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Introduction
Start with an introduction. This introduces the whole of the report that is to follow, sets the scene for what is come. Keep it to about 150 words.
In this report I am going to discuss the journey that me and my students were on and review my intervention exercise of four weeks. This intervention was set in place because my students would show up to lesson on a Monday afternoon with what seemed to be very little motivation. So my intervention was to check to see if by getting my students to partake in a physical activity will help improve motivation, productivity and quality of learning. I will be discussing my results, which will include emerging themes, what I expected and what actually happened and most importantly the students’ progress before/during/after the intervention.
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Section one. This is the justification for the research. Tell the reader why you wanted to do this, what is the context the work was carried out in? Who are the learners and what is your curriculum? What key government, college policies or teaching and learning theories does it relate to? What is the value of the research to your learners and to you as a teacher? Some of this has …show more content…
This is the evaluation of the data collection methods. Evaluate (make a judgement about) what was the ‘value’ of the methods you used to collect your data. What went well and gave good insight, what didn’t work, how could you have improved it, what changes if any did you make and why. If you did the research again would you use the same data collection methods or new ones? In this section you look back at how you collected the data and evaluate it. Were the methods you used ‘valid’ how did you make them ‘reliable’. You need to underpin this with appropriate theory. Judith Bell ‘Doing your Research Project’ would be very good here or anything by