Educating the Dragon






         A learning journey with no fixed abode

June 25, 2008

Who’s your SENCO?

Filed under: General interest, My Education, random-ramblings, teaching — Dragon09 @ 11:35 am
Tags: , ,

Those of you who have the patience to follow my blog will know that for the past little while now I have been tripping around schools. Doing some relieving here and there.

One such school I happened across asked for me to come in and cover some member of staff for a little while. During the course of my time there I have got to know some of the students and one in particular made me wonder. There was something unusual there, but I couldn’t put my finger on it.

I decided, the only action I could take was to speak to the Special Needs Co-ordinator. Not knowing who I was to speak to I approached the DP and asked the question: “Who is your special needs co-ordinator?”

A fairly easy question, I thought. But perhaps I caught them off guard, their mind on other things, maybe the answer was more complicated- “there used to be one, but…” or “So and so was but now they are….” Or perhaps that’s the English term and Kiwi’s call them something different.

Whatever it was I got this blank, scratching “I don’t know” head and directed to my syndicate leader. Or perhaps my Syndicate leader WAS the SENCO- (but that was not revealed to me)

Hmmmm. It just bothered me. Member of staff needs to be aware of who’s responsible for what, who to go to for what.

July 14, 2007

AtoL Expo

Filed under: AtoL07, Dragon09, Education, classroom management, teaching, writing — Dragon09 @ 1:46 pm

AtoL conference title

AtoL Expo 07, arranged by Massey University was packed out today with teachers from around the country. It was hosted at Havelock North Intermediate School with two excellent keynote addresses, the first from John Hattie from Auckland University and the second Erika Ross, Manager of the Literacy, Numeracy and Assessment team in the Ministry of Education in
Wellington. More about them in another post or two.

 What I would like to talk about now is Regan Orr, from Russell St. He talked about students creating their own criteria/ matrix. When I read it I thought ‘oh, he means success criteria from the Learning Objectives’, but it blew me away when he actually meant what he had written. He talked us through how his Y5/6 class spent the whole term on ‘Procedural writing’ but for the first two weeks they did no writing at all. But talked and discussed what a procedure was, what were features of a good procedure? He pulled out of School Journals a variety of examples and the students highlighted different parts of them a discussed what each feature was. From there they looked at what an ‘expert’ would create as a procedure, then what a ‘novice would be doing than then the ‘practitioner’ in the middle. The students, over the first three weeks had created (with some scaffolding and support) their own matrix for procedure writing. From there they each got a copy and for each of their own procedures highlighted on their copy of the matrix where they thought that piece of writing fitted. Genius.  

My class are doing Explanation writing this term. Hope he stay in touch, I want to do this thing the best that I can.

June 30, 2007

Wolves, sheep, educators

An Article in Investigate Magazine entitled “When the wolf is in charge of the sheep” (sorry there is no link to the article yet) written by Amy Brooke caught my attention today. Through her article she quotes Roy Kelley headmaster of King’s College.

She is talking about the use of technology in the classroom, perhaps the type to Online learning experience challenged by Roger Schank? but more likely, I suspect, the general implementation of laptops and computers into classroom teaching.

 She says:

“But they are too conveniently replacing genuine teaching, as is the overuse of setting so-called projects – for students theoretically to teach themselves.”

I’m not sure if she is reporting from
New Zealand or somewhere else as my experience of technology in the classroom has always been an extra to, not a replacement or an enhancement of, traditional teaching. For which  I have encountered resistance to this approach in the schools I have worked. The picture one paints as you read this section is of a school system on the cutting edge; latest technology, dipping with funding, hardly my experience.

She goes onto to say:

“In the hands of mediocre teachers their over-use is a smoke-and-mirrors practice, avoiding actual direct teaching, and replacing that centuries old practice of a genuinely knowledgeable teacher enthusing an interested class.”

A few points about this statement jumped up and slapped me in the face.

Firstly, she does not mention the potential of technology in the hands of gifted and talented teachers.

Secondly, the avoidance of direct teaching (or “deliberate acts of teaching” as Atol and literacy advisors would say) is impossible in the current climate of my school and no doubt schools around our nation.

Thirdly she assumes that the centuries old practice was a) good in its time and b) relevant for today.

Lastly she talks about ‘genuinely knowledgeable teacher enthusing an interested class’ with no enlightenment as to how a teacher is to achieve that ‘interested class’ because I can say from my own experience that interested classes are no-longer, if they ever were, gifted to us from the gods. It takes care, attention to the individual, thoughtfulness, concern, and a genuine love for the kids and the job in hand before you even think about what knowledge imparting we’re supposed to be doing. The old cliché will be forever true: “Kids don’t care what you know, until they know you care.”

What has that to do with whether or not a new entrant has an IWB in their room or a year three can share their work via blog or a wiki, or if a 16 year old is collaborating on a project with people around the world. Nothing is the answer.

