Title: Student Engagement
1Student Engagement
- Amy Reschly, Ph.D. James Appleton, Ph.D.
2- A meta-construct
- Brings together many separate lines of research
(e.g., belonging, behavioral participation,
motivation) - Fredericks, Blumenfeld Paris, 2004
- Antidote to conditions noted by many educators
- Students are characterized as bored, unmotivated,
and uninvolved
3Student Engagement
- Engagement is the primary theoretical model for
understanding dropout and is, quite frankly, the
bottom line in interventions to promote school
completion. - Student engagement has emerged as the cornerstone
of high school reform initiatives. - Both academic and social aspects of school life
are integral for student success engagement at
school and with learning are essential
intervention considerations.
4Engagement is the primary theoretical model for
understanding dropout and is, quite frankly, the
bottom line in interventions to promote school
completion.
- Finn (1989)
- Participation-Identification Model
- Indicators of withdrawal and engagement over
several years - Belonging, Identification, Relationships
5Finns Participation Identification Model
- Participation in Successful Identification
- School Activities Performance with
school
6Engagement is the primary theoretical model for
understanding dropout and is, quite frankly, the
bottom line in interventions to promote school
completion.
- Finn (1989)
- Participation-Identification Model
- Indicators of withdrawal and engagement over
several years - Belonging, Identification, Relationships
7- Dynarski Gleason (2002)
- Provided extra personal support for students
- Created smaller and more personal settings
- McPartland (1994)
- Provide opportunities for success in schoolwork
- Communicate the relevance of education to future
endeavors - Create a caring and supportive environment
- Help students with personal problems
8Student engagement has emerged as the cornerstone
of high school reform initiatives.
- National Research Council publication, Engaging
schools Fostering high school students
motivation to learn - I can, I want to, I belong
- Competence, Autonomy, Belonging
- The other ABCs
- URL http//www.nap.edu/catalog/10421.html
9- A common theme among effective practices is that
they have a positive effect on the motivation of
individual students because they address
underlying psychological variables such as
competence, control, beliefs about the value of
education, and a sense of belonging. In brief,
effective schools and teachers promote students
understanding of what it takes to learn and
confidence in their capacity to succeed in school
by providing challenging instruction and support
for meeting high standards, and by conveying high
expectations for their students success. They
provide choices and they make the curriculum and
instruction relevant to adolescents experiences,
cultures, and long-term goals, so that students
see some value in what they are doing in school.
Finally, they promote a sense of belonging by
personalizing instruction, showing an interest in
students lives, and creating a supportive,
caring social context. - National Research Council, 2004, p. 212
10Both academic and social aspects of school life
are integral for student success engagement at
school and with learning are essential
intervention considerations.
- McPartland (1994) Dynarski Gleason (2002)
- More than.
- Academic performance, behavior
11Engagement Theory
- Antidote to students characterized as bored,
unmotivated, and uninvolved - the students psychological investment in and
effort directed toward learning, understanding,
or mastering the knowledge, skills, or crafts
that academic work is intended to promote - Energy in action, the connection between person
and activity
Dropping out is the most extreme form of
disengagement
12Student Engagement Model
13(No Transcript)
14Academic EngagementUniversal Strategies
- Ensure the instructional match is appropriate for
the students and clear directions of what is
expected are provided - Use mastery learning principles to guide
instructional planning and delivery - Use principles of effective instruction (e.g.,
direct instruction, scaffolding, guided practice
informed feedback pacing of lessons) - Ensure that there is both academic press (high
expectations, well structures learning
environment) and support for learning (caring
environment)
15Academic EngagementUniversal Strategies
- Maximize instructional relevance (e.g., clearly
stated purpose, graph progress toward goals) - Attend to the effect of the organization/structure
of the school on learning (e.g., smaller
learning communities, Academies) - Allow students to have choices within course
selection and assignments (Skinner et al., 2005).
