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Wednesday, 30 June 2021

Tala noa - Cultural Responsiveness

Cultural Responsiveness has been a priority for all teachers, no matter what school I have been in. This session was discussed through a Tala noa, which under this name I hadn't attended before. 

Tala noa a discussion based around an objective with NO judgement. Despite the fact that this is not a new concept when I heard this first I was relieved because I have been in discussions where you could feel the look when you had your say. Personally, you can't change your thinking if you can't share it.

We looked at the Pasifika Success Compass, showing the student/learner in the middle and the way people, families, communities and series wrap around them. All with the purpose of Achievement, Engagement and Participation for the student at the forefront.

Students don't care what we know until they know that we care!

We looked at a video with the pleas of Pasifika students for the education system to catch up with the innovative practices of our Pacific communities.

"Enable me, enable us, my community, all our communities, my family, your family - so we can grow our potential."

When Pacific learners and their families all across Aotearoa feel safe, valued and equipped to achieve their educational aspirations, we know we have made the system shift in the right direction.

5 Main Ideas to Supporting Pasifika Learners (from TKI)

  1. Know your Learner
    • Build Relationship
    • Ask Students what will help 
  2. Establish Reciprocal Relationships with Families
    • Partner with Parents
    • Create Welcoming environment
    • Discuss Learning
    • Support Families
  3. Build Community Networks
    • Value Parents and Community Expertise
    • Strengthen Pasifika Community Engagement
  4. Build cultural Responsive Environment
    • Integrate Languages
    • Provide Leadership Opportunities
    • Support English Language Learner
    • Use Technology
  5. Explore Pasifika Perspective on Inclusion
    • Explore Family Beliefs, Values and Expectations
    • Review Research

What am I doing and What do I need to do more?

1. I love getting to know my students and sharing myself with them. I use the scrapbooks of family albums to show my own family and my life. We create a profile about ourselves for the class wall, I even did this in Term 2 this year when I started a new class because I believe relationships are so important.
2. Create a welcoming environment, with their work on the walls to help develop pride and a sense of belonging. Talk about learning with students and parents not just at interviews.
3. I have just moved into a new community so I am working on this one.
4. Each term I try to encourage different students to try different responsibilities. I love using technology to help explain learning and love how student blogs can be used to rewind learning.
5. Through meetings and reading I am coming to understand more about the way families are and how important RESPECT is! 

If I am honest, this helps not just our Pasifika Students. 

It helps everyone to feel valued! Making Society a Better Place for Everyone!

Wednesday, 23 June 2021

AFL - Assessment for Learning

Formative and summative are the two main types of assessment. Students complete assessments for many reasons including, informing parents, the board, or the government about achievement.  

Formative assessment is a tool for teachers as it informs them about the next steps for students.

Assessment for Learning helps us with this process, creating Learning Intentions to focus on and a list of the Success Criteria for the students to help them achieve each step toward the Learning Intention. 

Today's session was about:

How Confident are we in Writing Success Criteria

I thought I was confident in writing Success Criteria. As I have been part of Assessment for Learning schools for years. What I hadn't thought about was making the Success Criteria challenging yet understandable for Years 7 and 8 students. (This didn't register until I was doing planning for Term 3).

We discussed the importance of Success Criteria: 
  •     Learning Intentions without Success Criteria is hopeless
  •     Success Criteria without Learning Intention is not bad

It's about what we are learning not just what we are to do.

What is often found in Year 7 and 8 classes are Success Criteria are based more on performance and students can parrot it but that doesn't help them understand the learning.

Our expectations should be high but always reflect back to the Success Criteria, especially in what we say, well done I can see you are able to make groups of ten and add them together. Next, let's see if you can make groups of 100 and add them together.

Our Focus was on Reading which ties in well with our other Curriculum Focus on T-shaped Literacy.
For the last, while I have been focused on teaching Questioning and Answering Skills for Literal, Re-organisation, Inference, Evaluative, Vocabulary and Reaction. I can see the reaction and evaluative questions being useful to help develop a deeper understanding through T-shaped Literacy but I feel I need more direction and support with this.

What I do like about AFL is it gives control to students about how fast and how far they take their learning and helps to get rid of the stuff that doesn't matter.

If learning isn't secret and students have the keys they can continue to break down learning into steps and hold the keys for lifelong learning.

Saturday, 19 June 2021

Ako Hiko T shaped Literacy

 The focus of today's workshops is to 

'Teach Learners to Think and Question".


We need to encourage students to learn by participating in deeper discussions, thinking critically and developing strategies to develop in-depth comprehension.


Teachers often use open-ended questions for students to work independently or in small groups. However, without formal discussions and a chance to justify or explain their thinking with continued probing, they don't have the opportunity to question their own understanding or hear others' points of view. 

We were gifted through the Ako Hiko Portal - T-shaped Literacy resources, lots available for Years 4-6. We also received a checklist from Selena, helping teachers to reflect on lessons and the construction of T-shaped Literacy Plans.


The workshops had a large focus on Reading for Year 1-3 with a few that were applicable to Year 7 and 8. Reciprocal Reading is a tool I use, but I wondered how does it work with T-shaped Literacy. 

It was interesting to see this teacher using T-shaped literacy alongside guided reading groups. The skills groups were ability-based and the discussion groups were mixed abilities. I understood the reasoning behind this, not everyone needs the same skills to be taught or retaught. Discussion groups need a range of thinkers and talkers to help generate discussion and to help spark ideas and thinking. 


But my issue or problem remains how to generate the questions or activities to create the discussion. I will keep reading to learning how to phrase these questions.

Saturday, 5 June 2021

Manaiakalani Toolkits - Coding and Ban the Boring

 Coding  

Ever since I learnt about scratch and coding at DFI, I have wanted to share a forgotten passion. Forgotten because I last used it in Sixth Form/Year 12 many years ago when they first introduced coding and robotics. Back then, it was just basic javascript. 

Malcolm Bignell had a wealth of knowledge of all things electronic and code-related. 

However, Malcolm let us navigate around his teaching and learning site. The activities and challenges for the high school students were amazing and easy to follow sequentially. Something I hope to inspire too, but more at an intermediate level.

I found it reassuring was even though he was showing us what Year 10 are doing, the code and systems are familiar. My students who are learning coding through Scratch and Edu-Sphero are not at a disadvantage because the coding blocks have similar headings, E.g. Event, Control, Sound, Looks...

Ban Boring

This is looking at creating slides that inspire and encourage students to interact with the learning. Once you have created a set of backgrounds, you can reuse them. This will be really helpful during lockdown times when you are trying to get students to engage in learning, as you can make the class slides more relevant. 

We looked at a range of slides and how interactive, exciting or inspiring they were. Were they overpacked and distracting? We had the opportunity to look at other sites offering slides templates and how to make the bitmoji. Now to create my bitmoji. 


Sharon, thank you for your inspiring toolkit.


Wednesday, 2 June 2021

Toolkits - Students teaching Teachers

 We were at a Staff Meeting run by the local Ako Hiko Facilitator. The Focus was on creating and with the work I have been doing with writing and reading over the last few years this toolkit was awesome. 

We as teachers and students can create a range of styles of music using Incredibox. This music can play in the background while students read aloud a passage they have written. If they have an image or recording/screencast of their reading or the work they have accomplished they have created a multimedia. 

The slides the students created to teach other students. It was wonderful when I thanked them for teaching me, initially they were confused as I was new to the area. - Rewindable learning at its best!

 
 Thanks Boys!!😁👌

RPI 9 - Sharing

Green is a strength, so they obviously stayed the same.  Blue was teaching practice to strengthen and integrate. Orange is now more confiden...