Description
Throughout
my Mindlab journey, I have been excited by many of the innovative practices covered.
The big one
for me, as a connected educator who perceives herself as having a future focused
disposition, is Changing the Script – rethinking the roles of learners and
teachers.
Perhaps the
most intriguing part of this, is not changing the script for myself – but how I
feed this forward to my students. We, the teachers, are not the fountain of all
knowledge anymore, as the ubiquitousness of technology is surpassing this old
concept of education.
Many of my
students believe in a number of misconceptions.
·
Learning
is about them being ‘fed’ information
·
Mathematical
learning is about getting the answer right
·
Sharing
information, answers, strategies is not okay
·
Research
and inquiry is about finding the answers from google as quickly as we can, and
regurgitating that information.
I started
to change this idea about the learner’s role, by creating and encouraging
communities of inquiry in mathematics.
At the time,
I was somewhat hesitant about how my students would react to the change in our
mathematics workshops. They were used to working individually, finding the answers
relatively quickly and only just beginning to share their thinking with others.
Looking
back now, I am actually quite surprised how keen my students were to work
together, learn from each other and be collaborative in their problem solving. I am heartened by this and see it as a
reflection of the classroom community we have created around our shared values.
This aspect
is certainly an area to celebrate. In addition, the students are becoming much
more adept at explaining their solutions and ensuring that all members of the
group have the means to share with the entire group. Students are acknowledging the strengths their
peers have, within mathematics.
Many of the
problems I chose, in the beginning were simple and easy to solve, therefore not
providing a challenge to all my learners and I need to ensure future problems
have more depth and are multi-layered.
One of the
key findings for me, right at the beginning of our Mindlab journey was the 21st
Century Skills that ITL Research (2012) decided were important. This has really
impacted on my teaching over the past two terms and I am continuing to reflect
on ways that I can ensure my teaching programme incorporates these. Creating learning communities in my classroom,
certainly requires my students to be collaborative, to self-regulate and to
become skilled communicators.
In
conclusion I am pleased with how my mathematics programme is evolving. There is
still work to do, as mentioned above, I need to think about the problems the
students are solving, now that they have developed the skills to work together.
I am also looking at giving them choices about how they share their learning
with the wider community.
This term,
I have rearranged the groups I was using, to try and enhance relationships and
communication skills between all my students, and this is having a positive
effect. I have also begun introducing
the same idea into my reading programme, using literature circles to improve
reading comprehension through discussions on the meaning of text.
My next
step is to look at changing the way my students look at inquiry and how they
create questions for investigation, research and evaluate the information they
find.
Bolstad,
R., Gilbert, J., McDowall, S., Bull, A., Boyd, S., & Hipkins, R. (2012).
Supporting future-oriented learning and teaching — a New Zealand perspective.
Report prepared for the Ministry of Education. Retrieved from https://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/schooling/109306
ITL Research. (2012).
21CLD Learning Activity Rubrics. Retrieved from https://education.microsoft.com/GetTrained/ITL-Research
Hey Jacalyn what an interesting topic. I agree with you that student agency and them seeing themselves as problem solvers is so important for our maths learners. I am trying to be more mindful about their perceptions of themselves as well. I wonder if you could provide more information about what digital tools you have used that you have found successful to help you with this? Would love to know more!
ReplyDeleteThanks Kate. I used screencastify and show me for student's to record their solutions to problems. Then we posted these on our blogs in order to share with others. We were trying to encourage commenting - that didn't quite happen last term and is a big focus for us this term.
DeleteIt is hard to get everything you want to say into 400-600 words isn't it?
Jac, it is interesting that you are finding the encouraging of commenting on others blogs difficult. We have also been focusing on this this term and aside from the many technical difficulties the students seem to be taking their time at having a go at this, despite often being in the same classroom as the person they should be working with.
DeleteWe have also sent a letter home to encourage parents to be involved in the blogging feedback process and as a teacher I also comment. It would be a great way to share work with family members near and far and create a great feedback loop between a learner, their peers, their teacher(s) and their (wider) whanau.
I would also love to hear more about how you run the math programme, or potentially see a video of it in action alongside how you plan for this.
Thanks for sharing Jac that sounds like a great way to show their learning. Alex and Jac we have been using Seesaw for our guys seems to do the trick, especially for parent engagement. Seems to be more popular with juniors as I think my guys would struggle to use screencastify. Might have to come out for a visit sounds really interesting.
DeleteGreat post Jac. I like your comments about your students mindset around learning and how your innovation is changing this. I can see in my class how the introduction of digital tools and having the students to work together to figure them out has increased their ability to listen to each other's ideas and learn from each other.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree Jac, we are not a fountain of all knowledge anymore! The love the idea of collaborative learning and student's using the strengths of their peers. I really like the way you are thinking about deepening your student's learning by developing more challenge.
ReplyDeleteAnd yet still keeping in mind those that need extra support - a constant challenge! (:
DeleteHi Jacalyn
ReplyDeleteIsn't it refreshing that we can consider ourselves facilitators of learning rather than the fountain of all knowledge! Have you noticed that your relationships with your learners has enhanced by the introduction of your new teaching strategies? I am interested in the tools you use. Do you use strategies (such as internal/external circles or the donut activity) that allows students to get to get to know and trust each other? Although these activities are not using a digital platform could there be a digital tool that could suffice to develop collaboration. (: