Understanding History – an experience around the Freedom Trail

I feel a little self indulgent in showing these photos of the historical freedom trial Penny Vanderkruk and I walked over several mornings whilst studying at Harvard last year. However in walking the trail we feel we got a glimpse into why Americans are generally proud of their historical struggles towards independence and freedom. We also learnt about their fairly historical religious backgrounds.

We in Australia haven’t had those battles towards independence which in part define the American identity although if I can draw some parallel we also established part of our identity through by the character shown on the battlefields of WW1 and WW2.

For those not familiar with the trial we started the freedom trail at Boston Commons which was an open area for people to congregate. Prior to the struggles towards independence the area was noted for public punishments ((hangings, lashes) for crimes according to old Mormon type law. From there we walked to the Granary burial grounds where many of the initial thinkers, writers or people who contributed towards of the act of independence are buried:e.g.  Paul Revere and Sam Adams. We then walked along and visited Churches where public meetings of dissent where held and the town hall where the act was first read on the balcony to the people. We finished the guided tour with Nabby at the Quincey Market.

We continued the trail past Paul Revere’s ride, house and church where the latern shone to warn the people of the advancing British Army. We finished the trial at the Bunker Hill Monument.

I was fortunate enough to visit Beijing later in the year and again learn about some of their history: Ming Dynasty, Forbidden City and the Great Wall of China.

These two experiences have reinforced the need for Australian history to be taught in schools (its in the new National Curriculum). It also for me calls for us to remember our history in similar trials around our cities. I know there are several historical trials around Melbourne but not to my knowledge guided in such a way as to relive the history. Something to ponder – do we have trials around our schools and local communities?

 

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The Harvard Social Experience.

A few things have cropped up since we returned from the Harvard course in July that I haven’t had a chance to share some thoughts about the trip and so being on summer holidays is the perfect opportunity to do just that. I’m hoping that this might bring back some memories some our new colleagues from the States and other places.

I’ve broken the trip down to several different posts each with a theme this one being learning from the social experience.

The first photo shows Penny, my assistant principal, and I at the Harvard lectern at the completion of the course which is a little misleading as we are still completing the online sessions which continue until late March 2012. Its one of the prerequisites of the course that you attend in a team and having started the work back at school in Melbourne I think its essential. I have been a little caught up in the management side of the organisation (as has Penny to a degree) with employment and budgets but having Penny as an online data-wise coach for a few teachers at the school we are building up the assessment literacy as well as the knowledge of a few core people so that this team can lead the work in 2012.

The next few photos show our morning routine of catching the bus each morning to Harvard from the hotel with the same bus driver and stopping at Starbucks for the usual heart starter – the coffee isn’t bad. I must add that Penny had many different pronunciations of her name on the cup (Panny, Peggy being two). Shows how hard our Australian twine is to understand at times.

Five of the next 6 shots show us in some of the groups we were placed in during the course. Harvard was very particular in the way they grouped people working together. One of the groups I was placed in was with a group of fellow principals ( Lemelle and Yashika were two principals in that group). Each day we were set tasks to resolve and share as part of the data wise process. It was interesting for me to hear their different journeys as educators particularly Yashika who had come from the armed services before being appointed as a principal. The other group was with the 6 internationals in the group as we planned each day to continue the work back in our own schools.

Our international tutorial group had Liz as a leader (pictured with Penny) who provided a special treat by organising dinner at her home for us. It was great to eat in a home rather than a restaurant for one night while we travelled. Liz a published author in her own right was tremendous in supporting and challenging our thinking.

We have taken some of Harvard’s deliberate grouping strategies to our staff meetings and used names placement cards to group teachers. We think this has helped hear a few different voices on the topics we investigate or inquire into.

