It's been a busy term and everyone is a little frayed. It's time like this that a school like ours can start to wear on you a little. You see only the negative and miss all of the good things that are being done. You start to become that teacher that has been at the school a little too long and starts to believe the reputation of a school rather than see the potential of students.
If this happens, I hope you are able to take a step back and look at what you are doing. I hope you have great people around you that can fill your sails with enthusiasm and drive you past the negativity - and similarly you can be that person for others in the organisation. I hope you can look over your shoulder and see all the kids that have passed through the system successfully and realise that you are a part of something that makes a difference in your community.
I only noticed it this week because I was doing long hours and getting tired. I was at a social function and a few jokes were bandied about our school (which is fairly normal - we have a reputation that we no longer deserve) and probably for the first time I wasn't one of the ones leaping to our defence. Yet, I was surrounded at the time by two math teachers that graduated from our school (and were now working in the local area), my current practicum student is a graduate from our school, three of our past practicum students keep close contact with the school because they are keen to work with us (not only did practicum not scare them off - they can see the support and challenge of a school like ours), past students at university drop in all the time and visit. Nearly every student that I have taught stage 3 courses to is now at university and is successfully traversing their degree.
We are lucky at the moment to have an administration that is challenging us to do more, and is helping those that want to rise to the challenge. They are supportive of our hair brained schemes that may help our hair brained students, ideas born from the extensive experience of the teaching team and through discussions with students. There are even levels of real performance management entering the system - which is exciting as this is the heart of real change in the school.
We are doing things that very low SES schools don't do.. overseas trips, winning state and national competitions in multiple areas (science, history, home economics, dance from my knowledge in the last 5 years). We develop leadership.. With each PD I find that our school department has developed teachers in TiC and HoD positions all over WA that remember the school fondly.
I hear comments about how students miss our school once they have left and it's not just our stage 3 kids. With the development of an active PE
department, a T&E dept (focussed on vocations not just skills),
dedicated dance and drama teachers and a MESS group that is getting
their head around national curriculum delivery, we should be positive
about the direction of the school.
It was a little surprise to discover I had become a teacher that had real pride in our school, rather relying on my more natural cynicism about everything!
Sure, we'll take hits in year 11 exams, as students start to realise a work ethic is needed to succeed but past experience says that the majority will get there (at least the ones that can surmount the problems the area brings). The kids make the transition (giving us more grey hairs whilst making this transition) and it is ok. Perspective needs to be maintained.
I think we need to be mindful of staff that focus on the negative aspects of schooling and miss the great things that are happening. These members are always there, and it is a group I don't want to be a part of.
For someone like me that is developing their leadership skills, I think positivity is a real area I can work on. As an art of leadership, inspiration of a team requires real belief in what you are doing. If you feel that your belief is waning, take a good look around and see what you have done to make a difference, listen to colleagues that are in the zone, if that does not work, go make that difference instead.
Saturday, May 19, 2012
The important of positivity
Location:Perth, WA, Australia
Perth WA, Australia
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Underestimating the impact of fly-in fly-out
I read the paper and see people write, "fly-in fly-out will buy me my house" and I can't believe my eyes. The idea of being away from my family for extended periods for money would keep me up at night, if it was the only solution. It seems naive and short sighted.
The impact on a family must be horrendous. One parent effectively looking after everything to do with the house, another 4000 km away with nothing to do but work. The only payback being a few extra dollars per hour. It may pay off the house, but it would certainly put my marriage under strain. I value time with family a lot higher than that.
In schools we see this impact emerging with dual income families and one parent FIFO. Kids get limited support from parents as instead of sharing the load of parenting, it is placed on one overworked person trying to juggle 100 balls in the air and usually a job aswell. I could only liken it to the load of the single mum, something that I wouldn't wish on anyone.
Needless to say the load ends up somewhere and typically it is with kids in schools unable to socialise effectively and study adequately. There is a cost to FIFO and we haven't paid it yet. It's on its way and we had better put some thought into it. These kids are coming and many may be underdeveloped and lack self discipline after being left alone for extended periods of time. It has the potential to be a mental health issue (with kids lacking belonging), a policing issue (with kids not being adequately monitored), an education issue (with attendance and performance dropping) and a social issue (with families under strain).
Encouraging true regional areas seems to be the only real solution and it will take years to create viable communities in outlying areas. Royalties for regions was a ridiculous notion but if refocussed now that money is available, it will be an interesting exercise spending money to make regional centres attractive - fixing health, education, lack of amenities and creating a broad spectrum of service based jobs (built around decent populations); rather than risky exiles from city centres with fear of never being able to return due to increasing land values. Just ask a teacher trying to return from a regional centre how easy it is to get a job in Perth after a regional posting now independent public schools has reduced the available pool of places.
