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70: Taking Charge with Teacher Action Research w/ Etta Kralovec image

70: Taking Charge with Teacher Action Research w/ Etta Kralovec

E70 · Human Restoration Project
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13 Plays5 years ago

Today I am joined by Dr. Etta Kralovec, a professor of education at The University of Arizona, who focuses on context, research gathering, and teacher preparation, specifically with a focus on US/Mexico border communities. Dr. Kralovec is a widely accomplished author and researcher, with works such as The End of Homework and Schools That Do Too Much, a Fulbright Scholar, school leader and founder, and international expert.

In this podcast, we talk about the practice of teacher action research, where educators perform qualitative studies of what they're doing - essentially to figure out if it works. As you'll soon hear, the power of teacher action research lies in the process of reflecting and analyzing the information. Further, teacher action research is the cornerstone of Human Restoration Project's upcoming microcredentialing program.

GUESTS

Dr. Etta Kralovec, professor of education at The University of Arizona, author, researcher, Fulbright Scholar, and expert on teacher action research with a specific focus on US/Mexico border communities.

RESOURCES

*Dr. Kralovec has graciously provided her author email, endhomework@gmail.com - to answer any questions about teacher action research and how it can work for you!

FURTHER LISTENING

Recommended
Transcript
00:00:03
Speaker
Hello!

Podcast Support and Introduction

00:00:04
Speaker
Before we get started, I wanted to let you know that this podcast is brought to you by Human Restoration Project's patrons.
00:00:09
Speaker
All of our work, which includes free resources, materials, and this podcast are available for free due to our Patreon supporters, three of whom are Bradley Hinson, Tracy Nicole Smith, and Emma.
00:00:19
Speaker
Thank you for your ongoing support, and you can learn more about the Human Restoration Project on our website, humanrestorationproject.org, or find us on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook.
00:00:47
Speaker
Hello

Introduction to Dr. Etta Kralovec

00:00:47
Speaker
and welcome to Season 3, Episode 28 of Things Fall Apart, our podcast of the Human Restoration Project.
00:00:53
Speaker
My name is Chris McNutt, and I'm a high school digital media instructor from Ohio.
00:00:57
Speaker
Today, I am joined by Dr. Etta Kralovec, Professor of Education at the University of Arizona, who focuses on context, research gathering, and teacher preparation.
00:01:07
Speaker
specifically with a focus on the U.S.-Mexico border communities.
00:01:10
Speaker
Dr. Kralovic is a widely accomplished author and researcher with work such as The End of Homework and Schools That Do Too Much.
00:01:17
Speaker
She's a Fulbright Scholar, a school leader and founder, as well as an international expert.
00:01:22
Speaker
In

Teacher Action Research Program

00:01:22
Speaker
this podcast, we will talk about the practice of teacher action research, where educators perform qualitative studies of what they're doing, essentially to figure out if it works or not.
00:01:31
Speaker
And as you'll soon hear, the power of Teacher Action Research lies in the process of reflecting and analyzing that information.
00:01:38
Speaker
Further, Teacher Action Research is the cornerstone of Human Restoration Project's upcoming micro-credentialing program.
00:01:46
Speaker
I'm

Dr. Kralovec's Educational Journey

00:01:47
Speaker
Etta Kralovec and I started my career as a teacher in Laguna Beach, California, where I started an alternative high school for at-risk students.
00:02:01
Speaker
And it was a progressive high school.
00:02:03
Speaker
The students were involved in every decision that was made.
00:02:07
Speaker
and hired the teachers and so from there i went on to graduate school at teachers college columbia to get my doctorate in philosophy because i had so many questions after teaching for 12 years i went on to college of the atlantic where i was the head of the secondary education program also a progressive college also students all the committees decisions were made by consensus um
00:02:34
Speaker
And I developed the teacher education program there.
00:02:37
Speaker
During that time, I went to Zimbabwe as a Fulbright scholar to develop a teacher preparation program at a new university.
00:02:46
Speaker
And then I've now come to the University of Arizona, where I am a teacher educator and run a program.
00:02:58
Speaker
for STEM teachers in the border region.
00:03:04
Speaker
It's a really impressive CV.
00:03:05
Speaker
And I came across your work when I read The End of Homework, and then I picked up Schools That Do Too Much.
00:03:13
Speaker
I love reading works by progressive educators that are really into the research, because I think that what's missing from progressive education a lot of the time is that focus on
00:03:23
Speaker
the fact that it is backed by research.