The last few photos reminded me of the importance of celebrations and social interactions in organisations. Harvard have their traditional Clam Bake on the last night of the course which was a hoot. We wore the bids to cover the squirts of juice as we cracked open the lobsters. Our colleagues from Texas took us to a bar and introduced us to some interesting cocktails and I had long chats to Lenny a principal who talked about the need for safe and secure learning environments (employing an additional 2 security guards rather than teachers).  His school catered for students from troubled backgrounds (lots having witnessed killings).

We had a few celebrations for staff at the end of the school year which was important for 2011 was a tough year (not in Lenny’s league) but they helped heal the wounds and acknowledge the work.

So in summary the social experience of learning in another context or setting was invaluable to us for it both added to the cultural dimensions, challenges and opportunities we took away with us. I’m now trying to get other committed teachers on staff to experience something similar.

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Jiangsu School Leaders Delegation

This week I was invited to meet a delegation of school leaders from the Jiangsu Province of China. After the introductions and overviews of each region or province were finished we had an opportunity to exchange views of education and ask each other questions.

The issues raised included money from governments, reviewing  and supporting teachers improve instruction and building school facilities in the style of their community or beliefs about learning. The school leaders from Jiangsu spoke about how they were impressed during their school visits with the students social skills, their sense of independence and the different styles of teaching that focused on students as individuals.

We have been invited to explore some closer relationships using online technologies with schools between the two regions that may lead to sister school ties in the future.

This is a great opportunity I fully intend to pursue.

PS I unsuccessfully  tried to use Google translater and insert the Mandarin translation under the text. All that came out was questions marks so if some could help that would be appreciated.

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21st Century Learner

I’m constantly searching for better ways to engage in conversations with groups about learning, the work of schools to both reflect and lead communities in change and the leadership required to achieve these things.

I came to this clip in this quest. I was listening to the school that was built to engage digital learners and really liked the statement that they have gone completely wireless so they can use computers where they are really needed and put them away at other times. They showed an image of students painting as an example of this other time. This makes sense and I think supports our investigations into a  1:1 notebook or tablet (ipad) program in 2013.

 

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Like to start teacher conversation about observing practice – with humour?

Recently we ran a workshop on observing teacher practice in classrooms within a coaching relationship. To break the ice but make the point we used this clip from Summer Heights High which was an Australian TV show that “sent up” schools.

 It successfully broke the ice and teachers talked about instruction and how hard it can be to observe practice when you don’t have a focus.

 Penny, my Assistant Principal, and I are presenting at a Harvard online session this Friday as part of the Data Wise Course and we made reference to this clip so I thought that it might be easier to embed the clip in my bog for our American colleagues.

 If teachers or school leaders have used other clips to view instruction in classrooms we would be interested to hear from you.

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Rick Wormeli on redo’s and retakes

I’ve been pondering some recent parent feedback about our senior students lack of engagement with some teachers and the material they are expected to learn. I began my reflections about the students coming from the digital generation and expecting to be entertained by teachers otherwise they are bored or non engaged.

Parents are saying  if there wasn’t enough time to cover the material at school send it home so long as we know and the homework is marked or graded upon its return (thereby signifying its importance).

After watching Rick I am now wondering if we are if fact letting our kids off by a lack of accountability for their learning. His take on encouraging student to relearn the material (after a poor grade) given certain conditions of course is best summed up on his touch down comment on clip 2.

I’m interested in others opinions as he certainly serves it up to teachers who let students off the hook.

Posted in differentiation, Feedback, Instruction, teacher efficacy, Teaching, Uncategorized, Video Clips | 6 Comments

Inspect what you expect

Earlier this year Penny, one of my assistant Principal’s, and I participated in the ASCD summer conference in Boston. One workshop we attended was by Pete Hall the Principal of Sheridan Elementary School in Spokane.

Pete spoke about the need to monitor classroom instruction to improve performance. He used a walk-through as tool to monitor instruction and provide individual feedback and coaching to teachers. I have wrestled for some months with these what I thought at times contradictory actions of monitoring or evaluating requiring judgements  and coaching and feedback.