The impact on a family must be horrendous. One parent effectively looking after everything to do with the house, another 4000 km away with nothing to do but work. The only payback being a few extra dollars per hour. It may pay off the house, but it would certainly put my marriage under strain. I value time with family a lot higher than that.
In schools we see this impact emerging with dual income families and one parent FIFO. Kids get limited support from parents as instead of sharing the load of parenting, it is placed on one overworked person trying to juggle 100 balls in the air and usually a job aswell. I could only liken it to the load of the single mum, something that I wouldn't wish on anyone.
Needless to say the load ends up somewhere and typically it is with kids in schools unable to socialise effectively and study adequately. There is a cost to FIFO and we haven't paid it yet. It's on its way and we had better put some thought into it. These kids are coming and many may be underdeveloped and lack self discipline after being left alone for extended periods of time. It has the potential to be a mental health issue (with kids lacking belonging), a policing issue (with kids not being adequately monitored), an education issue (with attendance and performance dropping) and a social issue (with families under strain).
Encouraging true regional areas seems to be the only real solution and it will take years to create viable communities in outlying areas. Royalties for regions was a ridiculous notion but if refocussed now that money is available, it will be an interesting exercise spending money to make regional centres attractive - fixing health, education, lack of amenities and creating a broad spectrum of service based jobs (built around decent populations); rather than risky exiles from city centres with fear of never being able to return due to increasing land values. Just ask a teacher trying to return from a regional centre how easy it is to get a job in Perth after a regional posting now independent public schools has reduced the available pool of places.
Monday, April 16, 2012
Extinction Event: School Librarian
As a kid I loved the library, I was a book a day kid. I didn't really care what it was, as long as it was interesting in some way and over 300 pages. I never understood picture books as the picture created in your own mind was the fun of it. I still own a decent science fiction collection from the 50's and 60's.
but.. I think the school teacher librarian and the idea of a library itself is on its last legs. The non fiction section completely lacks relevance (it always was too small to be useful) and has been surpassed by online resources or class based texts. The day of the printed book, even fiction, is passing. I realised this when I watched my wife prefer to read her book on a backlit iPad than the paper copy next to her.
Specialist research tasks are no longer the domain of the librarian. There's no reason why a bibliography by a student can't be written using a tool like 'Papers' - it's a task now that does not need a specialist teacher. There's no reason why a teacher can't prepare a list of articles for students to research from and keep for later use - I've never seen this done by a librarian anyway (albeit it was more common with paper books). Electronic documents can be annotated and highlighted just like paper - without printing and photocopying time/expense. Students with laptops are ringing the death knell of the library being IT centres, distributed computers in classrooms are just more useful.
When I look at a library I see a shell of the learning centre it once was. I see broken computer labs with kids playing games, too loud to promote study. I see old mouldy books last read in a previous decade. I see old brown furniture that wasn't even that well made to begin, not old enough to be retro, not new enough to be modern.
Libraries could become study centres again with the right management in place. Librarians though are too expensive to use managing study centres. Once a fertile ground for breeding librarians, now that paper books are becoming extinct, so are librarians. The person choosing, storing and sorting books has been overtaken by digital resources selected by the masses or distant experts.
Where does this leave the librarian?
Sadly, I'd suggest out of a job. I can't see such traditionalists re-inventing themselves into something as required as the librarian was.
but.. I think the school teacher librarian and the idea of a library itself is on its last legs. The non fiction section completely lacks relevance (it always was too small to be useful) and has been surpassed by online resources or class based texts. The day of the printed book, even fiction, is passing. I realised this when I watched my wife prefer to read her book on a backlit iPad than the paper copy next to her.
Specialist research tasks are no longer the domain of the librarian. There's no reason why a bibliography by a student can't be written using a tool like 'Papers' - it's a task now that does not need a specialist teacher. There's no reason why a teacher can't prepare a list of articles for students to research from and keep for later use - I've never seen this done by a librarian anyway (albeit it was more common with paper books). Electronic documents can be annotated and highlighted just like paper - without printing and photocopying time/expense. Students with laptops are ringing the death knell of the library being IT centres, distributed computers in classrooms are just more useful.
When I look at a library I see a shell of the learning centre it once was. I see broken computer labs with kids playing games, too loud to promote study. I see old mouldy books last read in a previous decade. I see old brown furniture that wasn't even that well made to begin, not old enough to be retro, not new enough to be modern.
