Vonda Scipio Dissertation Final Defense

The College of Education, Health and

Human Sciences

Announces the Final Examination of

Vonda K. Scipio

for the degree of

Doctor of Education

May 15, 2014 at 1:00 pm

405 Ball Hall, University of Memphis

Memphis, TN

 

Biographical Sketch

Bachelor of Science, Human Resources Management, Upsala College

Master of Arts, Reading Specialization Adult Literacy, Kean University

Advisory Committee

Vivian Gunn Morris, Ph.D., Professor, Instruction and Curriculum Leadership, Committee chair

Satomi I. Taylor, Ph.D., Professor, Instruction and Curriculum Leadership

J. Helen Perkins, Ed.D., Associate Professor, Instruction and Curriculum Leadership

Jerrie Scott, Ph.D., Professor, Instruction and Curriculum Leadership

Louis Franceschini, Ph.D., Research Associate II, Center for Research in Educational Policy

Mitsunori Misawa, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Leadership

Major Field of Study

Instruction and Curriculum Leadership

Period of Preparation:  2007 – 2014

Comprehensive Examination Passed: August 2013

Improving Teacher Effectiveness in an Urban School District through a

High Quality Induction and Mentoring Program

Abstract

Induction and mentoring programs are being implemented throughout the nation by school districts as intensive professional development for new teachers. These programs are designed to accelerate the development of novice teachers as a strategy for improving the academic achievement of students enrolled in P-12 classrooms. In an effort to assess the relative importance of school-level factors that might further such teachers’ growth, the purpose of this study was to investigate the perceptions of three cohorts of mentored teachers with respect to five working conditions at their assigned schools—namely, (a) colleagues contribution to professional growth; (b) principal support of professional growth; (c) adequate classroom space; (d) sufficient materials and supplies and (e) collaboration with veteran teachers—and to determine if there were differences in their perceptions by such respondent characteristics as years teaching, time working with their mentors, and level of education.

Participants in this study were 169 mentored teachers who taught from one to three academic years, from 34 schools, in a predominately African American district in the southeastern United States. While enrolled in a school district-university sponsored induction and mentoring program over a three-year period, the mentored teachers completed an anonymous online Induction Survey that was developed and administered by the New Teacher Center, Santa Cruz. Derived from successive administrations of the Induction Survey, the data were brought together in a single file were subjected to secondary analysis. Obtained through the application of a variety of non-parametric statistical procedures, the findings indicated that the mentored teachers rated those items highest that pertained to the “social context” of the school: namely, colleagues’ contribution to their professional growth, collaboration with veteran teachers, and support of principals. Conversely, the more “material” conditions of the school—specifically, the adequacy of the room in which they taught and sufficiency of materials and supplies for instruction—were consistently rated lowest by these teacher respondents.

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