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Doing Things Differently: The Outcomes of Teachers Researching Their Own Practice in Teaching Writing

TLDR
The authors investigated whether teachers' pedagogical and content knowledge of writing would increase as an outcome of teachers taking a research lens to their practice to raise students' writing achievement using student achievement data as a baseline.
Abstract
In this study we investigated whether teachers’ pedagogical and content knowledge of writing would increase as an outcome of teachers taking a research lens to their practice to raise students’ writing achievement. Using student achievement data as a baseline, teachers examined and refined their practice using an inquiry process. The study took place over a two‐year period and involved over 20 teachers from six low socio‐economic urban primary schools in Auckland, New Zealand. Literacy leaders in the schools and four university researchers also took part in the inquiry project. Data collected from teachers’ records, researchers’ field notes, and transcripts from focus groups of teachers and literacy leaders indicated enhanced pedagogical and content knowledge of writing, as well as marked gains for students on a standardized test of writing. This study contributes to research demonstrating that, through researching their own practice and teaching targeted to students’ strengths and needs, achievement in writing can be raised.

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Journal ArticleDOI

From assessing to teaching writing: What teachers prioritize

TL;DR: The authors examined the instructional priorities that U.S. high school teachers set based on both their typical methods of writing assessment and a think-aloud protocol (TAP) assessment that they designed.
Book ChapterDOI

Being a Student of Teaching: Practitioner Research and Study Groups

TL;DR: Although Dewey specifically refers to learning to teach in his cautionary statement, the words remain true for practicing teachers, the focus of this chapter.

Theory to practice, practice to theory: Developing a critical and feminist pedagogy for an English as a second language academic writing classroom

TL;DR: It is suggested that critical and feminist theories can be enacted in everyday classrooms and can be helpful with regard to improving teachers’ and learners’ experiences of everyday ESL academic writing classrooms.
References
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CONOCIMIENTO Y ENSEÑANZA: FUNDAMENTOS DE LA NUEVA REFORMA 1 Knowledge and Teaching: Foundations of the New Reform

TL;DR: Lee S. Shulman as mentioned in this paper builds his foundation for teachi ng reform on an idea of teaching that emphasizes comprension and reasoning, transformation and reflection, and argues that this emphasis is justified by the resoluteness with which research and policy have so blatantly ignored those aspects of teaching in the past.
Journal ArticleDOI

Knowledge and Teaching: Foundations of the New Reform

TL;DR: Lee S. Shulman as mentioned in this paper builds his foundation for teaching reform on an idea of teaching that emphasizes comprehension and reasoning, transformation and reflection. "This emphasis is justified," he writes,...
Book

Visible Learning: A Synthesis of Over 800 Meta-Analyses Relating to Achievement

TL;DR: This meta-analyses presents a meta-analysis of the contributions from the home, the school, and the curricula to create a picture of visible teaching and visible learning in the post-modern world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Professional Development and Teacher Learning: Mapping the Terrain

TL;DR: Teacher professional development is essential to efforts to improve our schools and as discussed by the authors provides an overview of what we have learned as a field, about effective professional development programs and their impact on teacher learning and suggests some important directions and strategies for extending our knowledge into new territory of questions not yet explored.
Book

Inside/Outside: Teacher Research and Knowledge

TL;DR: Inside/Outside as discussed by the authors is a conceptual framework for reading and understanding teacher research, exploring its history, potential and relationship to university-based research, linking research with practice and inquiry with reform.
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