Thursday, 6 September 2018

Stars Guest Speaker - Rangi Pou

Image result for Rangi PouRangi Pou - Guest Speaker
35 mins of Rangi talking about his experiences with drug addiction, choices he made at school; working hard; being clean 5 years getting ill (had a stroke - 6 months in recovery); relapse into drug use again. 
Interacted with students asking what they would like to do when they finish school. Rangi said a lot of inspiring quotes that related to the choices he made in life - how they could affect the year 9's. 
 "It's hard when you don't know what you want to do - you have no direction"
"Sometimes life throws a brick at you..." unfortunately he never finished this quote!
5 years of being clean and he went back to old bad-habits. Best mate used meth for 10 + years and then committed suicide. This affected him badly and he used drugs heavily again. Rangi considered taking his life - shaken coke bottle analogy about pressure - How do you open it?
Rangi's advice was to talk to someone about how you're feeling, especially when you're feeling low - deep down people want help - talk little bit by little bit and let the pressure out.


Rangi sang/rapped a really inspiring song he wrote about the suicide of his best mate. His lyrics were very confronting about his drug use and friendships. 
I think this guy was really great inspiration to some of the students and hopefully he resonated with the way they think, or the choices they are currently making in terms of friendships and behaviour.

Collaborative Inquiry Reading: What Research Says Abut Collaborative Inquiry


What Research Says About Collaborative Inquiry
Jane L. David

Teachers can make better use of data when they work together than when they go it alone. But creating the conditions for such collaboration is a tall order.

What's the Idea?
In collaborative inquiry, teachers work together to identify common challenges, analyze relevant data, and test out instructional approaches. The idea behind this approach is that such systematic, collaborative work will increase student learning.

What's the Reality?
Teacher collaboration does not occur naturally; it runs against prevailing norms of teacher isolation and individualistic approaches to teaching. Without specific training, teachers often lack the necessary collaboration skills as well as skills in collecting data, making sense of the information, and figuring out its implications for action. With little time and competing agendas, schools often hold unreasonable expectations for what teachers can accomplish.

Another common mistake is to make raising test scores the primary goal, displacing the more important goal of gathering rich data that suggest what adjustments are likely to increase student understanding.

What's the Research?
A growing body of evidence suggests that when teachers collaborate to pose and answer questions informed by data from their own students, their knowledge grows and their practice changes. Borko (2004) describes teachers who met regularly to review student work in response to a common assignment. From their joint study of students' strategies, the teachers gained greater understanding of their students' reasoning and adapted their classroom practices to this new knowledge. Gearheart and Osmundson (2008) report similar findings. They studied grade-level teams of teachers who created student assessment portfolios. As a consequence of sharing and discussing their students' portfolios, teachers not only deepened their knowledge about how to assess student understanding but also used the assessment results to guide their instruction.

Teachers could conduct cycles of inquiry individually in their classrooms, but they rarely do so on their own. Collaboration seems to add both motivation and value. In their study of nine high schools, Igram, Louis, and Schroeder (2004) report that teachers are more likely to collect and use data systematically when working as a group. When working by themselvens, teachers tend to rely on anecdotes and intuition.

The kinds of data available to inquiry teams matter. If teachers do not view assessment data as timely, or if they feel that it does not accurately measure student learning, efforts to get them to use the data fall flat (Marsh, Pane, & Hamilton, 2006). In addition, data sources must be rich enough to provide a basis for considering alternative instructional approaches (Cochran-Smith & Lytle, 1999). Student work products or individual teachers' formative assessments are more relevant to instructional practices than standardized test scores are. Yet, district and even school initiatives to conduct inquiry often prescribe use of local or state standardized test data (Marsh, Pane, & Hamilton, 2006; Young, 2006). These data can point to problem areas, but they provide little guidance for improvement.

Several studies identify factors associated with effective inquiry teams. Two such factors are leadership and norms that support collaboration and data use (Marsh, Pane, & Hamilton, 2006; Young, 2006). Other factors that keep inquiry teams on track are sufficient chunks of time to meet, training in inquiry skills, protocols to guide data collection and discussion, and a skilled facilitator to keep the agenda focused on implications for instruction instead of "war stories" (Cochran-Smith & Lytle, 1999; Gearheart & Osmundson, 2008; Ingram, Louis, & Schroeder, 2004; Nelson, Slavit, Perkins, & Hathorn, 2008).

What's One to Do?
Collaborative inquiry is among the most promising strategies for strengthening teaching and learning. At the same time, it may be one of the most difficult to implement.

The biggest risk in moving to establish collaborative inquiry is to do so without providing the necessary leadership and support. To start, schools and districts need to create a shared understanding of the purpose and value of collaborative inquiry among teachers and administrators. Other essential conditions include time for teachers to meet regularly and adequate investment in training and facilitation. Common lessons and student tasks that are meaty enough to merit collective investigation can serve as a structure for discussion.

