Ulearn 2019 - Samuel Beyer - Sparking Curiosity in young people
Resources - Informational or Inspirational
Resource - What's the purpose? Use a range of literacies.
Explain part involves questioning.
Analyse / Evaluate - Default response for most children is to go personal.
Geyser Hotel activity
Could we use a photo as a resource to inspire our learners before a topic.
Questioning is an art form.
Fertile Questions.
- Open
- Undermining (challenges preconceptions)
- Rich - it requires research
- Connected - it must have meaning for the learner (must care about it)
- Charged - (social or ethical component to it)
- Practical - It must be practical and answerable (eg What would life be like if Captain Cook hadn't arrived? - not practical)
National Library natlib.govt.nz - Cook's nail!
National Library service can deliver books.
- have better empathy
- mindfulness - the best way to get outside yourself is to explore through story. Helps develop empathy.
Great books -
Kiwiana -
Explore Aotearoa -
If you want quality digital resources rather than gambling with google then
Topic explorer.
Any questions.govt.nz anyquestions.govt.nz
They don't give them the answer but point them in the right directions in terms of resources eg discuss .com or .govt . Which sites are most trustworthy? Digital skills are a focus.
Can access resources through Epic. -
digitalnz.org
https://www.tupapa.nz/app.html
Thursday, 10 October 2019
U Learn 2019 - Jacque Allen - Empowering Learners through use of Dialogue
U Learn 2019 - Jacque Allen - Empowering Learners through use of Dialogue
Workshop Facilitators: Del Costello and Christophe Mullings
We need to make sure what's underneath discourse models that make them rich.
Types of talk:
Cumulative Talk -
Disputational Talk - Argumentative
Exploratory Talk -
How to make it work - Key foundation skills.
Listening - The ability
Fluency - Mind to mouth
Voice and Speech Clarity -
Body language and paralinguistic skills - Facing in, eye contact, affirmation skills.
Talk Settings and progressions towards confidence.
Talking to self is a great way to build fluency.
Discussion Guidelines:
1. Be respectful, curteous
2. One person speaking at a time.
3. Actively listening
4. Asking questions
5. Everybody participating
Ground Rules photo -
Important to agree as a staff about what these should be and how we agree to work as a staff and within classrooms right across the school.
Needs to build norms as teachers around how we work with each other. With the use of video to record professional practice, we need to build parameters which govern how we work eg ... coaching conversations etc etc
The vulnerability of teachers in this area needs to be considered.
The reason for the nervousness around video has come from traditional lesson observations associated with appraisal and performance . The actual purpose is about improving outcomes and that camera is focussed on the learners and therefore the learning.
Videoing conversations between students - You get your best information when you as the teacher are removed from the group.
What can you see photo
Video clip
- Children asked what they think
- Questions not asked
- Ideas not challenged
- Contributions are built upon.
Groups summary:
- Scaffold would have helped child 2 structure conversation.
- Body language can be analysed using video.
The role of video (SWivl, Iris etc) can be used to record evidence but also to set goals around what they can do better.
Can use video to know the impact that we are having.
Over a few weeks we can capture the way groups speak to one another and look at ways to improve.
The teachers role in process.
Accountable talk - Participants place markers on the discourse prompts as they go.
What can we do to develop the oracy of our learners at Makauri?
Workshop Facilitators: Del Costello and Christophe Mullings
We need to make sure what's underneath discourse models that make them rich.
Types of talk:
Cumulative Talk -
Disputational Talk - Argumentative
Exploratory Talk -
How to make it work - Key foundation skills.
Listening - The ability
Fluency - Mind to mouth
Voice and Speech Clarity -
Body language and paralinguistic skills - Facing in, eye contact, affirmation skills.
Talk Settings and progressions towards confidence.
Talking to self is a great way to build fluency.
Discussion Guidelines:
1. Be respectful, curteous
2. One person speaking at a time.
3. Actively listening
4. Asking questions
5. Everybody participating
Ground Rules photo -
Important to agree as a staff about what these should be and how we agree to work as a staff and within classrooms right across the school.