Foundations in Education Philosophy

00:03:25
Speaker
It's not just, I think that some people might paint it as like this hippie, like we're all connected, like there's not like a basis of science.
00:03:34
Speaker
Oh, who would think that?
00:03:35
Speaker
There's a little bit of that in there, but that's what people need in order to learn.
00:03:39
Speaker
They need that human connection and they need that like intrinsic motivation.
00:03:44
Speaker
I think one of the things that we've lost is sort of education and the foundations of education for teachers.
00:03:53
Speaker
When I was training to be a teacher, I had to take a philosophy education class, sociology, history.
00:03:59
Speaker
We don't do that anymore in teacher preparation.
00:04:02
Speaker
You know, it's kind of down and dirty.
00:04:04
Speaker
It's more focused on technical things.
00:04:07
Speaker
So we've lost the foundations of education and people aren't able to.
00:04:12
Speaker
I don't think to really understand the philosophical and theoretical frameworks that progressive ed goes out of.
00:04:19
Speaker
So it's too bad because it's a very rich theoretical literature about progressive ed.
00:04:27
Speaker
And I'd like us all to return to it.
00:04:30
Speaker
In this change towards like teacher as technician, as opposed to like teacher as artist or teacher as professional, um,
00:04:38
Speaker
Uh, there's like this really tight rope that we have to walk across where teachers feel like they're disrespected from all angles by practically everyone.
00:04:47
Speaker
But the same exact time, if teachers want to be treated as professionals, they have to have a certain level of professionalism, which means that they have to have that basis and that framework.
00:04:57
Speaker
So even before we jump into teacher action research, how do you communicate growth for teachers without it coming across as you're just not a good teacher or you're a soccer or something like that?

NSF Grant and Teacher Leadership

00:05:09
Speaker
Well, we just got a new NSF grant to bring in a cadre of STEM teachers into a leadership program.
00:05:19
Speaker
And we framed the leadership program in a way that I think is really powerful.
00:05:25
Speaker
And that is that we said that we're gonna prepare these teachers to be teacher leaders and lead professional development programming in our professional learning community.
00:05:38
Speaker
And there's just so few opportunities for teachers to be leaders in any way other than the traditional, okay, now you're going to be a vice principal, now you're going to be a principal.
00:05:50
Speaker
So we're trying to open up avenues, and I think that's what your work does too, places where teachers can become professionals, which means they can read together, study together, lead each other, act as colleagues.
00:06:05
Speaker
So we need to create those spaces, I think.
00:06:08
Speaker
Because right now it's just, if you have a good principal, they come in once a year, they do whatever they do.
00:06:14
Speaker
You know, there's people that think we ought to use student test scores to rate teachers.
00:06:18
Speaker
So it's all very punitive right now.
00:06:21
Speaker
And the whole system doesn't define teachers as professionals, really.
00:06:28
Speaker
So teachers are deprofessionalized all the way through, from the testing to the standards to the textbooks.
00:06:35
Speaker
It's like they've lost...
00:06:37
Speaker
Their freedom in many ways.
00:06:40
Speaker
And I think I think that's what leads to this really what can be a toxic environment for teachers.
00:06:47
Speaker
Sure.
00:06:47
Speaker
And the thing that's really I'm noticing that worries me a lot is that freedom is starting to be kind of masqueraded.
00:06:55
Speaker
through professional learning.
00:06:56
Speaker
So what I mean by that is like this, like neoliberal corporate, like selling package PD, bring someone in for $7,000 to do like a one day workshop.
00:07:05
Speaker
Well, you know, we're trying to turn that on its head with the, with this teacher run professional learning community.
00:07:11
Speaker
And, and,
00:07:12
Speaker
We were really interested in it when I was really interested in when I was meeting with a local principal maybe three years ago.
00:07:20
Speaker
And he started telling me about, oh, this great PD they're going to do.
00:07:24
Speaker
They're going to fly all the teachers to Texas.
00:07:26
Speaker
They're going to do.
00:07:27
Speaker
I think it was what's that?
00:07:30
Speaker
Whatever the Cornell note, Abbott, the Abbott training.
00:07:32
Speaker
Yeah.
00:07:33
Speaker
And he said, and I'm going to have the teachers do teacher research.
00:07:37
Speaker
And I said, oh, that's great.
00:07:39
Speaker
It'd be so interesting to hear what questions they have and what data they want to collect to answer those questions.
00:07:47
Speaker
And he said, oh, no, no, no, no.
00:07:49
Speaker
No, I don't know what you're talking about.
00:07:51
Speaker
We're just going to look at student data and figure out how to get it up.
00:07:54
Speaker
And, you know, when he said that to me, I thought, this is what we're doing to teachers now.
00:08:00
Speaker
We're sending them to AVID.
00:08:02
Speaker
We're making them learn how to do some system that may or may not fit their school.
00:08:07
Speaker
And we're calling it teacher research.
00:08:11
Speaker
Let's dive into it then.
00:08:12
Speaker
Let's talk about your program.
00:08:14
Speaker
Let's talk about what teacher action research is.

