FS 1 - Module 3
FS 1 - Module 3
FS 1 - Module 3
CLASSROOM-BASED ACTION
RESEARCH
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MODULE 7
INTRODUCTION
In this module, you will learn the nature, importance, and impact of
classroom-based action research (CBAR) in your development as a life-long
learning educator.
OBJECTIVES
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There are three lessons in the module. Read each lesson carefully
then answer the exercises/activities to find out how much you have
benefited from it. Work on these exercises carefully and submit your output
to your instructor/professor.
In case you encounter difficulty, discuss this with your teacher during
the prescribed consultation hours.
Lesson 1
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collect and analyze data, to assess its effectiveness, and then make
decisions about your next courses of action based on your experience.
How should you conduct your reading/review of CBARs? Here are some
steps you can follow to guide you in your search and review of completed
CBARs.
This is the stage where you allocate the majority of your time looking
for sources of knowledge, data, or information related to the problem you
are trying to make an action research on. Three basic types of literature
sources come into play here:
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Step 2. Reading
Step 3. Reflection
The third part is writing your reflection papers on the CBARs that you
were able to read. We will dive deeper in this step as we move to the next
lesson of this module.
Use the table below to make an inventory of the CBARs you have found.
Look for at least five (5) titles.
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2.
3.
4.
5.
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Lesson 2
As you begin to search and read related literature, and other completed
action researches, you will be exposed to many problems, solutions,
techniques, and strategies. You may or may not agree with everything you
encounter, but it is very essential that you document how you feel, or
react, towards whatever information or knowledge you find. This is where
reflective writing plays a huge role.
Reflective writing offers you the opportunity to consider how your personal
views, values, experiences and observations shape the way you think and
accept new information and ideas. Some of your teachers or professors
occasionally require you to write reflections on certain activities, such as
after a film showing, after reading a book or article, or after an event. We
do this in order to encourage you to explore your own ideas, feelings or
emotion about the movie, article, book or event, and allow you to express
your own opinion instead of summarizing or paraphrasing the opinion of
others.
This is also the reason why you will be required to prepare and write your
own reflection papers about the professional readings you have made about
completed CBARs.
Reflective writing can help you improve your analytical skills because it
requires you to express what you think, and more importantly, how and why
you think or feel that particular way. Moreover, reflective analysis asks you
to acknowledge that your thoughts are shaped by your own assumptions and
ideas, and while doing so, you can appreciate the ideas of others and notice
how their assumptions and ideas may have shaped their thoughts, and
perhaps recognize how your ideas support or reject what you have read.
Experiential Reflection
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you are asked to reflect upon an experience in a placement, you do not only
describe your experience, but you evaluate it based on ideas from class. You
can assess a theory or process based on your observations and practice and
evaluate your own knowledge and skills within your professional field. This
opportunity to take the time to think about your choices, actions, your
successes and your failures is best done within a specific framework.
Abstract concepts can become concrete and real to you when you
considered within your own experiences, and reflection on your own
experiences allows you to make plans for improvement.
Reading Reflection
To ensure that your readings provide you balanced, useful and integrative
assessments and insights, some of your courses may require you to submit a
reading reflectionthis subject included. Often we, your teachers, will tell
you what we expect of a reflection, but the general purpose is to get your
informed opinions about ideas presented in the text and to consider how
they affect your interpretation. Reading reflections offer an opportunity to
recognize and perhaps break down your assumptions which may be
challenged by the materials you have read.
Make connections:
-How does this text reinforce my existing ideas or assumptions? How does
this text challenge my existing ideas or assumptions?
-How does this text help me to better understand this topic or explore this
field of study/discipline?
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Writing Assignment:
Using the five CBARs you have made readings on, choose two (2) and write
your reflection paper for each.
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Lesson 3
Now that you have read a few examples of completed action researches and
have written your reflection papers, it is now time to write a CBAR of your
own.
Use the following guide questions along with the outline below to prepare
your CBAR research proposal. This outline uses the DepEd 2017 model.
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MODULE SUMMARY
Congratulations! You have just studied Module I. now you are ready
to evaluate how much you have benefited from your reading by answering
the summative test. Good Luck!!!
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References:
Lucas, M., Borabo, M., Bilbao, P., Corpuz., (2021). Field Study 1:
Observations of Teaching-Learning in Actual School Environment. Lorimar
Publishing
Lucas, M., Borabo, M., Bilbao, P., Corpuz., (2021). Field Study 2:
Participation and Teaching Assistantship. Lorimar Publishing
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