16Academic EngagementUniversal Strategies
- Increase time on task and substantive interaction
through cooperative learning, whole class or
group instruction (Greenwood et al., 2002) and
peer assisted learning strategies (Boudah,
Schumacher, Deshler, 1997 Lee Smith, 1993) - Provide home support for learning strategies to
fit content area - Enhance critical thinking through project work
and ungraded writing assignments
17Academic EngagementUniversal Strategies
- Use supplemental program within school, i.e.,
Academic Coaching Team (Hansen, Cumming,
Christenson, 2006) - Increase opportunities for success in schoolwork
- Encourage parents to volunteer in the classroom
(Lee Smith, 1993) - Enhance teacher-student relationships and/or
teacher-student support (Hughes Kwok, 2006)
18Academic EngagementUniversal Strategies
- Reinforce students frequently and base it on the
amount of work completed (Skinner et al., 2005). - Utilize a variety of interesting texts and
resources (Asselin, 2004 Guthrie Wigfield,
2000) - Incorporate projects that take place in the
community (Lewis, 2004)
19Academic EngagementIndividualized Strategies
- Utilize after school programs (tutoring, homework
help) - Increase home support for learning such as
home-school notes, assignment notebooks, and
academic enrichment activities - Implement self-monitoring interventions
- Ensure adequacy of educational resources in the
home - Help parents to understand and set expectations
(Klem Connell, 2004)
20Academic EngagementIndividualized Strategies
- Help parents to understand and set expectations
(Klem Connell, 2004) - Foster positive teacher-student relationship for
marginalized students - Utilize Behavior Education Programs Have
students check in with the teacher each hour to
ensure they have pens, notebooks, etc. Check in
with teacher each hour, check-out at the end of
the school day (Hawken Horner, 2003). - Seek out and utilize college outreach programs
and tutors for students (Rodriquez et al., 2004)
21Behavioral Engagement Universal
- Examine suspension policies strive to eliminate
out-of-school suspension - Examine discipline policies ensure they are
considered fair, nonpunitive and understood by
students. End reliance on negative consequences
as a means of managing student behavior. - Encourage social interactions and planning for
the future though smaller learning communities
that target vocational interests (e.g., Academies)
22Behavioral Engagement Universal
- Offer developmentally appropriate social skills
training to all students as part of the
curriculum - Implement school-wide positive behavioral support
systems that include positive reinforcement and
group contingencies - Use coordinated, collaborative home-school
interventions to address attendance - Involve students in hands-on-learning that is
directly related to future career paths or
interests
23Behavioral Engagement Universal
- Create an orderly routine environment that
promotes consistency - Offer professional development on classroom
management strategies - Gather student input about classroom rules,
school climate and evaluation of
coursework/assignments use feedback to make
appropriate changes - Encourage participation in and provide
extracurricular activities actively seek to
involve uninvolved students
24Behavioral Engagement Universal
- Consider ways of having multi-level sports teams
- Ensure that the school climate, school culture is
respectful to all students - Systematically monitor student population on key
variables (attendance, academics, behavior) for
signs of disengagement from school and follow up
with students showing signs of withdrawal.
