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Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

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Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab
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Page 1: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

Computer Technology Training (CTT)for Parents of On-Line Learners

Hesham Diab

Page 2: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

EDUCATIONAL VISION

“Docendo discimus” This Latin proverb coined by the ancient Roman philosopher Seneca almost two thousand years ago, literally translates to “by teaching we learn.”

CPSEL: 1,2,6

Page 3: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

Inaugural yearPrivate high school (Celerity Education Group)

Sixteen 9th graders. Online learning

CPSEL: 6

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zv8T3troUMI

Page 4: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

DEMOGRAPHICS

SEXFemale (11)Male (5)

RACEHispanic (14) African American (1) Asian (1)

CPSEL: 6

Race

HispanicAsianAfrican American

Sex

MALEFEMALE

Page 5: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

COMPELLING NEEDS

1. To maintain scholarship, minimum grade = B.2. Parents require technological “know-how.”3. Two different online portals.

CPSEL: 5

Page 6: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

INQUIRY QUESTION

How will the implementation of a computer and technology training program for parents impact student achievement?

CPSEL: 2

Page 7: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

PAR TEAM

Teachers:1. Mr. Diab—math & science2. Mr. Doute—humanities

Administration:3. Ms. Macias—principal4. Ms. Beck—director 5. Ms. Munoz—office manager

CPSEL: 6

Page 8: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

RESEARCHAUTHOR (year) 1

Involving parents improves student success

2Parent attitudes towards being “involved”

3Computer training improves parents’ capacity

4On-line learning vs traditional

Notes

Yip, M. (2003). X experiments on www

Reynolds, D., Treharne, D., and Tripp, H. (2003). X x X Reality vs

hopes

Underwood, J. and Szabo, A. (2003). x

Cheating, academic offenses

Conlon, T. and Simpson, M. (2003). X X X x

Comparative (www vs

traditional)

Terale, P. (2003). x x x x Implementation of ICT

Epstein, J. L. (1991). x xEffects on student

achievement

CPSEL: 5

Page 9: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

RESEARCHAUTHOR (year) 1

Involving parents improves student success

2Parent attitudes towards being “involved”

3Computer training improves parents’ capacity

4On-line learning vs traditional

Notes

Henderson, A. T. (1987). x x x evidence for

parent involvement

Epstein, J. L. (1984). x x School policy

& parent involvement

Lunenburg, F. C., & Irby, B. J. (2002). x x Parent

involvement

Dik, D. W. (1984). x x xEmpowering

parents through CTT

Hammonds, S. (2003). x x x x Impact of on-line learning

TOTAL 9 8 6 6

CPSEL: 5

Page 10: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

PROJECT MISSION

Increase students’ success in on-line courses by enabling parents, to monitor and support their

students outside the classroom.

CPSEL: 1,2

Page 11: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

PAR cycle 1

AGENDASubmitted 11/20Approved 11/26

CPSEL: 1,2

Page 12: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

PAR cycle 1

FLIERInitially there was

only one night scheduled.

CPSEL: 1,2

Page 13: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

PAR cycle 1

RSVPTwo separate sessions were

eventually scheduled.

CPSEL: 1,2

Page 14: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

PAR cycle 1• FOOD– Key component in creating a

comfortable atmosphere.– Food first!

• TRANSLATORS– Ms. Macias & Ms. Munoz– Time was not factored

• FLEXIBILITY– Both sessions combined into

one large group.• SUCCESS– Will be a permanent fixture in

Back-To-School night.

12/5 & 12/7

CPSEL: 1,2

Page 15: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

TIMELINE

• 2013: October (PAR project approved)• 2013: November (RSVP)• 2013: *December (two sessions)• 2014: *February 21st (Open House)

Note: indicates training.

CPSEL: 1,2,3,4,5

Page 16: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

PAR cycle 2• Computer Training

scheduled on 2/21/14 as part of Open House

• Agenda identical.• Data Collection– Questionnaire– Survey

STUDENTCENTERED• Students taught

parents during evening.

• How is this specifically impacting students.

CPSEL: 1,2

Page 17: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

Methodology (Mixed)

QUALITATIVE• Field Notes• Student Questionnaire

Note: indicates data collected after 2nd PAR Cycle.

QUANTITATIVE• Student Survey• Parent Survey• Grades

CPSEL: 2

Page 18: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

Field Notes (Qualitative)

CPSEL: 2,5

Page 19: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

STUDENT SURVEY

CPSEL: 1,2

Page 20: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

PARENT SURVEY

CPSEL: 2

Page 21: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

ANALYSIS: STUDENT QUESTIONNAIRE

• In the qualitative portion of the student survey, the students expressed their issues with taking their courses on-line.

• The main reasons the students experienced problems were due: to lack of accessibility to certain websites; the speed of the internet; and the teacher as well as the scheduling of tests and classes.

