Northern Territory students visit Elsternwick

On Friday this week 4 indigenous students from the Northern Territory visited Elsternwick as part of the Australian Football League’s program Kickstartto support students attending school and having a healthy lifestyle.  The four students were from a school of 20 students in a remote community of about 100 about 6 hrs drive from Darwin. They were in Melbourne for a long weekend and boarding with two families connected with Auskick from Elsternwick Primary. They attended two AFL games, played at half time at Telstra Dome, came to school on Friday and visited the Melbourne Zoo.

Naturally they enjoyed playing football at recess and lunchtime with a 100 or so other senior students on our main oval. We wish them well.  

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Toronto Superintendent Kathy Cowan visits Elsternwick.

On Wednesday 7/8/08 I was honoured to host Kathy Cowan a superintendent of a family of schools [SE6] in Toronto. I first met Kathy at Harvard University in 2006 and again in 2007 in Toronto when I visited a number of the family’s principals. Readers of my blog might remember an earlier post about Spencer, her son working at my school. Kathy spent the day day touring my school walking through classrooms, talking to the school’s leadership team, visiting a colleague’s school in Frankston and finishing the day attending Aladdin, a  musical performed by the school’s senior students.

It was great to hear about some of the principals I had met at Harvard in 2007 and the challenges they faced.

It was particularly pleasing to hear some Ahh’s as she spent time in classrooms. One of those Ahh moments came when she commented on the comprehension work she saw in a prep classrooms [schema – e.g. applying ones prior knowledge about the world to text].  We both commented on the fact that prior to this comprehension work in both cities [Toronto and Melbourne]  we had taught students effective decoding of text skills in preps to year 2 but then saw reading scores drop in statewide testing  of reading in years 3 and 5. These statewide reading tests focused on comprehension skills. Hence our work changed in the junior years to include a balance between the explicit teaching of comprehension skills [e.g. 20%] and decoding skills [80%]. This balance changes for most students, in both cities as they move to senior classes.

Perhaps was of the day’s highlights was her talk to the school leadership team. Kathy talked about her family of schools including a high school [years 10-12] of 2000 students, 3 middle schools [years 7-9] of 450 – 700 students and 21 primary schools ranging from K-4 or K-6 with an average of 450 students although a few are smaller around 150 students.  

Kathy spoke about her family’s commitment to all students achieving high levels of literacy and numeracy. This is a key responsibility of all educators. She spoke about this push being lead by Avis Glaze and that in her family one significant challenge was to reduce the 30% of students who do not pass the tests in literacy and numeracy and therefore fail to graduate from high school.

She saw the prime role of principals as instructional leaders working together to solve the problems. She used a Harvard quote: “no blame, no shame, no excuses” ! I really like this quote which got me to reflect on the public ways we take responsibility for collectively solving the literacy and numeracy problems.

One strategy Kathy has working in the family is within a 6 week block teachers in teams, in some ways act like those in the medical industry and make a literacy and numeracy diagnosis of each student. Having made the diagnosis they then set a target and commitment to some intentional teaching for those students. Then after 6 weeks have a culminating activity made by the team with an assessment rubric.  Students work demonstrations on the task are then collected and swapped with different teachers for assessment [moderated markings]. This is having a significant impact on those students in schools whose teachers undertake this practice.

Kathy talked about making private practice in classrooms – collective practice through peer teaching, co teaching and mentoring.  She talked about her work being premised on the belief “that all children can learn given enough time and support”. This is so like the work we are engaged in at Elsternwick.

Last winter in Toronto they had about 6ft of snow and she used the image of snow ploughs in a street when she talked about bringing all students learning outcomes up. The ploughs are like teachers following each other along so that no snow or in this case no child is left behind. The teachers look at achievement data and using this as a starting point saying what do I have to do today to improve this child.

Kathy and I have agreed to swap further ideas, research and connections so that our practice as leaders is also not private but informed by other leaders “in the field”.

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Shift Happens updated video

I have posted the updated version of Shift Happens as its still worth showing teachers and parents to set the context for change in education. It goes for about 7 minutes but hang in there – the discussion afterwards is worth it.

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Get Smart – Open the Classroom Doors!

One of the central themes of the Big Day Out this year was to “get smart and open the classrooms doors” so that instruction, which can often seen as private teacher business, can be seen and improved. Each year Darrell Fraser, the deputy secretary of the Department [DEECD] gathers together all the principals across Victoria so the vision for school improvement can be explored. It’s quite a symbolic and cultural move as 1500 of us including various heads of departments gather to hear and discuss the central themes of school improvement.