25Behavioral Engagement Individualized
- Provide additional, supplemental supports for
students not responding to positive behavioral
support systems implemented school-wide - Devise an individualized approach to addressing
attendance or participation issues at school
strive to understand student perspective and
unique family circumstances - Implement programs that work to build specific
skills such as problem solving, anger management
or interpersonal communication
26Behavioral Engagement Individualized
- Provide an adult mentor who works with students
and families on a long term basis to foster
engagement in school and deliver the message that
school is important (i.e., Check Connect) - Develop specific behavior plans or contracts to
address individual needs - Provide intensive wrap-around services
- Provide alternative programs for students who
have not completed school
27Behavioral Engagement Individualized
- Encourage parents to monitor and supervise
student behavior - Implement student advisory programs that monitor
academic and social development of secondary
students (middle or high) - Implement school-to-work programs that foster
success in school and relevant educational
opportunities
28Cognitive Engagement Universal
- Guide students in setting personal goals in
courses and monitoring their progress - Provide student with choices when completing
assignments - Enhance or explicitly identify relevance of
schoolwork to future goals (see six year plan for
St. Paul Public schools ninth graders at
http//studentresources.spps.org.) - Focus on necessary steps to reach/pursue personal
goals and career aspirations
29Cognitive Engagement Universal
- Set learning/mastery goals over performance goals
ensure mastery goals permeate the philosophy of
the classroom/school culture - Provide students with challenging and motivating
assignments that relate to life outside of school - Model learning strategies when teaching specific
concepts - Provide feedback that emphasizes self control and
the link between effort/practice and improvement
30Cognitive Engagement Universal
- Provide professional development training to
teachers (e.g., goal setting and self-regulation
combined with informed feedback that focuses on
improvement and enhancing intrinsic motivation) - Encourage students who are on the cusp to put
forth effort to earn credits by calculating a
graduation achievement rate (e.g., number of
credits earned divided by number of credits
possible, compared with needed to graduate)
(Hansen et al., 2006) - Encourage parents to deliver messages related to
motivational support for learning (high
expectations, talk to students about school and
schoolwork)
31Cognitive Engagement Individualized
- Enhance students personal belief in self through
repeated contacts, goal setting, problem solving
and relationship (e.g., Check Connect) - Implement self monitoring interventions (e.g.,
graph progress toward goals) - Explicitly teach cognitive and metacognitive
strategies (e.g., mnemonic strategies) and teach
effective note-taking and study skills - Discuss the link between students effort and the
outcome/behavior/success achieved to increase the
students perceived self control, self-efficacy,
and self-determination - Design tasks that have the characteristics of
open tasks (e.g., student interests, autonomy,
collaboration with peers) (Turner, 1995).
32Affective Engagement Universal
- Systematically build relationships/connections
for all students - Educators identify students
who may not have a connection with a staff member
(i.e., list all students names at grade levels
and determine who knows the student) and match
staff members and alienated students for future
regular mentor like contact - Address size through implementation of smaller
learning communities - Enhance peer connections through peer assisted
learning strategies - Implement a mentoring program (use of college age
students)
33Affective Engagement Universal
- Increase participation in extracurricular
activities - Combine social support for students (from
teachers, peers, parents, and community) with
high levels of academic press (i.e., teacher
belief that they are challenging students and
student perception that they are being challenged
(Lee Smith, 1999). - Create a caring and supportive environment
(ethos) (Baker, 2001)
34Affective Engagement Universal
- Intervene early, persistently, and across the
contexts of school peers, school adults, and the
home and community to change student
developmental trajectories. - When evaluating results, be sure to check for
delayed outcomes associated with early
interventions
35Affective Engagement Individualized
- Build personal relationship with marginalized
students enhance relationship with one caring
adult - Personalize education (e.g., alter assignments to
match personal interests and goals) - Assist students with personal problems
- Provide extra support for students in a timely
fashion - To improve generalizabilty, intervene across
peer, family, and community contexts when possible
36Intensive Intervention ExampleCheck Connect
- A model designed to promote student engagement at
school and with learning - Approach is based on enhancing strengths and
connections between home, school, and community
through relationship building, problem solving,
and persistence - Drawn from the literature on resiliency,
cognitive-behavioral interventions, systems
theory to address complex social problem,
person-environment fit, motivation
37The Why of Check Connect
- Drawn from the literature on resiliency,
cognitive-behavioral interventions, systems
theory to address complex social problem,
person-environment fit, motivation - Dropout literature
- Status vs. alterable variables
- Early signs of withdrawal engagement
38- A model designed to promote student engagement at
school and with learning - Approach is based on enhancing strengths and
connections between home, school, and community
through relationship building, problem solving,
and persistence
39Check Connect Components
- Check.continuous assessment of student levels of
engagement - Monitored on a daily-to-weekly basis
- Alterable risk factors Attendance, Behavior,
Academics - Connect.basic and intensive levels
- Basic feedback, discussion, problem solving
- Intensive problem solving, academic support,
community service/recreation
40Role of the Mentor/Monitor
- Person responsible for helping a student stay
connected to school. - Described as a mentor, case manager, advocate
- Relationship is built over time, based on trust
and familiarity - ongoing efforts (e.g., checking grades and
attendance) - informal connections (e.g., checking in with the
student) - Social Capital
41- Develop individualized intervention strategies.