Contradictions

This year I have completed a 3 day course on differentiated coaching and I’m currently reading Jane Kise’s book “Differentiated Coaching – A framework for Helping Teachers Change”.  It appears there are at least two sorts of coaching frameworks (Cognitive and Instructional) however the one thing they both have in common is that the power to change within a coaching situation is in the hands of the coached – not the coach who must be free from judgement.

As principals we wear at least two hats: coach (non judgmental) and evaluator (of teacher performance – with the overlaid of  judgement – have teachers met the required standards?).

How does a teacher distinguish when you are coaching and when you are judging performance? If there is no distinction how does the principal as coach build up trust for the teacher to disclose an issue they want to work on (knowing the evaluator is not far away) .

I asked Pete how he reconciled this apparent contradiction – his answer was, as I recall, you cannot for you are always making judgements when you complete a walk through) in a classroom [do the facilities work, are the required O.H&S signs displayed, are the students following the school norms and finally is the teacher making their intent explicit). The only time he felt there was an issue was if the teacher was not performing well in which case he said that he stopped his walkthrough and made a time to meet the teacher to discuss the issue. That teacher was not part of his regular walkthroughs again till the issue had been resolved.

This year the annual teacher survey rated teacher feedback as very low.  After three meetings to explore the issue (e.g. was feedback just acknowledgement or was it objective and factual) we have come to a point where teachers acknowledge that if the purpose of the classroom observation and feedback  is clear then it might ease teacher apprehension about judgement.  

I have tried to clarify three purposes for classroom observations:

  • walkthroughs (short 3-8 min observations) to monitor and gather data on school instructional targets and expectations and the effect of the professional learning program – feedback as a whole staff to the leadership and staff as a team.
  • learning walks (medium 15 – 30 min observations)  to monitor classroom instruction for individual teacher feedback (written with an offer for a follow up conversation)
  • coach [medium or longer – up to whole lesson) to provide requested feedback on an individual teacher improvement target.
  • instructional rounds (medium 15 inute) observations collected by a team to gather data around an instructional problem of practice identified by teachers from student assessment data.

I have shared my wondering with colleagues recently at a network meeting who came back with another challenge – finding the time to any of these on a regular basis. That’s still a work in progress.

Pete’s mantra still applies no matter what the purpose – We must inspect what we expect!

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Why are we still asking questions about students repeating or being retained in the 21st century?

I was requested to publish an updated post on the research around students repeating or being retained in the same level class. This post was first published some 3 years ago and surprise surprise the issue hasn’t gone away. 

In summary I reported then, using  a research article by Helen McGrath on the topic titled: “To Repeat or not to repeat” the following:

It now overwhelmingly indicates that there are neither academic nor social advantages for the majority of students who repeat a year of their schooling. There is probably no other educational issue on which the research evidence is so unequivocal. There is also no other educational issue where there is such a huge gap between what the research says and the practices that schools continue to adopt.  

It went on the say that: Kenny (1991) has estimated that approximately 14% -18% of all Australian students repeat a year, especially in the first four years of schooling.

The article concluded :

• Repeating does not improve academic outcomes
• Repeating contributes to poor mental health outcomes
• Repeating leads to poor long term social outcomes
• Repeating contributes to a negative attitude to school and learning
• Repeating results in students dropping out of school
• Repeating decreases the likelihood that a student will participate in post-secondary schooling
• Repeated students demonstrate higher rates of behavioural problems
• There is no advantage to students in delaying school entry for a year in order to increase ‘school readiness’

The paper suggested other strategies like individual learning plans be developed for those struggling students or multi aged classes be set up so that children could progress through the stages with no stigma attached. It concluded that parents should have access to the research and schools should develop policies.

I now offer John Hattie’s work who in 1999 reported the following effects of what he calls “retention”

After one year the retained groups were scoring .45 standard deviation unit lower than the comparison groups who had gone on to the next grade and in many cases were being tested on more advanced material. Each subsequent year this difference became larger with the difference reaching .83 standard deviation unit for measures taken four or more years after the time of retention.