Libraries could become study centres again with the right management in place. Librarians though are too expensive to use managing study centres. Once a fertile ground for breeding librarians, now that paper books are becoming extinct, so are librarians. The person choosing, storing and sorting books has been overtaken by digital resources selected by the masses or distant experts.
Where does this leave the librarian?
Sadly, I'd suggest out of a job. I can't see such traditionalists re-inventing themselves into something as required as the librarian was.
Location:Perth, WA, Australia
Perth WA, Australia
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Papers: Creating a glossary of terms
After writing my last article on using Papers I thought to myself, I need to write a glossary of terms at some point, maybe Papers can help.
If I use the search function in Papers, I can search for the term and view how other authors have interpreted them.
I started with 'microblogging' and came up with 8 documents:
Then I clicked on the first document, on the right hand side a list of pages and entries appeared where the term 'microblogging' was used:
The entry itself was highlighted at the bottom of the page. This entry did not have a good definition so I clicked back on my search list and tried the next entry:
In searching for the glossary item I discovered a table that I had missed and thought may be useful later in defining what microblogging was and why microblogging was important from Halse (2009).
My first glossary item came from a post from Romania of all places:
"Microblogging is a Web2.0 technology and a new form of blogging, that let the users publish online brief text updates, usually less then 140-200 characters, sometimes images too. The posts can be edited and accessed online, or sent as SMS, e-mail or via instant messaging clients. Usually the microblogs authors embed their posts as a widget on blogs or sites." (Holotescu, 2009)
A second item:
"Microblogging is a variant of blogging which allows users to quickly post short messages on the web for others to access. These messages can be restricted to a certain number of individuals, sent exclusively to a specific contact, or made available to the World Wide Web." (Costa, 2008)
Both came from conferences, indicating that completed formal research may be still coming and that microblogging is a relatively new phenomenon.
Quite a cool use of the search function, something that would have taken ages trolling through multiple pdf files or rewriting from sticky notes attached to paper.
I will need to look further into why ellipses are turning up in reference lists though.
References
Costa, C., Beham, G., Reinhardt, W., & al, E. (2008). Microblogging in technology enhanced learning: A use-case inspection of ppe summer school 2008. Proceedings of the ….
Halse, M. L., & Mallinson, B. J. (2009). Investigating popular Internet applications as supporting e-learning technologies for teaching and learning with Generation Y. International Journal of Education & Development using Information & Communication Technology, 5(5), 58–71. University of the West Indies.
Holotescu, C., & al, E. (2009). Using microblogging in education. Case Study: Cirip. ro. 6th International Conference on e- ….
If I use the search function in Papers, I can search for the term and view how other authors have interpreted them.
I started with 'microblogging' and came up with 8 documents:
Then I clicked on the first document, on the right hand side a list of pages and entries appeared where the term 'microblogging' was used:
The entry itself was highlighted at the bottom of the page. This entry did not have a good definition so I clicked back on my search list and tried the next entry:
In searching for the glossary item I discovered a table that I had missed and thought may be useful later in defining what microblogging was and why microblogging was important from Halse (2009).
My first glossary item came from a post from Romania of all places:
"Microblogging is a Web2.0 technology and a new form of blogging, that let the users publish online brief text updates, usually less then 140-200 characters, sometimes images too. The posts can be edited and accessed online, or sent as SMS, e-mail or via instant messaging clients. Usually the microblogs authors embed their posts as a widget on blogs or sites." (Holotescu, 2009)
A second item:
"Microblogging is a variant of blogging which allows users to quickly post short messages on the web for others to access. These messages can be restricted to a certain number of individuals, sent exclusively to a specific contact, or made available to the World Wide Web." (Costa, 2008)
Both came from conferences, indicating that completed formal research may be still coming and that microblogging is a relatively new phenomenon.
Quite a cool use of the search function, something that would have taken ages trolling through multiple pdf files or rewriting from sticky notes attached to paper.
I will need to look further into why ellipses are turning up in reference lists though.
References
Costa, C., Beham, G., Reinhardt, W., & al, E. (2008). Microblogging in technology enhanced learning: A use-case inspection of ppe summer school 2008. Proceedings of the ….
Halse, M. L., & Mallinson, B. J. (2009). Investigating popular Internet applications as supporting e-learning technologies for teaching and learning with Generation Y. International Journal of Education & Development using Information & Communication Technology, 5(5), 58–71. University of the West Indies.
Holotescu, C., & al, E. (2009). Using microblogging in education. Case Study: Cirip. ro. 6th International Conference on e- ….
Papers: Finding lost articles
Here's something I do a lot. I'll read an article, quote it in a document and then forget where I quoted it from. Then I'll have a rummage, fail to find the document and have to remove the quote, undermining the argument I was trying to build.
