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    Can I tell you what really happened?: learning to make decisions in response to indigenous student voice in a high school language arts classroom

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    Author
    Rushman, Alyssa M.
    Chair
    Patterson, Leslie
    Committee
    Siekmann, Sabine
    Martelle, Wendy
    Keyword
    Alaska Native students
    Chefornak
    indigenous peoples
    education
    secondary education
    language arts
    high school sophomores
    classroom management
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/11122/10535
    Abstract
    This study focuses on engaging high school students in reading and the decisions I make to sustain that engagement. I learned that one way to enhance the engagement in my classroom is to listen to my students' stories and to incorporate culturally relevant texts. All of the students in this study were previously in our school's language intervention program: Read 180. While teaching this intervention-based class, I noticed this class was a behavior management nightmare. The students' challenging behavior led me to question the intervention program's ability to sustain my students' engagement through the prescribed texts. This study aims to describe my observations in a 10th grade Language Arts II class in Chefornak, Alaska. Specifically, this thesis describes my findings and analysis as it relates to how students show engagement and how I make (and revise) decisions in response to my students' voices. I used teacher action research (TAR) to research the events in my classroom. During an 11-week period, I collected audio recordings, student work samples, and teacher action research journal entries. At the end of the research, I also wrote memos about the data. I used constructive grounded theory (CGT) to make sense of the story the data tells and to see what kind of patterns were present. This research is important to me because it helps me to understand the weaknesses and the strengths in my own instructional planning as well as how I interpret students' participation in class. After this research, I am convinced that learning outcomes are preceded by learner engagement, and that learner engagement is complex.
    Description
    Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2019
    Date
    2019-05
    Type
    Thesis
    Collections
    Linguistics

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