Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Learning architects ROB Wednesday 26th September 18

GOALS
Document labelled: 
PLD - Leadership, Digital Fluency & Writing - St Mary's Rotorua 2018/20

Just to remind you that these are the goals for the project.

1 - Leadership CapabilityBuild the capability of senior and middle leaders to identify and cater for staff needs, and provide relevant and specific feedback and support to develop effective practice.
2 - Use of digital toolsBuild the capability of teachers and leaders to effectively select and utilise a wide range of digital technologies to enhance and transform current practice. To encourage and support innovative practice that will lead to differentiated learning and better learner outcomes, particularly in writing.
3 - Inquiry into practiceStrengthen ‘inquiry into practice’ for leaders and teachers so that they are more discerning, reflective, evaluative and responsive to learners needs. Staff will become better at interpreting, analysing and responding to a wider range of data in order to better respond to learner needs.
4 - Learner AgencySupport teachers and leaders capability to understand and develop student agency.
Rob coming in to work with us:
Tuesday 19th 9-10:30am during CRT 
Wednesday 20th March 2019 9-10am in classroom during writing session 

2 x PD goals 
Using Book creator and EDUCA to make learning visible (inquiry focus) and to enhance writing purpose and audience.
*use of digital tools
*learner agency

Today we looked at using what was around the classroom to create a new book.


30 Jan 2019
Our PLD  day
Under My Drive - St Mary's Rotorua - Staff Only days 2018/19

Doc labelled - PLD-Leadership, Digital Fluency & writing - St Marys Rotorua 2018/19
Skill I want to develop - Using Hapara and chrome books in the classroom - My ideas for transferring them into the classroom .



20 December 2018

TOD link


https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1x0iNBEi6bFWNvleAL-y9nhgQgBUj1gDB9XyOPGzG0Bc/edit

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1_NsEhkolMTG8kJpVw1OMpI0hmioW9Wg7GaVlH6wjkrs/edit

Started with
G -grateful
L -leaned
P-promise myself for today

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeL9s0tD1dYPoHeDSoazvkis8goJL3Ip4kMCKftJ4Uafyt6uw/viewform

Spreadsheets hover over the colums double click to adjust the


Laura - Screen capture  
Screencastify 

Our teams screen castify + stop motion
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1EWxIjFWWtXY1MHgdPGpwRt4HtsT6oa9-/view?ts=5c1af5e7




26 September 2018

ROB  Learning architects.com
PLD project – 2 years
Strength coaching – supporting us with digital tools to enhance our learning.
Project – e learning and digital tools to improve student incomes – helping us use digital tools
Review process – identifying big issues we want to get better at.

Wonderings - Robs
Student Agency
Staff Agency
Multimedia
School systems

Dreaming for teachers-learning with and through other teachers





Hopes and Dreams for elearning at school 

Saturday, September 8, 2018

Te Wananga o Aotearoa course starting 15 May 2018

He Papa Tikanga - Te Ao Maori - The Maori world
Student working journal
Moduel 1
Te Ao Maori - The Maori World
This resource was great because it went over many maori concepts that I have heard of but didn't really have a good understanding of. The follow are areas looked at for the first module.
*Maori concepts
-Whakapapa- genealogical links
-Whanaungatanga - relationships
-Tapu-sacred , Noa - normal/common, Mana - prestige, Utu
-Manaakitanga - hospitality
-Whenua-land
*Tikanga - Maori customs and protocols
*oral traditions - Purakau-historical stories, narratives - Whakatauki - proverbs - Karakia - prayer
*Whakapapa
This module also has a very good resource book which includes  
Pronunciation, alphabet, common maori words, tinana, nga tae - colours, Kakahu- clothing, Kupu Tuingoa- nouns, Kararehe - animals, Nga kupu - words, Nga Wahanga o te wharenui - parts of the wharenui, Nga Ingoa Wahi - place names


Module 2 due Monday 29 October 3.30-5pm
Te Ao Marama - the World of Understanding
Learning outcomes - Demonstrate an understanding of Whakaaro Maori - Achievement - I will demonstrate an increased understanding of WHakaaro maori as expressed in Nga korero o nehera (historical accounts stories) and whakatauki (proverbs), and analysed how these are applied within a contemporary context
-Demonstrate an understanding of how Whakaaro Maori is practised in Aotearoa/NZ Achievement - I will demonstrate an understanding of symbolism within Te Ao Maori by explaining the significance of symbolic structures and the philosophical approaches of symbolism.