- Promote access to services for students/families.
- Assist students and families in navigating
secondary school system.
42Monitoring is essential for students at-risk of
dropping out for two reasons . . .
-
- Provides a systematic and efficient way to
connect students with immediate interventions - Provides an essential link to students
educational performance
43Check.. Student Levels of Engagement
- Risk factors monitored regularly
- Increased risk leads to interventions to
reconnect.
44Connect Basic and Intensive Interventions
- General information about monitoring system.
- Monthly problem solving around different topics
related to the importance of staying in school
(e.g., economics of staying in school, how to ask
for help). - Regular feedback.
- Problem solving around risk factors.
45We have hypothesized that
- The unique feature of the Check Connect
procedure is not the specific interventions per
se, but the fact that interventions are
facilitated by a person, the mentor, who is
trusted and known by the student and who has
demonstrated his or her concern for the school
performance of the youth persistently and
consistently over time.
46Check Connect Secondary Level
- Pilot Study Quasi-experimental design, students
with Emotional or Behavior Disorders. - CC students were significantly more likely to..
- be currently enrolled in school
- Never have dropped out
- Be on track to graduate
- Sinclair, Christenson, Evelo, Hurley, 1998
- Quasi-experimental study High school students
with EBD were significantly - less likely to dropout,
- more likely to persist in school,
- and more likely to access educational services
(alternative programs, transition planning). - They were more likely to be on track to complete
school in four years and more likely to have
completed school at the end of five years. - Sinclair et al., 2005
47- Chronically truant students in grades 6-12 with
and without disabilities in suburban schools on
the School Success truancy prevention initiative
(N363) have shown improvement in attendance,
skipped classes, out-of-school suspensions, and
academic performance. - About 65 of Check Connect students (N91) are
successfully engaged (equivalent of 0-1 day
absent per month), with no incidences of class
failures. - More effective if students are referred before
absences exceed 25 of the school year.
48Check Connect Elementary Level
- Pre-post intervention results for elementary
students with and without disabilities (N 147
with 2 years of intervention) in suburban
settings reveals that tardies to and absences
from school have declined, and overall attendance
has improved. - 86 of students who received intervention for at
least two years (N 147) showed increased levels
of student engagement as evidenced by significant
increases in the percentage of students who were
absent or tardy less than 5 of the time, an
improvement of 104 over baseline behavior. - Also, over 90 of the school staff (N 123)
perceived students were showing improvement in
homework completion, attendance, and interest in
school. - 87 of school staff reported parents were more
supportive of their childs education - (Lehr, Sinclair, Christenson, 2002).
49Other Applications
- Early Risers I Implemented with students in Kdg
and 1st grade who were highly aggressive.
Students in CC displayed significantly fewer
problem behaviors during the 2-years of
intervention - Early Risers II 1st and 2nd graders who were
highly aggressive and poor readers living in
poverty - Combined with Reading Interventions. Significant
differences in phonological awareness no
differences in ratings of aggressive behavior
50- Project ELSE (Early-Literacy School Engagement
Project) 2000-2004 - Implemented Check Connect with Kindergarteners
at-risk for learning to read. 6 Schools randomly
assigned to treatment and control - Statistically significant differences in early
literacy skills and engagement (attendance and
tardies) for students in CC with EL as compared
to control - Positive changes in teachers perceptions of
childrens behavior and academic competence - OShaughnessy, Draper, Christenson, Militch,
Waldbart, Gabriel (2004)
51- www.ici.umn.edu/checkandconnect/
- whatworks.ed.gov/PDF/Intervention/techappendix06_3
12.html
52- STUDENT ENGAGEMENT INSTRUMENT (SEI)
53Instrument Blueprint
54Urban Midwest Instrument Validation Study
- 8th graders (Think Aloud)
- 2,577 of 3,104 diverse, urban 9th graders
- 1,931 (75) in analyses
- 51 female, 40 Afr Amer, 35 White, 11 Asian,
10 Hispanic, 4 Amer Ind - 61 FRL 8 Sped Services
55Conclusions
- Based on actual student responses, the six survey
Themes and the overall instrument were valid and
reliable. - When checked against students academic and
behavioral records, the SEI themes aligned as
expected.
