Tuesday, 30 August 2022

Needing to refocus

For the past 8 weeks, I have had a student teacher in my room. This has been an interesting experience and has made it difficult to maintain any type of routine for myself and my students. Therefore I haven't been able to focus on my target cohort as much as I had anticipated. I do not have any Extended Discussion documentation for this time frame. Although I have been able to observe their reading habits, I have noticed they have reverted back to working independently of each other and in the cases where there are discussions they are not using the strategies we had been working on. 

I look forward to getting routines back and a reinvigorated reading group time with documentation and data collection for my inquiry.

Tuesday, 24 May 2022

Extended discussion: Student Led Learning the ropes

This recorded session was set up to see how well the students coped with their roles within a discussion if not being monitored constantly by the teacher. It was a way for me to observe from afar but still be able to give guidance if needed.

We are working towards the group's ability to work more independently whilst still following the discussion protocols.


Below is the most recent data gathered for this cohort of students. All students involved have made significant progress by at least 2 reading year levels.
  

Thursday, 5 May 2022

Introducing Reciprocal Teaching to my cohort

First attempt at Reciprocal Teaching

Set the rules: 

  • Everyone will have a turn to talk. 
  • Everyone will be an active listener.

The 4 Strategies: Predict, Question, Clarify and Summarise.

Introduce and explain what Reciprocal Teaching is. Model how to use the Train Your Brain To Read bookmarks.

Practice using the stems as sentence starters.

What I noticed:
The students are keen to talk about the text. I noticed they are hesitant to discuss as, I believe, they are unsure how to go about having a proper rich discussion.
We used the Train Your Brain To Read bookmarks from Reading Rockets. The stems were helpful for the tamariki to initiate their line of questioning. It seems to help them to organise their thoughts, which leaves them free to concentrate on thinking and answering.

Reflection on how it went
I gathered feedback from the students to see how they felt about the session.
They liked asking people how they felt about the text and having the time to ask questions and be heard by their peers. 
They enjoyed having time to connect with their peers and connect with the text. They liked being able to learn from, and teach, each other. All agreed that once they get used to it, it will be easier and easier.
Overall I think it was a successful session. My personal short-term focus is to resist initiating the discussions and allowing time for the students to think and respond.

Thursday, 28 April 2022

Baseline Data

All but one of this cohort of students has excellent school attendance. This data was gathered from their most recent PAT Reading Comprehension assessment and Running Records. Student TeAu was absent for the PAT assessment.

Wednesday, 6 April 2022

Growth Cycle: Inquiry Focus 2022

To incorporate extended discussions within reading through Reciprocal Teaching, to accelerate students' overall comprehension of multimodal texts, therefore building students' communication skills. My focus is on developing their ability to explain and justify their thinking, as this is an area of weakness for my students.

Target students

My target cohort is a small group of 5 tamariki who are just at the expected level for reading. I chose these students as I feel they lack some of the communication skills required to progress more and that it is holding back their ability to confidently move ahead. 

I believe these particular students will pick up the reciprocal teaching strategies quickly and we should soon see positive results. Then these students will be able to become mentors within the class to help establish reciprocal teaching and extended discussions with their peers.

Monday, 27 July 2020

Film Editing workshop

I took part in a film editing workshop run by Harley Alexander for the Te Hiku Cluster. Harley is an award-winning filmmaker based in Northland, New Zealand, who has worked for major broadcasters and video production agencies in London, Auckland, Sydney and Hong Kong for over 25 years.
The workshop was a great way to pick up some skills around movie making and editing.
The workshop covered setting up albums, iMovies, manipulating audio separate from video, and other editing aspects.
Now I just need to find some time to play around and experiment with using iMovies.




Friday, 24 July 2020

Online Digital Fluency Intensive: week 1

For term 3 of 2020 I was asked to take part as a coach for the Online Digital Fluency Intensive. This is Professional Development offered to teachers who work within a Manaiakalani Outreach School. It is a fantastic opportunity to join a professional learning group to learn together, following a programme designed to meet these four key goals:
  • Our teachers are supported to acquire fluency using the basic tools our young people use for learning
  • Our teachers are supported to acquire fluency using the basic tools required for effective teaching, planning, assessment and professional learning
  • Our teachers are supported to understand how digital technologies used effectively can have a significant impact on accelerating achievement outcomes
  • Our teachers are supported to understand how the Manaiakalani pedagogy and kaupapa has been co-constructed over more than a decade to maximise the impact of effective teaching and learning in a digital learning environment. https://dfi.manaiakalani.org/

I am working with 5 teachers in a 'digital bubble'. They are from different schools and different year levels all across New Zealand. 
It was a full-on first day, but highly enjoyable. They learned lots of new things and I did too.