Archive for April, 2007

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If I only had TIME!!!!

April 26, 2007

Teachers are some of the busiest and most tired people I know! Unless you have been a teacher, and experienced the daily energy required to prepare for and manage a class full of kids, then it’s hard to understand what teachers get to feel like – especially towards the end of the term! And then there’s the marking, the paperwork, the parents, your team…..extra-curriculum activities, school fairs….. The list is endless.

This huge workload makes taking on personal new learning really difficult. First of all you need the time to actually reflect on what you need to learn, then the time to investigate, explore, take on board and experiment with new ideas.

Learning takes TIME!

However, I feel it’s really important to take that time, perhaps at lower stress times of the term, and focus on our own personal professional development. Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just insert a memory chip in our brain, and the knowledge we need would be there, integrated with what we already know!

In Learning Pathways, we are wanting children to take more responsibility for their learning, to identify what their learning needs are, and to follow these up. This is partly based on the belief that children learn more if they follow their own interests and curiosities, but also with the intent to teach children HOW to learn. We know about information overload, and the fact that there is more knowledge out there than any of us can ever process, therefore while we attempt to drill some small holes in this giant ball of knowledge, we want to teach children how to wield the pneumatic drill in order to get to the guts of it, so they can do it without us at the helm!

My feeling is, that we first of all need to develop our own skills in this area! Many of us have been taught with chalk and talk, and being fed the small bits of knowledge that someone else has decided are important for us. The truth is, of course, that we are the ones that know best what we need to learn! It’s really no good expecting others to drip feed us with the bits they think are best, because you actually need the whole picture and a deeper understanding to be able to make use of those bits in a way that will maximise the benefit to children’s learning.

Modelling learning for children is another way of giving that pneumatic drill a bit of oomph. I think it’s good to share the Learning Pathway that you’re taking personally, with the children. For example, if you are trialling a new Thinking Skill with students, there’s no harm in letting them know this. Teaching children consciously HOW to learn is important. When I introduce a Thinking Skill that’s new to me, I would tell the children up front, that this is a new Thinking Skill I read about, and that we’re going to try, and that I’d like their feedback at the end, about how helpful it was for them. This gives you valuable information about how well it works, enabling you to adjust and adapt your teaching of it, and also helps the students reflect on how they are going about the learning process. They are also learning that you are learning and trying new things too.

Which brings us back to TIME!!

Not only do students need the TIME to reflect about their learning, but so do teachers.

So how do we do this??

I read some research (can’t quote the source, but suspect it was John Hattie on ICT PD in NZ) which says that TIME is often quoted as an issue for teachers, but that in fact, this is often indicative of another sort of block, and once teachers get over that block, then the issue of TIME disappears.  So what can we do? First of all, reflect on what is blocking you! Maybe it really IS time. Or maybe it’s something else. Maybe you don’t think you need to learn or change, after all, you’re an experienced successful teacher already, right? Maybe this is a direction you don’t really believe can make a difference to children’s learning. – Whatever it is, try to identify it, and in this way you may be able to overcome it!   Then – plan your time!!!!

a) School Time – difficult but possible – This needs school management to designate meeting times to professional learning. eg Time for professional readings at meeting time, syndicates or teams devoting a meeting to learning something the team needs to focus on, and whole staff PD. Most schools do this now. Some schools have Quality Learning Circles, where teachers get together to share what they’re trialling, the difficulties and the successes. Use your CRT time!

b) Personal Time – plan yourself an hour a week (or more!) to focus on something you need to learn about. It might mean getting up an hour earlier one day a week, or it might mean switching off the TV and reading instead. Do your own personal homework while your kids do THEIR homework…. It’s different for each person, but PLANNING it in, makes all the difference.

c) Share with your colleagues – Make your conversations meaningful – share what you’ve been reading about, and discuss the outcomes. Reflection is crucial to your learning!

d) Decide to take personal responsibility for your own learning. Take the time to explore what your colleagues are doing and saying on the internet, both nationally and globally. There’s a lot of research and exploration going on out there!

e) Weekly Implementation – USE your new learning every week. Plan to implement a new strategy in your planning for your classroom every week, whether it’s for an individual, a group or the whole class. Ask them for feedback about how it helped their learning. Think about how you could change or adapt it for another purpose.