Addressing the ‘technology in the classroom’ question is all about preparing students for the myriad of jobs they will have in their lifetime, some of which we haven’t even thought of yet. No one is saying that Literacy and Numeracy are to take a back seat to the education in computer technology, those things remain important.

What I think is being said is that remembering:

1. Finding the World’s First Dinosaur Skeleton

2.Knowing the kings of England- IN ORDER

3. Telling the legend of how the kiwi lost its wings

Are no longer required as they are only one Google search away.

June 22, 2007

Talking and Writing

 

 

 

Peer mentoring continues in my class using Skype and Talk and Write. Below is picture of the work my Y3 did collaborating with an Intermediate in Napier.

I want to highlight, here the value of engaging the children with collaborative projects such as this.

Giving primary school children an opportunity to witness and experience for themselves the value of emerging Web 2.0 tools is hugely beneficial to their view of the world around them. Using the Internet in such dynamic ways also enables pupils to experience working in a way that will open possibilities for them in the future.

If my kids are thinking in a Web2.0 way now then when they ARE older and are given research projects and assignments then they are more likely to reach out across the internet to search for up-to-date information, expert opinion, and possible collaborative partners. Their thinking will be wider than popping down to the local library, asking mum or big sister for help, all of which have value but knowing that there is a wider knowledge base out there will broaden the scope and depth of their research and presentation.

June 10, 2007

The Power of Anyway

Filed under: Dragon09, Education, Martina McBride, inspiration, teaching — Dragon09 @ 12:39 pm

This is not a carbon copy of Vicki’s post but what the words of her favourite song, Anyway, by Martina McBride have encouraged me enormously.

Those you that follow my ramblings may have picked up that discouraged and sad tone that I try so hard for my blog NOT to reflect.

Anyway allowed me to reflect constructively on several areas in my life:

Build Anyway

You can spend your whole life building
Something from nothin’
One storm can come and blow it all away
Build it anyway

This is about my home, my family. I moved to
New Zealand some three-bit years ago with my life. Wanting to build a better life for ourselves. We came for a year and realised this was a place we felt we belonged. We have a family here now, my son is charging towards 2 as I type. We bought a house, 100 years old, the roof is likely to leak anyday now, the floor is crooked and the walls are rotting away in places. But we saw the potential, the potential of a home, of a life, and we continue to build that home. Tragedy or misadventure my force us to abandon this home and return to  England, but we build anyway. 
What will you build anyway?

Dream Anyway

You can chase a dream
That seems so out of reach
And you know it might not ever come your way
Dream it anyway

To say I chase a dream would be a fib. Thinking about these different ‘anyway’s I’ve realised that all my hopes and dreams and aspirations are complete. Maybe that’s a good thing maybe not. But I do dream of an educational system that reflects how business and the world runs today. What’s my part, my role? I’m working on that. I don’t know the answer to those two questions but I dream it anyway.What dream will you dream anyway?

Love AnywayYou can love someone with all your heart
For all the right reasons
In a moment they can choose to walk away
Love ‘em anyway

I love my wife and my son with all of my heart. God has blessed me with a wife who knows me, understands me, puts up with my ways. I am blessed and I love her. My boy is a delight to me. He looks at me with love and affection. His sense of humour is developing, and personality growing- I hope he takes after his mother! God has truly blessed me with a gorgeous family. I am so thankful. Their presence at the end of a frustrating day draws my life into focus and my work into perspective. They could be taken from me anytime. But I love ‘em anyway.
Who will you love anyway?

Sing anyway You can pour your soul out singing
A song you believe in
That tomorrow they’ll forget you ever sang
Sing it anyway
Yea – sing it anyway
 Vicki’s passion echoes my own: 

In the sharing of how I teach and how I am learning to teach. Of the bumps and bruises of this new thing we’re all discovering together called Web 2. Of the frustration of the three steps up, two steps back of helping others discover it too. Of the frustration of being misunderstood with people thinking I must have “too much time on my hands” if I am blogging.Knowing that should I stop blogging tomorrow, that my name will be forgotten and my blog will begin gathering dust — because that is the way it works in the blogosphere.But I’ll sing this song anyway.The chorus of my life

God is great
But sometimes life ain’t good
And when I pray
It doesn’t always turn out like I think it should
But I do it anyway
I do it anyway
This world’s gone crazy
It’s hard to believe
That tomorrow will be better than today
Believe it anyway

So, when you feel down about all you’ve done. All the kids that have forgotten. All the people who’ve never said thank you. The dreams you wish you’ve done. The messes people dump in your lap. Brush off the dust, take a moment and smile.This is life. Life is good… it doesn’t always turn out like I think it should.

But I’m going to live it, bruises and all, with all I’ve got…anyway.

What will you do anyway?

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