Exploring Teacher Action Research

00:08:16
Speaker
Because honestly, up until about probably two years ago, I had no idea what that term meant.
00:08:22
Speaker
I don't feel like it's as publicized as it probably should be.
00:08:24
Speaker
So what is it?
00:08:25
Speaker
Well, I think teacher action research is really a response to the work that came out, you know, I don't know, maybe 15 years ago about the inquiry stance in teaching and how the argument really was teachers need to be inquirers in their classrooms.
00:08:47
Speaker
And it's so clear to me in working with my students.
00:08:52
Speaker
I mean, I've been a teacher educator for 20 years.
00:08:54
Speaker
So when I work with my students, one of the first things that happens for a teacher, a new teacher,
00:09:02
Speaker
is they start, they get into a school, you know, sometimes teachers complain, you know what a school environment is like, you know, and they just get sort of demoralized by the negativity of the other teachers and kind of of the system, you know.
00:09:19
Speaker
So I really try to help my students and I do this whenever they go on some negative rant.
00:09:26
Speaker
And I say, can you turn that into a question?
00:09:28
Speaker
Can you turn what you're feeling about what's happening in your classroom?
00:09:34
Speaker
What questions come to you from this experience that you're describing?
00:09:39
Speaker
And I think it is a tremendously powerful experience.
00:09:44
Speaker
framework adjustment when teachers start thinking about their classrooms and the problems they're having, not as problems, but as questions.
00:09:53
Speaker
And so for me, I think that's where teacher action research really starts, is with the questions that teachers have that, frankly,
00:10:01
Speaker
Only teachers can answer about their classrooms, you know?
00:10:05
Speaker
I mean, the model that we have where the research is done at the university and then it kind of dribbles down maybe to the superintendents and then the superintendents maybe fan it out to the prince.
00:10:17
Speaker
You know, I mean, that whole system of research delivery is what T-direction research tries to flip on its head.
00:10:25
Speaker
And I would assume, too, that a lot of that research is also kind of caked into progressive ed as well, which is that's really what we're expecting from students, which is students are the inquirers and then teachers are the inquirers watching their students inquire, which is kind of this whole flip narrative.
00:10:40
Speaker
Could you speak a little about how teacher action research then advances progressive ed in that pedagogy and mindset?
00:10:47
Speaker
Yeah.
00:10:47
Speaker
Well, I think that, and I'll talk a little about the transition of my students as they're developing action research proposals, because I think that they start out, you know, it takes them a long time to shape questions.
00:11:02
Speaker
They start out by thinking they're going to do a survey or they're going to look at student grades or whatever, you know, typical kind of statistical stuff.
00:11:12
Speaker
And we spend a lot of time talking about student voice.
00:11:16
Speaker
And so they move along in their journey from thinking about, all right, I need to collect their grades and then see if the attendance affects the grades or whatever, you know.
00:11:28
Speaker
And they come to a point where they're really interested in hearing what the students have to say about whatever the questions are.
00:11:36
Speaker
You know, so the shift into the focus on student voice and trying to understand students' lived experiences in their classrooms is a, I mean, there is probably no more foundational principle in progressive education than student voice, than the students are part of this mix and this community.
00:11:59
Speaker
And, you know, I've even started, you know, so as my students get their research data collection stuff together, I always encourage them to do a community engagement board.
00:12:10
Speaker
where I say to them, you know, if you have these questions, why don't you write this on a poster board and have the students answer this in public on a paper so everybody in the community can see how everybody feels.
00:12:23
Speaker
You know, so that notion of the classroom or the school as a community is really fostered when teachers engage in action research where they're speaking to students and having students involved in shaping that research.
00:12:38
Speaker
It seems like such a powerful tool to not only obviously learn a lot about your students and improve on your own craft, but once you start looking at student voice, you're also going to start looking at all of the other fundamentals of progressive ed that go hand in hand, like critical pedagogy, for example, which would just be a natural offshoot of once you dive into this.
00:12:59
Speaker
How do you see your students then start interacting with each other as a result of each person doing their own separate research?
00:13:07
Speaker
Well, you know, they have to share their research findings with each other.
00:13:13
Speaker
And I think probably, unfortunately, we couldn't do that face-to-face this year for the first time ever.
00:13:20
Speaker
