[AAACE-NLA] nifl, research, advocacy
Sissy Kegley
sissy.kegley at verizon.net
Thu Jan 29 13:18:02 EST 2004
In response to the legislative aide's comment about research, can't we
point him to the US Department of Education's Institute of Education
Sciences' definition of evidence-based education as:
>>The integration of professional wisdom with the best available
empirical
evidence in making decisions about how to deliver instruction.<<
This definition values the insights of both researchers and
practitioners in
determining how best to provide educational services.
The above excerpt is from NCSALL's Establishing an Evidence-Based Adult
Education System.
Once again, I have the feeling I'm talking about apples when the
discussion is actually about oranges.
Sissy Kegley
ESOL/Adult Education
(301) 588-4333 home office
(301) 467-5364 cellular
sissy.kegley at verizon.net
-----Original Message-----
From: aaace-nla-bounces at lists.literacytent.org
[mailto:aaace-nla-bounces at lists.literacytent.org] On Behalf Of Janet
Isserlis
Sent: Wednesday, January 28, 2004 12:02 PM
To: National Literacy Advocacy List sponsored by AAACE
Subject: [AAACE-NLA] nifl, research, advocacy
Dear all,
(with apologies for cross-posting, but with keen interest in
responses from as broad a group of educators as possible c-- this is
being sent to all NIFL lists. This list may be a place to ask deeper
questions and to not only ask, but work towards an advocacy-oriented
response, or set of responses so that individuals and programs might
be able to act in ways that enable us to use research in aid of (and
not as a barrier to) doing the work we need to do.
There are many reasons for us to continue to support the critically
important work of NIFL, including its focus on adult learning. In a
recent conversation with a legislative aide, a practitioner reported
that the aide said "that he didn't necessarily see
'researched-based' [practice/teaching] as a problem [for adult
literacy practitioners], as he put it, 'that means you just have
studies showing that what you do works, and you don't just go
doing whatever you want to do'."
What are these 'studies'? What passes for research that informs our
work, what research 'counts' to legislative people and who will
ultimately decide what counts for programs that receive federal
funding?
What do you think about that? If NIFL were to change, to
provide resources only on scientifically-based reading research
practices, how would that impact adult literacy and basic
education?What does this mean to you? Do you see that as posing a
problem? What are the implications in terms of our work of all of
the above - both as professional development workers and as classroom
teachers?
Janet Isserlis
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