implementing advisory programs in the middle school

10
Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School Information in Favor of Advisor Programs Compiled by Middle Web and the National Middle School Association Claire Landreville

Upload: senwe

Post on 14-Jan-2016

24 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School. Information in Favor of Advisor Programs Compiled by Middle Web and the National Middle School Association Claire Landreville. Definition of Advisory Programs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle

School

Information in Favor of Advisor Programs Compiled by Middle Web and the National

Middle School Association

Claire Landreville

Page 2: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

Definition of Advisory Programs

• According to the researchers for the NMSA, a Middle School Advisory Program is defined by:

• An advisory program is an arrangement whereby one adult and a small group of students have an opportunity to interact on a scheduled basis in order to provide a caring environment for academic guidance and support, everyday administrative details, recognition, and activities to promote citizenship.

Page 3: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

Research Also Says: Author and researcher Stevenson says of the

programs: “ Stevenson (1992) stated that the

purposes of advisory are "to ensure that each student is known well at school by at least one adult who is that youngster's advocate (the advisor), to guarantee that every student belongs to a peer group, to help every student find ways to be successful, and to promote coordination between home and school" (p.293).

Page 4: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

Goals of Implementing the Program

The National Middle School Association has outlined five general goals which they feel a good advisor program can achieve. They are:

• Promote student-teacher relationships• Address general self-esteem and

competence beliefs • Provide social exchange and peer

recognition in a safe environment• Link parents and school• Mediate between academic and social

concerns

Page 5: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

Wigfield and Eccles

A study conducted by the aforementioned in 1994 on 1, 875 students concluded that the self-esteem of children who had just transitioned to middle school or junior high is significantly lowered. They believe the decrease in self-esteem is caused by the disruption of established social networks at a time when social activities is gaining importance.

Page 6: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

Advisory Programs and Self-Esteem

The study of Wigfield and Eccles also concluded that a properly and well implemented advisor program can increase the sense of self-esteem in middle school students. The time spend daily with an adult who knows them and cares about them and a familiar 5 to 7 students has been shown to be very beneficial.

Page 7: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

Advisory and Improved Academic Performance

Robert Felner, Joan Lipsitz, Anthony Jackson, Deborah Kasak, et al., Illinois (Carnegie) report that:

“Fully implemented" middle grades schools show gains in achievement standard scores of 23 points in math, reading, and language (with 25 points representing a half standard deviation) over "non-implemented" schools and schools that are initially implementing the recommendations of Turning Points (advisory programs)”.

Page 8: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

The Three Most Common Goals

The three most commonly sought after and achieved goals in relation to advisory programs are, according to Jim Burns of the NELMS journal:

• 1) supportive and caring relationships with adults• 2) a constructive group of friends • 3) relationships with the community through

service projects

Page 9: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

Conclusion

Thus, in light of the presented information and research, advisory programs are beneficial to students when implemented correctly and staffed with teachers who are willing to work towards the goals of middle schoolers. Such programs are need by students at this age who are in a difficult transition period. These 15 minutes a day will make the transition smoother, test scores and academic achievement higher and more significant, and truancy and low self-esteem decrease significantly.

Page 10: Implementing Advisory Programs in the Middle School

Works Cited

Information for this presentation on advisory programs was taken from:

Articles by Jim Burns published in the NELMS scholarly journal in 1996 and used by www.middleweb.org

Articles and research by Wigfield and Eccles and other members of the NMSA published to their website and in their publicaton, Turning Points 2000 which can be located at: www.nmsa.org