Reflections on University Life at Monash

Well, I have submitted my second reflective piece of writing this week, on my holidays. It’s been a while since I’ve had my writing “marked” and I was quite nervous I must say in accessing my assessment [what students at school must feel].

I liked the group feedback Phil, the professor gave about the writing and the 3 voices or lenses we must try and interweave: the professional, the personal and the scholarly. Like most principals and teachers we have no problems with the professional voice which we use a lot at school [newsletters, reports etc..], the scholarly takes a lot of reading and reflection – yes I’m still coming to grips with the citation style [APA] and the quantity of reading – but surprisingly its the personal [the emotional] that takes the time: “the more personal the more universal the message” is a saying that echoes a lot of truth for me.  

My second reflection is how universities have moved on technology wise – I guess its 16 years since I was last in one as a student. All essay’s or writings are submitted via an electronic blackboard – everyone in the class has access to the writing and is equally marked on the number comments they make on others writing. There is a blog one is expected to contribute to and all marks are accessed online. My presentation group has started a wiki so that we can collaborate and put it together without having to meet all the time. There are some messages here for the way we work in schools. I like it.

I would like to post one of reflective pieces of writing for general comment soon although I may have to edit some details as people might recognise the context. Any feedback is appreciated.   

 

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Mitchell at the Red Centre

Mitchell, my son has just returned from 13 days in the the Northern Territory and South Australia exploring the red centre of this vast continent. He has been to places I haven’t and has a set of experiences that will last a life time. Thanks to the school, McKinnon SC for organising the trip and the dedicated teachers for taking him [one week was during the school holidays].

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Twitter – what for?

Thanks to Chris Betcher, a teacher I found this clip on twitter which is one of the more popular social networking tools out now. PURPOSE. PURPOSE. PURPOSE is everything. Without a purpose lets not rush into this – I’m still at blogs presenting purposeful reflection and the sharing of resources and links.

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Reading Comprehension Strategies made explicit in classrooms

I visited Matthew Needlemans blog and really like the way his is trying to get his students to anchor their reading comprehension skills through the creation of posters that students can connect to. Often charts displayed in rooms don’t provide reminders to students about strategies they can use when learning and Matthew’s works in progress I think take us forward in this area. Of course no matter what we display students need to have these strategies modelled for them by the teacher and have the language unpacked so they can make connections. It’s worth a look.

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Latest 2008 edition: Did you Know?

Worth a look at the latest edition of Did you know.

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Will Lyon’s Bites

Thanks to John Connell I found this fantastic resource for teachers by Will Lyon on his Flickr site should they need an image for their lesson. This one struck me as I was writing my next post.

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assessment for learning

At last weeks leadership meeting we struggled for some time with the question how to best use the latest assessments we had of students mathematical understandings. During March we had all our 350  Prep – Year Four students individually tested using this new online version of the Mathematics Interview.

Using the reports generated from the test we discussed on how we might use this assessment information which was collected to identify students current level of understanding for future learning. We tossed around how a teacher might structure a lesson and use this information and what might they do after 4 weeks to assess if the students”got it”.

Enter Rick the recovering psychometrician!

Sarah, the assistant principal and I attended a whole day workshop by Rick Stiggins on assessment for learning that week. Rick is from Oregon, and had established The Assessment Training Institute (ATI) in 1992 to support teachers, the first being his wife who had been a prep teacher at that time.

Rick gave a really good model for looking at assessment that would both inform instructional decisions and encourage students to try and learn. He made two powerful point that

if assessments isn’t working well in the classroom – if poor decisions arise from unsound assessments during the learning then other assessments at whole school or state level won’t fix the problems that arise.

This is self evident for us as principals but how much of our time is spent on the “bigger” state or national tests? I know we are bound up in all sorts of compliance issues around state or national tests but how much time do we spend with teachers supporting them with assessments for learning on a daily and weekly basis.

The second point was that the fundamental shift in education was

all students must hit the academic targets – not just a few at the top of the rank order.

Perhaps his words on students might hit us:

The student’s emotional reaction to results will determine what that student does in response and that students get to make their data-based instructional decision first.

Here I was thinking that students do what the teacher instructs and lots do however how many make the decision to stop trying [a few images of children do come to mind for me here] before I instruct.

I got Rick’s point that purpose in assessment is everything and that we need to determine which different assessment methods are more appropriate if we are to assess knowledge, reasoning, skills or work products.

Rick’s point is that we need to develop relationships with students around their work and provide in time descriptive feedback [not a page of red marks that overwhelms] that is understood by all users. Students need to see what “good work” looks like and learn to be able to compare their work to that standard so that generate their own feedback and learning goals  [life long learning here].

