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Addressing Diversity in Rural Education

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Addressing Diversity in Rural Education Lynne Vernon-Feagans, UNC-CH Jill V. Hamm, UNC-CH Thomas W. Farmer, Penn State Univ. The Targeted Reading Intervention: How ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Addressing Diversity in Rural Education


1
Addressing Diversity in Rural Education
  • Lynne Vernon-Feagans, UNC-CH
  • Jill V. Hamm, UNC-CH
  • Thomas W. Farmer, Penn State Univ.

2
The Targeted Reading Intervention How Rural
Diversity makes a difference for implementation
Targeting instructional match in every
interaction
Lynne Vernon-Feagans Marnie Ginsberg Steve Amendum
3
NRCRES TRI staff
  • Lynne Vernon-Feagans, PI
  • Steve Amendum
  • Peg Burchinal
  • Kate Gallagher
  • Marnie Ginsberg
  • Kirsten Kainz
  • Steve Knotek
  • Nathan Vandergrift
  • Pam Winton
  • Pledger Fedora
  • Iris Padgett
  • Megan Livengood
  • Kelley Mayer
  • Jason Rose
  • Andrea Sauer
  • Heather Ward
  • Tim Wood

4
What is Rural
  • US Census Bureau Census Tracts
    http//www.census.gov/geo/www/ua/ua_2k.html
  • Population density
  • Population size
  • NCES Locale Codes
  • http//nces.ed.gov/surveys/RuralEd/definitions.asp
  • Population size
  • Distance to an urbanized area

5
What makes Rural different from urban?
  • Promotive Factors
  • More two parent families
  • Less population density
  • Much less violent crime
  • More homes owned by families
  • Proportionately more children
  • attending Head Start
  • Fewer behavior problems in school
  • Smaller schools
  • More experienced teachers

6
What makes Rural different from urban?
  • Risk Factors
  • Higher percentage of children living in poverty,
    especially minority children
  • Outmigration of talented young people because of
    job losses
  • Fewer college graduates
  • More maternal depression and prescription drug
    abuse
  • Lower child achievement levels
  • Less educated teachers with lower salaries
  • Longer bus rides to school

7
The consensus intangibles in rural education
  • In a place at a distance from large cities
  • Historical roots to agrarian culture
  • Access to fewer resources
  • Smaller communities and schools
  • Ready to meet community needs
  • Grounded in a sense of place and rooted in the
    lives of families

8
The TRI Study
  • Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial
  • to assess the effectiveness of the
  • TRI in Low Wealth Rural Schools.
  • Part of the National Research Center
  • on Rural Education Support
    www.nrcres.org/TRI.htm
  • www.nrcres.org/TRI.htm
  • Funded by the
  • Institute of Education Sciences (IES)

9
Purpose
  • The TRI is designed to improve the literacy
    teaching strategies of rural kindergarten and
    first grade teachers, using an individualized
    diagnostic teaching model, with a specific focus
    on strategies that are effective with struggling
    readers who do not make reading gains using
    traditional reading instruction.

10
Why focus on teacher training?
  • Research has shown that the first few years of
    school are critical for childrens later school
    success, especially in the area of reading
    (Alexander Entwisle, 1992 Juel, 1988).
  • Teachers in rural areas have more experience in
    teaching and knowledge about the background of
    their students but teachers have less access to
    professional development opportunities (GAO
    report, 2004 Lee Burkham, 2003)
  • Teachers and parents are more satisfied with
    their schools in rural areas but children come to
    school with less formal and high quality
    preschool experiences (Israel, 2004
    Vernon-Feagans et al., in press).

11
The TRI Strategies for Success
12
The TRI Model of Reading
13
Examples of TRI Strategies Teaching in
the context of the word and text from the
beginning
14
Word Work
15
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16
Guided Oral Reading
17
TRI Materials
TRI Reference Tool
TRI Picture Dictionary
TRI Professional Development Guide
  • Posters
  • Reading Model
  • Stages of Word Work

TRI diagnostic map
18
TRI Summary
  • Based on research based evidence
  • Based on research in special education that
    emphasizes individualized diagnostic teaching
  • Specifically geared to children considered
    struggling readers because they do not make
    progress with traditional reading approaches.
  • Can be used with any reading curriculum and
    Reading First
  • Teaching conducted by the classroom teacher in
    one on one teaching sessions between the teacher
    and child at least 4 times a week until the child
    makes rapid progress
  • Teaching literacy that is always geared to the
    context of the word and text.
  • Material developed to be extremely affordable by
    any school
  • Delivered through a Collaborative Consultation
    Model, specifically geared to the needs of rural
    teachers