Whakaaro Maori - is a beautiful and metaphoric language that uses word pictures, symbolism and imagery to give it rich meaning. Whakaaro means the thinking and use of ones mind - from the word 'aro' is the act of focusing your attention on a particular matter, ie: the act of interpreting and understanding - comprehending the information you receive. So Whakaaro can be understood as the process of thinking, ones thoughts, ideas, understanding, or a persons intention. Therefore you might interpret whakaaro maori as the maori way of thinking..
Whakaaro maori is the appreciation and use of ideas, principles, and concepts of Te Ao Maori which are preserved in nga korero o nehera - historical accounts. 
Different expressions of whakaaro maori are preserved in bodies of knowledge such as:
*Purakau - narratives
*whakatauki - proverbs
*Waiata - songs
*Whakairo - carvings
*Whaikorero - oratory
The course also looked at -
Maori concepts 
Humarie - to be humble
Mauri - life force
Ahi Ka -a groups right to use and occupy land

Nga Korero o Nehera - Historical accounts
Taharakau and Tapuwai - Manaakitanga, whakawhanaungatanga, Mana Tangat, Whakaritenga

Symbols
Whare tupuna / wharenui: the ancestral house
Waka
Harakeke - flax
Whariki - woven mat

Symbolism in our world today
The Three health models
Te Whare Tapa Wha - individual well-being
Te Wheke - family well being
Te Pae Mahutonga - Healthy living
-Waiora, environmental protection
-Toiora - healthy lifestyle
-Te Oranga - participation in society
-Nga Manukura , community leadership
-Te Mana Whakahaere - autonomy
Tino Rangatiratanga - The right to self determination

Whakatauki and whakatauaki
King Tawhiao - inspiration
Te Puea Herangi - unity
Apirana Ngata - wisdom


March 2018 Orientation Day in Room 18A and 18B


When Michelle and I first started our ILE classroom in 2018, we realised there was a fair amount of carpark chatter amongst parents in regards to our learning environment. We realised that parents did have a genuine concern for what their kids were in for in a learning environment they were unfamiliar with. Hence the idea to have an informative afternoon where parents can find out about our programme and learn about play based learning. Brigitte (our team leader) kindly offered to talk about the play based side as she is very passionate about it and able to inform parents of the theory behind it. We had a good group of people come along which was fantastic. We had an open forum at the end where parents were able to ask any questions in regards to their child's learning environment. 

 Letter sent out to parents


Orientation Afternoon for Parents of Room 18 students
Friday 16th March 2.15pm in Room 18

We would like to invite you to an informative afternoon covering the following:
  • Learning Through Play
  • Our Weekly Learning Timetable
  • Our ILE - Innovative Learning Environment

There will be time for Q & A after our presentation. We look forward to seeing you there.
Kate and Michelle



2018 Kakano Writing inquiry + writing ideas

17 July 2018
Writing is a focus for our school this year. Below is an article with points taken to help our writing in Kakano.




Boys will learn like boys 
Article to read as part of my appraisal from Education Gazette 
Points
 creative and innovative teaching practice as a major factor in literacy and engagement success among young boys, coupled with supportive leadership.

“The main focus [of our initial research] has been to study what motivates boys to write, for those who were just a bit reluctant in class and hard to motivate.

*  “One of the big things to come out of this initial survey was that the boys found it really difficult to come up with ideas. Many of them struggled with being told what to write about, they expressed a desire to come up with ideas and starters themselves; basically they wanted to write about things they found stimulating, not necessarily what the class was doing as a group.
“Another concern was spelling. Many found it hard to spell words correctly, and for that reason among others, they didn’t see themselves as good writers. Therefore writing was boring to them.”
They had to go through the planning process. It wasn’t just ‘jump in and write’, it was about planning what was going to happen in the story, who the characters were. We did a lot of work too around descriptive language and brainstorming.”
* The importance of sharing + using technology
the key to unlocking engagement is ownership, confidence, and self-direction.
13 August 2018
Reading as part of our Writing Inquiry 
http://www.ero.govt.nz/publications/reading-and-writing-in-years-1-and-2/writing/ 

