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Occasional
Reports
(rev., March, 2004)
Roland G. Tharp
Center for Research on Education, Diversity & Excellence
University of California, Santa Cruz
R. William Doherty
Center for Research on Education, Diversity & Excellence
University of California, Santa Cruz
Jana Echevarria
California State University, Long Beach
Peggy Estrada
Center for Research on Education, Diversity & Excellence
University of California, Santa Cruz
Claude Goldenberg
California State University, Long Beach
R. Soleste Hilberg
Center for Research on Education, Diversity & Excellence
University of California, Santa Cruz
William M. Saunders
California State University, Long Beach
* * * * * *
Tharp, Estrada, Dalton, and Yamauchi (2000) propose the Five Standards
for Effective Pedagogy as critical for improving learning outcomes for
all students, and especially those of diverse ethnic, cultural, linguistic,
or economic backgrounds. The Five Standards are:
- Standard I — Teachers and Students Producing Together
Facilitate learning through joint productive activity among teacher
and students.
- Standard II — Developing Language and Literacy Across the Curriculum
Develop competence in the language and literacy of instruction across
the curriculum.
- Standard III — Making Meaning; Connecting School to Students’
Lives
Contextualize teaching and curriculum in the experiences and skills
of students’
homes and communities.
- Standard IV — Teaching Complex Thinking
Challenge students toward cognitive complexity.
- Standard V — Teaching Through Conversation
Engage students through dialogue, especially the Instructional Conversation.
These standards are discussed extensively in Teaching Transformed:
Achieving Excellence, Fairness, Inclusion and Harmony (Tharp et al.,
Westview Press, 2000), but three clarifications are made here. First,
these pedagogy standards are not intended to represent the full spectrum
of complex tasks that comprise teaching; rather, they represent instructional
activities that promote active student learning and must be adapted to
varying contexts and diverse student needs. Second, these standards do
not stand in opposition to direct instruction. In fact, Tharp and Gallimore
(1982) used the terms direct and effective interchangeably in their report
on reading comprehension in the Kamehameha Early Education Program. Third,
we do not propose these standards should be used to the exclusion of other
strategies. Our data suggests that teachers who use the standards at higher
rates are more likely, not less, to use a variety of other effective teaching
strategies (Doherty, Hilberg, Epaloose, & Tharp, in press).
A highly abstracted model of instruction using the Five Standards for
Effective Pedagogy consists of a teacher and a small group of students
having an instructional conversation while collaborating on a cognitively
challenging activity contextualized in students’ personal, social,
or cultural knowledge and experience. The overarching goals or instruction
are to foster complex thinking by all students, and language and literacy
development in the language of instruction, as well as in the content
domains. The latter is especially important for English Language Learners.
An instructional unit developed at an American Indian reservation middle
school provides a concrete illustration of the Five Standards model. Tribal
leaders were asked to speak to students at an assembly, after which an
eighth-grade teacher team created subject area units related to the topics
presented. In mathematics, students worked in small groups with the teacher
to generate student surveys on the issues presented, the data from which
served as the basis for a unit on fractions, decimals, and percents, with
survey results presented in multiple representations such as pie charts,
graphs, and frequency distributions.
Simultaneously, other students rotated through a series of activity centers
to complete a variety of tasks related to the unit goals. The unit culminated
with student presentations and letters written to the tribal council to
share survey results. In science, students focused on the issue of local
water quality. They worked in small groups to sample several local water
sources, including water fountains in the school itself, to examine for
chemical content and pollutants.
Recent research has found a consistent relationship between use of the
standards
and a wide range of student outcomes. This research has examined teachers’
use
of the standards, both separately and in combination, with a variety of
methods including case studies of multiple classrooms, short-term randomized
designs and quasi-experimentation in single classrooms, and longitudinal
studies of entire schools.
