Educational Need
I am looking to address the lack of reading comprehension that my students have. Year upon year, students have a problem with remembering what they have read. This is very important for both their ability to retain knowledge as well as for standardized reading assessments that students are required to take.
Plan to Address Issue
I plan to address this educational issue by incorporating digital storytelling into my classroom. Furthermore, students will choose one of our weekly stories that the whole class has read to focus on and they will be put into groups based on their choice. Students will also choose the character in that story that they would like to represent. Giving students choice builds interest level and motivation. Each group will have a week to plan, practice, and record themselves acting out and retelling the story of choice. I will be videotaping with a Flip Video Camera. Then the whole class will watch the video. This will not only cause the group to summarize the weekly story, but will also show a fun video summarizing the story to the other students in the class. Students will be engaged in this activity as they each get their own role as well as an audience to perform for.
Logistics
Everyday we have a half hour time block where the classroom teachers rotate reading aloud to the entire 2nd grade. Therefore, on the days when it is not my turn to read (Wednesday is my day), I will pull the group who is working on their video to collaborate about their story back in my classroom. Once finished planning, I will film the video of the group retelling the story that the whole class has read. Depending on the story, the video may need to be filmed outside or in a particular area of the school. In order to keep students on track, I will have them discuss the story on Monday, write the script on Tuesday, practice on Thursday, and I will film it on Friday. If necessary, I wlll edit the movie over the weekend and show it to the class the following Monday afternoon. I will continue this strategy until each group has filmed their story. Therefore, every student in my class will have an opportunity to be in a video. If I find that this method has worked well in improving comprehension, I may choose to do a 2nd or even 3rd round of retelling and videotaping new stories. Parents filled out a photo consent form at the beginning of the year so I will be able to take photographs for my future blogging for this project.
Research
There were five websites that were especially helpful in guiding my project. Four of these resources pertain to digital storytelling for reading comprehension, while the fifth source is an iMovie tutorial that will help me implement my project. I found studies that showed an increase in motivation when collaboratively using educational technologies in the classroom (Coiro, 2003 and Heo, 2009). This helped affirm my idea of using digital storytelling in small groups. Furthermore, the RAND Reading Study Group described the significance of teaching reading comprehension through a social activity (Coiro, 2003). With the incorporation of video creation, students obtain a deeper sense of purpose for their work as they are performing for an audience. According to Heo (2009), integrating technology into my teaching increases authenticity and will also give students a sense of ownership over what they are learning.
I learned that my idea was worth trying. Using digital storytelling gives students purpose and motivation. It also is a holistic approach that reaches visual, auditory, and kinesthetic learners. When researching, I used both Google and ProQuest through the MSU Library website. I got the best results when using as specific words as possible. For example, when I searched for “benefits reading comprehension digital storytelling,” I got better results than when searching for “digital storytelling comprehension.” Next time, I would start with the scholarly journals found on ProQuest through the MSU Library website. Here you can search for full-text articles that relate to your inquiry. I spent a lot of wasted time weeding through Google search results. Also, ProQuest automatically highlights the words that are contained in your search to make it easy to find what you are looking for.
"IMovie 2 Training - Atomic Learning." Atomic Learning – Education: Professional Development, Technology Integration and Software Training and Support Solutions - Atomic Learning. Web. 27 Sept. 2011. <http://www.atomiclearning.com/imovie2x.shtml>.
Sherman, Diana, Glenn Kleiman, and Kirsten Peterson. "Technology and Teaching Children to Read." NEIRTEC - Northeast and the Islands Regional Technology in Education Consortium. (2004). Web. 27 Sept. 2011. <http://www.neirtec.org/reading_report/report.htm>.
Plan for Implementation
I plan to implement at least 2 videos/groups during this course. Depending on how many characters are in each story and how many students choose each story, the group sizes will differ. Therefore, there will be about 2-4 more groups creating and filming their videos after the course is over. My goal is to finish one group per week, but this may change once I have a sense of how my students will handle this and if we have any school-wide activities that will disrupt our process. It may end up taking two weeks for a group.
Indicators of Success
As an immediate assessment I will view the videos and assess whether or not students actually retold and summarized the story accurately. When assessing the group videos I will use a rubric that I created on Rubistar. I will show students this rubric before we begin the project so students know what is expected of them. The 4-component rubric that I created includes: comprehension and accuracy of what is being retold, awareness of audience and point of view, conversational style voice, and voice pacing. Students will not only benefit from the comprehension end of this project, but also fluency and speaking/listening skills will be practiced.
In regards to comprehension and using the retelling/summarizing strategy, students must retell the story accurately with appropriate characters and props (if used) in order to gain full credit for that component. This comprehension component is the most important piece that I will be looking at as I assess my students and the effectiveness of this teaching strategy. If students do poorly on this component, but do well on the other components, I will know that this digital storytelling strategy did not meet my goal of improving my students’ reading comprehension.
The student growth will not only be measured during and immediately after the videos, but also throughout the year. When I implement weekly reading comprehension activities as well as trimester reading assessments, I will assess whether or not students’ comprehension has improved. This serves as a summative assessment. One of my guided reading groups is grouped based on comprehension support so I will refer back to the videos and assess my students’ learning through my observations during guided reading. This serves as a formative assessment.