COURSE PROJECT OPTION #1: A CASE STUDY OF YOUR FOCAL LEARNER
Procedures for Conducting your Case Study
Rubric for Assessing Course Project #1
Links to Additional Ideas and Information Regarding the Conduct of a Case Study
Examples of Case Studies written by 3461 Students
COURSE PROJECT OPTION #2: YOUR EXPERIENCES AT THE PLC
Rubric for Assessing Course Project #2
Examples of PLC Experience Papers written by 3461 Students
COURSE PROJECT OPTION #3: MAINTAIN AN ONGOING BLOG ABOUT YOUR EXPERIENCES AT THE PLC
Rubric for Assessing Course Project #3
Examples of PLC Blogs written by 3461 Students
Whichever course project you select, please consult the Writing Tips page and do your best to avoid the common writing errors listed there.
COMPUTING YOUR GRADE FOR THE SEMESTER
COURSE PROJECT OPTION #1: A CASE STUDY OF YOUR FOCAL LEARNER
For Service-Learning in Secondary English
Education, you may elect to write a case
study of the person whom you will be tutoring
during the semester at Classic
City High School: A Performance Learning Center
What is the personality of the person with whom you are working, including his or her interests, hobbies, passions, demeanor, and other aspects of self?
How does this contrast with your own personality?
What is the cultural background of the learner, including such social categories as race, ethnicity, gender, social class, and sexual orientation? How do these factors contribute to the person's ways of viewing and acting in the world?
How does this contrast with your own cultural background?
What are the educational experiences of the learner, including ability track placement, likes and dislikes about school, beliefs about teachers, beliefs about formal education, ability to apply personal strengths to school tasks, and other experiences that affect the learner's functioning in a school setting?
How does this contrast with your own educational experiences?
You will produce a case study of your tutoring relationship with a focus on the learner's literacy potential and the degree to which the school enables him or her to grow toward that potential. You should take into account the learner's personality, cultural background, and educational experiences and relate them to ideas that you gather from your Book Club readings and discussions. You will focus on the learner and use your own cultural background as the relief against which you present the case. Your final case study report will include the following:
Note: Because these course projects are set in a school and are not being conducted for the purpose of publication, they are exempt from the Institutional Review Board's approval process.
Procedures for Conducting your Case Study
1. After each Tutoring Session, you will produce an entry in a teaching log in which you record your impressions regarding your focal learner's personality, cultural background, and educational experiences in light of the academic work covered during the session. As part of this entry, you will compare and contrast your focal learner's personality, cultural background, and educational experiences with your own and consider the consequences of teachers and students coming together with different worldviews, experiences, and socialization.
2. You will bring your log entries to class each week; they will serve as central texts in the discussions you have with your classmates.
3. Periodically, we will dedicate class time to identifying themes from your teaching log. A theme is a recurring pattern that you notice in your tutoring relationship. It might concern any of the following topics, or many others:
4. Based on your attention to themes in your teaching log, you will develop a case description of your focal learner that covers the four areas outlined above. You may supplement this report with any artifacts that you collect from your tutoring experience (with the learner's permission): samples of school work, samples of literacy practices from outside school, photographs, scanned documents, etc. Your final product may come in a variety of media, including but not limited to:
Rubric for Assessing a Case Study
Your case study, regardless of which form you use, will be assessed according to the following criteria. You will receive 0-5 points in each of the following categories, with 0 being a lowest score and 5 being the highest.
| Assessment Category |
| A clear account of the learner's personality, cultural background, and educational experiences |
| Identification of themes that follow from the account of the learner's personality, cultural background, and educational experiences |
| A comparison and contrast between the themes found in the case study and themes present in your own personality, cultural background, and educational experiences |
| A consideration of the ways in which the student's life and disposition are and are not in synch with the expectations for behavior and academic performance in school; and of what would need to change in order for school to be an arena for success for the student |
| Explicit referencing to each of the three books from your Book Club discussions in order to illuminate insights about your case study student |
| A concluding statement that details how you would teach this student and others like him or her in your own classroom in order to take the greatest possible advantage of the student's strengths and learning goals |
Your grade for the case study will be calculated by adding your score for each category and matching to the total point values below:
A= 26-30 points
B= 21-25 points
C= 16-20 points
D= 11-15 points
F= 0-10 points
Links to Additional Ideas and Information Regarding the Conduct of a Case Study
The Case Study as a Research Method
Basics of Developing Case Studies
Reformating Reporting Methods for Case Studies
COURSE PROJECT OPTION #2: YOUR EXPERIENCES AT THE PLC
Based on your observations and experiences working at the PLC, conduct a detailed report in which you consider all relevant factors from the following list. Keep in mind how these experiences might have been influenced or altered by the books you have read and classroom discussions. Make sure to indicate how these experiences might influence you as a future educator. You do not have to address every issue, but because each person's experiences at the PLC are unique, make sure you address the most relevant ideas to your experience at the PLC.
You may present your course project
in any of the following media, or others that you see fit (please run any
seemingly radical ideas past me before you get carried away):
1. A categorical presentation (i.e., a report in which you provide a separate
section for each of the following major categories: the institution, the teachers
and administrators, the students, you as a teacher)
2. A narrative in which you incorporate information into your story of the
semester's experiences, without relying on categories but including information
where relevant in your presentation.
3. A documentary film, animated feature, claymation or other form of stop-action
film, or other technology-based presentation, in either categorical or narrative
form.
4. A series of journal entries that involve some sort of organization of the
material.
5. A work of fiction or epic poem
that provides a verisimilitudinous account of your experiences as a tutor/mentor.
THE INSTITUTION
Consider the structure and format of Classic City High School-including the
curriculum, structure, and set-up of the classroom and its environment-and
discuss the implications for teaching and learning.
