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The Collaboratory Symposium

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Richard E. Byrd Community Academy, Cabrini Green, Near North Chicago ... The principal at Byrd Academy welcomed the opportunity to build a partnership ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Collaboratory Symposium


1
Brian Schultz
  • The Collaboratory Symposium
  • April 30, 2004

2
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
Introduction
3
Linking Graduate and Elementary Students
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • A Practical Inquiry Curriculum Using Technology
  • A practical inquiry based project that joins
    graduate student mentors with a fifth grade
    classroom at Byrd Community Academy in Cabrini
    Green.
  • The focus of this practical project is teaching
    writing skills to the fifth graders by using the
    Collaboratory ePortfolio environment to create
    and post student work.
  • The adults monitor, mentor, and provide ongoing
    weekly feedback to their writing counterparts
    postings.
  • This student-specific feedback is based on the
    needs and interests of all students involved.

4
Methodology
Results Conclusions
Introduction
Literature Review
Literature Review
5
Literature Review
Methodology
Results Conclusions
Introduction
Literature Review
  • What was done?
  • Research and writing done on how to effectively
    provide feedback to students was examined.
  • Student-directed approaches to learning as well
    as practical inquiry and meeting situational
    needs of students were examined to seek out ways
    to better engage students in curriculum.

6
Literature Review
Methodology
Results Conclusions
Introduction
Literature Review
  • Why was it done? Why is this a problem?
  • Often times teachers, especially in elementary
    settings, are forced or expected to generalize
    curriculum to all their students.
  • When curriculum is generalized to the masses, the
    individual needs of each student are not
    optimized.
  • Teachers tend to focus on the needs of a class
    versus supporting and nurturing each student to
    their fullest potential.
  • Students tend to remove themselves from lessons
    due to ineffective, blanketed methods of
    instruction..
  • Graduate students curriculum focusing on
    secondary sources, rather then working directly
    with students and their work.

7
Literature Review
Methodology
Results Conclusions
Introduction
Literature Review
  • What needs to be done?
  • Teachers need to find ways to reach all students
    at differing skill levels, while maintaining
    interest and motivation amongst their students.
  • Students need to have individualized,
    student-specific feedback to help them meet their
    own needs.
  • Graduate students studying how students learn
    need to focus their efforts on real situations of
    learners rather then focusing on textbook and
    secondary illustrations.

8
Literature Review
Methodology
Results Conclusions
Introduction
Literature Review
  • What methodology was used in the past?
  • Previous methodologies that were used in the past
    included case studies on mentoring, feedback on
    writing and practical inquiry.
  • What conceptual framework was leveraged?
  • Joseph Schwabs practical inquiry served to
    establish the conceptual framework for meeting
    individual needs and adapting curriculum to the
    given situation.

9
Analysis
Methodology
The Facts
Recommendations
Introduction
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
Methodology
10
The Methodology
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • Elementary Setting and Students
  • Richard E. Byrd Community Academy,
  • Cabrini Green, Near North Chicago
  • 5th grade classroom-16 students
  • 100 African American
  • 100 eligible for free and reduced lunch
  • Graduate Setting and Students
  • Tennessee Tech University
  • Cookeville, Tennessee
  • Doctoral or masters students in Literacy and
    Language Curriculum program

11
The Methodology
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • The approach leveraged
  • Students in 5th grade classroom learned to
    keyboard
  • Students were exposed to different tools for
    writing including
  • The Writing Hand
  • Color and Feeling Generation
  • Time Order Words
  • The Narrative Writing House
  • The Expository and Persuasive Writing House

12
The Methodology
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • The approach leveraged (continued)
  • 3. 5th grade students write and post their
    writing to the ePortfolio
  • 4. Mentor/pen pals give comments to elementary
    posted work to help them further develop their
    text and media
  • 5.Students leverage feedback to create another
    iteration
  • 6. Students and mentors correspond and develop
    relationship through writing commentary and
    closed-system email

13
The Methodology
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • Why them? How gained access?
  • 5th grade students in Brian Schultz' class
  • Reading levels ranging from frustrated-first
    grade to sixth grade all in one classroom
  • Approached by Northwestern Collaboratory Project
    to leverage a partnership between graduate
    students and elementary students
  • The principal at Byrd Academy welcomed the
    opportunity to build a partnership with both
    Northwestern and Tennessee Tech University.
  • Literacy professor at Tennessee Tech invited
    graduate student to volunteer their time to
    mentor Byrd students by providing feedback to
    them through web-based ePortfolio.

14
The Methodology
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • Collaboratory www.collaboratory.nunet.net
  • The Collaboratory Project is a Northwestern
    University initiative that provides project
    consulting, training, technical advice, and
    Web-based resources and services to K-12 teachers
    and their students who are interested in using
    Internet technologies to advance education.
  • The Collaboratory is an easy-to-use, web-based
    collaborative environment that teachers use to
    develop project-based activities that are linked
    to Illinois Learning Standards.

15
The Methodology
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • Collaboratory www.collaboratory.nunet.net
  • ePortfolio
  • Students develop work within the Collaboratory
    ePortfolio.
  • Students publish writing to the ePortfolio.
  • Encourage document-centered collaboration and
    multiple iterations based on feedback.
  • Use of web-based document templates using
    ePortfolio communication tools.

16
The Methodology
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • ISBE and CPS Curriculum for 5th Grade Writing
  • Narrative, Expository, Persuasive writing
  • Tested in 5th grade on ISAT

17
The Collaboratory
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
18
The ePortfolio
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
19
ePortfolio Binders and Folders
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
20
ISAT Student-Friendly Rubric Expository Writing
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
21
The Methodology - Recommendations
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • Make sure you have committed graduate student
    mentors
  • Otherwise students left without feedback.
  • Elementary teachers must take up slack.
  • Students feel left out and disengaged.

22
The Methodology - Recommendations
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • When spending time in the Collaboratory
  • Make sure to outline expectations of students
  • Ensure that they have meaningful feedback to
    respond to
  • Expect that some students will not always be
    eager to receive and engage in dialogue with
    their mentors-have other things for them to do (
    survey, polls, hypermedia)

23
The Methodology - Recommendations
Methodology
Literature Review
Results Conclusions
Introduction
  • Clearly outline expectations and commitment from
    mentors
  • Leverage a contract
  • Share expectation of elementary students with
    graduate students

24
Methodology
Literature Review
Introduction
Results Conclusions
Results Conclusions
25
Results and Conclusions
Methodology
Literature Review
Introduction
Results Conclusions
  • Students were excited about the project.
  • Students take ownership and pride in their work.
  • Students are interested in improving their work
    based on the feedback they receive.
  • Students make corrections , additions and changes
    based on feedback.
  • Students that do not receive consistent feedback
    are disengaged and feel alone or left out.
  • Graduate students are able to work with a real
    students and experiment on giving different kinds
    of feedback and gauge results based on the
    students response and changes made.

26
Collaboratory Feedback Checklist
Methodology
Literature Review
Introduction
Results Conclusions
27
Collaboratory Quick Reference Guide
Methodology
Literature Review
Introduction
Results Conclusions
28
The Persuasive and Expository Writing House
Methodology
Literature Review
Introduction
Results Conclusions
29
Narrative Writing House
Methodology
Literature Review
Introduction
Results Conclusions
30
Comments and Feedback Examples
Methodology
Literature Review
Introduction
Results Conclusions
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