Needs to build norms as teachers around how we work with each other. With the use of video to record professional practice, we need to build parameters which govern how we work eg ... coaching conversations etc etc
The vulnerability of teachers in this area needs to be considered.
The reason for the nervousness around video has come from traditional lesson observations associated with appraisal and performance . The actual purpose is about improving outcomes and that camera is focussed on the learners and therefore the learning.
Videoing conversations between students - You get your best information when you as the teacher are removed from the group.
What can you see photo
Video clip
- Children asked what they think
- Questions not asked
- Ideas not challenged
- Contributions are built upon.
Groups summary:
- Scaffold would have helped child 2 structure conversation.
- Body language can be analysed using video.
The role of video (SWivl, Iris etc) can be used to record evidence but also to set goals around what they can do better.
Can use video to know the impact that we are having.
Over a few weeks we can capture the way groups speak to one another and look at ways to improve.
The teachers role in process.
Accountable talk - Participants place markers on the discourse prompts as they go.
What can we do to develop the oracy of our learners at Makauri?
Wednesday, 9 October 2019
Ulearn 2019 - Maurice Abraham - Hobsonville Point
What is success for our young people? Establishing a blueprint for success.
https://www.hpss.school.nz/
https://sites.google.com/a/hobsonvillepoint.school.nz/hpps/welcome - primary school.
Personal Excellence (front half of NZC) v Academic Excellence (back half of NZC)
How is our school defining success you've got to go to your values.
eg Perseverance, Caring, Respect, Responsibility
How can we infuse our 21st Century Learning skills such as creativity, curiosity and collaboration into these via a graduate/learner profile? How do we involve the community in this process?
Learning hubs are where dispositions are developed and project learning takes place.
Hub curriculum.
All assessment that we do in our projects are done on our values. They have to focus on a value eg Collaboration and Connectedness? See handout for detail.
They develop learning goals from these and use a coaching model to assess and evaluate these.
Change has to happen right through to prizegiving. As well as dux (academic excellence) there is a personal excellence award and then an overall one.
Ways of recording and gathering evidence that shows success.
Hero tool to collect evidence link
U learn - Cam Swainson - Technology for Technology's Sake
Framing the Challenge - Cam Swainson
Going beyond Technology for Technology's Sake to deeper learning.
TPACK, SAMR, RAT
RAT (Replacement, Amplification, Transformation)
Technology should be:
Active -
Collaborative -
Authentic -
There is currently not a lot of guidance around how you can develop.
4 shifts protocol
- deeper thinking and learning (checklist photo)
-
- are we involving the community?
- domain knowledge, deeper learning
- critical thinking (checklist photo)
- authentic work (checklist photo (s) - real or fake, authentic role, domain practices
student agency and personalisation (photos)
Student agency
Technology infusion - number 4.
Going beyond Technology for Technology's Sake to deeper learning.
TPACK, SAMR, RAT
RAT (Replacement, Amplification, Transformation)
Technology should be:
Active -
Collaborative -
Authentic -
There is currently not a lot of guidance around how you can develop.
4 shifts protocol
- deeper thinking and learning (checklist photo)
-
- are we involving the community?
- domain knowledge, deeper learning
- critical thinking (checklist photo)
- authentic work (checklist photo (s) - real or fake, authentic role, domain practices
student agency and personalisation (photos)
Student agency
Technology infusion - number 4.
U learn - Using computers in schools.
Lorna Simmonds 9/10/2019 www.sensiblescreenuse.org - Ulearn2019
The moderate use of devices has a positive impact on learning - including gaining digital skills.
OECD report 2015 research
Students who used computers frequently had significantly lower educational outcomes.
High screen use is associated with negative impacts on:
- physical and mental health
- sleep disturbance
- obesity
- vision loss
- hearing loss
- mental health - results are mixed.
MRI studies - ABCD study sites neurological issues such as ADHD
Higher risk of of ASD children developing negative impacts
Legislation has been passed is USA to protect children from screens in schools.
Reading of screens affects comprehension of more complex texts in a negative way.
Overseas guidelines are a good starting point.
