Every year, I'm involved in supporting senior high school students and parents through their decision making process about which is the right English course for them. They (we) navigate the requirements for tertiary pathways, the University Entrance specifications, endorsement for NCEA, what is interesting to them and what is the best match for their skills. Most parents and students find understanding how NCEA works a little tricky, and parents of several children are sometimes frustrated to find that just as they felt they understood how it all works, the rules change in some significant way.
At the beginning of each year, I feel the same. Many aspects of school are similar each year, but significant change is also a constant, and I need to take time and enlist support to work out what my priorities will be for the year. The more involved I have become with the life of the school, the more I have understood about documents like the annual plan and how I can contribute to its goals, sometimes as a classroom teacher, sometimes as an HOD English and/or a Literacy Leader, and this year as a CoL within schools leader. That understanding is always hard won, as I question and reflect and work out what is practical and how to lead by example.
This year we continue on our journey towards a radical reshaping of our teaching practice using the learn-create-share philosophy. Our school is committed to making this central to our teaching and learning work. All of our Mawhera CoL commitments to numeracy, boys' writing, culturally responsive pedagogy and lifting NCEA Level Two achievement are grouped together under the commitment to learn-create-share. Making this a reality is part of the project of our CoL within schools leaders.
I spent most of yesterday with fellow Learn-Create-Share leaders from across our Toki Punamu cluster and then with fellow Mawhera CoL within and across school leaders. By the end of the day, I was a little overwhelmed.
The only way to make it work for me, and I think the best way, is to step back from the bigger picture of what support for other teachers means this year and focus myself on what I will do with learn-create-share and our annual plan in my own classroom.
I have a Level Two Communications English class this year. Three years ago, I wasn't happy with what I achieved with the equivalent programme, and I am really keen to learn from the successful work done by two of my colleagues in 2015 & 2016 to make this course engaging and relevant. A new and positive development for students on this course in 2017 is that they all have their own chromebooks, and there is space to experiment with our learning process in quite new ways.
My big goal is for all of my students to achieve 15 credits by sustaining engagement in English and to take significant skills from the course into their later working and learning lives. Some students have come in to the course without Level One Literacy, so adapting tasks for them to meet their achievement goals is also important. Over time I anticipate that I will also have specific target students who are at risk of not achieving NCEA Level Two, but we don't have those names just yet.
My this-coming fortnight goal with my ENC212 students is to take the discussion skills we have been building through our work on Smash Palace, Under the Bridge and a seminar at school on The Teenage Brain by Nathan Mikaere-Wallis and tie them with written texts related to one of these topics. I want us to use on screen texts which we annotate and then use screencastify to discuss. This work will form our evidence for US2989 Select, read and assess texts for gaining knowledge (3 credits, Level 2).
I can use the Learn-Create-Share tools shared by Madeline Campbell and Dorothy Burt as my pedagogical basis for this experimentation, and I'm lucky that our across schools lead teacher, Karen Schwabe, has taught this course before, and I'm going to ask her to come and observe me and share her thoughts on what is working and what we can tweak. This year our principal is my appraiser and so he can observe and give feedback on the next stage of my inquiry. Classroom focused inquiry is how I will keep my feet on the ground, and work with others will grow from there.
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