Over the past 3 years we have been fortunate to have Richard Elmore from Harvard as a critical friend as we continue to build the capacity of teachers and principals. Richard again presented on his theme of “if you cannot see it in the classroom it isn’t there” as did Geoff Masters, the current executive officer of ACER.

Richard Elmore make the case for networks adopting a knowledge framework. As the work advances in complexity we need to adopt a shared language [language is culture and culture is language]. He said that networks are where we should bring our problems of practice to: learning to use agreed protocols, staying in a descriptive rather judgemental voice and seeking the acquisition of new knowledge to solve the problems.   

Geoff made a strong case for using assessment to identify the starting for instruction. He said a challenge for leadership was to ensure teachers used the data on student achievement from the previous year rather than having children start from a clean slate as does often happen [Manshak 2003: states it seems we dump knowledge each year as we move from teacher to teacher].

The final session for the day was to seek feedback from principals upon the 5e model of instruction we are busy developing for all teachers across the state. Readers of my blog will know from previous posts that I am on the principal working party for the development of the instructional model which has been very challenging. Principal feedback was encouraging. I did wonder how teachers might feel moving between novice and expert as they learn to deepen their instructional practice [Hattie].  

 

 

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New Learning Spaces

This is another post on learning spaces we have constructed. These images are of a new building that houses years 5 and 6 students.

  • The first image is of a large central spaces that facilitates learning in different size groups. There are digital whiteboards located at either end of the room with small banks of computers for individual students. Within this space we have defined some dedicated small group teaching spaces.
  • The second image is the central area of the buildingwhich features a series of dicussion pits shaped different so that they are identified by students. There is a large bank of computers to the side for individual students. The whole building has wireless access points for students to use laptops in discussion pits or outside learning areas, still to be completed.
  • The third image is again the central area of the building which has a dedicated science learning area complete with heating and freezing facilities, movable display benches, more discussion pits and internal student lockers.
  • The fourth image is a discussion pit near a digital whiteboard for teachers or students to use.

Teachers and students are busy creating the learning conditions to maximise these new facilities, which we expect to continue to evolve over time. The central principles remain the same that deeper learning occurs in collaborative engaged communities around rich challenging tasks and resources. Students that continually reflect on their learning based on specific feedback from teachers are better able to take responsibility for their own learning and finally grouping students at their point of need for specific instruction requires teachers to continually track learning and adjust their teaching and feedback.

We are now busy working on substantially renovating very old buildings to provide similar facilities for younger students. Learning tours for parents are being organised in August this year. Other groups need to make appointments.

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Kath Murdoch, an inspiration on how to learn within a social context.

Readers of my blog will know that we have had Kath Murdoch working with our teachers at Elsternwick Primary over the past 4 years. Kath initially worked with the whole staff to develop some shared understandings about inquiry learning and then shifted to supporting teams. Her team work phase focused on effective planning and modelling key thinking strategies in classrooms. This team focus continues as well as the third phase of coaching individual teachers in instructional strategies and skills.

Last week Kath engaged us a whole staff in setting up and layering learning environments with not only rich tasks that challenged our thinking and understandings but also setting some norms and making explicit a few social competencies. She really challenged and inspired us to help individual students publicly set a learning and social goal for some sessions each week. She has recently published two books with lots of the strategies she used on the day: “Helping your students to work cooperatively” and “Personalised learning in the primary classroom” – both worth a read.

I was inspired by the multi layers of teaching she was able model during a session: provide a rich task, organise explicit social competencies that are chosen by students [in this case us] to work on, moving around the groups supporting them in their thinking – commenting where appropriate on the social competency chosen by the learner but also to write quotes made by learners during the session on the inclusive language they used. I did pose a question on how long it took to learn to layer lessons like that – her reply was that’s it’s all about the intentions – what are intentions of the lesson – if they are clear then the practice can follow.

Throughout the day there were little gems that stuck with me:

  • modern small families that are complete with multiple TV and computers etc… are usually not structured in ways that demand our youth to negotiate with lots of siblings – school now takes that challenge.
  • using a ball of wool that passes to students who are scattered around a room students can learn and visually reinforce the interconnectedness of learners. 
  • like a car needing to be serviced several times a year so do teachers in classrooms need to go back and workshop the social competencies we need to practice to build a cooperative learning community.
  • use wait time not only after the initial question but after the response as well – for this allows learners to piggy back off each other in their thinking.