Points I have taken from reading this article
* Chn need a variety of writing opportunities
* point made about using the assessment to target individual writing needs of children. I do find this tricky to incorporate into my writing programme. Catering to individual needs.
* using writing assessments to inform teaching, important for me to understand the progressions moving through the levels.
What's working well in schools
* good point about sharing successful teaching approaches from other teachers in the school. 
*teachers working together to critically analyse writing samples
*grouping chn with similar learning needs
*time taken to assess each others chns unassisted working samples
*important to obtain individual children’s goals or group learning intentions to carefully match to their needs
*IDEA TO DO FROM ARTICLE
Teachers shared the moderated writing sample with each child and discussed their next goal with them. Each group or individual child had writing goals recorded in their exercise books. These goals were referred to and monitored through regular teacher-children conferences, and were formally reflected on at the end of each term before setting new goals. Classroom displays highlighted examples of children’s work that successfully showed writing features described in their goals.
*Benchmarks to use
Many effective schools were using the draft Literacy Learning Progressions and The New Zealand Curriculum Exemplars as their reference points for children’s achievement.
*Blog posts?? Samples of writing, sent home to parents, included teachers’ comments about the child’s level of achievement, the skills they had mastered and what they should focus on next. Children explained their progress with their goals during three-way conferencing held as part of parent interviews. Families sometimes provided written feedback about their child’s writing progress and success. Children were well aware of what they had done well and how they could improve their writing.
Examples of effective use of writing assmts
* lots of talk about what chn need to do and kids able to say what they are working on. This is all shared with home, ie: through 3 way conf, parent interview. 
What was not working well
Interesting to note how some schools  only focussed on a few features of writing such as Capital letters and full stops. 
* a problem - Teachers had limited understanding about appropriate levels or writing progressions because they weren’t using the reference points to set their achievement expectations or make judgements.
* writing -system limited beginning writers’ opportunities to write expressively about something meaningful to them that matched their learning need.
Many children were not taught the writing features they specifically needed to focus on to progress to their next writing development stage.
* Parents have no understanding of what their child's writing should have or what they need to work on.
Using instructional teaching strategies in the classroom
Children need a wide variety of experiences to motivate and engage them so they enjoy writing. 
* Effective teachers -They recognise that effective teaching requires deliberate instruction balanced with opportunities for children to experiment with writing for different purposes and audiences.
*Effective teachers also understand how important it is for children to know what they are learning, why they are learning it, and how they can use their new skills. In particular teachers should structure learning experiences that help children draw on oral language and enable them to transfer words encountered in speaking and reading, into their writing.
What was working well in schools
*this is nearly what we have been doing in our class
*Effective teachers gave children a purpose for writing and encouraged them to write about things and experiences they were likely to be familiar with. They used objects, artefacts, books, and visual images to motivate children to write. They also showed photographs or computer images of events and occasions, and learning activities or discoveries children had previously been involved in and could talk and write about. As part of writing motivation, teachers used big books and texts used during shared reading to reinforce how reading and writing are linked. Children could sometimes make choices about what they wanted to write about and were given many opportunities to write independently.
*Oral language activities promoted discussion about ideas and helped children to talk about what they wanted to say before they wrote. Effective questioning by the teacher encouraged children to think more deeply and clarify their thoughts before planning their writing. Children talked about the likely content of their stories with buddies or in small groups before they began writing. Teachers immediately reinforced children’s suggestions when they offered interesting or exciting words. Introductory discussions were carefully timed to ensure children were motivated and did not sit for too long. Teachers showed interest and enthusiasm in children’s ideas and writing.
Children were given ways to improve their writing. During shared writing sessions, teachers modelled language features by writing together with individuals or groups. They carefully broke down the skills children were expected to focus on. This helped children to understand what they were learning to do and what they should be looking for in their writing. When modelling, teachers used contexts suggested by children to show how their ideas were valued. Children were taught to use diagrams, charts and pictures to plan their own writing. They could talk about the skills they were focusing on and how they could improve.
Good classroom management made time available for teachers to support individual writers. They managed time with small groups of children who needed additional help or extension. Teachers roved around the class reinforcing children’s success with the language features or writing skills focused on in the lesson. They had conversations with individual children to help them further refine or expand their ideas, help them edit their work, and highlight their success and progress.Teachers provided many opportunities for children to assess their own learning. Children were carefully taught how to reflect on their own work and were skilled at helping peers critique their writing. They used such things as ‘I Can’ or ‘My Goals’ sheets to help them assess progress against their individual goals. They also highlighted where they had used the effective writing features in their work. Time was given to share their writing with, and receive oral feedback, from others. This helped children recognise they were writing for an audience. They confidently regulated and monitored their own progress.
There was ample support for and celebration of children’s developing writing in the classroom. Writing was valued and presented on classroom walls. Word cards and simple dictionaries for finding words, highlighter pens for editing, and computers for word processing were provided to encourage children’s independence. Children enjoyed reading together from displayed books featuring collections of their writing or that of their peers. Writing corners provided a place for children to write in their spare time and displayed successful work completed by ‘writers of the day’. Teachers created lots of opportunities for children to celebrate and affirm their writing achievements. Children were encouraged to aspire to be writers.
Examples of effective strategies for teaching writing
Teachers use a wide range of effective instructional strategies. These include modelling and explaining new skills, and carefully sequencing learning so children can build on their previous learning. They prompt and encourage children to extend their ideas and they ask questions that encourage them to think more deeply. Children are provided with specific feedback that explains to them how well they have achieved the aspects taught in that particular lesson. The purpose of lessons is shared orally and often recorded in class learning journals. Children spoken to were able to share their learning goals.
Children work in groups or with buddies to talk about and practise new writing skills. They capably help each other by reminding their friends of the ideas they shared and suggesting ways to attempt to write new words. Their previous learning is reinforced. Pictures are used for building images in their minds that they can then write about. They regularly brainstorm words and ideas together, and the teacher reinforces their use of new words. They have opportunities to read their stories to each other, and to other classes, and they have them displayed in the classroom. Interactive boards are used in highly motivational ways by children, as well as the teacher, to develop writing skills.
What was not working well
* a school wide genre that all chn were expected to write about.
Writing sessions began and ended abruptly, with little time for motivation, instruction or reflection
Children had no opportunities to share their writing or discuss the features of good writing. 
High frequency words were not displayed, or made known to children before they began writing.
Teachers did not encourage children’s attempts to form letters to represent a word. Very young children were not supported in developing their independence as writers or encouraged to take ownership of their writing.
 Children’s writing books do not have any feedback or goals for improvement. The classroom has no examples of children’s writing on display.