19
Implementation Diversity Issues in Rural
Education
20
Examples of challenges
  • Teachers are often in classrooms with no aides
    and no special services
  • Teachers know the families of the children and
    have both positive and negative preconceptions
    about child learning
  • Teachers are often weary of new families who have
    moved to the area
  • Teachers have not been observed in their
    classrooms and may not be comfortable with in
    class consultation and the use of new reading
    strategies
  • Children come to school with particularly poor
    readiness skills with respect to learning
  • Children come to school with better behavior than
    urban children

21
Vernon-Feagans, Ginsberg Amendum, 2006
22
How to create a Community of Practice (Buysse
Wesley, in press)
  • Teacher responsibility and leadership
  • identify struggling learners
  • choose who to start working with
  • do not change their current curriculum
  • chart progress of students
  • Teacher collaboration (Lesson Study)
  • (Stigler Hiebert, 1999)
  • exchange ideas with others
  • understand the value of observation
  • suggest the ideas for monthly workshops

23
Collaborative Structure for Rural Teachers
  • 3 Day Summer Institute
  • Teachers identify 5 struggling readers
  • Biweekly classroom visits from TRI Consultant.
  • Grade level meetings to discuss strategies and
    problem solve.
  • Daily consultation from the on-site TRI
    consultant
  • Bimonthly workshops on topics teachers choose.

24
TRI Design
Year 1
Year 2
Kindergarten
1st Grade
Kindergarten
1st Grade
21 high risk (4 teachers) 20 high risk (4 teachers) 30 high risk (6 teachers) 30 high risk (6 teachers)
22 low risk 19 low risk 30 low risk 30 low risk
24 high risk (5 teachers) 25 high risk (6 teachers) 30 high risk (6 teachers) 30 high risk (6 teachers)
30 low risk 30 low risk 30 low risk 30 low risk
Experimental
Control
25
Child Characteristics
CON
EXP
Race Black White Other 61 32 7 33 37 31
Gender Male Female 73 27 63 37
Parents Married 46 54
Maternal Education M 11.8 yrs M 13.3 yrs
26
Teacher Characteristics
of years teaching M 18 yrs
Teacher Age M 43 yrs
Teacher Race White Black Other 65 30 5
National Board Certification 5
Certification type Temp Regular Specific grade certification Masters Degree 10 40 50 20
27
Gain Scores over 4 months
Outcome
F-Test
Group
LSMean
Phonological awareness (CTOPPS) F(1,69) 1.29 C E .52 1.67
Word Attack (Woodcock Johnson) F(1,151) 4.09 C E 27.15 35.86
Letter/Word Identification (Woodcock Johnson) F(1,152) 5.25 C E 34.12 42.22
Vocabulary (PPVT) F(1,120) 0.38 C E 1.20 2.32
28
Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement
29
Future Directions
  • Webcam technology
  • TRI consultation in remote rural classrooms in
    real time
  • TRI grade level meetings across sites through
    web cam technology
  • Problem solving across sites to create a
    community of practice

30
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31
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32
Summary
  • Rural Schools are different contexts for learning
  • Need sensitivity to rural structure and beliefs
    in schools
  • Need to break the barrier of access
  • Need to break the barrier of isolation
  • Individual consultation in real time using the
    TRI provides a major solution to these barriers
    while providing research based literacy
    strategies for struggling learners

33
  • Implementation and Evaluation of the Rural Early
    Adolescent Learning Project (REAL) Commonalities
    in Diverse Educational Settings
  • Jill V. Hamm, Dylan Robertson, Kimberly Dadisman,
    Matthew Irvin, Allen Murray, Jana Thompson, Kelli
    OBrien, Jenny Westrick
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

34
  • General Aims of Project REAL
  • Professional development for rural teachers who
    serve middle level youth (5th 6th grades)
  • Responsive to local resources, needs, and school
    configurations
  • Promote strategies that provide universal support
    for all students during early adolescence
  • Promote strategies that help teachers advance the
    learning of low-achieving students