This happened to me this morning and I had an idea. Perhaps Papers can find it for me. The quote was:
" However, most Yers ...".
I selected "Papers" at the top of the left hand pane to bring up all articles.
Then in the search box typed my quote:
And up came the relavent document:
I was then able to click on the document and find the quote that I had highlighted previously.
This may sound like a trivial task but I can see that this would also be very useful when checking the validity of quotes when proofing a document.
This happened to me this morning and I had an idea. Perhaps Papers can find it for me. The quote was:
" However, most Yers ...".
I selected "Papers" at the top of the left hand pane to bring up all articles.
Then in the search box typed my quote:
And up came the relavent document:
I was then able to click on the document and find the quote that I had highlighted previously.
This may sound like a trivial task but I can see that this would also be very useful when checking the validity of quotes when proofing a document.
Saturday, April 14, 2012
Papers: Using Collections
Papers collections can be a bit confusing at first, but once you figure it out, finding articles is considerably easier, especially when you are reading 50-60 papers a week preparing for a literature review.
A collection (folder) of articles can be created by
File->New Collection->Manual Collection
All unfiled articles are automatically added to the "Unfiled Papers" collection
To add an article to a collection, drag it from the main pane to the collection. Once filed it will disappear from the "Unfiled Papers" collection.
If you make a sub collection (a collection in a collection) articles will be automatically added to parent collections. I found splitting Case studies and Editorials handy, since case studies typically have more depth (useful for a literature review) and reviews/editorials are wider reaching (useful to get a big picture look at where research trends are developing).
Things to remember about collections:
This can all be disorientating at first (with articles appearing all over the place), but once figured out, it is quite useful.
A useful tip when wanting to move a file between collections is to delete an article from a collection and then add it to the desired collection from "Unfiled papers". This will save you from having multiple copies of the same paper in different collections (but takes a bit of courage the first time).
Another interesting feature is the detection of duplicates. If you download the same file twice, Papers detects it and prompts you to delete it. The indicator is on the far right hand side near the bottom when looking at an article or in the main pane on the left hand side column.
A collection (folder) of articles can be created by
File->New Collection->Manual Collection
All unfiled articles are automatically added to the "Unfiled Papers" collection
To add an article to a collection, drag it from the main pane to the collection. Once filed it will disappear from the "Unfiled Papers" collection.
If you make a sub collection (a collection in a collection) articles will be automatically added to parent collections. I found splitting Case studies and Editorials handy, since case studies typically have more depth (useful for a literature review) and reviews/editorials are wider reaching (useful to get a big picture look at where research trends are developing).
Things to remember about collections:
- If you delete an article from a collection, it will again appear in "Unfiled papers".
- If you delete an article from "Unfiled papers" it will be moved to Trash.
- If you move an article directly to Trash, it will be deleted from all collections (but can be restored from the Trash).
- If you delete a file from Trash it is permanently deleted.
This can all be disorientating at first (with articles appearing all over the place), but once figured out, it is quite useful.
A useful tip when wanting to move a file between collections is to delete an article from a collection and then add it to the desired collection from "Unfiled papers". This will save you from having multiple copies of the same paper in different collections (but takes a bit of courage the first time).
Another interesting feature is the detection of duplicates. If you download the same file twice, Papers detects it and prompts you to delete it. The indicator is on the far right hand side near the bottom when looking at an article or in the main pane on the left hand side column.
Location:Perth, WA, Australia
Perth WA, Australia
Friday, April 13, 2012
Papers: Citations and Referencing (Mac)
I'm a fairly lazy researcher and loathe the tedious process of referencing - like many in the new generation, I enjoy finding and using a new idea, care little of the source, file the articles poorly and then find it difficult to reference them properly.
Luckily technology has come to the rescue. EndNote, Papers and Sente can do some of the menial tasks in the past I may have written applications to do for me. They do the work of filing and scraping references from online journals and all I have to do is verify the results to make sure it is correct and adequate.
My first efforts were with Papers for iPad which made the process relatively easy, and now that I have Papers for my mac, creating bibliographies and citations is a trivial task - at about the level of complexity I am comfortable with. It's not to say EndNote and Sente are not better, it's just that I am familiar with this relatively cheap ($49 for a student version) option with iPad support.
I know why referencing is important, I do - I just don't care that much, the implementation and spread of good ideas is what a research practitioner is about; and a good idea can come from anywhere not just a renowned journal or academic. Being able to recognise a good idea is a mark of a real practitioner, especially where early adoption is concerned. If you can't do this, you end up implementing ideas that are aging and reaching end of life cycle, taking high risks on projects that are likely to fail or using ideas that have little merit.