All this sent us back to thinking about the mathematical assessment data we collected from the Interview and how we might advocate grouping and targeting student learning. Then how do teachers display “good work” so that students self reflection can occur and encourage students to continue practicing the skill and reasoning so that knowledge is acquired.

It also got us to thinking that supporting teachers in assessment for learning might best be achieved by working in small study teams with those teachers to want to learn and improve their assessment practice rather than try and get a tipping point by working with the whole staff. I have attached an article by Rick on assessment for learning in the middle years classroom which provides more information.   

I’d be interested in hearing what other people think about this notion of students making the first instructional decision and what sort of “good work” to a standard is displayed in classrooms for students to self reflect and set their own learning goals.

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Why a Master’s Degree now?

“You did it… You did it”, the words of Professor Higgins from My Fair Lady were ringing in my ear as I drove home from University this afternoon – yes I did it – I’ve enrolled and started my Masters in Education course at Monash University.

Today was the second day on campus and it’s 18 years plus years since I was a student at University. This, of course, is not counting my time at Harvard University over the past few years at their summer institutes. I really enjoyed the quiet atmosphere of learning – of study – it’s not so quiet at my primary school. I enjoyed the time to think, to read, to ponder, to talk to the many aspirant teachers wanting to learn about leadership in the course – and of course the time free of the distractions and interruptions.

I have DEECDto thank for supporting my part time study. The Victorian Department have a strong theory of action that when you build the capacity of leaders and teachers improvements in students learning will come.

Last night for homework I read the first 3 chapters of “The Wounded Leader” by Ackerman and Pat Maslin- Ostrowski. The narratives of the wounded principals and leaders were a real call to reflect on some of my “wounds” over the years – had I moved on or learnt from the isolation, fear and vulnerability  that these wounds bring out. I need to read more of the narratives to make stronger comments and reflection on what healed many of my wounds.  

 

 

I’m looking forward to tomorrow when we talk about Roland Barth’s work Learning by Heart. I was honoured to hear him speak at the Harvard Principals’ Centre, an institute that he establish quite a few years ago. Perhaps more of that later.

 

 

What intrigues me is the calling for scholarship in leadership. We talk about data informed decisions but I think scholarship goes deeper into inquiry and reflection – those who have read earlier posts might recall my work on deeper levels of inquiry learning for students in schools. Well this course has started with this  what Tina Blyth calls a through-line of internal inquiry into oneself and what emerges about ourselves in this public life of leadership.

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Learning Walks on improved relationships and engagement.

Near the end of February my Assistant Principal and I went on a series of learning walks or walkthroughs with a focus on classroom rules and norms of working. We spent a short time in each classroom listening to students and teachers talking, we looked around the room for anchor charts teachers and students had constructed to see if school values had been unpacked with students and some goals identified and finally asked some students questions on the expectations they had of each other when working. These photos taken on one of the walks clearly show the consistency between classrooms.

This year with Kath Murdoch’s guidance we planned a whole school unit on learning to learn. These units gave us a second starting point, the first being our school values, for working on our agreed norms or rules. The senior school looked at the way the brain works whilst the junior school focused on preferred ways and conditions for learning. The photos below school samples from the junior school:

Our aim is to set up the conditions necessary for learning in each classroom. 

However is this enough?

We suspected our senior students were saying no – its not! Student surveys completed by our seniors over the years had indicated students felt safe and connected to their peers but not fully engaged with teachers or the learning environment. Sure our overall academic results were well above state and national benchmarks but something was blocking significant improvement.

So we have brought in Margaret Armstrong,  a fellow of the Winston Churchhill Memorial Trust to use restorative justice practices so that children learnt to verbalise and use their emotional intelligence so that they could more fully engage with learning. I participated in one of Marg’s sessions with the students joining their circle and hearing their stories.

I was particularly taken with one of Margaret’s strategies where she got students to write what was blocking them [other students putting them down, some group exclusion however subtle, not really knowing their peers] which she read out [no names]. She then rolled the paper up and tied it with elastic bands and this became the “talking stick” which, when passed around the circle, gave students permission to say what’s

on their minds. The stick passed around the circle a few times as students answered some questions about themselves and their peers. At the end of the session the students made some commitments to each other which was to be followed up next week Then came a cathartic exercise as students ripped the sheets of blockers [talking stick] to pieces symbolising the end of that behaviour.  

I’m looking forward to next weeks session to see what has changed.    

 

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Typealyzer, a tool to promote dialogue about blogs

I stumbled upon this site, typealyzer, that looks at your blog and tries to analysis the type of blog it represents. There are many different types and when I typed in my blog address it looked at several entries I image and then decided a category. There is no right or wrong here just a discussion. My feedback is below 

INTP – The Thinkers

The logical and analytical type. They are especially attuned to difficult creative and intellectual challenges and always look for something more complex to dig into. They are great at finding subtle connections between things and imagine far-reaching implications.