Recommendations for digital technologies
Embrace the exciting field it is but
D Ts can support Special Educational needs helping to overcome challenges with strengths
Foster face to face interactions and opportunities for community building.
Focus on the why?
Summary:
Critique current use of technology
Look at recommendations and guidelines
Be informed of risks to health and well-being
The moderate use of devices has a positive impact on learning - including gaining digital skills.
OECD report 2015 research
Students who used computers frequently had significantly lower educational outcomes.
High screen use is associated with negative impacts on:
- physical and mental health
- sleep disturbance
- obesity
- vision loss
- hearing loss
- mental health - results are mixed.
MRI studies - ABCD study sites neurological issues such as ADHD
Higher risk of of ASD children developing negative impacts
Legislation has been passed is USA to protect children from screens in schools.
Reading of screens affects comprehension of more complex texts in a negative way.
Overseas guidelines are a good starting point.
Recommendations for digital technologies
Embrace the exciting field it is but
D Ts can support Special Educational needs helping to overcome challenges with strengths
Foster face to face interactions and opportunities for community building.
Focus on the why?
Summary:
Critique current use of technology
Look at recommendations and guidelines
Be informed of risks to health and well-being
Key Takeaways
Digital technologies should be embraced as the exciting field that it is.
Introduce children to skill-based use of ICT, such as coding, robotics, 3D printing, programming, animation, filmmaking.
Teach computer science. For younger children, computational thinking can be taught with non-digital games and puzzles, and free teaching resources are available.
For older children, computers can provide the ability to create rich content such as images, video and interactive presentation.
Digital technologies can support learning and inclusion for children with special needs. Assistive technologies can aid children with learning difficulties, working with their strengths, to get around their challenges.
Wednesday, 25 September 2019
Students Leading Learning Workshop - Shaun Hawthorne - Wednesday 25th Sept
Students Leading Learning Workshop - Shaun Hawthorne - Wednesday 25th Sept
Notes around what a quality facilitator does:
Meticulous planning using the context of the audience. Delved deeper into the audience using ACT (myself) to gain an insight into what the audience might be looking for.
Gauged prior learning and next steps early in order to ascertain what be useful knowledge from within slideshow. He adapted accordingly.
Lots of time given for sense-making around slides and videos.
Good balance of slides, videos, and discussion, conclusions.
Excellent interaction with groups - the movement and listening in.
Knowledge and experience - Excellent subject knowledge and the surrounding political context and experience as a teacher.
Notes and Ideas around students leading their own learning.
We need to think about why we are conducting change.
Project Zero - Harvard University - Making thinking visible.
This is an excellent website for thinking routines and education focussed.
Trilogy - Metacognitive, Emotional , Behavioural, (Self-regulation at the centre) link
Three key questions for students, teachers, leaders.
Where are we going?
How am I doing?
Where to next?
Learner profile - First cab off the rank - It is critical. We need to know what our children should and could look like when they leave us. Alongside this the teacher profile is just as important.
"Know it doing it, teaching it - then I have learnt it. "
Strategy conversations among students around what works for them at this level are effective.
Graduate profile - Needs to be simple to understand and children need to be able to remember it across the school.
Students giving feedback to each other - We need to build those skills in those children.
Success Criteria is critical to know where they are going.
Students need clarity around what 'success looks like'.
Term 4: What are the conversations you've had as a result? What have you agreed to do in your classrooms, teams, and schools?
Book called 'Switch' ' How to change when change is hard?
Notes around what a quality facilitator does:
Meticulous planning using the context of the audience. Delved deeper into the audience using ACT (myself) to gain an insight into what the audience might be looking for.
Gauged prior learning and next steps early in order to ascertain what be useful knowledge from within slideshow. He adapted accordingly.
Lots of time given for sense-making around slides and videos.
Good balance of slides, videos, and discussion, conclusions.
Excellent interaction with groups - the movement and listening in.
Knowledge and experience - Excellent subject knowledge and the surrounding political context and experience as a teacher.
Notes and Ideas around students leading their own learning.
We need to think about why we are conducting change.
Project Zero - Harvard University - Making thinking visible.
This is an excellent website for thinking routines and education focussed.