Back to the problem at hand.. Papers installation and setup is quite simple. It took me a little longer than this to figure it out, I hope this can help save you a little time.
Install papers from here. A 30 day trial was available at time of writing.
In the Papers application go Papers->Preferences->Access and enter the university library journal search url at the bottom of the page.
Now go to File->Open Library Website
Use your search page to find a journal article. The journal search pages are widely different but the process is usually quite similar. Here's one example:
Papers will attempt to scrape the page for the citation and is generally quite good. To increase accuracy of the citation download a citation file (the endNote/RIS citation format works well) and Papers will automatically detect the downloaded file and use it instead. Quickly you will find that although not perfect, it is superior to manually recording citations.
Next click on a fulltext pdf representation of the journal article. Papers will add it to the citation and the unfiled papers section for later reading. Each pdf/citation can be added to a collection for use when generating an article or research proposal.
Once the article and citation is downloaded, the tab will be renamed with the name of the author (an important check to ensure the right citation is linked to the right article - sometimes it gets confused and overwrites the library website tab, restart the app if this happens). Sections of the article can be highlighted whilst reading the article and notes can be added for later use. The journal articles get automatically renamed and can be filed in folders (collections) to aid in relocating the article file later.
You can also add a bookmarklet to other browsers to add articles directly from a browser. This also works quite well but lacks the workflow listed above.
Liking creature comforts, I enjoy reading articles on the couch on my iPad. Papers allows me to link to my iPad effortlessly and annotate articles. Grab it from the appStore.
The true heart of Papers though is in the ease of adding citations to articles that you are writing. This works in Pages and Word, even Blogger! Within any of these apps press control twice and a citation menu appears. Type the author or title and then select the article that you are working with - it inserts the citation directly into the document. When you are finished adding citations, go back to the citation menu and at the touch of a button a reference list can be created.
For the article above to get the the reference in APA format for Blogger would be "control, control" then
The citation is:
(Nehme, 2010)
The reference found is:
Nehme, M. (2010). E-learning and Student's Motivation. Legal Education Review, 20(1/2), 223. Australasian Law Teachers Association.
Viola!
Luckily technology has come to the rescue. EndNote, Papers and Sente can do some of the menial tasks in the past I may have written applications to do for me. They do the work of filing and scraping references from online journals and all I have to do is verify the results to make sure it is correct and adequate.
My first efforts were with Papers for iPad which made the process relatively easy, and now that I have Papers for my mac, creating bibliographies and citations is a trivial task - at about the level of complexity I am comfortable with. It's not to say EndNote and Sente are not better, it's just that I am familiar with this relatively cheap ($49 for a student version) option with iPad support.
I know why referencing is important, I do - I just don't care that much, the implementation and spread of good ideas is what a research practitioner is about; and a good idea can come from anywhere not just a renowned journal or academic. Being able to recognise a good idea is a mark of a real practitioner, especially where early adoption is concerned. If you can't do this, you end up implementing ideas that are aging and reaching end of life cycle, taking high risks on projects that are likely to fail or using ideas that have little merit.
Back to the problem at hand.. Papers installation and setup is quite simple. It took me a little longer than this to figure it out, I hope this can help save you a little time.
Install papers from here. A 30 day trial was available at time of writing.
In the Papers application go Papers->Preferences->Access and enter the university library journal search url at the bottom of the page.
Now go to File->Open Library Website
Papers will attempt to scrape the page for the citation and is generally quite good. To increase accuracy of the citation download a citation file (the endNote/RIS citation format works well) and Papers will automatically detect the downloaded file and use it instead. Quickly you will find that although not perfect, it is superior to manually recording citations.
Next click on a fulltext pdf representation of the journal article. Papers will add it to the citation and the unfiled papers section for later reading. Each pdf/citation can be added to a collection for use when generating an article or research proposal.
Once the article and citation is downloaded, the tab will be renamed with the name of the author (an important check to ensure the right citation is linked to the right article - sometimes it gets confused and overwrites the library website tab, restart the app if this happens). Sections of the article can be highlighted whilst reading the article and notes can be added for later use. The journal articles get automatically renamed and can be filed in folders (collections) to aid in relocating the article file later.
You can also add a bookmarklet to other browsers to add articles directly from a browser. This also works quite well but lacks the workflow listed above.
Liking creature comforts, I enjoy reading articles on the couch on my iPad. Papers allows me to link to my iPad effortlessly and annotate articles. Grab it from the appStore.
