|
Case
Studies
Note:
You will need a copy of Adobe
Acrobat to access these publications.
Case Studies of External School
Reform Organizations
Each of the case studies presented below examines
the work of an external school reform organization and its
interactions with three high schools. As part of a larger
CPRE study of high school improvement efforts, data for these
case studies was collected between 2004 and 2006 in a total
of 15 high schools in 15 school districts across the United
States. The 15 schools in our sample were selected based on
recommendations from the reform organizations. The case studies
draw from interview and survey data from teaching and administrative
staff at the schools. In addition, we interviewed staff members
from the central office in each of the school districts and
staff from the reform organizations. In total, our findings
are based on approximately 514 semi-structured interviews
lasting between 30 and 60 minutes each and 1,052 surveys from
15 schools conducted in the spring of 2005 and 644 surveys
from nine schools conducted in the spring of 2006.
The reforms in this CPRE research project include:
First Things First, High Schools That Work, the Penn Literacy
Network, Ramp-Up to Literacy, and SchoolNet. These reforms
were selected as representative of the types of external assistance
found in high schools during previous CPRE research. The providers
include two whole school reform models, two literacy programs,
and one strategy to increase data-driven instruction.
The research presented here is not an evaluation study and
thus is not generalizable to other schools and districts.
It was designed to illuminate a deep understanding of teacher
and administrator experience with the reform and their sense
of the reform’s progress in the three schools. References
to "change” or work related to the reform are based
not on external measures such as classroom observations or
student achievement, but instead reflect the perceptions of
school, district, and reform organization staff as expressed
through interview and survey data. In addition, because we
were most interested in documenting and understanding the
process of re-interpretation and enactment that happens between
schools and reform organizations early in their work together,
our findings heavily emphasize the experience of those schools
that are relatively early in their implementation processes.
These case studies were written by: Joy Anderson, Margaret
E. Goertz, Matthew Goldwasser, Kate Hovde, Diane Massell,
Jennifer A. Mueller, Matthew Riggan, Catherine Dunn Shiffman,
Jonathan A. Supovitz, and Elliot H. Weinbaum.
Funding for this work was provided by the United
States Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences
(Grant number R308A96003).
The five case studies below are available for free
download:
First Things First: A Case Study of Implementation
in Three Schools
High Schools That Work: A Case Study of
Implementation in Three Schools
Penn Literacy Network: A Case Study of
Implementation in Three Schools
Ramp-Up to Literacy: A Case Study of Implementation
in Three Schools
SchoolNet: A Case Study of Implementation
in Three Schools
Case Studies from CPRE's Evaluation
of the Merck Institute for Science Education (MISE)
Franklin
Elementary School, Rahway, NJ
(Siobhan McVay, March 2003)
Highland
Avenue School, Linden, NJ
(Claire Passantino, March 2003)
Inglewood
Elementary School, Lansdale, PA
(Siobhan
McVay, March 2003)
Three
Bridges and Holland Brook Elementary Schools,
Readington
Township, NJ
(Patricia
J. Kannapel, March 2003)
Case
Studies from CPRE's Evaluation of the Children Achieving Initiative
in Philadelphia, PA
Introduction
to the Case Studies
(Spring 2002)
Glossary
(Spring 2002)
Children
Achieving Challenge Overview
(Spring 2002)
Evans
Elementary School
(Susan Watson, Spring 2002)
Redding
Elementary School
(Rhonda Phillips, Spring 2002)
Ward
Elementary School
(Claire Passantino, Spring 2002)
Baker
Middle School
(Jolley Christman, Spring 2002)
Cooper
Middle School
(Nancy Lawrence, Spring 2002)
Memorial
High School
(Theresa Luhm, Spring 2002)
Walker
High School
(Hitomi Yoshida, Spring 2002)
Copyright
© 2001-2007 CPRE/PENN, All Rights Reserved
Site
Design by Jam
Design
|