Several studies (Saunders, 1999; Saunders, & Goldenberg, 1999a, 1999b,
2001, in press; Saunders, O’Brien, Lennon, & McLean, 1998) have
found instructional conversations useful in assisting literacy development.
Instructional conversations are planned, goal-directed conversations on
an academic topic between a teacher and a small group of students. Although
instructional conversations can be used to meet any learning goal in any
content area, these studies focused on the effectiveness of instructional
conversations in developing thematic understanding of literature.
In a recent study (Saunders & Goldenberg, in press), fourth-grade
English Language Learners (ELLs) read a short story and then were randomly
assigned into one of two kinds of lessons. The experimental group participated
in an instructional conversation (IC); the control group participated
in a directed reading lesson suggested in the teacher’s current
reading series. Both groups achieved equivalent levels on post-tests of
literal comprehension (76%), but a significantly larger number of students
in the IC group (63%) demonstrated a clear understanding of the story
theme than in the control group (13%).
In another study, Saunders and Goldenberg (1999a) found that instructional
conversation and contextualization (CTX) greatly assisted the reading
comprehension and thematic understanding of students with varying levels
of English proficiency. Fourth- and fifth-grade students were randomly
assigned into four experimental conditions: (1) IC: teacher-led small
group discussions of story content and theme; (2) CTX: students wrote
in literature logs about personal experiences related to story content
and theme; (3) IC + CTX; or (4) Control: reading and study only. The study
found a strong independent IC effect on comprehension, with all students
in the IC group scoring .75 standard deviations higher than controls.
There was also a strong effect for instructional conversation and contextualization
combined: students in the IC + CTX group scored 1.07 standard deviations
higher than students in the control group. This effect held up for both
fluent and limited English proficient students.
The additional time spent sharing and discussing literature logs (contextualization)
proved to be quite helpful for LEP students, but of lesser importance
for fluent English proficient students. Among LEP students, 69% of the
students in the IC + CTX group successfully explained and 56% successfully
exemplified thematic understanding. The percentages among LEP students
in both the IC and CTX conditions were virtually the same as that for
LEP students in the control group: 6%-19% for explanation and 13%-25%
for exemplification. There were no significant differences on thematic
understanding for fluent English proficient students. The percentages
of fluent-English proficient students who successfully explained and exemplified
the story’s theme were equivalent across the IC, CTX, and IC + CTX
groups: 69% could explain it, and 46-62% could exemplify it (the percentages
for fluent English proficient controls were 46% and 31%, respectively).
Doherty and Pinal (2002) used the Standards Performance Continuum (Doherty,
Hilberg, Epaloose, & Tharp, 2002) to examine the influence of teachers’
use of joint productive activity (JPA) during language arts instruction
on the metacognitive development of predominantly Latino ELL students.
In joint productive activity, the teacher and a small group of students
co-construct meaning from a text. The teacher is a full collaborator in
the activity, modeling his/her use of effective reading comprehension
strategies while assessing and assisting students’ comprehension
efforts. This study found a significant positive association between teachers’
use of JPA and students’ self-reported use of cognitive reading
strategies: teachers’ use of JPA predicted students’ self-reports
of effective comprehension strategy use; JPA was unrelated to self-reports
of ineffective strategy use. This study also found that self-reported
effective strategy use predicted achievement gains on standardized comprehension
tests, whereas ineffective strategy use, unrelated to JPA, predicted declines
in comprehension achievement.
A set of studies by Estrada over a four-year period have consistently
shown a positive relation between implementation of the Five Standards
and student outcomes in first and fourth grades. These studies also demonstrated
that it is possible to assist teachers to implement the Standards and
to garner student gains in achievement parallel to teachers’ gains
in pedagogical capacity. In the first year, first graders whose teachers
were stronger implementers of features of the Five Standards scored higher
in reading and language on the SABE. Fourth-grade students whose teachers
were stronger implementers scored higher in reading and language on the
SAT9 (Estrada, in press). Teacher ratings of student performance showed
the same pattern. In the second year, in a subsample of six first grades,
the vast majority of students in strong implementers’ classrooms
reached grade level in reading, whereas less than half did so in weaker
implementers’ classrooms (Estrada & Imhoff, 2001).