They enjoy working with complex things using a lot of concepts and imaginative models of reality. Since they are not very good at seeing and understanding the needs of other people, they might come across as arrogant, impatient and insensitive to people that need some time to understand what they are talking about. http://www.typealyzer.com/index.php?lang=en

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The Star Fish Story

This video reminds me of a former school council president, John Stafford who would each year thank the teachers for their service to the community. John would present each of them with a star fish he would make and a small gift as a symbol of the gratitude the community felt each time a teacher would go out of their way to make a difference to the individual children they interacted with throughout the school year.  

I am seeing John next week as he is a guest of the school at the annual school council dinner, a dinner for old and new school councillors, as they pass the baton of governance and service onto the new school council.

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social networking possibilities in classrooms

 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/nzpix/3332094759/

 I was reading Will Richardson’s article on the use of social networking sites in classrooms. Will was quoting the research of Christine Greenhowa doctoral student at Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Yes, some of you might say that I am showing a little self interest in choosing this article as I have completed some summer institute courses there myself, however the research strongly supports a view I hold that we need to embed the use of web 2.0 tools in classrooms, if we want to engage our youth in schooling.

While Greenhow cautions that the study wasn’t intended to be nationally representative, it is only slightly higher than national studies by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, which found that 82 percent of teens with a family median income of $30,000 or less were online, and that among all teens, 58 percent had a profile on a SNS.

The teens and include my own teenagers are on the social networking sites on a daily basis both here in Australia and other countries around the world. 

 As national magazines and newspapers debate what it means to be literate in a computer age in which students butcher language in text messages and open books less and less outside the classroom, Greenhow has found a virtual creative writing boom among students spending long hours writing stories and poetry to paste on their blogs for feedback from friends, or creating videos on social issues to bring awareness to a cause. Far from media stories about cyber bullying, meanwhile, she found that most students use the medium to reach out to their peers for emotional support and as a way to develop self-esteem. One student created a video of his intramural soccer team to entice his friends to come to his games. Another created an online radio show to express his opinions, then used Facebook to promote a URL where friends could stream it live, and then used one of Facebook’s add-in applications to create a fan site for the show.

 I have been busy advocating the use of student blogs for years but it requires teachers to be a little tech savvy with email addresses for students logging on and looking at access issues in classrooms. We are thinking that a classroom wiki for students might just be a stepping stone into writing and using blogs for feedback.  

Despite the potential of social networking sites in developing marketable skills, however, Greenhow has been frustrated by the lack of attention paid to them — or to the Internet in general — in the classroom. For her doctoral thesis, “From Blackboard to Browser,” Greenhow looked at how teachers’ expectations and assumptions about teaching affected the way they used (or didn’t use) the Internet in the classroom. “She did a very systematic and well-reasoned study about quite a practical matter,” says Lecturer Stone Wiske, Ed.D.’83, Greenhow’s thesis advisor who has studied the use of technology in schools. Greenhow found that the teachers who were most effective in integrating the Internet into the classroom were those who subscribed to constructivism — the theory that effective teaching allows students to construct new ideas from the expertise they already have.

This is still a fundamental shift in thinking for lots of teachers – yes we teach students with explicit instruction at the point of need – but the thinking in classrooms must be constructed by students not done to students – for learning is about constructing understandings [and skills] that we can apply in our lives. 

What was more surprising to her, however, is how few teachers were using the Internet at all — and even fewer were aware of, much less using, social networking sites, despite their heavy usage by students. “It is the kids who are leading the way on this,” she says. “They are forming networks with people they meet every day as well as people they have barely met. If we can’t understand what kids are doing and integrate these tools into a classroom, what kind of message are we sending them? I think we’ll see an even bigger disconnect than already exists.”

I think one of the easy blockers is the computers don’t work or are too old [I have increased technical support services this year] but for large parts of the day the computers are not even switched on [this points to internal access issues]. I think another frustration has been filters blocking all the social networking sites for fear of ……….. but nothing replaces trust – agreements and consequences and constant supervision or monitoring.

The journey continues….

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Old Man Take a Look at Yourself – Graduation

At the start of each school year we, in the broadest sense of community, plan a series of activities and events for the coming year that are connected – connected to students, their learning, their families and some of the challenges they as individuals face now and the years ahead. One example of a challenge in our curriculum planning was the idea of sustainability in both an environmental and economic perspective.

Some of the regular planned events are often connected to our past e.g Anzac Day celebrations or Christmas concerts as well as some to the future e.g this months Bush Dance with proceeds going to the victims of the recent bush fires .

One event that was raised for discussion at the recent parent information evening this year was the annual senior year graduation [year 6].

I stumbled upon this Neil Young clip which brought back some memories. I find music has the power to connect many memories.

