Surveying Arizona's Third through Fifth Grade Teachers about their Confidence in Teaching the Cognitive Demands of the Common Core State Standards to All Students

abstract: ABSTRACT The purpose of this descriptive study was to gain an understanding of the confidence level held by third, fourth, and fifth grade teachers as to their preparedness for teaching the cognitive demands of the Common Core State Standards (Arizona's College and Career Ready Stan...

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Other Authors: Fast, Deborah R. (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.27534
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-275342018-06-22T03:05:46Z Surveying Arizona's Third through Fifth Grade Teachers about their Confidence in Teaching the Cognitive Demands of the Common Core State Standards to All Students abstract: ABSTRACT The purpose of this descriptive study was to gain an understanding of the confidence level held by third, fourth, and fifth grade teachers as to their preparedness for teaching the cognitive demands of the Common Core State Standards (Arizona's College and Career Ready Standards) to all students, in particular Hispanic students living in poverty, who occupy close to a third of all classroom seats in Arizona. The achievement gap between Hispanic students living in poverty and non-Hispanic students of non-poverty status is one of the largest achievement gaps in Arizona, which has existed with minimal change for more than 12 years. By gaining an understanding of the teachers' confidence in teaching critical thinking skills, further support and professional development is suggested to link a teacher's knowledge to instructional practice that in turn increases the academic achievement of Arizona's poor Hispanic students. The process of gaining this understanding was by using a multi-dimensional survey with 500 third through fifth grade teachers in two uniquely different, but representative, Arizona school districts. Approximately one-third of those teachers responded to the multi-dimensional survey about teaching the critical thinking (CT) skills of Arizona's College and Career Ready Standards for English Language Arts. The survey asked teachers to rate their levels of preparedness for teaching CT to several types of students, to choose a CT definition, describe the relationship of CT and reading, explain how they teach CT to students who are reading below grade level, express the support they need to teach CT to those students, and rate the effectiveness of several CT classroom vignettes for different types of students. Although the questions involved several types of students, the primary focus was on exploring the teachers' position with teaching CT to Low SES Hispanic students. A disconnect was revealed between the teachers' perception that they had the ability and knowledge necessary to teach critical thinking skills and their ability to identify ineffective critical thinking instructional practices. This disconnect may be interfering with the link between the professional development teachers are currently receiving to implement Common Core State Standards and teachers actively engaging in learning what is needed to effectively teach critical thinking skills to their students. Dissertation/Thesis Fast, Deborah R. (Author) Fischman, Gustavo E (Advisor) Harris, Connie (Committee member) Bader, Beth (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Education Educational leadership Elementary education critical thinking low SES Hispanic students poverty professional development reading eng 195 pages Doctoral Dissertation Educational Leadership and Policy Studies 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.27534 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Education
Educational leadership
Elementary education
critical thinking
low SES Hispanic students
poverty
professional development
reading
spellingShingle Education
Educational leadership
Elementary education
critical thinking
low SES Hispanic students
poverty
professional development
reading
Surveying Arizona's Third through Fifth Grade Teachers about their Confidence in Teaching the Cognitive Demands of the Common Core State Standards to All Students
description abstract: ABSTRACT The purpose of this descriptive study was to gain an understanding of the confidence level held by third, fourth, and fifth grade teachers as to their preparedness for teaching the cognitive demands of the Common Core State Standards (Arizona's College and Career Ready Standards) to all students, in particular Hispanic students living in poverty, who occupy close to a third of all classroom seats in Arizona. The achievement gap between Hispanic students living in poverty and non-Hispanic students of non-poverty status is one of the largest achievement gaps in Arizona, which has existed with minimal change for more than 12 years. By gaining an understanding of the teachers' confidence in teaching critical thinking skills, further support and professional development is suggested to link a teacher's knowledge to instructional practice that in turn increases the academic achievement of Arizona's poor Hispanic students. The process of gaining this understanding was by using a multi-dimensional survey with 500 third through fifth grade teachers in two uniquely different, but representative, Arizona school districts. Approximately one-third of those teachers responded to the multi-dimensional survey about teaching the critical thinking (CT) skills of Arizona's College and Career Ready Standards for English Language Arts. The survey asked teachers to rate their levels of preparedness for teaching CT to several types of students, to choose a CT definition, describe the relationship of CT and reading, explain how they teach CT to students who are reading below grade level, express the support they need to teach CT to those students, and rate the effectiveness of several CT classroom vignettes for different types of students. Although the questions involved several types of students, the primary focus was on exploring the teachers' position with teaching CT to Low SES Hispanic students. A disconnect was revealed between the teachers' perception that they had the ability and knowledge necessary to teach critical thinking skills and their ability to identify ineffective critical thinking instructional practices. This disconnect may be interfering with the link between the professional development teachers are currently receiving to implement Common Core State Standards and teachers actively engaging in learning what is needed to effectively teach critical thinking skills to their students. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Educational Leadership and Policy Studies 2014
author2 Fast, Deborah R. (Author)
author_facet Fast, Deborah R. (Author)
title Surveying Arizona's Third through Fifth Grade Teachers about their Confidence in Teaching the Cognitive Demands of the Common Core State Standards to All Students
title_short Surveying Arizona's Third through Fifth Grade Teachers about their Confidence in Teaching the Cognitive Demands of the Common Core State Standards to All Students
title_full Surveying Arizona's Third through Fifth Grade Teachers about their Confidence in Teaching the Cognitive Demands of the Common Core State Standards to All Students
title_fullStr Surveying Arizona's Third through Fifth Grade Teachers about their Confidence in Teaching the Cognitive Demands of the Common Core State Standards to All Students
title_full_unstemmed Surveying Arizona's Third through Fifth Grade Teachers about their Confidence in Teaching the Cognitive Demands of the Common Core State Standards to All Students
title_sort surveying arizona's third through fifth grade teachers about their confidence in teaching the cognitive demands of the common core state standards to all students
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.27534
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