Becoming an effective inquiry team takes patience and persistence. Collaborative inquiry is not for the faint of heart, but it can be well worth the effort.

References
Borko, H. (2004). Professional development and teacher learning: Mapping the terrain. Educational Researcher, 33(8), 3–15.
Cochran-Smith, M., & Lytle, S. S. (1999). Relationship of knowledge and practice: Teacher learning in communities. Review of Research in Education, 24(1), 249–301.
Gearhart, M., & Osmundson, E. (2008). Assessment portfolios as opportunities for teacher learning(CRESST Report 736). Los Angeles: University of California, Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing.
Ingram, D., Louis, K. S., & Schroeder, R. G. (2004). Accountability policies and teacher decision making: Barriers to the use of data to improve practice. Teachers College Record, 106(6), 1258–1287.
Marsh, J. A., Pane, J. F., & Hamilton, S. (2006). Making sense of data-driven decision making in education: Evidence from Recent RAND Research. Santa Monica, CA: RAND.
Nelson, T. H., Slavit, D., Perkins, M., & Hathorn, T. (2008). A culture of collaborative inquiry: Learning to develop and support professional learning communities. Teachers College Record, 110(6), 1269–1303.
Young, V. M. (2006). Teachers' use of data: Loose coupling, agenda setting, and team norms. American Journal of Education, 112(4), 521–548

Thoughts after reading: Under the heading "What's the Reality?" I don't agree with the statement "collaboration does not occur naturally". In my experience, collaboration has been a natural occurring part of my learning and teaching. As a student teacher, I had  three associate teachers that I collaborated with in order to meet the needs of students who Iwas developing relationships with. Collaboration has occured at every level I have taught at. It occurs when planning as a team, sharing resources, in meetings, and whilst teaching. Making sense of data is much easier when you are guided by a colleague with more experience. 

Monday, 3 September 2018

Staff Only Day


Staff Only Day Agenda
September 3 2018
8:30 – 9:00 – staff briefing and update of kawenata partnership and surveys
9am – 11am – Moana Brown – Restorative Practices training
11am – 11:30am – shared morning tea
11:30 – 12:15 – GHA – best practices for effective external moderation 2019
12:15 – 1:00 – COL update and the Collaborative Inquiries of - In school teachers
1:00 – 1:30 – Lunch
1:30 – 3:30 – Faculty Focus

Tainui  - Kauanata (our school was one of the first five schools to join)

Video: Waikato Tainui – Aaron Wetere
TCO – Tribal aspirations for Education and Pathways
-      80% Te Reo fluent – (Tainui). With each language comes its own Tikanga. The customs and the language are intertwined.
-      Connected to their Marae and know their pepeha.
-      Transition in to a meaningful pathway from education to employment.
Who are the partners that have a role to play in doing better?
Completed Waikato Tainui survey. 


Moana & Janine – Restorative Practices
Activities about learning and engaging students
LI:
Working together – Whakawhanaunatanga
Expectations:
-      Listening with intention
-      Being respectfully honest
-      Being aware of others wellbeing
-      Keeping track of my learning
-      Kaimoana activity handout

 


External Moderation Processes
GHA 11:35 - 12
Purpose: assurance that marking is consistent and students are getting a fair deal; to maintain consent to assess we have to participate; opportunity.
Assessment Plan
We get to choose the standards to be moderated.
Reports posted on NZQA
Review of reports (what changes need to be applied?)
Plan for changes (consistently taught)
November: We get to select the standards to be externally moderated – 10% of the standards – level 3 standards are chosen first.

Choosing standards – choose standards that are new to the programme. Can send these away early for feedback. Make sure there are sufficient samples of student work. Random samples are chosen by the HoF. The teacher is not to remark the work. Keep the work accessible to the HoF or the PN. Digital work can be stored in Teacher Shared. 
Make sure there is a mark chosen before publishing.

Physical Evidence
Stored in a faculty work area as determined by HoF. Access to the assessment task.

Moderation Website – this needs to be kept up to date.


Senior Subject Guide
                                                          
  



COL - update and the Collaborative Inquiries of - In school teachers.
Drivers of change - moderation 
Collaborative inquiry - coaching and mentoring other people. The programme is designed to build stronger relationships with FFC contributing schools.
How does collaborative inquiry look at FFC?
How are we culturally responsive?


Kahui ako - MCH

-      Purpose is to work collaboratively to raise student achievement
Research has proven that collaborative teaching and learning has many positive outcomes.
Kahui ako will receive specific training
Explain how you make the perfect cup of tea – with a partner.

The CI process – MMA
-      More minds, more experiences, more direction, more purpose
-      Genuine interest
-      Challenge and be challenged
Interested in finding the driver of change
GHI - Student Engagement
Where did we start? Narrowing down the process; finding the focus; where do we want to be?
SMA - Collecting Evidence and Data on Engagment
Focus is on Year 10. Engagement based on: cognitive; behavioural; emotional. 

1:30 Faculty - AFI & CBO