The true heart of Papers though is in the ease of adding citations to articles that you are writing. This works in Pages and Word, even Blogger! Within any of these apps press control twice and a citation menu appears. Type the author or title and then select the article that you are working with - it inserts the citation directly into the document. When you are finished adding citations, go back to the citation menu and at the touch of a button a reference list can be created.
For the article above to get the the reference in APA format for Blogger would be "control, control" then
The citation is:
(Nehme, 2010)
The reference found is:
Nehme, M. (2010). E-learning and Student's Motivation. Legal Education Review, 20(1/2), 223. Australasian Law Teachers Association.
Viola!
Web 2.0 usage in the classroom
This is the year of web 2.0 usage in the classroom. Teachers have avoided using technology in the classroom and have stated that the failures in the past is a justification for not using it in the future. I'll put my hand up and say that I was one of those.
Then I did a host of research for my "on again" masters.
I think the time has come that we give this a good look. The failure of learning management systems (LMS's) can now be overcome. Social media applications provide the gloss that engages students online. It gives them reason to revisit and get access to information that they require at critical times during their "learning journey" (bleuch.. writing that leaves a bad taste in my mouth - but best describes what I mean).
Online applications are now reaching the level that they can be useful in the classroom and superior to direct instruction. There is enough competition that application vendors are willing to listen to classroom requirements, assist teachers with implementation and work towards a successful implementation (rather than an "overstate the possibilities, take my money, dissappear" approach. I'm sure this sounds familiar to many of us).
Web 2.0 extends the classroom beyond four walls - blogging, microblogging, social networking, cloud computing are being used effectively in higher education and there is little reason it shouldn't be used in primary and secondary settings. Not doing so causes equity issues for our students when they enter higher education.
Students are now IT literate in ways that can be useful to implement in the classroom. We're not teaching mail merging, Excel and Access usage anymore. We're talking small bites of IT understanding and using it to directly aid classroom progress. Microblogging (short notes sequentially placed on a wall similar to facebook) attaching IWB notes for revision, getting a better idea of progress through online marksbooks, providing tools for online collaboration and creating active subgroups within a class, shared development of documents through googledocs, improved organisation through calendars, online project submission, annotation reducing paper usage, creating digital rather than paper notes using applications such as notability or goodnotes, classroom monitoring software, vod and podcasting - these sorts of things take small amounts of time to implement, are typically free and can make real differences in results, it's now accessible, cheap and works. These things can be done now, not tomorrow, enabled by tablet and 1-1 laptop access.
I'm not glossing over the learning curve for us, or the overhead of starting the progress but.. if it can clearly be shown that these techniques are superior, it is worth the effort. I think this time has come.
Even in Math, technologies are starting to mature that reduce IT overheads and improve the classroom experience especially in revision, organisation and note taking. It's time that schools and universities embrace what can be done to improve teaching pedagogy where new technologies drive student performance. Perhaps we could give less prominance to engagement and self esteem. These two come primarily as a result of performance and to get engagement with web 2.0 in a class, I think it has to be shown that performance is the primary result.
Then I did a host of research for my "on again" masters.
I think the time has come that we give this a good look. The failure of learning management systems (LMS's) can now be overcome. Social media applications provide the gloss that engages students online. It gives them reason to revisit and get access to information that they require at critical times during their "learning journey" (bleuch.. writing that leaves a bad taste in my mouth - but best describes what I mean).
Online applications are now reaching the level that they can be useful in the classroom and superior to direct instruction. There is enough competition that application vendors are willing to listen to classroom requirements, assist teachers with implementation and work towards a successful implementation (rather than an "overstate the possibilities, take my money, dissappear" approach. I'm sure this sounds familiar to many of us).
Web 2.0 extends the classroom beyond four walls - blogging, microblogging, social networking, cloud computing are being used effectively in higher education and there is little reason it shouldn't be used in primary and secondary settings. Not doing so causes equity issues for our students when they enter higher education.
Students are now IT literate in ways that can be useful to implement in the classroom. We're not teaching mail merging, Excel and Access usage anymore. We're talking small bites of IT understanding and using it to directly aid classroom progress. Microblogging (short notes sequentially placed on a wall similar to facebook) attaching IWB notes for revision, getting a better idea of progress through online marksbooks, providing tools for online collaboration and creating active subgroups within a class, shared development of documents through googledocs, improved organisation through calendars, online project submission, annotation reducing paper usage, creating digital rather than paper notes using applications such as notability or goodnotes, classroom monitoring software, vod and podcasting - these sorts of things take small amounts of time to implement, are typically free and can make real differences in results, it's now accessible, cheap and works. These things can be done now, not tomorrow, enabled by tablet and 1-1 laptop access.
