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Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

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Session 4: Plan-your- research workshop SUE SENTANCE
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Page 1: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Session 4: Plan-your-research workshopSUE SENTANCE

Page 2: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Aims of this session …(or what do we hope you will get out of this session)

Perhaps … one of these?

Help you to focus your plans for a research project/ small classroom investigation

Help you to find somebody to help you with your research plans

Give you the opportunity to share your own research plans

Find out about what other people are doing …

Page 3: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Aims of this session …(or what do we hope you will get out of this session)

Perhaps … one of these? As a result – in yellow

Help you to focus your plans for a research project/ small classroom investigation – plan the next step

Help you to find somebody to help you with your research plans – make an arrangement to work together

Give you the opportunity to share your own research plans – refine your research plans

Find out about what other people are doing … formulate your own research idea

Page 4: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

There are so many research questions …

How can students progress from learning visual programming to textual programming?

Do unplugged approaches for teaching X help to secure understanding?

Does pair programming help students to get better at debugging their programs?

Does programming with devices (eg Raspberry Pi, Arduino, Gadgeteer) increase motivation to learn?

What strategies for teaching Scratch work best to develop understanding of selection/variables/loops etc?

What strategies for teaching Scratch work best with a wide range of abilities?

Do activities involving tracing and labelling code enhance debugging skills for some of my students?

What benefits are there to copying code and getting it to work in terms of learning to program?

How do different questioning techniques enrich understanding of X?

Is X a good way of assessing programming skills?

What are the main misconceptions that students have when struggling to understand binary numbers (or X)?

Does flowcharting help with algorithmic thinking?

How does activity X support problem-solving skills?

·How can Computer Science concepts be delivered across the curriculum/in History/Geography/Science etc.?

·How can I support literacy development in Computing lessons?

·How can I support numeracy development in Computing lessons?

·How did my SOW on the history of computers engage and motivate students?

·How can I support the development of social/cultural and ethical awareness in Computing lessons?

 

Page 5: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Task: write down your research interest

Take a (or more) post-it and write on it what you are interested in in the very wide realm of research

Pink post-its – just an idea

Yellow post its – getting beyond an idea

Green post its – I’m a researcher working on this

Blue post-its – doesn’t fit into this category

Use one post-it (appropriately coloured) for each research interest/idea

Try to be specific (eg not just “learning programming”)

Page 6: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Task 2: Share

In a group of 3 (or table group) share your research interest

Suggest ways in which the people in your group could make progress to the next stage

Categorise the sort of topics that the people in your group are interested in

Page 7: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Task 3: Match-making

Put your post-its on the wall in topic areas

See if you can identify somebody who is interested in the same area as you

Discuss with them how you could work together

This is a basic form of speed dating!

Page 8: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Task 4: Identify ways forward

On a new post-it (any colour) identify your next step. Write down what it is

Write down the support that you need to move forward

Share with group

Page 9: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Framing your research question

Research questions should be specific and it should be possible for you to design a study that would answer it

For example, “how do students learn programming” is too vague but “Does code scaffolding improve CA outcomes for GCSE CS students learning programming?” may be much better.

Page 10: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Learning research skills

Universities run Research Methods courses for teachers enrolled on MA Education programmes.

Buddying up with somebody in the local university to support you with accessing literature can be useful

Skills which are helpful include: How to read critically

How to create effective data collection instruments eg questionnaires

How to analyse your data

Question: What can CAS do to support teachers who want to engage with research?

Page 11: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Having an output in mind

Write up your project/inquiry for publication in Switched On

Send to Sue for inclusion in the CAS-Research section of the website (in development) as a case study

Write up for your school newsletter/magazine

Add as a resource on the Community website

Use as Part 3 towards the BCS Certificate

Page 12: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Benefits for teachers of engaging with research Helps you to reflect deeply on your practice and how it affects learning.

Practitioner research can improve students’ outcomes

Gives you an opportunity to gather evidence for what you have a gut feeling about

Teaches you new skills that have other applicability in evaluating school initiatives etc.

Even being aware of research gives benefits: “Overall, engaging in research evidence was perceived to encourage practitioner reflection and open-mindedness” (NFER, July 2014).

Page 13: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Some news

CAS now has a research group called CAS-Research which is a group of academics meeting together every 3 months to plan how to push the research agenda forward.

Contact Sue if you are interested in joining the mailing list

We have a small amount of funding to run 4 small research hubs in 2015-2016 to support teacher inquiry projects, which we hope will be successful enough to enable us to apply for more funding. More announcements to follow.

Page 14: Session 4: Plan-your-research workshop SUE SENTANCE.

Aims of this session …(or what do we hope you will get out of this session)

Perhaps … one of these? As a result – in yellow

Help you to focus your plans for a research project/ small classroom investigation – plan the next step

Help you to find somebody to help you with your research plans – make an arrangement to work together

Give you the opportunity to share your own research plans – refine your research plans

Find out about what other people are doing … formulate your own research idea


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