But what they learn from each other
00:13:24
Speaker
Oftentimes they'll say, it's like I just did 12 research projects because I've seen the results of all of my fellow students.
00:13:33
Speaker
And they learn phenomenal things because there's so much diversity in those research projects.
00:13:40
Speaker
But the research projects are all conducted in southeastern Arizona.
00:13:43
Speaker
So there's some characteristics of the schools that they're all in.
00:13:48
Speaker
that shape those action research projects.
00:13:51
Speaker
So they're really relevant to all the students.
00:13:55
Speaker
And for someone who's listening in that maybe isn't involved in like a graduate program or a special professional development program, where would they get started to start doing this process on their own?
00:14:08
Speaker
Or would that be possible without someone to advise them?
00:14:11
Speaker
Well,
00:14:12
Speaker
No, you can go to YouTube and figure out how to do teacher action research.
00:14:15
Speaker
I mean, there's, you know, there's organizations, there's websites where teachers post their action research projects.
00:14:22
Speaker
There's a lot of stuff out there on the internet.
00:14:27
Speaker
You know, we always encourage our students to have critical friends and in our classes, they work as critical friends and, you
00:14:35
Speaker
That has been really important to some students.
00:14:39
Speaker
So I would say for some people, they might need critical friends, which you would always want.
00:14:45
Speaker
That would be the ideal.
00:14:47
Speaker
You know, we don't live in an ideal world.
00:14:49
Speaker
So...
00:14:51
Speaker
If that's not possible and you're the kind of person that's self-motivated and can do this kind of work on your own, you can do it on your own with your students.
00:15:01
Speaker
And instead of having your colleagues be your critical friends, your students are your critical friends.
00:15:07
Speaker
Imagining I'm walking through this process.
00:15:09
Speaker
I do some research.
00:15:10
Speaker
I pick a question.
00:15:11
Speaker
I talk to students about it.
00:15:12
Speaker
I probably change my question slightly after I talk to students.
00:15:15
Speaker
And I probably change my research halfway through because I've done a little bit of this myself.
00:15:20
Speaker
And what it looks like at the end is entirely different than what I figured it would be when I walked into it.
00:15:25
Speaker
Yeah, right.
00:15:26
Speaker
And is there a point where because I've done this by myself.
00:15:31
Speaker
And I feel like I've messed it up because there are many points where I'm going through it and I'm like, the result that I get is not like, it could be analyzed, but it feels very tailored to what I was trying to figure out what was going on, if that makes sense.
00:15:46
Speaker
Like it's very contextual and very, it's hard to read.
00:15:51
Speaker
It's very complex.
00:15:52
Speaker
Is there a way to mess this up?
00:15:54
Speaker
Like, are there things that you shouldn't do?
00:15:56
Speaker
Well, I would say I don't think there's anything you shouldn't do.
00:16:00
Speaker
So, you know, but I mean, we we use these action research projects as in lieu of master's thesis in our program.
00:16:10
Speaker
So there are very strict university standards for qualitative research in terms of data collection and data analysis.
00:16:20
Speaker
So the actual final project that is produced by the students in addition to a poster are these rather formal qualitative studies, basically.
00:16:32
Speaker
And I mean, there are systematic ways to analyze data.
00:16:36
Speaker
There's systematic ways to display your findings.
00:16:41
Speaker
I mean, so that kind of systematic stuff in graduate school is one thing, but I think in terms of teachers in their classrooms,
00:16:50
Speaker
I mean, you don't have to do a formal data analysis on an informal survey you give your kids, and when you ask them, did this movie help you?
00:17:04
Speaker
And 92% of them raise their hand and say no.
00:17:07
Speaker
I mean, you don't need to really analyze that data formally.
00:17:12
Speaker
So, no, I don't think there's any bad way to do it.
00:17:17
Speaker
I took a year's leave from the university and was at a principal of LA Leadership Academy, which was a charter school in East LA.
00:17:25
Speaker
And the reason that the CEO wanted me to come there was he wanted me to do action research with his teachers because he just thought it would be a really powerful way to do PD.
00:17:37
Speaker
So I went and we spent most of the year with the teachers got in groups, they selected the topic.
00:17:44
Speaker
Anyway, they did great projects, lots of interviews, lots of stuff.
00:17:48
Speaker
And then they went on strike in the spring.
00:17:50
Speaker
So the whole thing fell apart.
00:17:53
Speaker
So I guess sometimes when you do things right and you kind of formalize it, shit happens in schools.
00:18:01
Speaker
It makes sense.
00:18:02
Speaker
I
00:18:03
Speaker
I highly doubt it, but I wonder if any of that work lends itself to teachers feeling like, oh, now I start having a voice and now I can actually like take charge for a little bit and try to make a difference.

