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Classroom ResearchWorkshop at Darunsikkhalai, 2 November 2012

Richard Watson ToddKing Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonburi

http://arts.kmutt.ac.th/crs/workshop.htm

A quick survey

Have you conducted any research within the last year?

Have you changed your teaching because of research within the last year?

What is research?

“Research is an attempt to understand something better through the systematic and formal collection and analysis of empirical data” (Shanahan, 2002: 10)

– research is not ‘proving’ something– research is not necessarily changing something

– research is UNDERSTANDING

Why do research? “Research is valuable because it offers mor

e than results. It provides grounds for thinking more deeply about what is being studied” (Shanahan, 2002: 15)

Uses of research– To identify or understand problems– To increase our understanding of how things w

ork– To lead to reflection

Benefits of research

Conducting research helps teachers to– Become more professional– Think more deeply about their work– Become more innovative

Conducting research helps an institution to– Become more professional– Become more respected

Classroom research and formal research Classroom research

– exploratory

– context-specific

– emphasis on insightfulness

– focused on addressing immediate concerns

Formal research– predetermined expectat

ions

– generalisable

– emphasis on validity and reliability

– focused on contributing knowledge

Goals of classroom research

Deeper understanding of a specific context Greater awareness by teacher-researcher

NOT– Testing solutions– Objective findings– Widely applicable theory

Stages in classroom research Deciding on the focus - an area you want to unders

tand more deeply (not necessarily a problem) Deciding on the type of data that sheds light on the

focus Organising collection of the data Analysing the data Reflecting on the findings for personal developme

nt Disseminating your findings

Deciding on the focus

What are you curious about? What would you like to know reasons for? What gaps are there between your current

performance and your ideal performance? Why do your students behave the way they

do? Why do your students believe as they do?

Typical areas of classroom research

Teacher talk Interaction between teacher and students Student talk Student behaviour on tasks Student attitudes and beliefs

Refining your focus

Simple focus– How much L1 do I use?

Broad focus– How can I get students to

speak more? Focus without reasons

– Do my students score better if I …?

Judgmental focus– What activities work well?

Complex focus– What purposes do I use L1 for?

Specific focus– What sorts of questions lead to

extended responses? Focus with reasons

– What do my students do if I …?

Insightful focus– How do I rate activities, and

are there any differences with how my students rate the activities?

Deciding on the type of data Quantitative

– Number of open and closed teacher questions– Average length of student response

Qualitative– Examination of student talk during a

groupwork task to identify how they work together to complete the task

Deciding on the type of data Quantitative to qualitative

– Numbers of teacher questions and student responses

– Interesting examples examined in depth Qualitative to quantitative

– Detailed examination of teacher instructions to identify components

– Frequency of different components

Typical instruments used in classroom research Observing

– Video recording (description and transcription)– Audio recording (transcription)– Observation sheet

Student work (essays, tests etc.) Asking

– Diaries, interviews, questionnaires

Analysing data Quantitative

– Frequency, percentage, means, SDs Qualitative

– Identifying key features– Thematic categorisation– Narrative

Goal of analysis: To provide as much insight as possible

Disseminating research

Internal sharing workshops Presenting at conferences

– Submit abstract, prepare presentation, write article?

Publishing articles– Identifying journal, finding model article,

finding references, writing, submitting, dealing with reviewers’ feedback

Finding references

Useful search resources– Google Scholar (http://scholar.google.com)– BALD (http://arts.kmutt.ac.th/books/main.asp)

Finding texts– Full text available on the web (30% of

references in Google Scholar)– Main library website– KMUTT Resource Centre (5th floor, SoLA)

Some examples What REALLY happens when designing a

course?– Course design literature presents an

unrealistically neat picture– Keep an extensive diary while designing a

course– Analyse qualitatively as a narrative– Compare against neat picture from literature– Paper published in ThaiTESOL Bulletin

Some examples

How do teachers use their power in the classroom?– Observe lessons, record and transcribe– Qualitatively identify features that show power

(e.g. modals – “you must” “you might like to”)– Count frequencies– Show varieties of manifestations of power and

relationship to contexts– Paper presented at international conference

Some examples Can students induce grammatical rules by

themselves?– For an error they made, students collect

examples of use from the Internet– Students analyse examples for patterns– Students use patterns to correct errors– From student work, count numbers of suitable

examples of use, correctly induced patterns, corrected errors

– Paper published in System

Some examples

How do students react to different formats of feedback on journals?– In a course with 3 teachers, students submitted

journals and teachers gave feedback in different formats

– Students interviewed about reactions to feedback

– Paper published in ELT Journal

Some examples Do bulletin boards or discussion lists

provide a better outside-class support system?– For outside-class sharing, bulletin boards and

discussion lists each used for half a semester– Student contributions analysed for length,

complexity, quantity of ideas, patterns of interaction

– Paper presented at an international conference

Task

What about you? Make a plan for conducting classroom research– Identify an area of interest– Think about what information you need– How will you collect the information?– What data will you get?– How will you analyse the data?– How will the research help you develop?– How might you disseminate the research?

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