35
Conceptual Framework for REAL
Supporting and Encouraging Effective Transitions



Behavioral Engagement
Academics

Social Relations
36
Support for Conceptual Framework in Rural Areas
  • Pilot Sites Research Participants
  • Recruited from all 5th grade classrooms of eight
    public elementary schools in two states of the
    rural Appalachia region
  • 61 agreed to participate
  • 315 participating students (170 girls and 145
    boys)
  • Over 95 White
  • Schools were eligible for U.S. Department of
    Educations Rural and Low-Income School Program
    (RLISP)
  • locale code 6, 7, or 8 and at least 20 of
    students are from families living below the
    federal poverty level

37
Support for Conceptual Framework in Rural Areas
  • Measures Adjustment in Multiple Domains
  • Teacher-ratings on 18-item questionnaire (ICS-T
    Cairns, Leung, Gest, Cairns, 1995)
  • Sub-scales/factors
  • Aggression (a .84), Popularity (a .83),
    Academic competence (a .80), Affiliative (a
    .74), Internalizing (a .52), Olympian (a .78)
  • Measures Achievement
  • End-of-Year Grade Average
  • School records data for end of 5th grade for
  • math, English/reading, social studies/history and
    science
  • Mean across four subjects (in the form of a
    percentage) was obtained and used in analyses
  • State-level Standardized Achievement Test Scores
  • School records data for end of 5th grade for
    similar subjects
  • math, science, social studies and English
  • Mean across these four subjects was obtained and
    used in analyses
  • scaled scores were on different metrics by state
    average standardized achievement score were
    standardized within state.

38
Support for Conceptual Framework in Rural Areas
  • Data Reduction Techniques
  • 4 unique patterns of variables emerged in girls
  • (i.e.,clusters, behavioral configurations)
  • Troubled above average aggression and
    internalizing below average academic competence,
    affiliative, popularity, and Olympian
  • Tough well above average aggression average
    popularity, academic competence, affiliative, and
    Olympian below average internalizing
  • Sensitive above average internalizing below
    average affiliative average aggression, academic
    competence, popularity, and Olympian
  • Model above average academic competence,
    affiliative, and popularity below average
    aggression and internalizing.

39
Support for Conceptual Framework in Rural Areas
  • Data Reduction Techniques
  • 5 unique patterns of variables emerged in boys
  • (i.e.,clusters, behavioral configurations)
  • Troubled above average aggression and
    internalizing below average academic competence,
    affiliative, popularity, and Olympian
  • Low academic below average academic competence
    and Olympian above average affiliative average
    aggression, popularity, and internalizing
  • Tough well above average aggression above
    average affiliative, popularity, and Olympian
    below average internalizing average academic
    competence
  • High academic above average academic competence
    below average aggression average affiliative,
    popularity, Olympian, and internalizing
  • Model above average academic competence,
    affiliative, popularity, and Olympian below
    average aggression and internalizing

40
Support for Conceptual Framework in Rural
AreasResults from Pilot Sites
41
Support for Conceptual Framework in Rural
AreasResults from Pilot Sites
42
  • Moving from Pilot Sites to Efficacy Sites
  • Research Design for Project REAL
  • 8 intervention and 8 control schools
  • 8 with middle school transition configuration
  • 8 alternative configuration (e.g., k-8, k-12)
  • Baseline data collected in spring of 5th grade
    Process/transition data collected in fall and
    spring of 6th grade
  • Outcome data on school adjustment and academic
    achievement collected in spring of 6th grade

43

44
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45
  • Implications of Rural Diversity
  • for Interventions
  • Special needs by region, locale
  • Challenges to delivery, implementation
  • Pinpointing transition

46



Positive Behavior Enhancement
Academic Engagement Enhancement

Social Dynamics Training
  • Positive Behavior Enhancement
  • Strategies to create structure and consistency
    across classes
  • Encouraging self-directed behavior
  • Proactive approaches to prevent behavioral
    difficulties