If I only had TIME……..ONLY TIME!!!!!

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Literacy – how does it fit in?

April 10, 2007

We were having one of those before school discussions in our Teacher Workroom the other morning, about how we fit the literacy programme to Learning Pathways.

Great to hear the discussion! This is a really important issue for us.

Previously, schools would have a plan showing which genre (don’t you hate that word?) should be covered in which weeks of each term, and off we’d go. Literacy in it’s block, and Social Studies, or Science and Technology in ITs block, and never the twain should meet.

My view is that the teaching of literacy should be a really close fit with what is happening in the Inquiry Process.  This means, that the literacy teaching will change throughout the term, matching what is happening with the class, with groups and with individuals.

During the Immersion phase, I would focus on teaching a genre which is a close fit with a topic the question might relate to. For example – if the topic lends itself to a lot of debate, then these might be the skills you focus on, both orally, and in written form. Thus the children may learn the skills of debating, and of writing arguments. This of course will vary across the school according to the age of the students.

Later, as the students are investigating and finding answers to their questions, you may note that they need to improve the quality of their note-taking, and focus on this.

At the same time, you may be working with small groups in reading, working on skills of reading informational texts, and how to get information from text. The texts may well support the student in finding answers to their questions. This is a way of supporting students who are less able to do this task independently as well. In this way, the LP programme finds its way into the Literacy programme.

LP doesn’t just have to happen in one or two blocks a week, but can happen across the Literacy programme. If students are needing to write a report, or plan a story-board for a movie, this can happen in the writing part of the programme, and the teacher can work with groups according to their needs for this. How this happens in the classroom may vary according to the age level.

To me, the important aspect about Literacy and Learning Pathways, is that it needs to be a close fit, with the Literacy programme reflecting and supporting the students in their Inquiry process.

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Juxtaposition

April 4, 2007

Don’t you think that’s an awesome word?

Even just as a word even without considering its meaning!

Juxta position, Jux ta pos i tion, Juxtaposition.

I first came across the word in an educational sense when I was introduced to Jamie McKenzie, as an ICT Guru, in 1996. This was before we had the glorious disaster of Netday in our school, before one could get on the net and chat to a journalist in Israel and a writer in New York about what they had for dinner, before we could send each other fascinating and silly wriggling emails and share a laugh in our separate but similar four-walled rats cages!

Juxtaposition in the educational sense according to Jamie, was putting two things next to each other which would then trigger a different way of thinking about the two things, or shock us into recognition of the significance of the juxtaposition.

Read the rest of this entry ?

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Bing Bam Bash

April 2, 2007

Presenter M Guhlin from California showed us lots of exciting ideas and things kids are into on the net, with the point of view that if they’re doing this stuff on their own, we should be bringing it into the classroom.

I agree with that.

The classroom should at LEAST be able to engage children at the technological level they are already capable of, and where possible, of course, extend that.

However, what I struggled with is the BING BAM BASH thing. That’s where the kids do things like bring together different movie clips to create something different. One example that we were shown had space ships all shooting at each other.

When I  think about what actual critical or explicit learning the children are doing here, I think, hmmmm processing…. umm processing….yup…. processing.

I’m all for processing.

But what I’m actually for is the critical thinking behind the processing. The thinking that says, “I’m trying to show people what I think about this….it’s this person I’m trying to convince, I think they’ll get the idea best if I…… and what about if I include a shot of this….then they’ll know THIS important point that I want to make. And if I put a lot of quick shots of this in then they’ll feel………” To me, that’s a totally different thing than bringing together a BING and a BANG and a BASH to make some exciting movie special FX.

Things that wriggle and jiggle and go BIM BAM BASH are all fun and exciting, and a sure-fire way to pull some kids in, who might be hard to motivate otherwise, but let’s make sure that there is some real and explicit learning going on as well!

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TUANZ07

April 1, 2007

This blogsite has been developed in response to a number of our staff attending the TUANZ 2007 conference. We had been talking about the problem of some teachers feeling isolated as they went through the process of finding the answers to “The Big Question” and when we heard how some people are using blogs at the conference it seemed like a terrific idea. So here it is, and hopefully it will help teachers with their programmes!