I'm not glossing over the learning curve for us, or the overhead of starting the progress but.. if it can clearly be shown that these techniques are superior, it is worth the effort. I think this time has come.
Even in Math, technologies are starting to mature that reduce IT overheads and improve the classroom experience especially in revision, organisation and note taking. It's time that schools and universities embrace what can be done to improve teaching pedagogy where new technologies drive student performance. Perhaps we could give less prominance to engagement and self esteem. These two come primarily as a result of performance and to get engagement with web 2.0 in a class, I think it has to be shown that performance is the primary result.
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
CAS calculator and differentiation
There are a host of ways to find the first derivative on the CAS calculator and to solve calculus problems quickly. Sometimes I think exam writers are well behind what these calculators can do and fail to understand how trivial some problems have become.
Let's start with simple substitution into an equation:
a) Find y at x=3 for y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2
The "|" is important between the equation y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2 and x=3
Let's now find x if we know y. This is a little harder as we have to solve the equation.
b) Find x at y=14 for y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2

The easiest way to do this is to type 14 = 2x^2 + 2x + 2, highlight it using your stylus (this is important!) and then go
interactive->advanced->solve->ok
Note that it find both possible solutions (unlike using numsolve with the incorrect range specified)
Let's find the first derivative. For this use the 2D template in the soft keyboard
Go keyboard -> 2D -> Calc ->
c) Find the 1st derivative of y=2x^2 + 2x + 2
Note that I removed the "y=" this time. I differentiated the expression on purpose as it makes the next part easier.
Finding the 1st derivative/gradient/instantaneous rate of change at a point is also easy.
d) Find the 1st derivative of y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2 at x = 3
As you can see, it is a mix between c) and a)
Last but not least we can find a point for a particular gradient.
e) Find x at y' = 14 for y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2
To find y itself we could repeat a)
It's very much a case of thinking what you need and then finding it. As you can see it can all be done with one line on a CAS calculator, things that would take multiple steps on paper. TanLine is also a useful function that can be investigated and used to quickly find tangents.
Viola!
Click here for more CAS calculator tutorials
Let's start with simple substitution into an equation:
a) Find y at x=3 for y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2
The "|" is important between the equation y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2 and x=3
Let's now find x if we know y. This is a little harder as we have to solve the equation.
b) Find x at y=14 for y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2

The easiest way to do this is to type 14 = 2x^2 + 2x + 2, highlight it using your stylus (this is important!) and then go
interactive->advanced->solve->ok
Note that it find both possible solutions (unlike using numsolve with the incorrect range specified)
Let's find the first derivative. For this use the 2D template in the soft keyboard

c) Find the 1st derivative of y=2x^2 + 2x + 2
Note that I removed the "y=" this time. I differentiated the expression on purpose as it makes the next part easier.
Finding the 1st derivative/gradient/instantaneous rate of change at a point is also easy.
d) Find the 1st derivative of y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2 at x = 3
As you can see, it is a mix between c) and a)
Last but not least we can find a point for a particular gradient.
e) Find x at y' = 14 for y = 2x^2 + 2x + 2

To find y itself we could repeat a)
It's very much a case of thinking what you need and then finding it. As you can see it can all be done with one line on a CAS calculator, things that would take multiple steps on paper. TanLine is also a useful function that can be investigated and used to quickly find tangents.
Viola!
Click here for more CAS calculator tutorials
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
1-1 laptops and utilisation in mathematics classes
Last year I was struggling with using laptops in the mathematics classroom with students of significant disadvantage. I had thousands of dollars of equipment and yet felt unable to utilise them in a way that raised performance in my classroom. Use of technology outside of CAS calculators was near nil. We called in our local laptop reseller to help. It was a big surprise to hear from the reseller that utilisation of laptops in 1-1 laptop mathematics classrooms was around 5%. Schools hadn’t done much more than load textbooks, do the occasional assignment and play with math games.
This was a defining moment in the use of laptops at our school and freed the math department to think outside the box. These machines were unlikely to assist us in solving problems in a mathematics classroom. It wasn’t going to revolutionise our teaching, but with such a high level of available resourcing we realised it may have the potential to revolutionise learning.
The first thing we did was look at problems of the low socioeconomic student, resourcing, organisation, attendance, engagement, completion of work (in and outside the classroom), skill and knowledge deviation/development. This is where lights turned on and we started towards real reform of learning.
Our reseller jump started our thinking by showing us an application that filled a need for a learning management system at the school. Interactive whiteboards were creating masses of information that students wanted and digital resources were becoming more prevalent. We needed a platform to distribute electronic information to students in real time. Something cloud based was our preference as we did not have the resources to maintain something onsite. It needed to be something reliable and already tested, we didn’t want to be doing and paying for cutting edge research. Edmodo, the software suggested by the reseller, filled a need.