Trilogy - Metacognitive, Emotional , Behavioural, (Self-regulation at the centre) link
Three key questions for students, teachers, leaders.
Where are we going?
How am I doing?
Where to next?
Learner profile - First cab off the rank - It is critical. We need to know what our children should and could look like when they leave us. Alongside this the teacher profile is just as important.
"Know it doing it, teaching it - then I have learnt it. "
Strategy conversations among students around what works for them at this level are effective.
Graduate profile - Needs to be simple to understand and children need to be able to remember it across the school.
Students giving feedback to each other - We need to build those skills in those children.
Success Criteria is critical to know where they are going.
Students need clarity around what 'success looks like'.
Term 4: What are the conversations you've had as a result? What have you agreed to do in your classrooms, teams, and schools?
Book called 'Switch' ' How to change when change is hard?
Thursday, 5 September 2019
Suzie St Theresa's School
Our (European) culture has been embraced.
Every interaction with children is motivated by love.
Thinking hats used
What's our reality?
What's do we want to change?
Teachers decided
Value play-based learning.
Every interaction with children is motivated by love.
Thinking hats used
What's our reality?
What's do we want to change?
Teachers decided
Value play-based learning.
Maria McKenzie Brainwaves
Talk with your children.
Research points out being bilingual supports brain development.
7cs of Resilience
Research points out being bilingual supports brain development.
7cs of Resilience
Dr David Schaff - Equity / Diversion / Inclusion from a Public Health and Pasifika perspective
What is equity?
The family has a different meaning for Pacific people. It's more the extended family, not the immediate family.
Spirituality is very important to tp Pacific peoples.
Physical environment: Household crowding, heating, safe access for someone with a disability.
The median income in Counties is less than $20,000.
Scenario: A man had high blood sugar level and when we went to the home and found out he was eating lots of takeaways hence the reason. But delving deeper than that was that was the oven was not working. $300 to replace. $1000 to stay in the hospital for 2 nights depending on the specialist.
The importance of understanding the home is crucial in establishing the problem and resolving it.
The family has a different meaning for Pacific people. It's more the extended family, not the immediate family.
Spirituality is very important to tp Pacific peoples.
Physical environment: Household crowding, heating, safe access for someone with a disability.
The median income in Counties is less than $20,000.
Scenario: A man had high blood sugar level and when we went to the home and found out he was eating lots of takeaways hence the reason. But delving deeper than that was that was the oven was not working. $300 to replace. $1000 to stay in the hospital for 2 nights depending on the specialist.
The importance of understanding the home is crucial in establishing the problem and resolving it.
Leadership in a Diverse World- Tiumalu Peter Fa'afiu (Director Amnesty international)
Amnesty International
Diversity Starts at Home with the children.
Thoughts: The world as a village
Ways of achieving diversity, inclusion, and equity.
- surveying
- identifying critical goals and prioritising them
- training for staff and leaders
- developing a plan that will ensure it is sustained over time.
Externally we celebrate diversity; internally we suffocated it!!
Dealing with Adults:
link to books
Is the school going to teach me about being good and be kind?
Attributes needed by our future generation - Willingness to learn, adaptability, fairness, cultural competency.
Diversity Starts at Home with the children.
Thoughts: The world as a village
Ways of achieving diversity, inclusion, and equity.
- surveying
- identifying critical goals and prioritising them
- training for staff and leaders
- developing a plan that will ensure it is sustained over time.
Externally we celebrate diversity; internally we suffocated it!!
Dealing with Adults:
link to books
Is the school going to teach me about being good and be kind?
Attributes needed by our future generation - Willingness to learn, adaptability, fairness, cultural competency.
Ann Milne - Springboard Trust Auckland Sepember 5th
Dr Ann Milne - Colouring the White Spaces.
Equity for Maori is not the end game. It is sovereignty (shared ownership, self-determination)
How could schools ensure all students have strength in their own cultural identity? This is a school and community journey and there are no quick fixes. Because it is a partnership it is difficult to pluck a solution from elsewhere and hope it will fit a local setting. Some schools have many different ethnicities, some have very few. In all New Zealand communities the place of Maori as tangata whenua behoves all schools to listen and respond to their Maori communities, and to Maori as partners under the Treaty of Waitangi. The fact that this is a requirement already, yet we haven’t made a difference for Maori learners, is an indictment on our system and our listening processes.
