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How Schools and Universities Collaborate for Change

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... for Change. The Case of Logan Utah City School District and Utah ... Logan School District Board of Education passes a local tax levy to access Utah ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How Schools and Universities Collaborate for Change


1
How Schools and Universities Collaborate for
Change
  • The Case of Logan Utah City School District and
    Utah State University
  • International Reading Association Meeting
  • Toronto, Canada
  • May, 2007

2
A Perfect Storm 2001
  • New Superintendent appointed in local school
    district.
  • New Director of Elementary Curriculum appointed
    in local school district.
  • New Professor appointed at the University

3
A Need to Build Capacity
  • New administration was well trained in
    administering programs but not in building
    literacy instructional capacity
  • Demographics of the district were rapidly
    changing rendering previous ways of teaching
    literacy less effective

4
Seeking Public School Partners
  • New university faculty member reaches out to
    establish a partnership
  • New administration gives this new faculty member
    a chance
  • Over time a relationship of trust was built
    through multiple conversations

5
Establishing A Felt Need
  • Internal District Level Meetings were held with
    Elementary School Principals and Director of
    Elementary Curriculum to discuss the nature of
    literacy instruction.
  • University Professor was put on hold until
    internal meetings had been held Well get back
    to you!

6
Establishing A Felt Need
  • University professor, elementary school
    principals, and director of elementary curriculum
    meet to discuss the nature of literacy
    instruction in the elementary schools in the
    district.
  • Meeting revealed an eclectic, patchwork quilt of
    locally derived, nationally published reading
    curricula and programs from classroom to
    classroom and grade to grade

7
Establishing A Felt Need
  • Without some level of curricular and
    instructional coherence the district and school
    administrators were unable to determine an
    appropriate course of action to ameliorate
    declining literacy instructional effectiveness

8
Designing a District Literacy Model
  • A statewide literacy model was under development.
  • A statewide revision of the core language arts
    curriculum K-6 was under development.
  • A framework for guiding the districts literacy
    instruction was needed to provide some degree of
    unity and coherence in instructional content and
    focus.
  • Drafts of the model were circulated and discussed
    with teachers in schools.

9
Fall 2002 District-wide Inservice on the New
District Literacy Model
  • The partner University Professor was enlisted to
    provide a ½ day inservice on the literacy model
    for the entire school districts K-6 teachers.
    Topics included classroom management,
    environment, differentiated instruction, resource
    allocations, and the state eight of the core
    curriculum- oral language, concepts of print,
    phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary,
    comprehension, and writing.
  • Other university faculty began entering into the
    partnership by asking how the university might
    align its curriculum with the needs of the school
    district.

10
Fall 2002 District-wide Inservice on the New
District Literacy Model
  • School principals continue their literacy academy
    study for a second year and begin to accept the
    responsibility to provide literacy instructional
    leadership within their own buildings.

11
Assessment Drives Instruction Adopting an
Assessment Approach
  • State CRTs are revised and begin to be used to
    assess adequate yearly progress under 2002 NCLB
    requirements.
  • DIBELS is introduced as a series of quick,
    efficient, and predictive measures of early
    literacy skills acquisition.
  • Data collection and monitoring become part of the
    process of revising literacy instruction.

12
Legislation Adds the Force of Law to Literacy
Instructional Reforms
  • No Child Left Behind (NCLB)U.S. Legislation
  • Part B, NCLB Reading First (Utah was 5th RF
    grant to be funded in the U.S.)
  • State of Utah begins the development of the UPASS
    state accountability/assessment system.
  • State Core Language Arts Curriculum, K-6 is
    unveiled and put into practice.
  • Utah Governor, Olene Walker, successfully arm
    twists Utah Legislature into providing millions
    for the Utah Reading Initiative.

13
Legislation Adds the Force of Law to Literacy
Instructional Reforms
  • Logan School District Board of Education passes a
    local tax levy to access Utah Reading Initiative
    funds to provide school level Literacy Coaches.

14
Pressure Mounts for Change
  • School principals begin to provide regular
    professional development meetings on effective
    literacy instructional practices.
  • School literacy coaches press for teachers to
    make changes in content and method of literacy
    instruction.
  • Video taping of teacher literacy instruction for
    coaching is proposed.

15
A Revolution in the Making
  • Teachers feel increasingly under pressure.
  • Accountability for student performance and
    examining student data is required by literacy
    coaches.
  • Differentiating small group instruction in
    literacy to meet student needs requires greater
    planning and management.