56Replication Studies
- Urban Midwest, Rural South Carolina, and Rural
Midwest studies - Instrument measurement characteristics were
supported - Construct (Theme) validity evidence is strong
57- GCPS Data and Reports
- (For Advisors and Schools)
58Advisor ReportSide 1
Student Names
Theme Key
Subscale (Theme) Averages
Class Averages
59Advisor Report SampleSide 2
Interpretive Guide Reminders about how to read
and use the report
SEI Themes and Item Text
60Dynamic Data Views Who
61Dynamic Data Views What, When, Where
62References Resources
- Anderson, A. R., Christenson, S. L., Lehr, C.
A. (2004). School completion and student
engagement Information and strategies for
educators. In A. S. Canter, L. Z. Paige, M. D.
Roth, I. Romero, S. A. Carroll (Eds.), Helping
children at home and at school II Handouts for
families and educators (pp. S2-65S2-68).
Bethesda, MD National Association of School
Psychologists. Retrieved October 25, 2006 from
http//www.naspcenter.org/principals/nasp_compledu
cators.pdf - Appleton, J., Christenson, S.L., Kim, D.,
Reschly, A. (2006). Measuring cognitive and
psychological engagement Validation of the
Student Engagement Instrument. Journal of School
Psychology, 44, 427-445. - Christenson, S.L., Anderson, A. R. (2002).
Commentary The centrality of the learning
context for students academic enabler skills.
School Psychology Review,31(3), 378-393 - Christenson Thurlow (2004). School dropouts
Prevention, considerations, interventions, and
challenges. Current Directions in Psychological
Science, 13(1), 36-39. - Christenson, S.L., Reschly, A.L., Appleton, J.J.,
Berman, S., Spanjers, D., Varro, P. (2008).
Best practices in fostering student engagement.
In A. Thomas J. Grimes (Eds). Best Practices in
School Psychology (5th Ed). National Association
of School Psychologists.
63References Resources
- Finn, J.D. (1989). Withdrawing from school.
Review of Educational Research, 59, 117-142. - Fredericks, J.A., Blumenfeld, P.C., Paris, A.H.
(2004). School engagement Potential of the
concept, state of the evidence. Review of
Educational Research, 74, 59-109. - Lehr, Sinclair, Christenson (2004). Addressing
student engagement and truancy prevention during
the elementary school years A replication study
of the Check Connect model. Journal of
Education for Students Placed at Risk,
9(3),279-301. - National Research Council and the Institute of
Medicine (2004). Engaging schools Fostering high
school students motivation to learn. Washington,
DC The National Academies Press - Reschly, A. Christenson, S.L. (2007). Reading
and School Completion Critical Linkages Among
Reading Performance, Grade Retention, Special
Education Placements and High School Dropout.
Manuscript under review. - Sinclair, Christenson, Evelo, Hurley. (1998).
Dropout prevention for high risk youth with
disabilities Efficacy of a sustained school
engagement procedure. Exceptional Children,
65(1), 7-21. - Sinclair, Christenson, Thurlow (2005).
Promoting School completion of urban secondary
youth with emotional or behavioral disabilities.
Exceptional Children, 71, 465-482.
64Contact Information
- James Appleton, PhD
- Department of Research Evaluation
- Gwinnett County Public Schools
- 437 Old Peachtree Road NW
- Suite 2.240
- Suwanee, GA 30024
- 678.301.7090
- Jim.Appleton_at_gwinnett.k12.ga.us
-
- Amy L. Reschly, PhD
- Department of Educational Psychology
Instructional Technology - 325N Aderhold Hall
- University of Georgia
- Athens, GA 30602
- 706.583.5503
- reschly_at_uga.edu