Guiding educational innovation to promote children's non-cognitive abilities to succeed: implementation of the Sesame Street curriculum in Japan

Noriyuki Inoue, D. Light
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Abstract

PurposeWhat does it take to successfully implement new educational innovation in schools, and what roles does lesson study play there? In order to answer this question, this study investigated the implementation of Sesame Street's Dream–Save–Do (DSD) curriculum that was designed to help children in a Japanese elementary school learn to pursue their own dreams.Design/methodology/approachThe authors first reviewed available documents on the DSD curriculum in the district, and then conducted DSD class observations. We also interviewed the students, teachers, the principal, the lead teacher at the school, the school district staff in charge of the operation as well as the Sesame Japan staff in order to collect the data for the study.FindingsThe study found that students were highly engaged in open-ended discussions about their future dreams and how to achieve them in observed DSD classes. The implementation of the new curriculum benefited from utilizing lesson study as the main arena for curricular innovation. A further analysis of the data suggests that the success of the curricular innovation owed much to an inside-out implementation process that situated the iterative lesson study cycle of the teachers as the key driver of change while external actors supported the lesson study process in an inside-out fashion.Research limitations/implicationsThe study implies that guiding an educational innovation to success requires not only institutionalized lesson study, but also cross-institutional collaborative dialogues to support the lesson study process with mutually established trust among key players of the innovation. Further studies are needed to investigate how this model sustains as principals and how this model works (or do not work) in other pilot schools and beyond.Practical implicationsThis study implies that what matters most is that the school embodies a vision shared among teachers, school leaders and external curriculum developers, all working together across institutions in a spirit of collaboration. This type of inside-out implementation would be a path to ensure and sustain the success for those who plan any new educational innovation.Social implicationsWhat matters most was found to be that the school embodies a vision shared among educators, school leaders and external curriculum developers working together across institutions in a spirit of collaboration.Originality/valueGuiding an educational innovation to success requires not only new ideas and effective curriculum plans but also a social structure that allows teachers to engage in effective implementations of the desired curriculum. Lesson study is often considered to be a within-school or school-to-school collaborative process. It is rarely connected to outside agents that bring in new ideas for educational innovation. This study found how inside- and outside-school actors can work together to actualize educational innovation, and what roles lesson study play there.
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引导教育创新,促进儿童非认知能力成功:芝麻街课程在日本的实施
目的:在学校成功实施新的教育创新需要什么?课程研究在学校中扮演什么角色?为了回答这个问题,本研究调查了芝麻街的梦想-拯救-做(DSD)课程的实施情况,该课程旨在帮助日本一所小学的孩子学习追求自己的梦想。设计/方法/方法作者首先回顾了该地区现有的DSD课程文件,然后进行了DSD课堂观察。为了收集研究的数据,我们还采访了学生、老师、校长、学校的班主任、负责运营的学区工作人员以及芝麻日本的工作人员。研究发现,在观察到的DSD课程中,学生们高度参与关于他们未来梦想以及如何实现梦想的开放式讨论。新课程的实施得益于将课堂研究作为课程创新的主要舞台。对数据的进一步分析表明,课程创新的成功在很大程度上归功于一个由内而外的实施过程,该过程将教师的迭代课程学习周期作为变革的关键驱动力,而外部参与者则以一种由内而外的方式支持课程学习过程。研究局限/启示本研究表明,引导教育创新走向成功不仅需要制度化的课程研究,还需要跨机构的合作对话,以支持课程研究过程,并在创新的关键参与者之间相互建立信任。需要进一步的研究来调查这种模式如何作为校长维持下去,以及这种模式如何在其他试点学校和其他地方起作用(或不起作用)。实际意义本研究表明,最重要的是学校体现了教师、学校领导和外部课程开发人员共同的愿景,所有人都以合作精神在各机构之间共同努力。这种由内而外的实施对于那些计划任何新的教育创新的人来说,将是一条确保和维持成功的道路。最重要的是,这所学校体现了教育工作者、学校领导和外部课程开发人员在跨机构合作精神下共同的愿景。创意/价值引导教育创新走向成功不仅需要新的想法和有效的课程计划,还需要一个允许教师参与有效实施所需课程的社会结构。课程学习通常被认为是学校内部或学校与学校之间的合作过程。它很少与为教育创新带来新想法的外部机构联系在一起。本研究探讨校内与校外的行动者如何共同参与教育创新,以及课程研究在其中所扮演的角色。
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