The most consistent argument I hear as an excuse for doing very little is that parents wouldn’t agree to a more culturally responsive school. “Maori and Pasifika parents in my school,” I’m often told, “don’t want that culture stuff. They want their kids to achieve academically.” Of course they do – but we are asking the wrong question when we give parents an either/or choice.
In nearly 40 years of teaching in predominantly Maori and Pasifika communities, I’ve never met a Maori or Pasifika parent who, when assured the two are not mutually exclusive, didn’t want both! It’s also true that this argument is weakening as Maori and Pasifika parents become aware of the damage caused by loss of language and culture and more families practise the resistance I described earlier from my family’s personal experience. It’s worth repeating that it is wrong of us to assume that by enrolling in their local mainstream school Maori and Pasifika parents are not conscientised, resistant, and seeking transformative school practice. However, most Maori and Pasifika families have generations of experience of schools not responding to their viewpoint. It is equally wrong of us to assume that silence means families agree with what we are delivering. More often than not silence is a sign of disapproval, or of the fact no one has listened in the past so why would that change now? In order to develop culturally responsive programmes that develop strong secure cultural identities we have to do all of the following – and more: Raise our own awareness of the effect of whiteness on our thinking and practice – as individuals, as leaders, as a staff, as policy and decision-makers, as an education system and as a community. Critically analyse our current practice and policy in our own schools.
A powerful exercise we once did at a staff meeting was to start from the footpath across the road from the school gate looking at the image we presented to our community, then walk through the school office, classrooms, playground and finally examine a range of school documents, newsletters, our prospectus, our Charter, etc. As a staff we were shocked at the not-so hidden messages we were sending out to our Maori and Pasifika communities about what was “right” and about how they should meet our expectations. Ask different questions in conversations with your community. You are the educational leaders, so lead. Don’t wait for initiatives to be suggested by parents whose experience is that they don’t have a voice in education. Offer parents programmes that deliver BOTH academic achievement and cultural identity, languages, and knowledges, as of right. When you do develop these programmes don’t imply that you are doing the targeted children some special favour that the white majority of the school don’t have. They do. Don’t overtly or covertly structure learning and achievement as some sort of hierarchy with high status for some learning (literacy and numeracy) and lower or peripheral ‘add-on’ status for other knowledge, particularly cultural knowledges and competencies. Ask!
The resources for designing culturally responsive learning that fits your community exist in the community right at your doorstep. Listen! Having asked different questions don’t then re-interpret what your community tells you into “school-speak”. An example of this practice is the way we ‘allow’ bilingual units to develop but then measure their success in terms of their English literacy levels. Read! There is a vast pool of research and literature in this field that all educators need to examine. This is rich material for staff discussion and professional development. Audit! Truthfully and name the colour of the spaces on our own school ‘page’ and genuinely work towards changing this so all children can see a place for them in your space.
We need to teach our pakeha students about White Privilege.
Recommendations
1. That “mainstream” schools, or the national “network” of schools become culturally responsive to Maori and to children of other ethnicities so that this is not considered “alternative” to the norm.
2. That school principals and senior leaders develop an understanding of culturally responsive, critical, social justice pedagogy.
3. That pre-service education includes understanding of culturally responsive, critical and social justice pedagogies.
4. That Ka Hikitia be fully resourced so that schools can avail themselves of the professional development that should accompany this strategy.
5. That we ask different questions of our Maori and ethnic communities about their aspirations for their children, then don’t allow our own agendas to influence the answers, or reinterpret the answers to fit our preconceived ideas.
6. That we give Maori and Pasifika parents genuine choices. If mainstream schools are not providing authentic cultural learning environments, Section 156 of our Education Act should be supported to work in the way it was designed to do. The Ministry of Education should not put insurmountable barriers in the way of schools trying to implement the Act to provide an education that fits their community. The strength and bitterness of the opposition from education officials to any notion of self-determination or educational sovereignty in mainstream schools is consistent across countries and communities. Implementing this change should not be so hard.
