Our Team

Mission Statement
Our team has come together to collaborate on designing an action research project to systematically evaluate and analyze our teaching practices as elementary school teachers. Our goal is to improve teaching and learning in our schools and increase student performance.

Monday, September 22, 2014

Writing Our Problem Statement


This week our team discussed the problem statement on which we would like to base our projects. We have decided to study the effects of "brain breaks" on students' ability to stay focused.

Problem Statement:
We want our students to have the ability to be optimally focused on learning tasks, and to consistently demonstrate on task behavior, in order to maximize the benefit of instructional time and increase student learning and success.

Currently, there are a significant number of students in specific classes who frequently lose focus and engage in off task behavior. If we do not solve this problem, these students will not get the full benefit of instruction and won’t achieve the level of learning and success they are capable of. Not only will this result in them not adequately learning the current material, it will have the more devastating effect of not providing them with the base knowledge they need in order to succeed in future learning.

We will tackle this problem by incorporating short physical “brain breaks” into our lessons, providing the students with needed physical activity in order to prime their brains for optimal concentration and mental performance.

Questions:
1.       Will short physical brain breaks during a lesson decrease the occurrence of off task behavior with target students during the class period immediately following the brain break?

2.      Will routinely incorporating physical brain breaks into lessons, and thus providing students with the knowledge that such breaks are coming in each class period, decrease the occurrence of off task behavior with target students overall?

1 comment:

  1. I hope your literature review helps you to determine how many students typically lose focus in a lesson. That number will provide you with a benchmark for your methodology and analysis later in your ARPP.

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