CPSEL: 1,2

Page 22: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

ANALYSIS: STUDENT QUESTIONNAIRE

• In the quantitative portion of the student survey, the data was analyzed with MS EXCEL.

CPSEL: 1,2

CPSEL: 2 AVERAGE

Page 23: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

ANALYSIS: PARENT SURVEY

CPSEL: 2

Page 24: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

ANALYSIS: PARENT SURVEYID # PRE (overall average) POST (overall average)

1P

1.40 3.20 +1.82P

4.00 4.00 03P

3.80 5.00 +1.24P

3.30 5.00 +1.75P

4.50 4.50 06P

4.20

* (missing data) * (missing data)

CPSEL: 2

Page 25: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

ANALYSIS: Parent Survey• Parents 1,3,4

INCREASED• Parents 2,5 NO

CHANGE• NO PARENTS

DECREASED

CPSEL: 1,2

AVERAGE: increase of 0.94 per parent.PERCENT: that is approximately 18.8 %.

Page 26: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

ANALYSIS: Grades

Fall 2013 Spring 2014

• Average Math Grade:– 66.26%

• Average Science Grade– 73.12%

• Average Math Grade:– 80.97% (+14.71%)

• Average Science Grade:– 81.95% (+8.83%)

CPSEL: 2

Page 27: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

ROADBLOCKS

• Politics & “red tape”• Being open to others’ suggestions• Empowering others • Patience. – “The Way Things Are” (Zander and Zander 2000)

CPSEL: 1,2,3,5

Page 28: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

KEY LEARNINGS• A mixed methodology yields the maximum

amount of data, which can then be utilized to improve student learning.

• Technology is constantly changing—evolving.• Communication: scheduling, issues, resources,

accessibility, efficiency.• Patience. “Seek first to understand, then to be understood.”

-Stephen R. CoveyCPSEL: 2,3,4

Page 29: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

NEXT STEPS

• Students must be in PAR team.• Then identify factors students consider as important.• Quantify and analyze these factors.

CPSEL: 2,3,4

Page 30: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

LEADERSHIP • Recruiting PAR team• Organizing food• Finding translators• Being “aware” and

“present” to modify and assess the success of the program.

MANAGEMENT• Documents• Ordering & Serving Pizza• Setting up room• Assigning tasks• Communication

Leadership vs. Management

CPSEL: 1,2,3,5

Page 31: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

PERSONAL TRANSFORMATION

• “Leaders are visionaries with a poorly developed sense of fear and no concept of the odds against them.”

-Robert JarvikCPSEL: 1,2,5,6

Page 32: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

REFERENCESHammonds, S. (2003). Impact of internet-based teaching on student learning. British Journal of Educational Technology, vol 34 no 1, pp. 95-98.

Yip, M. (2003). Doing experiments on the WWW? British Journal of Educational Technology, vol 34 no 1, pp. 99-101.

Conlon, T. and Simpson, M. (2003). Silicon Valley versus Silicon Glen: the impact of computers upon teaching and learning: a comparative study. British Journal of Educational Technology, vol 34 no 1, pp. 137-150

Reynolds, D., Treharne, D., and Tripp, H. (2003). ICT—the hopes and the reality. British Journal of Educational Technology, vol 34 no 1, pp. 151-167.

Underwood, J. and Szabo, A. (2003). Academic offences and e-learning: individual propensities in cheating. British Journal of Educational Technology, vol 34 no 4, pp. 467-477.

Terale, P. (2003). ICT implementation: what makes the difference? British Journal of Educational Technology, vol 34 no 5, pp. 567-483.

Page 33: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

REFERENCESHenderson, A. T. (1987). The Evidence Continues to Grow: Parent Involvement

Improves Student Achievement. An Annotated Bibliography. National Committee for Citizens in Education Special Report.

Epstein, J. L. (1984). School Policy and Parent Involvement: Research Results. Educational Horizons, 62(2), 70-72.

Epstein, J. L. (1986). Parents' reactions to teacher practices of parent involvement. The elementary school journal, 277-294.

Epstein, J. L. (1991). Effects on student achievement of teachers' practices of parent involvement. In Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association., 1984. Elsevier Science/JAI Press.

Page 34: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

REFERENCESEpstein, J. (1988). Parent involvement. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University

Center for Research on Elementary and Middle Schools.

Lunenburg, F. C., & Irby, B. J. (2002). Parent Involvement: A Key to Student Achievement.

Epstein, J. L. (1985). Home and school connections in schools of the future: Implications of research on parent involvement. Peabody Journal of Education, 62(2), 18-41.

Dik, D. W. (1984). Empowering Parents through Computer Literacy Training.

Page 35: Computer Technology Training (CTT) for Parents of On-Line Learners Hesham Diab.

“TO TEACH IS TO LEARN”


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