Academic Engagement Enhancement -General
strategies that promote an instructional context
that is responsive to the need of a broad and
diverse range of students
Social Dynamics Training - Promoting teachers
awareness of the impact of peers on motivation
achievement. - Recognizing peer groups and social
roles - Identifying youth with social
difficulties that interfere with their own or
others learning - Strategies to use peer group
dynamics to foster classroom engagement -
Strategies to help students with social
difficulties develop positive, supportive
relationships
47
  • REAL Intervention Universal Components
  • Summer Institute
  • 15 modules completed between fall and spring by
    teachers
  • On-line articles and activities
  • Topics include
  • Early adolescent development
  • Motivation and academic engagement
  • Instruction for low-achieving students
  • School and classroom social dynamics
  • Information processing
  • Literacy support   
  • REAL Intervention Targeted Components
  • Bimonthly videoconferences with Project REAL
    staff
  • Directed Consultation Model Focused on issues
    salient to the site, addressed through REAL
    intervention framework
  • Supporting struggling writers

48
Pilot Sites Findings of Intervention Effects
  • Participants included 448 students (239 girls)
    who transitioned from 5th to 6th grade
  • Transitioned from 11 public elementary schools
  • Transitioned into 4 6-8 middle schools (2
    intervention, 2 control)
  • Over 95 White
  • Schools were eligible for U.S. Department of
    Educations Rural and Low-Income School Program
    (RLISP)
  • locale code 6, 7, or 8 and at least 20 of
    students are from families living below the
    federal poverty level
  • Data collected 5th grade spring, 6th grade
    early fall, 6th grade late spring

49
Social Impact of Intervention ResultsPilot Sites
50
Social Impact of Intervention ResultsPilot Sites
51
Summary of Pilot Site Findings
  • In control classrooms, students perceptions of
    the classroom social context evidence a
    significant decline across the transition year.
  • In intervention classrooms, students perceptions
    of the classroom social context remain stable and
    positive across the transition year. 
  • If teachers use strategies to enhance social,
    behavioral, and academic adjustment, they can
    maintain a positive social context for learning.
  • Future analyses will examine the implications of
    these patterns forstudents' achievement in
    intervention versus control sites.
  • Future analyses will investigate these patterns
    across a larger and diverse sampling of sites,
    and in relation to differences in student risk
    pre-transition and school characteristics, and
    using HLM.

52
Implications for Analyses of Diverse Locales
  • Representing School Differences in Meaningful
    Ways
  • Configuration differences
  • Concentrations of students at-risk
  • Cross-state Comparisons
  • State differences in achievement tests

53
Conducting Educational Interventions in Diverse
Rural Contexts Issues, Challenges, and Lessons
Learned
  • Thomas W. Farmer
  • Pennsylvania State University

54
Common Issues In Diverse Rural Areas
  • Educational needs of at-risk youth
  • Issues of critical mass and geographical
    isolation
  • Limited resources and professional development
  • Commitment to local issues and concept of place

55
Diversity in Issues Faced by Rural Areas
  • Different types of at-risk youth
  • Different school structures and approaches for
    addressing isolation and issues of critical mass
  • Different levels and configurations of providing
    supports and professional development
  • Local values, expectations, and support for
    education differ from community to community

56
Challenges for Developing and Evaluating
Standardized Interventions
  • Must include universal and targeted interventions
    that can be adapted to both the general and
    unique populations of each district while
    maintaining standardization
  • Must accommodate different configurations of
    grouping students and supporting teachers while
    guarding against biases that may be introduced by
    these differences
  • Intervention must complement existing curricula
  • Must be responsive to the fact that each
    community views themselves as unique and not
    fitting a standard curriculum or model of support

57
Lessons Learned Rural Intervention Research
  • There is more than one rural
  • Intervention design must be responsive to
    different contexts
  • Research design can be challenging and
    identifying comparable sites for randomization is
    very difficult
  • Increased research costs
  • Variability in district and school
    configurations, critical mass
  • Isolation increases both staffing and travel
    costs
  • Place matters
  • Pride, loyalty, and identity linked to the land
    or the community
  • Expectation that curriculum and instruction is
    linked to place
  • School is viewed as a primary anchor of the
    community

58
General Lessons Learned Developing Interventions
that can be Scaled-Up
  • Anticipate highly varied contexts in the
    intervention development phase
  • Assess the degree to which the intervention is
    instruction dependent and context dependent
  • Instruction (e.g., reading, writing)
  • Context (e.g., social, behavioral)
  • Create a delivery format that promotes
    flexibility and local tailoring in preparing
    teachers for implementation
  • Directed consultation (standard content and aims)
  • Embedded in the local curricula and instructional
    philosophies
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