Circumnavigating education to re-envision learning and re-think teaching at a small secondary school : a case study

This case study explores the potential for change within a small rural secondary school facing declining enrolment. Through participatory action research, a teacher-researcher examines the implementation of a school-wide pedagogical approach emphasizing project-based inquiry. Combining multi-age coh...

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Main Author: Marshall-Peer, Desiree Thelma
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/56493
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-564932018-01-05T17:28:45Z Circumnavigating education to re-envision learning and re-think teaching at a small secondary school : a case study Marshall-Peer, Desiree Thelma This case study explores the potential for change within a small rural secondary school facing declining enrolment. Through participatory action research, a teacher-researcher examines the implementation of a school-wide pedagogical approach emphasizing project-based inquiry. Combining multi-age cohorts of students using competency-based assessment and inquiry-based teaching and learning across a multidisciplinary curriculum, students and educators found greater flexibility and choice. Data sources drew on quantitative and qualitative mixed methods and included surveys, journals, interviews, artefacts of learning, and the documentation of teacher and student experiences. Quantitative data analysis entailed using Likert questions in student surveys, followed by graphical analysis using Excel. Qualitative data analysis entailed key word coding to determine emergent themes. Positive, negative and neutral attributes were subsequently tied to observations, interviews and journaling of teachers. Dominant themes across all data sources reflected positive effects on teaching practices, teacher autonomy, and student agency for learning. Specifically, findings indicated teachers and students found the learning environment cultivated through project-based inquiry to be favourable when compared to traditional classrooms, while supporting the needs and abilities of students at all stages of mastery. Students reported being more empowered within their own learning, while teachers described how curricular enactment re-engaged their own learning and passion for teaching. Critical and creative student thinking manifested over time and enabled teachers and the greater community to feel confident that students were gaining the needed skills and capacities for their futures, given a changing knowledge economy. The teacher-researcher observed how the changes to the school and classroom structure focusing on competencies rather than prescriptive content, productively affected the personal learning journeys of all individuals. School attendance was greatly enhanced and students, teachers, and the community relayed belongingness to the school that holds potential for sustained school growth. Education, Faculty of (Okanagan) Graduate 2016-01-14T15:28:34Z 2016-01-15T02:04:01 2015 2016-02 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/56493 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/ University of British Columbia
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language English
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description This case study explores the potential for change within a small rural secondary school facing declining enrolment. Through participatory action research, a teacher-researcher examines the implementation of a school-wide pedagogical approach emphasizing project-based inquiry. Combining multi-age cohorts of students using competency-based assessment and inquiry-based teaching and learning across a multidisciplinary curriculum, students and educators found greater flexibility and choice. Data sources drew on quantitative and qualitative mixed methods and included surveys, journals, interviews, artefacts of learning, and the documentation of teacher and student experiences. Quantitative data analysis entailed using Likert questions in student surveys, followed by graphical analysis using Excel. Qualitative data analysis entailed key word coding to determine emergent themes. Positive, negative and neutral attributes were subsequently tied to observations, interviews and journaling of teachers. Dominant themes across all data sources reflected positive effects on teaching practices, teacher autonomy, and student agency for learning. Specifically, findings indicated teachers and students found the learning environment cultivated through project-based inquiry to be favourable when compared to traditional classrooms, while supporting the needs and abilities of students at all stages of mastery. Students reported being more empowered within their own learning, while teachers described how curricular enactment re-engaged their own learning and passion for teaching. Critical and creative student thinking manifested over time and enabled teachers and the greater community to feel confident that students were gaining the needed skills and capacities for their futures, given a changing knowledge economy. The teacher-researcher observed how the changes to the school and classroom structure focusing on competencies rather than prescriptive content, productively affected the personal learning journeys of all individuals. School attendance was greatly enhanced and students, teachers, and the community relayed belongingness to the school that holds potential for sustained school growth. === Education, Faculty of (Okanagan) === Graduate
author Marshall-Peer, Desiree Thelma
spellingShingle Marshall-Peer, Desiree Thelma
Circumnavigating education to re-envision learning and re-think teaching at a small secondary school : a case study
author_facet Marshall-Peer, Desiree Thelma
author_sort Marshall-Peer, Desiree Thelma
title Circumnavigating education to re-envision learning and re-think teaching at a small secondary school : a case study
title_short Circumnavigating education to re-envision learning and re-think teaching at a small secondary school : a case study
title_full Circumnavigating education to re-envision learning and re-think teaching at a small secondary school : a case study
title_fullStr Circumnavigating education to re-envision learning and re-think teaching at a small secondary school : a case study
title_full_unstemmed Circumnavigating education to re-envision learning and re-think teaching at a small secondary school : a case study
title_sort circumnavigating education to re-envision learning and re-think teaching at a small secondary school : a case study
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/56493
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