Professional development provided to the same teachers in the third year
produced parallel increases in teachers’ implementation of the Standards
and in student performance. Virtually 100% of students reached grade level
in reading in strong implementers’ classrooms, whereas 69% did so
on average in weaker implementers’ classrooms (Estrada & Imhoff,
in press). Teachers continued to implement the Standards in the fourth
year, and preliminary analyses of reading data indicate that all of the
teachers maintained or increased gains in student achievement.
Hilberg, Tharp, and DeGeest (2000) examined the efficacy of the Five Standards
in mathematics instruction in a quasi-experimental study in an American
Indian middle school. Two groups of American Indian eighth grade students
were randomly assigned to either Five Standards or Traditional conditions
for a one-week unit on fractions, decimals, and percents. Students in
the Five Standards condition outperformed controls on tests of conceptual
learning at the end of the study and exhibited better retention of unit
content two weeks later.
Studies conducted at one of our OERI-funded Research and Demonstration
Schools document the relationship between teachers’ use of the Five
Standards and student achievement and provide strong support for their
effectiveness with diverse students. The school, serving predominantly
low-income Latino ELLs, ranked in the second decile of California schools
in 2001. For both studies, teachers’ use of the standards was recorded
with the Standards Performance Continuum (Doherty et al., 2002), and student
achievement gains were estimated from standardized test scores (SAT-9)
from two consecutive years.
The first study found that teachers’ overall use of the standards
reliably predicted achievement gains in comprehension, language, reading,
spelling, and vocabulary (Doherty, Hilberg, Pinal & Tharp, 2002).
In the second study, cluster analysis of data on teacher’ use of
the Five Standards and classroom organization generated a four-group taxonomy
of pedagogy (high vs. low use of the standards) and organization (whole
class vs. activity settings). Analyses found that students whose teachers
used the Five Standards extensively and their classroom organization consisted
of multiple, simultaneous, diversified activity settings as proposed by
Tharp et al. (2000) showed significantly greater achievement gains on
all SAT-9 tests than students whose teachers had not similarly transformed
their teaching. In fact, students whose teachers had transformed both
their pedagogy and organization were the only group to evidence achievement
gains; students in all other groups evidenced declines in achievement
from the prior year.
Following this quasi-experimental study, third and fourth grade students
were randomly assigned into treatment and control conditions, defined
by teachers’ use of the standards and classroom organization in
the prior year. Again, students in treatment conditions — classrooms
in which teachers had transformed both their pedagogy and organization
— showed significantly greater achievement gains in English, outperforming
control students on the reading, writing, and listening subtests of the
California English Language Development Test (CELDT; Doherty, 2004).
There is also some evidence of achievement gains when the Five Standards
are integrated into the curriculum. Doherty & Hilberg (2004) evaluated
the effects on student achievement of Creating Sacred Places for Children
(CSPC), a culture-based school reform model implemented in 15 Bureau of
Indian Affairs (BIA) schools. At the end of the three-year intervention,
students in CSPC schools in grades 3 - 5 showed significantly greater
gains in reading than students in all other BIA schools. The only factor
that reliably predicted these achievement gains was teachers’ use
of the CSPC curriculum that integrates the Five Standards by structuring
activities at the teacher center, including Instructional Conversations,
and by defining the activities at the peripheral activity centers.