Being retained one year almost doubled a student’s likelihood of dropping out, while failing twice almost guaranteed it.

The negative effects are pervasive over all academic and personal educational outcomes, and at all ages (including kindergarten)

There is a consistently negative picture of the association between retention and race, gender, SES, and school outcomes.

For those unfamilar with his effect size figures 0.4 might be considered the equivalent of 1 years learning progress so when he reports a negative -0.45 he indicates that the retained (or repeated) group have regressed when compared to those similar students who were promoted. 

So why in the face of all this evidence do we still continue to offer repeating or retention as an alternative to students not making adequate progress?

We must address the causes of the lack of adequate progress and not offer another year, usually of the same material, in the hope that they, the students,  “mature” into progress.

Posted in Leadership, parenting, Repeating Classes, school, Teaching | Tagged , , , , | 7 Comments

Forbidden City using Pano

Standing outside the main gate of the Forbidden City and trying to use Pano an i phone 4 app to show the size of the entrance. Its a great app which I recommend to others.

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The Forbidden City – some photos and comments from a recent trip.

I have attached some shots of the Forbidden City that I toured as part of the Leaders Course in Beijing. Besides the fascinating history of the City which is nearly 700 years old its sheer size is amazing. It covers 178 acres so in a few hours we were only able to see a small part of the City.

For the students in my schools that is 59 times the size of the school.

I am pictured outside the first of 3 main gates that one enters before going into the Forbidden City. The first main gate,  which has a large mural of Mao Zedong , faces Tiananmen Square where on a quiet day a 3 hour queue forms to see his entombed body.

The third and main gate pictured behind me is known as Wumen Gate where the emperor announced the coming years festivities.

There are 3 main palaces (some featured in the pictures) inside the Forbidden City where the emporer conducted business and held special ceremonies.

24 emperors lived and reigned for over 600 years in the City. Our tour guide really gave us the sense that the Forbidden City represents a period when China was considered by many as the main economic, cultural and financial power of the world. Many people from around China make a pilgrimage to this ancient city and while unspoken it’s easy to see that how they might think that its only time until China resumes its former held position.

I was in awe of the many of the palaces inside the city and how well its been restored. The colours in the palaces are vibrant red and yellow and the rock gardens are kept in tranquil order. You certainly get a feel for the order and splendor of the place and I’m keen to get a copy of the last film ever made in the City, “The Last Emperor”.

 


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Asian perspectives across a curriculum are just as important as learning a language like Mandarin.

Front page of the Age newspaper today were two headings that caught my eye: “PM seizes reins on China links” and “Mandarin off schools’ menu”.

The first article describes a government white paper due out early next year which seeks to made explicit links from an economic, strategic  policy and resourcing perspective to China in particular with the Prime Minister calling this “the Asian century”.

The second article talks about the decline in non native speakers completing Year 12 studies in Mandarin arguing that the tertiary entrance exams punishes these students, as it’s a really difficult language to learn, by failing to differentiate them from native speakers who generally achieve all the top marks.

Having just completed a week long course in Beijing I think I’m a little more informed now to make a comment here. Before I comment a little context.

The course for school leaders from Oceania I attended was funded through the Hanban Institute and held at the Beijing Language and Cultural and University. It aimed to teach us a little Mandarin and demonstrate quality curriculum material however of greater importance it tried to help us understand the Chinese people through a variety of hosted cultural events.

I’ll write some future posts on these cultural events for they hold lasting memories for me.

What I came away with was an understanding that China was once and for many hundreds of years thought to be the centre of the cultural and economic world. This powerful country withdrew or was overtaken for a number of reasons which are not the intent of this post to explain. However China’s re-emergence cannot be denied. Being the number 1 country (or co-sharing this number 1 position with a few other emerging Asian countries) is also a mindset held by many Chinese people that I came into contact with.

