Aberdeen Hall Visit and the link to Teacher Inquiry

Teacher Inquiry Defined_dana_ch_1Mr. Greaves gave us a tour of the Aberdeen Hall campus today. We are having to adjust what would normally be planned for school visits because of the current Teacher job action that is happening in BC. All of these factor happening together is having a pretty profound effect on my teaching philosophy and who I am as a teacher. I realized how much I really value the public school system and how much I want to work towards improving it. It has also made me realize how politicized education is. Everything about education is politicized. Jane Squair asked Mr. Greaves today if they had a trades program at their university and he said no (almost with a laugh). Why? Because it is a university preparatory school and it is very elitist. Parents who send their kids to this school can afford to to so and as Mr. Greaves said “they are looking for a more liberal arts education… trades is not their focus… parents who send their kids to this school want their kids to enter a profession”. I don’t like the fact that the parents of these kids are choosing to separate their kids from other kids. I feel that separating well-off kids from the majority of kids is not good for society as a whole. I firmly believe that all canadian children should go through public schools and that public schools should be held to a higher standard than they are now. Why does Christy Clark, the premier of our province choose to send her son to a private school? Does she not believe that he will receive a good education in the public system? I am not going to argue that the facility (Aberdeen campus) was beautiful and has a lot of good things going for it, but why can’t our government make this kind of education possible for all BC students with more funding and smaller class sizes?

Teacher Inquiry:
At the same time that I am thinking about my visit today to Aberdeen Hall, I am reading about teacher inquiry and it got me thinking about something that Mr. Greaves said today about his pet peeve, new teachers who ask him about professional development opportunities. He said that he thinks that new teachers have just spent 5 years or more essentially in professional development after they leave university to find jobs. He said that he doesn’t think that they need more professional development, they need teacher experience. They also need to ask about opportunities to work with other teachers, to have other teachers observe them teach and give them feedback. It seems to me that experience matters a lot more to Mr. Greaves (and probably other school principals looking to hire new teachers). I think that this relates to the article that I am presently reading about teacher inquiry because Mr. Greaves said that he has teachers at his school lead their own professional development and track it themselves through their own inquiry and I agree with this:

“As a teacher-inquirer in charge of your own learning, you become part of a larger struggle in education – the struggle to better understand, inform, shape, reshape, and reform standard school practice (Cochran-Smith, 1991). Teacher inquiry differs from traditional professional development for teachers, which has typically focussed on the knowledge of an outside “expert” being shared with a group of teachers. This traditional model of professional growth, usually delivered as part of traditional staff development, may appear an efficient method of disseminating information, but often does not result in real and meaningful change in the classroom.”

I think this is exactly what Mr. Greaves was getting at, and I completely agree. I think that he is ahead of the traditional model of professional development. Instead of focussing on Professional Development days for his teachers, he has someone who meets with each teacher once every 2 months, he said, to talk about their professional development inquiry process.

“Inquiry ultimately emerges as action and results in change.”

Storify.com

“Storify”

This is a good program to use for interactive multimedia lesson planning

You can put together various media and use social media sources like youtube, Facebook, etc… to gather information about a topic for students to learn from.

Might also be a good alternative to poster projects and power points

BC Renewed Curriculum and Competencies – Maureen

Believe in every kid – passion

“Illuminate the gifts of each and every kid”

Ethos of care (Nel Noddings)

“Prescribe the minimum curriculum so that learners can concentrate on their interests”

“Cleared space for teachers to pay attention to the curiosity of learners in the classroom.”

“If you want to change what is happening in the world, you need to invest in teachers.”

reporting and asessment….. work in progress

“Content is not the destination, it is the vehicle”

1- communication
2- thinking
3- personal and social identity development/responsibility

BC Core Competencies:
-Inclusive
-Cross-curricular
-strength-centered
-descriptive and progressive

*** This gives me hope that teaching under this new curriculum will give more autonomy to teachers and increase teacher professionalism.

Social Justice Aboriginal Perspectives – CBC Doc “8th Fire”

8th Fire Documentary Series (4 Episodes)

After a bit of a debate in my group about whether or not aboriginal students should get special treatment from educational institutions such as UBC I mentioned to my group that this documentary would be worth watching. I feel that these are current events, something that we will face in our classrooms and all perspective teachers should be aware of the generational issues and adversity that face aboriginal youth and be prepared to give more support to these students so that we can work to correct some of this generational damage. Teachers have a huge role to play in a reconciliation and healing between first nations and other more privileged Canadians.

Love Monkey – Love and Text

photo 5

I needed this laugh!! This was a difficult week for our group… not really sure if we were all feeling the “Love”

As for love and text though… my text that I love is sailing – I love to read my sails, read the wind on the water, the weather patterns that will affect how I sail, I love reading the weight on the boat and being generally responsive to what I need to do in order to sail well. There is literacy in many different content areas (not just academic ones). Text is everywhere. Reading is everywhere.

Group tensions during literacy unit

Today, Pamela got our group together to talk about some of the issues and tensions that she has noticed this week happening in our group. I know that she is right and it amazes me how intuitive she has been about sensing even slight problems happening in our group and giving us real focus points that we can address in trying to fix them. This third week has been a challenge for our group. I think that some of the tension started around two members of the group not getting along, but it quickly spread throughout the rest of our group. At first I put these tensions to the side and chose not to spend a lot of time thinking about it personally because it did not involve me, but now it is clear that the tension has been grating on the nerves of most if not all of the group members.

Sometimes, what is necessary to get past these tough times working in collaboration with others is to take a step back and air the tensions when the whole group is present. This week we have been loosing our cohesiveness and our open-heartedness towards each other. Everyone has been prioritizing their own work and not valuing the group experience. Sometimes we have not been kind to each other. I want to work hard to fix this.

Kelly et al. / Jukes – Creating 21st Century Learning Environments

#1 We must shift instruction to focus on the higher level thinking skills needed for the 21st Century

#2 We must embrace the new digital reality

#3 We must address the shift in thinking patterns of digital kids

#4 We must broaden evaluation to encompass activities that provide a complete picture of student learning

#5 We must increase the connection between instruction in schools and the world outside