The Successful Partnership Enhancement Program (PEP) Model in Appalachian Schools
Authors: Dr. Wimberly Royster, Dr. John Yopp, Dr. Harold Peach, Barbara Shoemaker

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4. Results
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Claim 1
The online and focus group surveys show similar identified needs and a similar priority order. (see http://www2.research.uky.edu/amsp/pub/June%202007% 20Research%20Conference/Harold%20Peach%20-%20Research%20Note.pdf.). Sources of data include a special, proven evaluative instrument, the Program Improvement Review (PIR) developed by AMSP personnel and officially adopted by the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA, http://www.nsta.org/pd/spir/ ). Other sources used are the Kentucky School Improvement Plans, survey data from parents or community, standardized test scores (the ACT's Plan and Explore Programs, Commonwealth Testing System) and the No Child Left Behind Yearly Report.

Claim 2
The PEP proposals have yielded a broad list of needs based on school and district data. Within this list, individual schools describe content and concepts as well as grade levels related to the needs. The schools propose both different intervention strategies to address the needs and varied implementation strategies. (See AMSP Annual Report Year 5 - http:// www2.research.uky.edu/amsp/pub/Annual%20Report%20-%20Year%205.pdf)

Claim 3
As stated by former Secretary of Labor, William Brock, "When the results fall short, we tell them (K-12 teachers), 'You just have to work harder'. Most feel that they have no voice in their schools. This in no way to treat professionals." (Wallwork & Male, 2008, 3).
Duncan's Examining AMSP Partnerships: Increasing Capacity for Distributed Leadership (AMSP 2006 Annual Report and publication in preparation) showed that both centralized and distributed leadership paradigms worked but that the latter was much more effective for getting more teachers involved at the local level, and that time was the single most important factor (and most lacking in schools) for successful partnerships - time to explore, brainstorm, think together and plan/coordinate the project or idea.

Claim 4
The 2007 AMSP Faculty Survey (see 2007 Annual Report) provided the evidence for changes in IHE faculty attitudes and teaching practices. For example,

  • 88% - Changed the instructional materials and/or content used in their courses
  • 71% - Changed the teacher preparation curriculum at their institution

"The PEPs required collaboration that yielded short-term partnerships leading to long-term relationships. For example, the PEPs "seeded" relationships within the counties that make up the AMSP and enabled them to grow. These relationships have become critical connectors to sustain locally generated work. Further, the PEPs enabled development of relationships between IHEs and K-12 that didn't previously exist. This has obvious benefits for the districts, but it also benefits the IHEs. The Appalachian Math Science Partnership: A Multi-State Umbrella Partnership Promoting Local Mathematics And Science Reform Close-Up Papers (Inverness Research, http://appalachian.mspnet.org/index.cfm/15831)

Claim 5
The Kentucky Academic Index scores rose for all 21 Kentucky schools participating in PEPs during the first two rounds evaluated. Thirteen schools demonstrated an 8% to 35% increase in mathematics or science academic indices. Preliminary impacts for the latest completed projects (2007-2008) show consistent improvements across districts, including one elementary and two middle schools with 10-13 point improvements in mathematics indices.
 The achievement data are also supported by numerous testimonies from participating teachers, e.g., "...the district met all of our math goals for the first time. We attribute that to the hard work of our teachers in the PEP program."