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Key Change of My Practice

What? Never before had opened Google scholar, never before had I even considered backing up my thoughts with research. The fact that someone else out there had been thinking the same thing and actually carried out the research to prove it, was very refreshing. I could now literally prove my point!! Using reflection, theory and evidence to guide changes in my practice will be one of the biggest changes I will take away with me from MindLab. I loved the exposure to new knowledge and ideas which the professional readings and research bought me. The requirement to reflect through blogging was at first foreign and difficult. So much of my reflective thinking had been just in my head or in a verbal download in a side-line collegial conversation. Now I was able to put these reflections on a platform with an authentic audience and with genuine feedback. Reading other teacher blog reflections was so encouraging also, it helped challenge me to think differently. So What? The Ministry ...
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Indigenous Knowledge and Cultural Responsiveness

All our students need a hope and a future to look forward to. They need to know that they can go forward while still holding on to all that they are and have become. Our students are drenched in so much of what we say and do from the day they walk into our doors at the age of 5. We want to shape them and give them all these possibilities. But if they walk out the doors at the end of their learning journey having lost who they deeply were culturally, then have we succeeded? Russel Bishop talked about the accumulated gaps between Maori and non-Maori educational achievement. The gap is compounding. The power that a teacher has to make a difference in a Maori student can be life changing one way or the other. Throwing a couple of day courses and the odd youtube clip about how to improve Maori achievement is not going to solve the problem. It requires a complete shift to genuine cultural responsiveness from the teachers. Cultural responsiveness is reflected in five elements knowl...

Trends Influencing our New Zealand Education

What? I realised today that a primary school teacher will spend about 1000 hours a year with a student, this is without any absences from either the teacher or the student. A high school teacher spends only 120 hours a year with a student, without any absence from either side. A parent, at best, will have the opportunity to spend 2860 waking hours with their child. This does not include the time they could have during the holidays. With all that in mind, the teacher is the person who is asked to ready a child for the future. To prepare them for the world out there and create a lifelong learner. The OECD (2016) report entitled “Trends Shaping Education” states that we must re-think our teaching profession as well as spend time looking at assessment and the achievement outcomes of our students to create a breed of lifelong learners. Should this really be our responsibility? So much of raising the lifelong learner is farmed out to coaches, club leaders, medical advisers and techn...

Using Social Media in the classroom- at high School!!!!

Using Social media in school can be such a wonderful and powerful way of allowing the students work to be viewed by a truly authentic audience. When I was a primary school teacher this would have been the most exciting new way to give my students a digital learning portfolio of their life at school. Now that I have finished my first year as a high school teacher, with only year 9 learning support (often behavioural support) students, I am constantly seeing these ideas through very different coloured glasses. I total agree with Magette 2014, “Embedding social media in the classroom helps equip students, beginning even before middle school, with the skills and judgment to help them become effective communicators in the spaces where it can count most.” I just get this knot in my stomach when I try and imagine how this could be managed well with my students. Would they take this seriously? Which ones would misuse it? I know the ones that would just love it and see it as a fantastic way ...

Inequality of BYOD in schools - Influence of law and ethics practice

Introducing BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) into a school of 1700 students and 105 staff is not a small task. The number of hours which go into the planning and implementing of such a task! Well, our high school did it. At the beginning of 2018 we introduced the recommended option of bringing your own device. The students were sent purchase options, best fit type devices and all the requirements needed for their device to be compatible with our school system. I think it was fully expected that around 80% of students would turn up on day one with their new device. Not quite so. There were not many students at all who came with a brand new device. The inequality gap was clearly apparent. The cost of outfitting your child with a new uniform as well as a device was just too much for many families, including my own. Those who had more than one child at the school were certainly not able to provide them all with a device. Ehrich et al (2011) Model for Ethical decision making has been use...

Contribution of teacher inquiry topics to my communities of practice

It has taken me a bit to get my thoughts and my head around what Communities of Practice (CoP) actually are and to identify if I am even in one. Thankfully, I am in a CoP and it is just beginning to grow. I really liked the youtube clip by Knox 2009. I liked the way he illustrated CoP's like a garden. This is when it became clearer.  My first authentic inquiry topic is around creating individualised and co-constructed learning pathways for my Year 11 and 12 students in Learning Support. I have 6 students at the moment and they are all on different pathways and needing different credits. I had no idea where to start and how to begin. I have come from Primary teaching, so NCEA is absolutely new to me. So I buddied up with a colleague in the English department who is taking Year 11 and 12 but she is struggling with the low-level learners and needs my help with how to simplify their program. It was a perfect match and the need, passion and enthusiasm has started my first genuine...

Changes in my future Oriented teaching practice

Reflecting on changes in my future oriented teaching practice Blog Two Lynne Green Nov2017 Bombay 3/4/17 Theme 1: Personalising learning Now that I have a full time role in the Learning Support area of the school, I am confronted with students and their learning needs hour by hour. There is no one independently capable of making any learning journey decisions. I think they have been so conditioned to sitting passively in the background that they are not able to critically think for themselves. They certainly haven’t been asked for opinions or their views. I see the look of surprise and fear when I do ask them. Silencing the wide mouth frogs has been the first job. We have then had to learn to be ok with the silence as we wait for those slow processors to offer their valuable idea or answer. Our hour of power has become quite different. It is upon this reflection that I would like to say that I now try and personalise the learning in Maths. I have worked the lessons around the pat...