Thomas DeVere Wolsey
Walden University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Thomas DeVere Wolsey.
Journal of Educational Administration | 2009
Cynthia L. Uline; Megan Tschannen-Moran; Thomas DeVere Wolsey
Purpose – Accompanying the recent concern for the quality of our nations educational infrastructure, a growing body of research connects the quality of school facilities to both student outcomes including achievement, behavior, and attitude as well as to teacher attitude and behavior. Less is known about the mechanisms of these relationships. This paper aims to examine the link between school building quality and student outcomes through the mediating influence of school climate. Results build upon those of a recent study that confirmed a link between the quality of school facilities and student achievement in both English and Mathematics, as well as the mediating role of school climate. This qualitative follow‐up study explores the complicated intricacies of how a school buildings physical properties influence teaching and learning.Design/methodology/approach – The study is structured according to a collective, instrumental case study design. Individual, focus group, walk‐through and photo‐interviews, ...
Literacy Research and Instruction | 2010
Thomas DeVere Wolsey
Cognitive flexibility theory posits that some tasks or cognitive activities resist oversimplification, a lens through which the present study is cast. High school writing tasks that promote complex thinking may also promote increased uptake of academic vocabulary. The study described in this article demonstrates how essential questions and other tasks that ask students to draw on multiple sources of information and high-order thinking may encourage increasingly precise vocabulary use by student writers. Those writing tasks that called for complex cognitive work tended to promote precision in use of language.
Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy | 2012
Thomas DeVere Wolsey; Diane Lapp; Douglas Fisher
Academic writing is a mainstay of expression in secondary schools. However, many students think of academic writing in terms of local operations that include spelling, punctuation, use of third person, and so on. Teachers may expect mastery of local operations, but often they want students to navigate the terrain of the content area or discipline by integrating sources, taking up academic vocabulary, synthesizing concepts, or creating new understanding. This article describes the expectations that students in one 10th-grade class hold about their academic writing tasks as compared with that of their teachers. Length of writing tasks, features of academic register in written work, and purpose in writing assignments are explored, and recommendations are provided based on the data.
Literacy Research and Instruction | 2013
Susan Davis Lenski; Kathy Ganske; Sandy Chambers; Linda Wold; Elizabeth Dobler; Dana L. Grisham; Roya Q. Scales; Linda Smetana; Thomas DeVere Wolsey; Karen Kreider Yoder; Janet Young
The purpose of this article is to describe the first part of a three-phase study to learn what makes an effective elementary literacy initial licensure program. The first step was to identify how nine programs prioritized research-based literacy practices and to identify each programs unique features, which we called “signature aspects.” Findings suggest that all the programs emphasized teaching literacy theories, instructional practices, and uses of assessment. The programs also had unique features, such as the workshop approach and communities of practice. The conclusions of this study are that programs, despite a wide variety of program configurations, independently prioritized the International Reading Association standards in similar ways, and that the signature aspects of the nine programs were a result of the contexts of the institutions.
Literacy Research and Instruction | 2016
Joy Myers; Roya Q. Scales; Dana L. Grisham; Thomas DeVere Wolsey; Sherry Dismuke; Linda Smetana; Karen Kreider Yoder; Chinwe H. Ikpeze; Kathy Ganske; Susan D. Martin
ABSTRACT This small scale, exploratory study reveals how writing instruction is taught to preservice teachers across the United States in university-based preservice teacher education programs based on online survey results from 63 teacher educators in literacy from 50 institutions. Despite the growing writing demands and high stakes writing sample testing in K–12 classrooms, our survey of literacy teacher educators indicated that teacher preparation programs rarely offer stand-alone writing instruction methods courses. Evidence suggests that writing methods are frequently embedded in reading methods courses. Equally concerning, data indicate a lack of confidence among many teacher educators regarding teaching writing methods. This study highlights the need for greater attention to writing in teacher preparation programs and adds to the conversation of why these issues continue to plague higher education.
Journal of Teacher Education | 2018
Roya Q. Scales; Thomas DeVere Wolsey; Susan Davis Lenski; Linda Smetana; Karen Kreider Yoder; Elizabeth Dobler; Dana L. Grisham; Janet Young
This three phase longitudinal multiple-case study, framed by positioning theory, investigated how four novice teachers learned to use professional judgment in their literacy instruction. Data sources from coursework, student teaching, and novice teaching were included. Interviews, observations, researchers’ observational notes, and school and classroom demographics were compiled and analyzed to create case reports. Findings indicated while they differed in their use of professional judgment as novice teachers, participants learned this skill in student teaching rather than in coursework, which caused us to question whether teacher preparation programs are preparing teachers to use professional judgment or training them for technical compliance.
Reading Psychology | 2017
Roya Q. Scales; Thomas DeVere Wolsey; Janet Young; Linda Smetana; Dana L. Grisham; Susan Davis Lenski; Elizabeth Dobler; Karen Kreider Yoder; Sandra Chambers
This longitudinal study, framed by activity theory, examines what seven novice teachers’ talk and actions reveal about their literacy teaching practices then delves into mediating influences of the teaching context. Utilizing collective, multi-case methods, data sources included interviews, observations, and artifacts. Findings indicate novices navigated school contexts by following existing practices, adjusting to conditions, and pushing back. Mediating influences, internal and external, were factored how novices applied knowledge from teacher preparation programs. Authors employed the metaphor of paddling a constantly changing river to convey novices’ actions for meeting students’ literacy learning. Recommendations for teacher educators and policymakers are suggested.
International journal on e-learning | 2008
Thomas DeVere Wolsey
Literacy Research and Instruction | 2011
Dana L. Grisham; Thomas DeVere Wolsey
The Journal of School Leadership | 2010
Cynthia L. Uline; Thomas DeVere Wolsey; Megan Tschannen-Moran; Chii-Dean Lin