Reflective practice is an important discipline- Dr. Korach dedicated one of our whole classes towards this discipline. I remember Dr. Sergiovanni stressing this in our graduate work- we even had assignments to journal through our practicums in undergraduate courses.
So why is it important? What does it take to make time for reflection in our schools? Is it valuable to have students participate in this practice?
In my dissertation we will explore this. Covey, Senge, and Baldrige are all impacting education today and they stress Personal Mastery. Do these systems increase a student's level of Personal Mastery?
Covey developed a Franklin Planner, Baldrige uses data folders, and people like Stiggins and Marzano believe in student-involved recording of formative assessment.
Many great leaders in history write about the power of our thoughts:
"I think therefore, I am."
"As a 'man' thinks in his heart so is he."
What tools are we using in schools to provide opportunity for such thinking to develop? Is there room in the age of accountability for reflection?
LATEST THOUGHTS ON POTENTIAL METHODOLOGY
I could create a student survey that measures Personal Mastery and Covey's Private Victory.
This survey could then be sent to Baldrige, Leader-in-Me, and Traditional Classrooms. I could analyze the results to see if Personal Mastery levels are higher in classrooms where systems are in place that pay attention to Personal Mastery.
After the analysis I could develop interview questions based on the themes that emerged from the survey. I could then identify the sites with the highest levels of Personal Mastery and interview school leaders and teachers there... compile themes and maybe a grounded theory.
I will share this with my advisor then see what happens next...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment