Browsing by Author "Marinoble, Mark Anthony"
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- Considerations in Building an Elementary Makerspace LabMarinoble, Mark Anthony (Virginia Tech, 2019-04-05)Globalization and technology have placed a recognizable pressure on both employers and educational institutions. Entry-level employees must be adaptive, innovative, collaborative, and have strong problem-solving and communication skills. To prepare students for the future workforce, schools must revisit existing practices and find new ways to foster innovation as the gap between the new skills students need verses what is being taught in public schools continues to grow (Bybee et al, 2006; Wagner, 2012). One way to increase students' interest and skills in STEM education is by incorporating makerspaces into schools. Makerspaces are physical spaces where people have opportunities to build and construct objects based on their own personal interests. Makerspaces foster the innovative ideas and skills students need upon graduation. This qualitative case study investigates why educational leaders decided to launch a makerspace lab and how school leaders established a model makerspace lab at an elementary school. The purpose of this study was to document and describe the change process connected with the implementation of the makerspace lab, how leaders navigated various obstacles, perceptions of the change process, and lessons learned from educators. The findings show that school leaders experienced a novel concept after visiting an extraordinary model makerspace program which demonstrated a unique approach to developing the innovative capacity of young learners. These experiences created a transformational moment in school leaders that motivated them to be change agents and launch their own makerspace lab. School leaders developed community partnerships with an engineering university, a Fortune 500 company, an education community foundation, and a large school district to make this work possible. Together, these educational and business collaborators created a model elementary makerspace model that is one of the first of its kind on the east coast and currently services students from other schools in the region. The findings further discuss the importance of community partnerships, inviting other schools to participate, having a model program to emulate, having the right people, and how a school initiative became a district opportunity.
- Hiring for Success: The Hiring Practices of Site-Based Principals in One District in VirginiaWorcester, Eric William (Virginia Tech, 2023-04-17)The goal of our educational system is to create successful students. Research has found that instruction from a high-quality teacher has more impact than other factors, and students taught by those high-performing teachers experience a range of long-term ongoing benefits (Marzano,2003; Chetty et al., 2011). Understanding this impact, one of the most important roles of educational leaders is to ensure that they are hiring teachers who will be effective at instruction. This hiring effectiveness has a direct impact on the efficacy of their school (Donaldson, 2011; Loeb et al., 2012). Despite the importance of using effective hiring practices, there has been a scarcity of research on determining what practices have been found to be successful in hiring high-quality teachers (Klassen and Kim, 2019; Bruno and Strunk, 2019). The purpose of this study was to examine the hiring practices of principals to discover what practices they found to be successful. Through the framework of a basic qualitative study, several principals were interviewed regarding their hiring practices. Through the study, the lessons that they learned from their hiring experiences were examined. By analyzing these practices, commonalities were explored that might be applicable to a broader group of hiring administrators. With teacher shortages hitting school districts nationwide (Walker, 2019), this study sought to provide assistance to those making those hiring decisions to help them secure the most effective teachers who will have a positive impact on student success. The findings discuss the importance of having common hiring practices, the ways that administrators develop those hiring practices, the factors currently prioritized when making hiring decisions (candidate experience and the perception of candidate interpersonal skills), and the impact that a smaller available pool of candidates has had on the hiring process. The implications suggest that districts should focus on including research-based hiring practices into their professional development opportunities and should provide more opportunities for discussion around hiring practices. Finally, the current hiring conditions should encourage leaders to adjust their approach to the hiring process in order to recruit and retain effective teachers in this competitive educational job market. As principals work to grapple with hiring challenges, continued research on effective practices will be needed to help guide them towards making the best choices. The success of their school and students requires nothing less.