School Culture and Teacher Action Research

00:18:12
Speaker
Because I think about like Linda Darling-Hammond's stuff, which is how I eventually, like how I got to the point of teacher action research and understanding what's going on.
00:18:21
Speaker
I see a lot of what she talks about in terms of empowering teachers to speak out for themselves and becoming more into that admin position, as you were talking about before, not as formal admin, but as teachers, as leaders, and how that would change the culture of a school, both in terms of teacher voice, but also like in terms of the relationship between administration, maybe between teacher groups.
00:18:46
Speaker
Do you want to talk a little bit about how teacher action research changes just the whole structure of what's going on?
00:18:52
Speaker
Well, I think that I think in order for teacher action research to have that impact, you have to have a culture in the school of inquiry.
00:19:01
Speaker
So if you want to do an action research project on your own, but your principal, you know,
00:19:08
Speaker
gets his information from someplace else and doesn't really support it and doesn't let you have a professional learning community or critical friends, doesn't help you fix your schedule so you can meet together.
00:19:19
Speaker
All that stuff is really important for this organization.
00:19:23
Speaker
So in some ways, the culture almost has to be there.
00:19:28
Speaker
And then the action research is something that turns that culture into a culture of inquiry.
00:19:33
Speaker
But there's got to be in that school, I think, some kind of culture where the teachers and especially the administration is open to that kind of inquiry and willing actually to do it.
00:19:46
Speaker
Because the stuff that comes out of some of this research is really damning about school culture.
00:19:52
Speaker
I'm sure it is, especially if you're tackling things like packets that you send home during COVID-19.
00:19:58
Speaker
Do you see a way for this to then be utilized virtually?
00:20:02
Speaker
Because a lot of us are walking into these virtual classrooms that will likely continue at least somewhat in fall without really any idea of what we're doing.
00:20:10
Speaker
Like I'm taking some pretty good guesses, but I don't even have...
00:20:13
Speaker
Like I'm used to being able to teach my class and I can kind of figure out what's going on.
00:20:16
Speaker
I can figure out the mood of the classroom.
00:20:18
Speaker
I can figure out why students either like or don't like what we're doing.
00:20:22
Speaker
Now it's kind of hit or miss.
00:20:23
Speaker
Kids could be really not saying much, but really enjoying what they're doing when I collect feedback.
00:20:28
Speaker
Do you have any suggestions or do you see any way of how this could be integrated specifically for COVID-19?
00:20:33
Speaker
Yeah.
00:20:34
Speaker
Well, you know, one of the really big kind of movements that's in the action research world is this youth participatory action research.
00:20:46
Speaker
And Angela Valenzuela's book on creating critical teachers.
00:20:51
Speaker
I'm not sure that's the right title.
00:20:52
Speaker
But anyway, this idea that
00:20:55
Speaker
the students are doing the action, are doing action research projects.
00:21:01
Speaker
That was one of the foundation pieces of the ethnic studies program in Tucson.
00:21:06
Speaker
So there's a way in which you can take the action research model and have students do it.
00:21:14
Speaker
And I think that would be a really interesting thing to try to do if we're online in the fall and to have the students research, how could this environment be better?
00:21:27
Speaker
What do I need in this environment?
00:21:29
Speaker
You know, and and so that's that YPAR piece, I think, could be really interesting right now, because I think the kids would be motivated to do work where they're asking their own questions and trying to find the answers rather than doing packets that arrive in the mail.
