Sunday, September 16, 2012

Draft of Action Research Summary

I am in EDLD 5397 Internship for Supervision and working on a draft of my Action Research Summary.


How does Middle School Math Success (MS)2 Camp affect student achievement and attitudes towards math in the year following math camp?
The math camp invites only economically disadvantaged students. This goes along with Leander district’s performance goal to, “Reduce the performance gap between economically disadvantaged and non-economically disadvantaged students in Math and Science across all grade levels while continuing to increase the performance of all students as measured by district assessments.” (http://www.leanderisd.org/users/0001/docs/AEIS/1112/DIP1112.pdf)

In the summer of 2011, we started with the original test group of students that attended the first camp for economically disadvantaged students. We gave each of our seven middle schools a list of economically disadvantaged students and asked the teachers to pick students whom they believed would benefit from having a camp in the summer for math. Each campus got to choose the number of students that correlated to the percentage of economically disadvantaged at their campus. During the 2011-2012 school year, I studied the students’ of those that attended the camp by looking at their district assessment scores and comparing the scores to the previous years to see if attending the camp had any impact on their success in math. I looked at the data to see if I could find a correlation. Besides myself, my co-worker, April Chauvette, helped me to gather data and report the findings to the Secondary Math Coordinator, the Director of Curriculum and Instruction and the Executive Director of K-12 Programs to help insure funding for the continuation of the math camp for the summer of 2012.
The information that we had found on attending math camps versus not attending were: Math camp helps to build student’s self esteem towards math and gives them positive experience. Math camp provides opportunity for some one-on-one learning and problem solving in group settings. Math camp also focuses on skills to help students be successful the following year and solidifies the skills taught the previous year. I also saw findings that any kind of academic camp during the summer was better than not attending at all.
After I pulled data for my action research plan, I met with my site supervisor to discuss what the data showed. I was a little disappointed that the data did not show what I thought it would. He said that ‘data is data, it is what it is’. He encouraged me to pull the camp attendees grades from last year and the current school year to see if there was any impact. We also discussed that teachers made the recommendations for the camp for a reason, so the camp attendees might have been low to begin with. Luckily for this past summer, we were able to secure funding, since it was for the best for students and not that the data showed any great improvement from the camp.
I will continue to monitor the new group of camp attendees and their data on district assessments. I will present the data to the Secondary Math Coordinator, the Director of Curriculum and Instruction and the Executive Director of K-12 Programs to try and secure funding for the 2013 summer camp. I do know with the current economic difficulties that the funding might not be there, and since the original data did not show a big difference the camp might be put on the chopping block.