Teachers’ use of the Five Standards has been linked to factors critical
to school performance such as motivation, perceptions, attitudes, and
inclusion. Predominantly Latino ELL students in classrooms where the Five
Standards were used only slightly or moderately spent more time on-task,
perceived greater cohesion in their classrooms, and perceived themselves
as better readers having less difficulty with their work (Padron &
Waxman,1999). American Indian students in mathematics classes integrating
the Five Standards reported more positive attitudes toward mathematics
(Hilberg, Tharp, & DeGeest. 2000). Findings, replicated over two years
with two cohorts of students (Estrada & Imhoff, 2001, 2002), indicated
that, across language programs, peer inclusion was greater in classrooms
in which students participated in more peer joint productive activities
(or peer collaboration).
• Opportunities Through Language Arts (O.L.A.)
O.L.A. is a language arts program for grades 3-5 developed by CREDE researchers
in southern California (Saunders & Goldenberg, 2001). Tightly aligned
with the Five Standards and exemplifying, in particular, Contextualization,
Cognitive Complexity, and Instructional Conversation, O.L.A. effects have
been tested (Saunders, 1999) and replicated (Saunders & Goldenberg,
1999b) with both longitudinal and short-term quasi-experimental designs.
Comparisons of randomly selected matched samples of O.L.A and non-O.L.A
students indicate the program produces higher levels of Spanish literacy,
significantly higher levels of English literacy, and important literacy-related
practices and attitudes for significantly larger numbers of students (Saunders,
1999). By grade 5, O.L.A students, on average, score at least one half
of a standard deviation higher than matched controls on standardized tests
of English reading and approximately .60 to .75 standard deviations higher
on standardized tests of English language expression and mechanics (Saunders,
1999; Saunders & Goldenberg,1999b; Saunders et al., 1998).
• Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol (SIOP)
Researchers have also documented the effectiveness of the Five Standards
using the Sheltered Instruction Observational Protocol (Echevarria, Vogt,
& Short, 2000). Sheltered instruction, grounded in two decades of
classroom-based research, is an approach for teaching content to English
language learners in strategic ways that make the subject matter concepts
comprehensible while promoting students’ English language development.
The SI model is closely aligned with the Five Standards, in particular
Language and Literacy Development.
Studies on the effects of sheltered instruction found that ELLs in middle
school classes of teachers trained in sheltered instruction out-performed
control students on overall gains in expository writing, and made significant
improvement in all areas measured by a writing rubric: language production,
focus, support/elaboration, organization, and mechanics (Echevarria, Short,
& Powers, 2002).
These consistent findings from instructional models and programs, and
controlled and correlational studies demonstrate a systematic relationship
between use of the Standards for Effective Pedagogy and improved student
performance across a broad range of outcomes. Taken together, these findings
provide strong support for the instructional effectiveness of the Standards
for Effective Pedagogy.
• Doherty, R. W., Hilberg, R. S., Epaloose, G., & Tharp, R.
G. (in press). Development and validation of the Standards Performance
Continuum: A performance-based measure of the Standards for Effective
Pedagogy. Journal of Educational Research.
• Doherty, R. W., Hilberg, R. S., Pinal, A., & Tharp, R. G.
(2002). Transformed pedagogy, organization, and student achievement. Paper
presented at the annual conference of the American Education Research
Association, New Orleans, LA.
• Doherty, R. W., & Pinal, A. (2002). Joint productive activity
and the development of metacognitive thinking. Manuscript submitted for
publication.
• Doherty, R. W. (2004). Five Standards and English Language Development:
Results from Experimental Research.
• Doherty, R. W., Hilberg, R. S. (2004). Summative evaluation of
Creating Sacred Places for Children.
• Echevarria, J., Short, D., Powers, K. (2002). Using sheltered
instruction to improve the achievement of English language learners. Manuscript
in preparation.
• Echevarria, J., Vogt, M. E., Short, D. (2000). Making content
comprehensible for English language learners: The SIOP model. Boston:
Allyn and Bacon.
• Estrada, P. (in press). Patterns of language arts instruction
activity: Excellence, inclusion fairness, and harmony in first and fourth
grade culturally and linguistically diverse classrooms. In H. C. Waxman
& R. G. Tharp & R. S. Hilberg (Eds.), Observational research in
U.S. Classrooms: New approaches for understanding cultural and linguistic
diversity. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.