Understanding this mindset explains their often patient and methodology approach to things. I observed a learning to speak English class for Chinese students (from a set text) that would have bored most Australian students to unrest. Here there was just attentiveness and application. Our Australian students need to understand that they are competing for global places at universities and colleges all around the world with mostly attentive and committed Chinese students who need little educational entertainment to stay engaged. Hard and continuous work is just expected even demanded.

I expect that with a little of our Western pedagogy (e.g. explicit learning intentions, use of thinking tools and connections to real life applications) these Chinese students would do even better.

We are relative new comers to teaching Mandarin (2 years) to primary aged students (5-12 year olds) at my school and we have just started to embed Asian perspectives (e.g. understanding their history and cultural practices) across our broader curriculum. This second journey of embedding Asian perspectives to me is of critical importance for regardless of one’s fluency in Mandarin these understandings will enable us to participate and engage in this, as the Prime Minister calls “Asian century”.

I’m interested in hearing other prespectives on this topic.

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A view from the bell tower.

This week while I was inspecting restoration work on the bell tower (built in the 1880’s) I had the chance to play with Pano, an app on my iphone.

Pano was easy to use. Like it.

This picture shows about 2/3rds of the school’s grounds.

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Asian Languages in Schools: in decline!

This week our school was featured on an ABC show (Newsline – Language Barrier)reporting the decline in Asian Languages taught in schools. The show pointed to the low numbers of students continuing their language studies in VCE [which is our final year of schooling].

I think its accepted that its harder to sustain teaching languages other English in Australian schools because of the perceived tyranny of distance [its easier to establish the need or necessity when you live next door or an hour or so away from countries that speak other languages]. This has factor has always been present for Australians.  I find it interesting that the tyranny of distance in the LOTE argument hasn’t decreased given the boom of people travelling for work or leisure.  In my own school there are an estimated 6% of students currently travelling with their parents overseas – during the school term – lots of them in Asian countries.

I think a second factor is the spread of English as a language across the globe has increased. I watched a youtube clip recently which said that China will soon be the number 1 English speaking country in the world.

However I feel there is something powerful in being able to communicate to another person in their native language – I think it sends a message that you have taken the energy and time to learn about them – their language and their culture.

We chose Mandarin as a language for our students to learn. I think parents who had a voice in the decision believed that Australia was either part of Asia or strongly connected to it and that it was in their children’s long term interests to learn not only the language but the culture.  

My theory about the decline in Asian languages being studied is that they are not consistently embedded in and across primary school curriculum’s and it becomes too hard if you haven’t continuously learnt them over the 13 years of compulsory schooling.  I think there should be seamless transitions between primary and secondary schools so that students can continue their learning and in this case Mandarin. Sounds easy – its not where students go to 20 different secondary schools across diverse systems.

I am going to China in 4 weeks as a school leader with others from around Australia and New Zealand to learn something about the pedagogy of teaching Mandarin in schools, embrace the culture first hand and start to make some connections to educators and schools in Beijing.

Perhaps my sharing these experiences might encourage other school leaders to do the same and thereby make a start towards a continuous langauge experience?

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For those who have had some trouble getting technology to work.

 

Some times you just need a laugh and this appealled to me. Thanks to Greg Carroll for this one.

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“learning as a social process through which understanding is achieved”

The title of this post comes from a book titled “Schools and Communities: working together to transform children live’s” by West-Burnham, Farrar and Otero.

Pictured above is George Otero, a co author of the book and Co-President of the Relational Learning Centre in Santa Fe New Mexico USA. George has started to do some work with us here at Elsternwick Primary School on learning as a social process. 

The authors quote Peter Senge’s from his book ‘Schools that Learn’ by saying “that schools learn only at three interdependent levels- the classrooms, the school and the community and that those schools that choose to learn from within are doomed to stagnate.”