Compare this nontraditional
format with the structure of your own high school.
Discuss how this structure of the PLC might benefit some students and not
others?
Think about your initial reactions to the PLC and how some of your opinions
changed or became confirmed with regard to classroom procedure or structure.
Analyze the usefulness of technology in regard to the student(s) you were
working with.
THE TEACHERS AND ADMINISTRATORS
THE STUDENTS
Discuss the student(s) you worked with and your interactions with them in terms
of the following factors:
Personality: What is the personality of the person with whom you are
working, including his or her interests, hobbies, passions, demeanor, and other
aspects of self? How does this contrast with your own personality?
Cultural Background: What is the cultural background of the learner,
including such social categories as race, ethnicity, gender, social class, and
sexual orientation? How do these factors contribute to the person's ways of
viewing and acting in the world? How does this contrast with your own cultural
background?
Educational Experiences: What are the educational experiences of the
learner, including ability track placement, likes and dislikes about school,
beliefs about teachers, beliefs about formal education, ability to apply personal
strengths to school tasks, and other experiences that affect the learner's functioning
in a school setting? How do his or her experiences contrast with your own educational
experiences? You might consider any or all of the following factors:
the student in relation to the teacher (e.g., the student has difficulty interpreting the teacher's instructions)
the student in relation to the school culture (e.g., the student is accustomed to working collaboratively but the teacher requires all work to be individual)
the student in relation to the subject matter (e.g., the student has difficulty understanding school grammar assignments)
the student in relation to the ways in which subject matter is taught (e.g., the student likes to read but does poorly on multiple-choice tests on reading)
the student in relation to peers (e.g., the student's friends apply pressure not to succeed in schoolwork)
the student in relation to school rules (e.g., the student and friends are loud and boisterous when together; such behavior gets disciplined in school)
YOU AS A MENTOR, TUTOR, AND
FUTURE EDUCATOR
Rubric for Assessing your Account of Experiences at the PLC
Your case study, regardless of which form you use, will be assessed according to the following criteria. You will receive 0-5 points in each of the following categories, with 0 being a lowest score and 5 being the highest.
| Assessment Category |
| A clear account of the institution and its characteristics, including its structure and the technology options |
| A clear account of the relevant teachers and administrators, including their relationships with students |
| A clear account of the students, including their personalities, cultural backgrounds, and educational experiences |
| A clear account of your role as a mentor and tutor and your prospects as a future educator. |
| Explicit referencing to each of the three books from your Book Club discussions in order to illuminate insights about your experiences at the PLC |
|
A concluding statement that details how you would teach based on your experiences at the PLC. |
Your grade for your account of your experiences will be calculated by adding your score for each category and matching to the total point values below:
A= 26-30 points
B= 21-25 points
C= 16-20 points
D= 11-15 points
F= 0-10 points
COURSE PROJECT OPTION #3: MAINTAIN AN ONGOING BLOG ABOUT YOUR EXPERIENCES AT THE PLC
Create a blog or a journal that
documents your time and experiences at the PLC. You will record your daily
experiences on your blog or in your journal. Be sure to include:
1. your observations (of the classroom, students, teacher, etc.)
2. what you are learning (from
your student(s), teacher, on your own, etc.)
3. your student's or students'
progress
4. your own progress as a tutor
and mentor
5. references to your book club
books, as well as other groups' books and presentations (e.g., how you can
apply them to what you're seeing in the classroom, how they helped you better
understand something/handle something, things in the classroom and with your
student(s) that support or question what was talked about, etc.)
6. your relationship with your
student(s) (how it's growing/not growing, building trust, etc.)
7. your expectations v. the realities
of the classroom
8. comparisons on how you learn
and your experiences versus your student's or students' and the PLC
9. tactics and methods you use
that both succeeded and failed, and reasons why
This assignment is a little more "bloggy" than the other 2 options. Be sure to document your time tutoring and mentoring after each time you go. For example, when you come home from the PLC, log on to your blog and write about your time there. Be very detailed.
At the end of your time at the PLC (or at the end of the semester), write a synopsis/conclusion on your experience, with attention to what you learned, what you will take away from your experience, what you could have done better, etc.
Have fun with it and take pride in your experience. You should learn just as much from your students as they are learning from you.
Rubric for Assessing your Blog of Experiences at the PLC
Your blog, regardless of which form you use, will be assessed according to the following criteria. You will receive 0-5 points in each of the following categories, with 0 being a lowest score and 5 being the highest.
| Assessment Category |
| A clear account of the institution and its characteristics, including its structure and the technology options |
| A clear account of the relevant teachers and administrators, including their relationships with students |
| A clear account of the students, including their personalities, cultural backgrounds, and educational experiences |
| A clear account of your role as a mentor and tutor and your prospects as a future educator. |
| Explicit referencing to each of the three books from your Book Club discussions in order to illuminate insights about your experiences at the PLC |
|
A concluding statement that details how you would teach based on your experiences at the PLC. |
Your grade for your account of your experiences will be calculated by adding your score for each category and matching to the total point values below:
A= 26-30 points
B= 21-25 points
C= 16-20 points
D= 11-15 points
F= 0-10 points
COMPUTING YOUR GRADE FOR THE SEMESTER
Your grade for the semester will be computed according to the following formula:
I will follow UGA's Grading System in calculcating your letter grade for the course based on these points. Point values will be distributed as follows:
A = 94-100 pts
A- = 90-93 pts
B+ = 87-89 pts
B = 83-86 pts
B- = 80-82 pts
C += 77-79 pts
C = 73-76 pts
C- = 70-72 pts
D = 60-69 pts
F = 0-59 pts