• Estrada, P. & Imhoff, B. D. (2002, in preparation). Peer joint
productive activity and peer inclusion in culturally and linguistically
diverse classrooms.
• Estrada, P., & Imhoff, B. D. (2001). Patterns of language
arts instructional activity: Excellence, inclusion, fairness, and harmony
in six first grade classrooms. Paper presented at the annual meeting of
the American Education Research Association, Seattle, WA.
• Estrada, P., & Imhoff, B. (in press). One road to reform:
Professional development, pedagogy, and student achievement in the context
of state reform of literacy instruction. In S. Stringfield & A. Datnow
(Eds.), The imperfect storm: Successes and failures of school reform efforts
in multicultural/multilingual settings. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University
Press.
• Hilberg, R. S., Doherty, R. W., Epaloose, G., & Tharp, R.
G. (in press). The Standards Performance Continuum: A performance-based
measure of the Standards for Effective Pedagogy. In H. Waxman & R.G.
Tharp & R. S. Hilberg (Eds.), Observational Research in U.S. classrooms:
New approaches for understanding cultural and linguistic diversity. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
• Hilberg, R. S., Tharp, R. G., & DeGeest, L. (2000). The efficacy
of CREDE’s standards-
based instruction in American Indian mathematics classes. Equity and Excellence
in
Education, 33(2), 32-39.
• Padron, Y. N., & Waxman, H. C. (1999). Classroom observations
of the Five Standards
of Effective Teaching in urban classrooms with English language learners.
Teaching and
Change, 7(1), 79-100.
• Saunders, W. (1999). Improving literacy achievement for English
learners in transitional bilingual programs. Educational Research and
Evaluation, 5(4), 345-381.
• Saunders, W., & Goldenberg, C. (1999a). The effects of instructional
conversations and literature logs on the story comprehension and thematic
understanding of English proficient and limited English proficient students.
Santa Cruz, CA: Center for Research on Education, Diversity & Excellence,
University of California.
• Saunders, W., & Goldenberg, C. (1999b). The effects of comprehensive
Language Arts/Transition Program on the literacy development of English
learners (Technical Report). Santa Cruz, CA: Center for Research, Diversity
& Excellence, University of California.
• Saunders, W., & Goldenberg, C. (2001). Opportunities through
Language Arts: Overview video, video guide, and program manual.
• Saunders, W., & Goldenberg, C. (in press). The effects of
an instructional conversation on transition students’ concepts of
friendship and story comprehension. In R. Horowitz (Ed.), The evolution
of talk about text: Knowing the world through classroom discourse. Newark,
DE: International Reading Association.
• Saunders, W., O’Brien, G., Lennon, D., & McLean, J.
(1998). Making the transition to English literacy successful: Effective
strategies for studying literature with transition students. In R. Gersten
& R. Jimenez (Eds.), Promoting learning for culturally and linguistically
diverse students. Monterey, CA: Brooks Cole Publishers.
• Tharp, R. G. (1982). The effective instruction of comprehension:
Results and description of the Kamehameha Early Education Program. Reading
Research Quarterly, 17(4), 503-527.
• Tharp, R. G., Estrada, P., Dalton, S. S., & Yamauchi, L. (2000).
Teaching transformed: Achieving excellence, fairness, inclusion, and harmony.
Boulder: Westview Press.
This work was supported under the Education Research and Development
Program, PR/Award No. R306A60001, the Center for Research on Education,
Diversity & Excellence (CREDE), as administered by the Institute for
Education Sciences (IES) (formerly the OERI), National Institute on the
Education of At-Risk Students (NIEARS), US Department of Education (USDOE).
The contents, findings and opinions expressed here are those of the author
and do not necessarily represent the positions or policies of OERI, NIEARS,
or the USDOE.
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