ACTION RESEARCH PROJECT
CAMPUS MISSION STATEMENT
1. SETTING THE FOUNDATION –
Through collaboration with campus administrators it has
been discovered that the current campus mission statement does not umbrella all
current grade levels. With the
transitioning of grade levels across the district, our current campus mission
statement does not allow for the success of academic excellence of a state
mandated testing grade level.
2. ANALYZING DATA – Use surveys that will allow for
teacher input on the importance of changing/not changing the current campus
mission statement. Campus mission
statements from other local school districts will be used in aiding the process.
Findings from surveys might include:
All current grade levels are not being covered under the
campus mission statement.
There are revisions that can be made to include all
current grade levels within the campus.
Teachers may feel that the current statement does not need
to be changed.
3. DEVELOPING DEEPER UNDERSTANDING – As research is being
processed, issues in phrasing and incorporating many opinions into one
universal statement may arise. For example,
when I was writing my initial action research statement, it came to my
attention that a campus statement needs to address more than academic success,
but also the fact that we are molding the future community leaders and workers.
4. ENGAGE IN SELF-REFLECTION – As a team creating the new
statement, it is important for us to answer the following questions:
Does the statement that the Campus Action Team creates
actually universal enough to address the campus as a whole?
Is the statement specific enough so that every faculty and
staff member knows their role in implementation and follow through?
5. EXPLORING PROGRAMMATIC PATTERNS – By meeting with
faculty and staff before and after the action research, their goals and input
are being thoroughly included and implemented into the new mission statement. By involving all parties in the process of
creating a mission statement, each party will know his/her role in implementing
the statement. With each party knowing
their role, there is a great likelihood of success.
6. DETERMINING DIRECTION –
A. Are you clear on what you are attempting to solve (your
research questions)? Yes. It is my goal to work with my fellow staff
members to create a new mission statement for our campus. Currently, we are working under the
guidelines of a statement that was established before our district reorganized
campus grade levels. The original
statement does not accurately reflect the goals and outcomes that we currently
strive to achieve.
B. Have you adequately addressed the skills and resources
questions? Ultimately, the goal is to
create a new statement. After meeting
with campus administrators, I am fully aware that the current statement does
not align with the goals of our campus.
C. Have you established a collaborative approach to the
issue? My approach includes
collaboration with the faculty and staff at my campus, along with members of
the CAT (Campus Advisory Team), which includes staff, parents, and community
members.
D. Are your timelines realistic? The timelines that I have
established seem to be realistic because they are based upon regularly
scheduled meeting times.
E. Do you have a reasonable plan to monitor the project? I
feel that the project will be monitored very well, as I serve as a member of
the CAT team and I will be responsible for leading in this effort to change the
current mission statement.
F. Do you have a reasonable plan for determining the level
of success – how do you evaluate if the plan is effective? By receiving
feedback from everyone involved in the change and by meeting regularly with the
CAT, I hope to monitor the effectiveness of the new statement.
G. How will you revise and improve the plan based on
monitoring and evaluation? After meeting and taking feedback into
consideration, the CAT can meet to determine whether the needs and desires for
campus goals are being adequately addressed.
If it is determined that the new goal is not being as effective as hoped
for, we can take a few steps back in the process and adjust accordingly.
7. TAKING ACTION FOR SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT
There is a committee formed that will be working to create
a new campus mission statement. As a
committee we will work to achieve all goals and guidelines set forth in the
action plan. A formative evaluation will
be done through surveys and teacher input forms that will show whether or not
the implementation of the new mission statement is effective. Upon implementing the new mission statement,
the committee will meet to address concerns and information will be relayed to faculty
and staff.
8. SUSTAIN IMPROVEMENT
Upon implementing the new
mission statement, pros and cons will be considered. Improved learning and campus environment will
show positive reflections toward the new goal.
If this is not the case, revisions will/can be made through the Campus
Action Team and campus staff.
This looks like a very challenging project. It will be a great experience for you to be able to work with so many teachers and staff. I will be interested to see how you work with so many different personalities to achieve this goal. I will follow this to see how you face those challenges and look to learn from your experience. Good luck!
ReplyDeleteWorking with so many different personalities is the only thing that I really fear about my research. I think, thought, if I keep a positive attitude and continuously portray that, everything will be okay.
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