Reflecting on Being Explicit and Open with Students in Class:
Why don't we share more with students?I call it the "Secret Teacher Talk or Code for Learning" and some kids like this and understand their learning better - they buy in more. I think they like to know/understand that teachers are making deliberate and thoughtful choices for them as a class/personally.
Some students always ask questions about the why, what we are learning, and how. This is not always a distractor for kids :) I think it can also show their active engagement in trying to understand their learning.
RPI Day 3: Text Selection Day -
I doubt many non-teachers understand all the decisions teachers make in their planning - before, during/with students, and in reflecting and refining for next time. I am going to share my thinking around 1 course / class. Imagine with all our courses ... or do I overhink?
I really enjoyed today's varied discussions, practical strategies, tools and tips to help tighten up my own pedagogical practice in my classes. I am finding that I am already doing many of the things suggested with varying degress of success and/or attention on focused literacy building skills and content. I am pretty sure this will be the case for most teachers.
Inviting you into my head... My own practice: (be kind - it is also the talk in my head and how I process when I am planning anew)
I noticed I seem to be "extra conscious and intentional "with my senior yr 11 English planning this year. (This is not to say my Humanities 9 program is not getting similar attention and focus - but today I will refer more to my senior course).
Reason for my greater attention at the moment to my yr 11 English course:
- new standards and curriculum
- department decision to create different courses for greater student choice and engagment based on different themes / contexts
- building and sharing ideas together within the department has helped with text selection and being more mindful of choosing texts for varied voices
- students selected this course and I want to engage them, their input on choices (which occurred regularly) throughout as we discussed what was working, what they needed help with and text types / options to meet student needs
- I wanted to choose both literature and perhaps other kinds of information from the past as well as the present.
- Text voices from around the world - discussion of different colonizers too (French, Spanish, German, Italian, British, American, NZ and Samoa)
- Varied text types to expose students to language features used for different intentions
- Varied voices - genders
- Kupu Rere Ke by Alice Te Punga Somerville (Hook - local writer, modern poet, relatable to students)
- White Man's Burden - Rudyard Kipling (poem from the age of Imperial India - intent to encourage Americans to persist with Colonization of Phillipines)
- "Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America" - Benjamin Franklin essay with irony being that the comments are moslty "pointed" towards implying the "British are the savages and the Indians the civilized peoples"
- Epic movie -Ghandi
- Ted Talks - Niki Sanchez "Decolonization is for Everyone," and Len Pierre - Decolonizing Substance Use and Addiction"
- Martin Luther King's Speech - "I have a Dream"
- modern local Pasifika / NZ poems:
- Dark vs the Light
- The Past is the Past
- Dawn Raids Apology
- short story - "Have I got a deal for you!"
Reflecting on RPI lessons, reminders, discussions.... my thinking and goals for semester 2 (same students but I know them better now). Time to make reading more active and fun!
* goal - to add more talk about literature - like literature circles / book clubs
why? - to build Tier I, II,III Vocabulary, understanding, community , questioning, close reading, responding as well as confidence with reading and sharing ideas with each other.
* goal - to encourage reading of extended text (novel).
why? - so many do not read full novels any more! Lots of reasons for this, but I am hoping to encourage students completing them together in small groups. Also to support students with reading challenges - I chose these novels for different gender voices, vocabulary levels, topics, author/genre styles for writing. These are also texts that we have with audio books (will put on hapara) and also films (visual). The films will be another option for "studied text." Films will be to compare, as well as a back-up for extended studied text for those who may not succeed reading their novels.
Novel choices: all offered (highlighted yellow ones are ones chosen to make groups - exception Shakespeare play - chosen but not enough to intro as a group)
- Shakespeare (interest in Greco/Roman history and lit) - Julius Caesar
- Modern: The Hate U Give, Boys Don't Cry
- Dystopian / Classic: Fahrenheit 451, Noughts and Crosses,
- NZ: Whale Rider
- Historical: The Help, Cry Freedom, student request - All Quiet on the Western Front
“Choices: Defining Moments and Crossroads in Our Lives”
Focus: "Character" - development, dilemmas and decisions, outcomes, personal response, and some creative writing too. Stay tuned... I may let you know how it goes, if interested.
Re-connecting to Day 3: Student data + all the above!
Aligning all the above choices with data of my students. I have not done this with the yr 11 group as specifically as I do not have their data in 1 place yet. I do plan to use the RPI Teacher workbook to help me out with my yr 9 texts and planning. Looking forward to delving into this deeper because this break out activity surprised me. Well done for the challenge!
Our challenge "class" to plan for today:
Whew! A very typical class in terms of needs, interests and dynamics, but today, for us it was also a challenging group to plan for - well done RPI Leaders!
Kia ora Valerie
ReplyDeleteIt was good to catch up with you during the break. I was really encouraged that you had a number of takeaways from RPI Day 3 for ‘tightening up’ practice, but also that there was content reinforcing those areas of strength in your practice too.
Thank you for sharing the many course design decisions you have made in planning your Year 11 English course. As you point out, the many changes to NCEA and your departmental decisions on more choice for students have certainly kept you busy! However, it’s great to hear that some of the RPI focus sessions on Day 3 regarding text selection, have further honed your text based decisions for semester 2. I look forward to hearing how your planning day went with Emma, with text coverage in mind, and how this may have supported the development of text sets for your year 9 class in term 3. As we discussed, the use of multimodal texts, including video, can be purposefully used to activate prior knowledge, or to support pre-reading too. This is really useful with the introduction of a new theme or topic, with visual and audio modes 'bootstrapping’ comprehension.
I also hope the concept of “windows, mirror and glass sliding doors” resonated with you. As you say, choosing texts that feature aspects of students' backgrounds or cultural identities (such as the impact of colonisation) is hugely important for indigenous and minority learners who may not get to ‘see’ themselves that often in classroom texts.
I am really looking forward to engaging with your learners’ screencasts (or audio recordings) as part of your practice implementation for homework.
Look forward to catching up this term.
Nga mihi nui.
Naomi R.
Literacy Facilitator - Manaiakalani Reading Practice Intensive
Hi Valerie, You certainly have taken the time to reflect on what you currently offer and how elements of RPI can extend and compliment what you are already doing! I really liked the way you were able to see the way data can impact the teaching and learning and ensuring we get the students on board with this. Talking to them about their learning always has a positive pay off, especially in terms of engagement. I like that way to get students to recommend texts as well, this is hugely empowering, especially if they can see you take it seriously. Looking forward to seeing how you bring your ideas to life in the classroom. Kiri
ReplyDeleteThanks Kiri - looking forward to your visit this week at OC. I am finding that this year is so loaded for me at the moment, I am learning and trying to put in practice but have not been able to do so regularly (yet). I am thinking this year will be where I learn, absorb and experiment to help make things work with the resources we have and hope to improve for next year with a more cohesive reader apprenticeship program as I learn more.
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