16
District Administration Under Fire
  • Teachers begin to fight back against unwanted
    changes.
  • Feel that their professionalism is questioned
    and disregarded.
  • Superintendent is forced out under political
    pressure.
  • Director of Elementary Curriculum is subject of
    Local Education Association survey study and
    personal attacks.

17
New Leadership Selected
  • New Superintendent is appointed by the Local
    Board of Education.
  • Literacy model under attack but supported by the
    Local Board of Education
  • New Superintendent stays the course on literacy
    change.
  • Elementary schools make AYP under NCLB.
  • Changes in literacy instruction are gaining
    increased support and acceptance among teachers
    as they have begun to perceive results and
    resolute leadership. A sense of collective felt
    need is emerging as success and demographics
    continue to provide challenges.

18
Moving Forward Where from Here?
  • Moving the literacy instruction reform to the
    middle school and secondary levels for a K-12
    focus on increasing students literacy skills,
    strategies, concepts, and motivation.

19
Selected References
  • Allington, R.L., Cunningham, P. (1996). Schools
    that work. New York Harper Collins College
    Publishers.
  • Allington, R. L., Johnston, P. H. (2002).
    Reading to learn Lessons from exemplary
    fourth-grade classrooms. New York Guilford
    Press.
  • Anderson, R. C., Hiebert, E. F., Scott, J. A.,
    Wilkinson, I. A. G. (1985). Becoming a nation of
    readers The report of the commission on reading.
    Washington, DC The National Institute of
    Education.Braunger, J., Lewis, J. P. (2006).
    Building a knowledge base in reading, 2nd
    edition. Newark, DE International Reading
    Asssociation.
  • Dickinson, D.K, Tabors, P. O. (2001). (Eds.),
    Young children learning at home and school
    Beginning literacy with language. Baltimore, MD
    Paul H. Brookes, Pub.
  • McCardle, P., Chhabra, V. (2004). The Voice of
    Evidence in Reading Research. Baltimore, MD
    Paul H. Brookes. Mosenthal, J., Lipson,M. Torncell
    o, S., Russ, B., Mekkelsen, J. (2004). Contexts
    and practices of six schools in obtaining reading
    achievement. Elementary School Journal, 104 (5),
    343-367.
  • Morrow, L. M, Reutzel, D. R., Casey, H. (2006).
    Organization and Management of Language Arts
    Teaching Classroom Environments, Grouping
    Practices, and Exemplary Instruction, p. 559-582.
    In C. Evertson (Ed.) Handbook of classroom
    management. Mahwah, NJ Lawrence Earlbaum
    Associates.
  • National Institute of Child Health and Human
    Development (2000). Report of the National
    Reading Panel Teaching children to read.
    Washington, DC.
  • Pressley, M., Allington, R. L., Wharton-McDonald,
    R., Collins-Block, C., Morrow, L. M. (2001).
    Learning to read Lessons from exemplary
    first-grade classrooms. New York Guilford
    Press.Snow, C. E., Burns, M. S., Griffin, P.
    (1998). Preventing reading failure in young
    children. Washington, DC National Academy Press.
  • Snow, C. E., Griffin, P., Burns, M. S. (2005).
    Knowledge to support the teaching of reading
    Preparing teachers for a changing world. San
    Francisco, CA Jossey-Bass.
  • Taylor, B. M., Pearson, P. D. (2002). Teaching
    reading Effective schools, accomplished
    teachers. Mahwah, NJ Lawrence Erlbaum
    Associates.
  • Taylor, B. M., Pearson, P. D., Clark, K.
    (2000). Effective schools and accomplished
    teachers Lessons about primary-grade reading
    instruction in low-income schools. Elementary
    School Journal, 101(2), 121165.
  • Taylor, B. M., Pearson, P. D., Clark, K. E.,
    Walpole, S. (1999). Beating the odds in teaching
    all children to read (Ciera Report No.2006). Ann
    Arbor, MI Center for the Improvement of Early
    Reading Achievement.

20
If you would like to get this power point
presentation please contact or visit the website
  • D. Ray Reutzel, Ph.D.
  • Emma Eccles Jones Endowed Chair Distinguished
    Professor
  • Emma Eccles Jones Center for Early Childhood
    Education
  • Utah State University
  • Logan, UT
  • www.cehs.usu.edu/ecc
  • Click on Presentations and Publications Button
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