7. That we seriously review our narrow blinkered focus of literacy, numeracy and technical academic achievement as our primary measures of “success.” This includes refusal by school leaders to implement National Standards in their present form.
8. That we acknowledge that this is a systemic issue, therefore apportioning sectoral blame is counter-productive to finding meaningful solutions. Alienation from school is not an intermediate/middle or secondary school phenomena. Disengagement and dislocation from their cultural identity begins when children enter our schools’ white spaces. Just because it takes some years for the impact of this dislocation to manifest itself does not absolve primary schools from their responsibility to respond differently.
9. That school leaders and teachers recognise that the systemic change required is unlikely to happen overnight, if at all. Our self-governing education system however, gives us an autonomy that the educators I visited could simply not believe. The greatest barrier to each one of us making this sort of change in our own school is our own thinking – which we do have the power to change.
What does it mean for Maori to have success as Maori? See photo
3 criteria culturally responsive pedagogy
Student learning.
Cultural competence requires an awareness of cultural diversity and the ability to function effectively and respectfully when working with and treating people of different cultural backgrounds.
Critical pedagogy (social justice) is a philosophy of education that views teaching as a political act. This philosophy focuses on issues of inequality such as social class, race or gender. At the heart of critical pedagogy is the idea that individuals can, in their own ways, transform the world into a better place.
link to sabbatical report
What can I control? - Who can I influence?
http://www.annmilne.co.nz/blog
Streetwise for mapping events and
What is a graduate profile?
Equity for Maori is not the end game. It is sovereignty (shared ownership, self-determination)
How could schools ensure all students have strength in their own cultural identity? This is a school and community journey and there are no quick fixes. Because it is a partnership it is difficult to pluck a solution from elsewhere and hope it will fit a local setting. Some schools have many different ethnicities, some have very few. In all New Zealand communities the place of Maori as tangata whenua behoves all schools to listen and respond to their Maori communities, and to Maori as partners under the Treaty of Waitangi. The fact that this is a requirement already, yet we haven’t made a difference for Maori learners, is an indictment on our system and our listening processes.
The most consistent argument I hear as an excuse for doing very little is that parents wouldn’t agree to a more culturally responsive school. “Maori and Pasifika parents in my school,” I’m often told, “don’t want that culture stuff. They want their kids to achieve academically.” Of course they do – but we are asking the wrong question when we give parents an either/or choice.
In nearly 40 years of teaching in predominantly Maori and Pasifika communities, I’ve never met a Maori or Pasifika parent who, when assured the two are not mutually exclusive, didn’t want both! It’s also true that this argument is weakening as Maori and Pasifika parents become aware of the damage caused by loss of language and culture and more families practise the resistance I described earlier from my family’s personal experience. It’s worth repeating that it is wrong of us to assume that by enrolling in their local mainstream school Maori and Pasifika parents are not conscientised, resistant, and seeking transformative school practice. However, most Maori and Pasifika families have generations of experience of schools not responding to their viewpoint. It is equally wrong of us to assume that silence means families agree with what we are delivering. More often than not silence is a sign of disapproval, or of the fact no one has listened in the past so why would that change now? In order to develop culturally responsive programmes that develop strong secure cultural identities we have to do all of the following – and more: Raise our own awareness of the effect of whiteness on our thinking and practice – as individuals, as leaders, as a staff, as policy and decision-makers, as an education system and as a community. Critically analyse our current practice and policy in our own schools.
A powerful exercise we once did at a staff meeting was to start from the footpath across the road from the school gate looking at the image we presented to our community, then walk through the school office, classrooms, playground and finally examine a range of school documents, newsletters, our prospectus, our Charter, etc. As a staff we were shocked at the not-so hidden messages we were sending out to our Maori and Pasifika communities about what was “right” and about how they should meet our expectations. Ask different questions in conversations with your community. You are the educational leaders, so lead. Don’t wait for initiatives to be suggested by parents whose experience is that they don’t have a voice in education. Offer parents programmes that deliver BOTH academic achievement and cultural identity, languages, and knowledges, as of right. When you do develop these programmes don’t imply that you are doing the targeted children some special favour that the white majority of the school don’t have. They do. Don’t overtly or covertly structure learning and achievement as some sort of hierarchy with high status for some learning (literacy and numeracy) and lower or peripheral ‘add-on’ status for other knowledge, particularly cultural knowledges and competencies. Ask!
