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"How Will It Help My Students?" What Teachers Consider When They Consider Participating in Classroom Intervention Research

In this qualitative study, 4 elementary classroom teachers who implemented a quasi-experimental study of reading fluency described their experiences. Themes that emerged from analysis of interview transcripts indicate that these teachers considered the value of the fluency study (benefit to students...

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Published in:Research in the schools 2011-10, Vol.18 (2), p.1
Main Author: Hayden, H. Emily
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description In this qualitative study, 4 elementary classroom teachers who implemented a quasi-experimental study of reading fluency described their experiences. Themes that emerged from analysis of interview transcripts indicate that these teachers considered the value of the fluency study (benefit to students, curriculum fit, and feasibility), their personal interest in the topic (gaining new materials, new strategies, and new learning), and efficacy for meeting the requirements of the study (viability of research requirements, comfort with challenges) when choosing to participate and when making implementation decisions. These 4 teachers' interpretations give insight into the tension between constraints of participation in experimental studies and teacher agency, and into the features of research studies that teachers may consider as supportive of involvement. (Contains 1 table.)
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subjects Child Health
Control Groups
Educational Research
Elementary School Teachers
Elementary Schools
Grade 5
Interests
Intervention
Interviews
Learning
Reading
Reading Fluency
Student Needs
Students
Studies
Teachers
Teaching
title "How Will It Help My Students?" What Teachers Consider When They Consider Participating in Classroom Intervention Research
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