initiatives, curriculum and program development; constructing educational tools using digital media; and hosting dialogue around student and faculty learning.
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