Tuesday 18th  September 2018
The Writing book (email)

New lesson plan:
Label it – humpback whale

We hope you are all enjoying Term 3

As part of our writing project in the Cook Islands (funded by $1 per book donation from our book sales), we prepared some writing resources about humpback whales which we thought you might enjoy using.

Label it (page 114, The Writing Book)
This is an excellent activity to generate vocabulary for writing. After the teacher has introduced the activity and maybe taught one or two new words, the students can label the image with a partner. Next, students can go for a ‘Walk and talk’ (page 41, The Oral Language Book) and check and add vocabulary to their image.

Students can then compare their notes with the labelled diagram of the humpback whale.




Monday, September 3, 2018

4 September 2018 Maori Achievement

Maori Achievement Staff Meeting- Google slides

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/18I7QZUodnrw0xfDsf1Bdx4QHj7tFhoFUFzC2P39lRj0/edit?ts=5b8dfdaa#slide=id.g40b409f5ac_0_4



How are we being culturally responsive?
Group work to look at the Educultural wheel

What are some of the things you are already doing in your class to be culturally responsive?

Kakano - in Kakano we do our Roupu whanau time at the end of the day, the children know it is their guardian group.

Doc -Curriculum guidelines for teaching and learning TE Reo English - medium schools years 1-13

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1d4h3M47zg01zE1xI1f7y-599-yRpxDN8/view

Te Ao Māori St Mary's Catholic School Rotorua
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1hc6tPq_FTNVgkPAVdfYdSGC0AY3B06CprCVreoY736k/edit


Brainstorming together to see what we already do in our classrooms


Monday, June 18, 2018

13 June - 15 June NZCEC Wellington


NZCEC Wellington 13-15 June 2018
RE Team
I was lucky enough to attend the Catholic Convention along with Bernie, Sheryl, Dave, Katherine and Deacon Mike.

The Convention is a huge gathering of Catholic school leaders, teachers, Bishops, Priests and officials from various Catholic Dioceses.  

The opening ceremony of the Convention included an inspiring acknowledgment of Matariki (the Pleiades star cluster) the presence of which marks the Māori New Year.  We were reminded about how important it is to celebrate the qualities, values and successes of our many stars who are the young people we work with everyday in our schools. We need to acknowledge and celebrate the fabulous work we all do in our school to nurture and inspire our little stars to grow and shine.  

Secretary for Education, Iona Holsted, also attended the Catholic Education Convention and addressed the 800 hundred strong audience.  She talked about the changes ahead and the many Task Force groups that have been established to reshape our system of education.  She talked about the Summits in Christchurch and Auckland and surveying the attendees about what values they felt were most important.  At both Summits, well-being was top of the list, followed by creativity. Ms Holsted told the delegates that since so many consider ‘well being’ to be of high importance, it will be included in all work streams for the Ministry this year. 

She noted that the Tomorrow's Schools review was the one causing the greatest anxiety for people and encouraged all participants in the Convention to submit their views to the Task Force chaired by Bali Haq. She congratulated the Catholic schools saying that with their strong practices of living values, and caring for others and their well being, meant they were well placed to deal with future challenges. 

We were certainly entertained and challenged by the many speakers who spoke to us during the course of the three days. 