My thanks went to the two teachers who pubically shared their learning after being coached by Kath. Being open to receiving feedback that challenges aspects of our instructional practice is truly the act of a learner.

An inspiring day. 

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Kevin Donnelly’s article on direct instruction needs a response!

A few members of staff found the link to Kevin Donnelly’s article in the Australian recently which is, as they say offering a different opinion to the one I’m putting forward and suggested I read it.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24005037-25192,00.html

A few quick comments on his article, if I may
1.   His comment about history saying the 70’s etc… innovations failed – whose history is he talking about – and to suggest that the poor need the discipline subjects [read traditional] more than the rich as they are culturally advantaged goes too far – yes the socio-economically poor need rich curriculum content like everyone does but rich curriculum content does not have to be delivered in traditional ways.
2.   The curriculum gave way to learning to work in teams – seems to suggest that curriculum has a body of defined knowledge – does not react to new knowledge [how many planets do we have in our solar system?] and since when does the social aspect of learning or working not warranty attention.
3.   Donnelly needs to learn that constructivism is a theory of learning not teaching and is not, as he would suggest, in direct contrast to teaching that make learning goals explicit, or specific feedback to students important. However his final point in this section on direct instruction is most likely the point of his article. Let’s all go back to the empty vessels theory of learning and pour information into student heads and have them restate this in tests and we prove that all is well with the world – forget inert knowledge is forgotten or any of the work of Perkins from Harvard.

Donnelly has been pushing a barrow for a long time – direct instruction – although I note that’s it been softened to direct at the start of lessons or for particular subjects and tries to justify this. Kevin no one is arguing with explicit instruction, challenge and feedback, content rich tasks, with learners inquiring and connecting understandings across disciplines for that’s what the progressive research suggests works.

Get up with it mate!

I shared my views on our leadership wiki and look forward to the continued dialogue.

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Between Class Difference: Myth or Reality!

This week at our weekly leadership meeting we discussed a research article about an American school who number crunched student achievement over a 3 year period. This article really set us up for the weekly staff meeting where we were investigating the question: If research suggests the greatest variance in student outcomes is between classes in the same school what did our data of student achievement tell us at half year about the students in our classes?

Like the school in the article I copied all the achievement data for each individual class in graph form from the various dimensions in English and Math. We collated the graphs in VELS levels so that individuals and teams could examine the data for similarities and differences between classes. We posed two questions were there any differences and what might we want to do about that to improve student performance in the second semester.

Of course this activity needed some retelling of our morale purpose; raise the bar – close the gap, some restating of our belief that all students can learn, some norm setting about a no blame approach but own the results and some purpose – making lateral public accountabilities to each other to improve.

Where did we end up after 45 minutes – some assessment process glitches [ a perhaps safer view with teams tightening some processes] and some committments to look with a closer lense at some more “successful” classrooms and pose some deeper questions about if and what instructional practices led to these results.

A brave new step in the use of data to improve performance and reduce variance between classes. 

The picture above represents a message our Assistant Principal Sarah gained from a recent professional learning course – the quote comes from a CEO of a fortune 500 country “When things are going well I look out the window however when things are going poorly I look in the mirror” – we have to own our results and improve. 

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Andy Hargreaves speaks about a new learning gap.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I heard Andy Hargreaves speak at the ACEL conference in Sydney last year and was impressed with his candor about governments setting what seemed to be easy targets for schools. I thought his point was that governments in Australia were overly obsessive with literacy targets given that we were ranked 5 in OECD countries on the Pisa test for literacy. I also remember giving a colleague a tour of the school a few years ago and his comment to me on our school’s strategic direction was that we were fortunate given our school’s higher socio economic background status and the associated higher standards in literacy not be obsessed with literacy targets.  

In fact we do have literacy targets – non fiction writing and the language and spelling associated with these genre is a target however we also have had inquiry learning as a target for the past 4 years. Why? I think it started out as curriculum coordination issue for teachers however after reading Andy’s article: Data Driven To Distraction and reflecting upon our changing cohort of students its now become clear that the learning gap that is growing is between those working class families who cannot afford the enriched and enlarged sets of learning experiences that the privileged enjoy. Inquiry learning as a target goes beyond the literacy and numeracy benchmarks that even I occasionally fixate on particularly around state wide test time and explores the issues that exist within children’s worlds.

I remember Andy’s words parting words saying something like we owe all our children the right to explore the burning issues of the day [melting polar caps] as well as the skills needed in the information age of the 21st century.  

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swing bridge at Lorne



lorne swing bridge, originally uploaded by markwalker.teacher.

Over the holidays I managed to get away for a few days and enjoy a few walks down at Lorne. Most of the holiday period was spent on site attending to building issues and so these few days were special.

Each morning we would walk across this swing bridge and along the beach. It was great to clear the mind, enjoy the brisk winter breeze and have a coffee to finish.

It’s important to take this time so that when the term begins again we are refreshed.

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old library being removed

Just before the school holidays the old library was shifted to another school. Our new library which is part of the major construction project should be open in the third week of term 3.

If you are interested in seeing photos of the building project click on this link and I have set up a set of photos called eps building project.

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Interactive Whiteboards

    

I was at school with the whiteboard electrician, Steve yesterday as we resolved wiring problems in the new building. We are installing 4 new interactive whiteboards in the new learning spaces as well as motorized screens and data projectors in the Visual Arts area and Library. I now know that wiring over 7 meters in length requires shielded CAT 5 cables -uuukkk – problem solved with boosters at a cost of $200 per set.

Anyway I have been doing some research on the use of digital whiteboards in schools and ultimately were there any studies showing improvements in student learning. Early reports have shown the initial increase in student motivation and engagement although I did wonder was this just the “new visual” technology fad. I then began to think about this very powerful technology in the hands of teachers who wanted students to demonstrate learning – deeper active learning. I came across this presentation which I think is both balanced and enlightening. It’s worth a look!

The other discovery was this great site, slideshare that allows presentations like this to be shown on blogs and websites and thats worth a look at as well. 

 

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Learning Spaces

 

As we near the occupancy of the first new learning spaces constructed at Elsternwick Primary since 1920, and before I am completely swept away with the detail surrounding the final stages of this building, the whole construction process begs me to reflect on the initial learning pedagogy behind the design and what I have learnt so far.

We began some 30 months ago planing to build learning spaces that were flexible [no more corridors with fewer walls], catered for different styles of learning [active, collaborative or individual], rich in technology, capable of being used by students for scientific experiments or quiet reading corners. Our pedagogy centered around active learning where students construct deep understandings from challenging tasks, that knowledge is inert unless acted upon, that students need teachers with multiple instructional and feedback strategies so that they learn the core tool skills [note this includes thinking and social competencies as well as English and math] which are practised regularly.

So what have we learned:

  • that its about dedicated spaces that enable students and teachers to learn [the flexiblity comes form being able to change the spaces for a different purpose].
  • design from the inside out
  • whilst you might work on pedagogy and instructional practice don’t be surprised when the day arrives of the “fear of the unknown” factor still – yes we are reshaping teacher culture by working openly – deprivatising our practice thus being open to constant reflection and feedback.  We held back a little from showing teachers other schools who “live” pedagogy and space in case the temptation to fill a vacuum proved too great – you need to understand context and learn to create rather than simply adopt.
  • don’t be scared to create furniture to meet learning styles – we, initially through Woods Furniture in Melbourne got the name of a manufacturer- we now have 2 companies who produce quality products – expensive but worth it.

There’s more learning and photos along the way and its an exciting opportunity. 

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Classroom 2.0


Over the weekend I discovered this online collaborative learning community dedicated to supporting educators use technology with learners. It’s worth a look.

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Dynamic Curriculum Mapping

Last week Michael Ymer worked with 3 of our teaching teams to plan the Math Curriculum for the next semester. Michael is one of our key educators we contract to build and support teacher learning. He coaches individual teachers in classrooms to build their instructional skills as well with teams in constructing math curriculum maps.

When you look at the photograph above it interesting to note the use of laptops and data projectors in planning. Michael was modelling the use of some excellent online curriculum resources from DEECD: digilearn [a portal of educational tools including film linked to specific learning goals – sorry you need a security number to access the portal], the maths continuum with its teaching points, activities and materials you need to use.

Teachers store their curriculum maps for the next semester on the school intranet so that all staff members can access and use them. The teachers “rave” about Michael’s support and his common sense approach to planning [e.g. don’t plan to cover too much as you end up not teaching the concept well or providing enough time for students to practise using different materials and just get frustrated].  

The prep team leader [the other Michael in this photo] was also showing some excellent resources the teachers could use on their digital whiteboards installed earlier this year in their classrooms.

It’s exciting to observe teachers use the power of technology to engage students and share their mapping of curriculum which broadens this de-privatisation of teaching. When our instructional practise is open to each other we can then truly observe, share, reflect and improve.   

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