Week 18: A Change in My Practice Towards Future-oriented Learning and Teaching
Theme
3: Personalising learning
Theme
4: Changing the script: Rethinking learners and teachers roles
Over
the past years I have been introduced to terms such as learner-centred, student
advocacy, student voice, learner-driven. I have heard these terms used at
PLC’s, QLC’s, PLD’s, and in MLE’s. I
heard it in conversations with colleagues and seen examples of the many
interpretations of it on many classroom walls …and I have felt gladdened and very
challenged by it.
In
my quest to ensure the learning of my new entrant students is learner-driven I
have tried a range of different approaches – Daily Five, student goals,
annotated writing exemplars on the walls, math stage posters on walls, modelling
books, math stages broken down into fine-grained progressions, WALTs, student
created success criteria, asking questions designed to support student
self-regulation, thumbs up, down, sideways, models of what ‘good’ looks like, student
inquiries, and play-based learning - all with various degrees of success but
all with little understanding of ‘why’ and a complete lack of understanding
regarding ‘how’ to make this happen in my new entrant classroom.
Being
involved in Mindlab has been like finding that pivotal jigsaw puzzle piece
which helps the picture make more sense. My journey of change in my classroom
began with my introduction to 21stt Century Learning, particularly
the ITL learning rubrics ( ITL Research, 2012). I
started to see the links between the thinking behind the ‘buzz words’ (student
advocacy, learner-centred, etc) and the need for my students, regardless of
their young age, to be developing the skills and understandings they need for
their future success in a world we can’t yet imagine.
In
our classroom collaboration is beginning to look like collaboration not simply
cooperation and I am starting to look more deeply at all aspects of my teaching
practice for example:
· Working from a student’s strengths rather than filling gaps or overly focussing on needs.
· Inquiry rather than prescriptive content driven units of learning.
· Co-construction as opposed to teacher constructed.
· Student advocacy/voice is more than goal charts on the wall and reflective questions asked at the end of learning just because they are required to be asked.
· Ipads are beginning to look like tools for learning rather than a replacement for a piece of paper, a book, a game or another activity on the task board.
With
the learning I am doing in Mindlab, lots of talking with my students about their learning and thinking, and through reading research literature such as the “Supporting future-oriented learning and teaching: A New
Zealand perspective (Ministry of Education, 2012)”, I am slowly developing
new understandings about what it means to be a teacher in the 21stt
Century.
I still have a long way
to go.
My challenge is, as
stated in Ministry of Education (2012, p. 42),
“to move past seeing learning in terms of being
"student-centred" or "teacher-driven", and instead to think
about how learners and teachers would work together in a
"knowledge-building" learning environment. This is not about teachers
ceding all the power and responsibility to students, or students and teachers
being "equal" as learners. Rather, it is about structuring roles and
relationships in ways that draw on the strengths and knowledge of each in order
to best support learning.”
References:
ITL Research. (2012). 21CLD Learning Activity Rubrics. Retrieved
from https://education.microsoft.com/GetTrained/ITL-Research
Ministry of Education.(2012). Supporting
future-oriented learning and teaching: A New Zealand perspective. Retrieved
from https://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/schooling/109306
Hi Donna,
ReplyDeleteMindlab has been amazing at fast tracking and connecting all the dots, I absolutely agree! It is interesting how you are finding your way to integrating this new learning with new entrants. How useful if these students are getting this input right from the beginning of their education, I can only imagine the benefits and lack of spoon feeding this model will promote. Your openness and willingness to find ways, and not be limited by barriers from the old system is going to help you navigate this new paradigm.