The resources for designing culturally responsive learning that fits your community exist in the community right at your doorstep. Listen! Having asked different questions don’t then re-interpret what your community tells you into “school-speak”. An example of this practice is the way we ‘allow’ bilingual units to develop but then measure their success in terms of their English literacy levels. Read! There is a vast pool of research and literature in this field that all educators need to examine. This is rich material for staff discussion and professional development. Audit! Truthfully and name the colour of the spaces on our own school ‘page’ and genuinely work towards changing this so all children can see a place for them in your space.
We need to teach our pakeha students about White Privilege.
Recommendations
1. That “mainstream” schools, or the national “network” of schools become culturally responsive to Maori and to children of other ethnicities so that this is not considered “alternative” to the norm.
2. That school principals and senior leaders develop an understanding of culturally responsive, critical, social justice pedagogy.
3. That pre-service education includes understanding of culturally responsive, critical and social justice pedagogies.
4. That Ka Hikitia be fully resourced so that schools can avail themselves of the professional development that should accompany this strategy.
5. That we ask different questions of our Maori and ethnic communities about their aspirations for their children, then don’t allow our own agendas to influence the answers, or reinterpret the answers to fit our preconceived ideas.
6. That we give Maori and Pasifika parents genuine choices. If mainstream schools are not providing authentic cultural learning environments, Section 156 of our Education Act should be supported to work in the way it was designed to do. The Ministry of Education should not put insurmountable barriers in the way of schools trying to implement the Act to provide an education that fits their community. The strength and bitterness of the opposition from education officials to any notion of self-determination or educational sovereignty in mainstream schools is consistent across countries and communities. Implementing this change should not be so hard.
7. That we seriously review our narrow blinkered focus of literacy, numeracy and technical academic achievement as our primary measures of “success.” This includes refusal by school leaders to implement National Standards in their present form.
8. That we acknowledge that this is a systemic issue, therefore apportioning sectoral blame is counter-productive to finding meaningful solutions. Alienation from school is not an intermediate/middle or secondary school phenomena. Disengagement and dislocation from their cultural identity begins when children enter our schools’ white spaces. Just because it takes some years for the impact of this dislocation to manifest itself does not absolve primary schools from their responsibility to respond differently.
9. That school leaders and teachers recognise that the systemic change required is unlikely to happen overnight, if at all. Our self-governing education system however, gives us an autonomy that the educators I visited could simply not believe. The greatest barrier to each one of us making this sort of change in our own school is our own thinking – which we do have the power to change.
What does it mean for Maori to have success as Maori? See photo
3 criteria culturally responsive pedagogy
Student learning.
Cultural competence requires an awareness of cultural diversity and the ability to function effectively and respectfully when working with and treating people of different cultural backgrounds.
Critical pedagogy (social justice) is a philosophy of education that views teaching as a political act. This philosophy focuses on issues of inequality such as social class, race or gender. At the heart of critical pedagogy is the idea that individuals can, in their own ways, transform the world into a better place.
link to sabbatical report
What can I control? - Who can I influence?
http://www.annmilne.co.nz/blog
Streetwise for mapping events and
What is a graduate profile?
Monday, 19 August 2019
3 Levels of Questions.
For our Reading Inquiry we are learning to develop the way ask questions. We are using Google Jamboard to post questions as a group. We then classify them into Level 1, 2 or 3 questions. Sometimes we think of easy questions which are easy to answer and don't require us to think deeply. If we want to challenge each other we have to try and ask questions that get each other to think deeply and use what they already know. It's amazing that another child from Mangapapa school has the same type of learning going on in her class. The power of blogging!!
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

