In the lyrics there are two lines that connected my thoughts to this discussion about graduation:

  • ..give me things that don’t get lost
  • I need someone to love me the whole day through…

Graduation ceremonies in many ways are rituals that people cling to in times of change so that things don’t get lost – symbolically as a rite of passage to another phase of schooling. In the ceremonies students often get to reflect on those people [mostly teachers and parents] that in different ways have shown care or love to them the whole day through. My own children went through such an experience at primary school.

New regulations [e.g. state government recently banning alcohol at school events with students present] or shifts in community perspective [i.e. present students with books rather than sporting pennants as symbols of their passing on] will often mandate or provide an impetus for change to the ceremony. My hope is that we still have a ritual and an opportunity for student reflection. Students will often forget my principal’s speech but remember the skit which in a good spirit poked fun at some of my mannerisms.  

We often cling to a certain way of doing things but need to remember the essence of the act or ritual – to reflect and learn from our past and look forward to our future with a sense of hope. I look forward to this years event whatever shape the ritual takes.

PS The filtering of youtube with its amazing content will make this clip difficult for those in schools to see.

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Interactive Whiteboard Sites

Tonight I stumbled upon Bill Gaskins blog which lists some tremendous sites for teachers who have interactive whiteboards. I really like the edheadsites as well as the national geographic sites – they are well worth a visit – thanks Bill

Sites

Virtual Knee Surgery: http://edheads.org/activities/knee/index.htm

Virtual Hip Replacement Surgery http://edheads.org/activities/hip/index.htm

Crash Scene Investigation: http://edheads.org/activities/crash_scene/

Weather: Learn how to report and predict the weather at the underground W.H.E.D. weather caves at http://edheads.org/activities/weather/index.htm

Simple Machines Activities:
Learn about simple and compound machines while you explore the House and Tool Shed! http://edheads.org/activities/simple-machines/index.htm

The Compound Machine:
Learn how forces and simple machines can work together to create The Compound Machine! http://edheads.org/activities/odd_machine/index.htm

Virtual Knee Surgery: http://edheads.org/activities/knee/index.htm

Virtual Hip Replacement Surgery http://edheads.org/activities/hip/index.htm

Crash Scene Investigation: http://edheads.org/activities/crash_scene/

Weather: Learn how to report and predict the weather at the underground W.H.E.D. weather caves at http://edheads.org/activities/weather/index.htm

Simple Machines Activities:
Learn about simple and compound machines while you explore the House and Tool Shed! http://edheads.org/activities/simple-machines/index.htm

The Compound Machine:
Learn how forces and simple machines can work together to create The Compound Machine! http://edheads.org/activities/odd_machine/index.htm

Wildlife Film Maker: Make a custom nature film with animal clips, sounds, and more. Then share your masterpiece with friends. http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/filmmaker.html

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Fires continue to burn amid questions what if that was a school day!

Every meeting I attend recently at some point has conversations about the ongoing – yes that right, 2 weeks later and I still say on going – bush fires. Today was no exception at the first network principals meeting where I was party to several separate conversations of how people are affected by the fires.

Just prior to the meeting starting one of my close friends returned my call from the previous night. His house was burnt down in Marysville were over 43 people were killed. Over the weekend the authorities allowed bus loads of residents, including himself to inspect the area in tour buses with instructions that no one was allowed off the bus as the whole place was still a crime scene. The sad and quiet tone in his voice on the phone told me of his continued distress and frustration. 

We start the meeting with a get to know you activity – the new network is still in the forming stage – and one of the principals tells how he saw the fire from his home sweep over the hills in the not to distant horizon. And again at the morning break another tells of the struggles of his friends as they come to grips with losing friends in the fires.

The regional director informs us how the department will want to rethink all schools emergency management processes and of how unimaginable it might have been if it had been a school day. He then fields questions from principals about the cancellation of school excursions and camps over the next 6 weeks as the fires continue to burn. Teams of our school psychologists are working with these communities now and for at least the next weeks. 

All public schools were encouraged to hold a casual clothes day last friday with donations going to the bush fire relief funds. We held a casual clothes day and as I walked past one of the large buckets held by a parent and student leader at one the entrances to the school I noted the number of $50 notes. The school raised over $4,900 which equates to approximately $120 per student which is simply amazing to see how generous and willing people are to support those affected by the fires.

Our next function is a bush dance with all proceeds going to the victims of the fires.

The death toll is now officially over 208 with more expected to be announced over the next week. The wild life and animal devastation is said to be in the 10’s of thousands.   

And tonight I was looking at some of my regular blogs and I see the Boston Globe has a series of photos about the fires.

Its times like this that you realise schools are more and more the centre of many communities – certainly the ones here in Victoria – as the government announces that schools will be the first set of buildings rebuilt in these communities.

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