I think the point being made here is that we need to learn from wider communities, organisations and networks so that we can benefit at these three levels in our own schools – classrooms, school and our communities. My work in Instructional Rounds  comes into my mind here as I learn to observe instruction across schools in the network and bring these understandings to my work at Elsternwick Primary.

George and his co-authors say, as do many other educators, the ‘one size fits all’ methodology of schooling has served its purpose and improvements are now plateauing. They point out a new moral imperative hidden in the plateauing of results “the widening variation in student achievement explained by student background.”  Four social background factors  are identified that influence the level of student academic success: low social class of family,  low social capital of community,  poverty and dysfunctional family life. 

They argue that schools need to work with the community on a broader definition of education that benefits both the individual student and the wider community. By broadening the definition of education and therefore our work in schools we can bring greater social equity to our actions to redress those social background factors that currently explain this variation in student success.

So what does this mean at the classroom and school level?

Essentially I think that George is arguing for us as classroom educators to form new levels of relationships with students and the students to have new relationships with the curriculum content so that student learning improves and the variance based on social background is diminshed.

George in the book talks about 4 levels of relationship students have with academic content:

  • Recognition:  content explained through lecture or download. Content is usually of little value for its rarely applied to anything and the learner has obtained facts to forget. This is in my opinion what is usually tested in high stakes testing like NAPLAN here in Australia. 
  • Understanding: content is tested through application to problems and interrelationships to other wider concepts and is sensed as relevant and of potential value to our lives.
  • Valuing: here content acquired through the first two levels of recognition and understanding are now tested to discern their value to us personally and our worlds. Here we begin see the connections to other human beings as we integrate this learning into our own lives. Learners start to self govern as they decide what really matters.
  • Relating: At this level learners are looking at new options as they apply learning making beneficial choices for themselves and others. At this level everyone’s experiences are equally shared with others in meaningful ways.

I heard Jerry Starratt from Boston College  express a similar thought about the purpose of education saying that “education was about gaining membership to the various communities we live in”. When you have learning at the valuing and relating levels I think you are recognising what’s required for this membership to the various communities we seek to live in. 

So perhaps its a new way to look at curriculum – through 4 sets of relationships:

  • students relationships to the subject: e.g. inquiry learning, thinking curriculum,
  • students relationships to other students: e.g. through circle time, codes of conduct, classrooms cultures
  • students relationships to the teacher: e.g. student well being seen a priority, team organisation, circle time
  • students relationships to the wider community: e.g. Inquiry learning, SRC.

Much of this is not new to us – but I think there are challenges in this new lense.

I’m currently grappling with an assessment system that values high stakes testing which see content largely as facts to be recalled. This recognition level with its value system is then applied to the work of teachers in classrooms. Teachers are valued and in some places around the world, including here in Australia, starting to be paid on their capacity to improve results based on the recall of facts on tests. Wider groups e.g. governments publish test results based largely on recalling facts and encourage parents to expect, even demand, ever increasing results on these tests. This is largely about the student as an individual and is certainly not about learning at the understanding, valuing and relating levels or phases.

Why would teachers waste time conducting circle time with students to improve relationships with other students and teachers if learning was not seen as relational but largely as an individual process where one acquires facts and success is measured through the recall of them on tests.

Conversations in ‘Circle Time’ between teacher and students are not the usual instructional focused ones that dominate most classrooms particularily those classrooms where the recall of facts is valued above other levels of relationship. These circle time discovery conversations where we open our thoughts to others and mutual growth is an end result are at the valuing and relational end.

I’m often of late in the middle of some confusions conversations from what I now perceive as coming from differing value systems. I’m busy trying to put some sense to all this through a pedagogical plan that has a dream for all students at its core and a kind of map of how we go about designing the journey for them all.

I’m happy to share that plan on a future  post but for now I’m intrigued if others sense a similar confusion about how students get to understand value and then relate learning concepts to their own lives and lives of others around them . Do you grapple with the inconsistencies of say assessment systems that value different things?  

I think I’m in Nottinghams Learning Pit on this one.

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