Our presentation to our staff Tuesday 19th June Google slides
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1D9AKUT_oVBPvNaceZALvn3devEpcAPH7-DURTJ_2z9E/edit?ts=5b24c3f9#slide=id.g3c6c757726_0_116






Following in the Footsteps of Suzanne Aubert - Meri Hohepa, the woman who will become NZ's first saint. We visited sites of significance and pilgrimage. We discovered historic and sacred places. 
This building is Buckle Street, a recently restored Historic creche. 

Compassion soup kitchen in Tory street, not far from its original location. The response of the soup kitchen to hunger and social isolation has been constant since 1901.






Our Lady's house of Compassion in Island Bay - home of the resting place of Suzanne Aubert and the mother house of the Sisters of Compassion. Facilities opened October 2017. 











Professor Br David Hall - Catholic Schools and the Possibility of God - Marist Brother from Australia. 







Chris Duthie-Jung Pastoral Minister - PARENTS - FIRST EDUCATORS IN FAITH - he used our school picture to show a school forming faith together - school, children, whanau all together.

 Great book for maybe new entrant families



Wednesday, June 6, 2018

1 June 2018 Nathan Wallis Conscious Intelligence

Friday 1 June 2018
Nathan Wallis
Conscious Intelligence
Ka Tikaka o ka Roro
The Developing Brain.

The outcome of your brain is determined in the first 1000 days - 1st year of your life - dictates your life.
1st child brainiest
It's not genetic, it's environmental - interact
*it allows access to his full brain
*face to face interaction uses most of your brain
*learn to hear one person first
*parent home in the first year of life gives the most outcome for a child

4 parts of the brain
1. survival
2. movment - both these are reptilion
3. Home of emotions - all 3 - mammal
4. thinking and learning brain
BOOK - Perry's Neuro seq
BOOK - The boy who was raised as a dog
BOOK - The whole brain child.

KEY COMPETENCES - what we should be looking at
ECE - disposions - attitudes, beliefs, behaviour
Under 7 - what they think of themselves - very important
Cognition skill - Creativity - RESILIENCE
key - Dyadic relationship - one on one

Monday, May 14, 2018

Yolanda Soryl Phonics training Monday 14 May 2018

Professional Learning
Engage in professional learning and adaptively apply this learning in practice.
Teaching
Use an increasing repertoire of teaching strategies, approaches, learning
activities, technologies and assessment for learning strategies and modify

these in response to the needs of individuals and groups of learners

Monday 14 May 2018  9am-3.30pm
Yolanda Soryl Literacy
Phonics Training

Great day today reinforcing everything we currently do with our phonics programme in the classroom. Have previous been on this course, it was very beneficial to go again as it reminded me of certain things I have omitted and she also had a couple of new ideas. 
Points from course
*remember graphic knowledge is knowing the shape of the word, work knowledge - just knowing it
*Yolanda reiterated the utmost importance of making sure children reread continuously - something I do focus on when I teach writing - yay doing something right!!
* reread to make sure it looks right, sounds right and makes sense.
*important to sing - aids phonological awareness
*sound breaks - syllables
*important children hear a syllable break - practice on their names
*nursery rhymes - do every day
* can they supply a missing word in a rhyme eg: little bo peep has lost her ........   
need this by 1 year at school*call out any word in rhyming strings
*P18/19 are we doing this every day. 
* use the Phonological awareness book - Yolanda's other book.
* Priority kids eg: Zack - flash a letter card throughout the day - hour by hour - what's the sound ...
*during guided writing - clap your sentence - Me -write their idea quickly on piece of paper so we don't forget.
*when checking with kids what sound it is on their word card - tell them to start with then ask them -- is it this one or that one!! give a choice of only two - they need to start doing the work.
*vowel drilling - use 5 big cards   aaa oooo 
then vowel strip
then vowel strip - black and white card - leave on teaching station
*STAGE 4 - freeze the pointer so kids actually have to stop at each sound rather than race through.
*page 15 - change my phonics - add a word - take it to fluency
*POEMS - print out poems
Kill the robot 3 months later

* How fast can my children read
*Early words   25 words
5 x 5    2 errors - stop the test
60 seconds - count up how many words he read
eg
is  my  Zack  is  Zack

my   my   is  Zack  is
Zack  is  Zack  my  my
Zack  is  Zack  is  my
my  Zack  Zack  my  is

*STAGE 5- at this stage at the end give them a 'hat ' test
hat  hut  hot  
** always make it to transfer level  - transfer what they know into writing and reading

This is me volunteering to do the robot!!




The St Mary's gang