00:21:48
Speaker
Yeah, that's interesting because I think it leads to the type of transformation that I think many of us are hoping for as a result of the pandemic.
00:21:57
Speaker
There's this one side that's very scared of transformation because it could lead to MOOCs and very gross individualized replacing teachers with computer programs.
00:22:07
Speaker
Then there's the complete other side, which is
00:22:10
Speaker
having students become more self-directed and seeing teachers as guides and getting more focused on purpose finding and all these like really cool things.
00:22:17
Speaker
And I just see teacher action research and what you're talking about that youth participatory action research or something like that.
00:22:23
Speaker
That's a pretty cool endeavor to get that started.
00:22:25
Speaker
Well, you know, I think that the possibilities are,
00:22:30
Speaker
for a reimagined education growing out of COVID are enormous.
00:22:35
Speaker
And so on the one hand, you've got Cuomo asking Bill Gates, you know, to figure out how to reimagine New York City.
00:22:41
Speaker
But I think we all hope that it's teachers who lead this Phoenix out of this, you know, because
00:22:52
Speaker
Oddly, and I think about this myself, I sit in my office and I think every single book in my office about teaching methods and classroom management is out of date now, you know?
00:23:01
Speaker
So it's like the teachers who lived through this are the ones who are going to have to redesign the system.
00:23:09
Speaker
And people like me and people like state boards of education are going to have to get out of the way because if the teachers don't need it, then you're going to get MOOCs and you're going to get Bill Gates and you're going to get...
00:23:21
Speaker
So, I mean, I'm hopeful because at least in Arizona, there was a red for ed.
00:23:27
Speaker
And I mean, the teachers got pretty activated here and activist around the salary issue.
00:23:35
Speaker
And we'll see if they carry that on.
00:23:38
Speaker
But, you know, the teachers haven't been in a position to redesign education anymore.
00:23:43
Speaker
ever before in the history of education.
00:23:47
Speaker
I mean, this is just like, wow.
00:23:49
Speaker
And you've got to get rid of a lot of these older teachers because when I talk to my students and we talk about how the transition is going to online, they always say that the teachers who are the angriest and the most, we can't do that online and blah, blah, blah, are the older teachers.
00:24:08
Speaker
So it may be that there's going to be a lot of older teachers are going to leave because they're going to go, I don't want to do this.
00:24:15
Speaker
I didn't sign up to teach online.
00:24:17
Speaker
I don't like computers.
00:24:19
Speaker
I just shop on my computer.
00:24:21
Speaker
I don't do anything.
00:24:21
Speaker
You know what I mean?
00:24:22
Speaker
So there may be this real change in who's teaching after this happens.
00:24:28
Speaker
And I think...
00:24:30
Speaker
whose teaching are going to be those teachers, probably like you, who are experimental and innovative and think about the world in very different ways than the people who set up the schools that exist think about the world.
00:24:45
Speaker
So I think it's a beautiful moment for teachers and let's hope that they take control of it.
00:24:56
Speaker
Thank you again for listening to Things Fall Apart from the Human Restoration Project.
00:25:00
Speaker
I hope this conversation leaves you inspired and ready to push the progressive envelope of education.
00:25:05
Speaker
If you have time, I'd love for you to leave us a review on iTunes, Spotify, social media, or anywhere you see fit.
00:25:11
Speaker
Do us a favor and tweet this out, post it on Facebook, spread our reach as much as possible, and let's push forward and restore humanity together.