If you've been in education for any length of time, you are always on the alert for the new buzzwords and trends. We've all heard them: collaborative grouping, open concept, differentiated instruction, whole language, and lately, PLCs and data-driven instruction. As such, you have a tendency to become cynical very quickly, knowing that any new initiatives will surely be replaced by the next idea that's going to save us all, just as soon as someone from the administration building gets back from whatever conference they have gone to this year.
But, sometimes, in tuning out you miss out on what is actually just plain 'ol good teaching practice, freshened up.
I've begun studying action research as part of my graduate coursework. What I've learned so far is that action research is just taking what we as educators (should) do naturally and making it a little more formal. It's a way of finding a solution to a problem, with a little data to back it up. If I do "X" will it improve "Y"? If it doesn't, can how can I change "X" so that it does?
I've also learned that the operative word in that phrase is "action". It's not about reading something in a book written by someone who hasn't set foot in a K-12 classroom since they were a student in one; it's about evaluating the needs of your students and/or campus and addressing those needs with solutions that will work in the real world. Collect all the data you want but, until you reflect on it and change your practice as a result, all you've done is a "fun activity" or two.
Action research is also a way to take control of your own professional growth. We've all spent hours of our lives that we'll never get back in meaningless staff development sessions that we take nothing away from but a pile of dead trees. Addressing concerns that are personal to you will motivate you to implement changes in your classroom or school.
I haven't fully decided how I'm going to implement action research in my own classroom. One area I'm looking at is student motivation, always a challenge with middle schoolers and an even bigger one it seems this year.
For now, I'm keeping an open mind and a muzzle on my inner cynic.