We needed to seek ways to increase our influence outside of the classroom to better utilise classroom time. School grades were posted online allowing students access to their progress. Practice tests and screencasts of key lessons were posted online for students to use as revision for tests. Students started to post question online for answering by the teacher or peers – more importantly students started responding to posts before I had a chance to.
Last Friday I sat with a disengaged student learning BIMDAS. I noticed that although he could identify what to do, by the time the student reached the part of the sum to work with, he had forgotten what he had to do. A simple idea was to underline the next operation to be performed. This changed his demeanour and he engaged with me as his teacher, working through a page of sums. A new (although I imagine obvious to many) teaching method though was not the main outcome from this incident.
By far the most unexpected outcome of our IT journey is watching the doors between classrooms open, with math teachers in the school sharing ideas. Ideas such as the underlining during BIMDAS are starting to pollinate between teachers – teachers that found it hard to meet due to timetabling were now able to share and comment on resources. Ideas are being recorded and are retained for use in following years. Although the laptops were not engaging students, the idea of using them more effectively was solving some of the problems that I had expected that laptops would resolve directly.
This idea of technology helping engage students goes beyond direct use of laptops. The online environment itself was proving a motivating factor with the year eights. They could see that we were making an effort to extend into their world, where physical appearance, socioeconomic status, age, gender, religion were insignificant factors to interaction. Where rapport is so important with low socioeconomic students, any connection we can make between their world and ours is beneficial. It helped that edmodo had adopted an interface very much like that of Facebook, a generally banned interface in the government school system.
Now that we had a system that can store boardwork and assist absentee students work whilst outside school (such as those doing VET courses) we had the potential to ameliorate some of difficulties of absentee students and students with academic difficulties. It removed some of the excuses and put more of the onus of responsibility back onto the student to perform.
It is only a beginning but one that is exciting. We know IT has been traditionally an underperformer, but in this instance I am excited by the response both by students and teachers. We will need to continue examining how the system is working going forward and drive towards more tailored resources for students.
Location:Perth, WA, Australia
Perth WA, Australia
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Dominance games and adapting to a new position.
Being of ethnic background, some things are just not nice. Four senior staff have called me boy in conversation. Given that I actively seek to remain connected to the current generation, I can understand where they are coming from, but I must admit to finding it extremely irritating especially coming from a white person. I have more life experience than most, if not all the staff (I packed a lot into my twenties) and I'm two years off 40. I'm hardly boy anymore.
Culturally it is really inappropriate (my grandfather was darker than most of our boys of African descent) and although I don't think a racist element is present, it probably is an unconscious dominance tactic at worst, a really poor idea for an affectation at best.
The only thing I know is that it is annoying. Coming from a professional background outside of teaching, politeness becomes an artform, professionalism a requirement. In teaching the rules are blurred and seemingly become moreso the higher you reach.
I have managed to stay out of school politics to some degree by being being predominantly in a classroom isolated from other teachers. I've had to move into the building and it makes me more accessible and requires more contact with elements of the organisation than I am used to. It will take time to adjust, knowing what people need to know and what can be just dealt with.
Even jurisdiction is a problem, knowing who, what and where is your responsibility and what should be done by others. What do you do when things that need to be done are neglected by those that should be doing them? Do you ignore it, act to fill a need or report it to get fixed (and to who?).
Given that no time is given to resolve anything (as TiC), I know there is little within the role I can do, other than ensure administrative tasks are done. This of course means that staff training, monitoring of progress, curriculum development and other roles traditionally in the hands of a HOLA will be neglected at times of the year as my teaching load demands attention.
At least things have calmed down this week - my classes are planned, notes are done and assignments are ready. From a teaching point of view it should all be good. Let's hope there's not too much else going on for a little while.
Culturally it is really inappropriate (my grandfather was darker than most of our boys of African descent) and although I don't think a racist element is present, it probably is an unconscious dominance tactic at worst, a really poor idea for an affectation at best.
The only thing I know is that it is annoying. Coming from a professional background outside of teaching, politeness becomes an artform, professionalism a requirement. In teaching the rules are blurred and seemingly become moreso the higher you reach.
I have managed to stay out of school politics to some degree by being being predominantly in a classroom isolated from other teachers. I've had to move into the building and it makes me more accessible and requires more contact with elements of the organisation than I am used to. It will take time to adjust, knowing what people need to know and what can be just dealt with.
Even jurisdiction is a problem, knowing who, what and where is your responsibility and what should be done by others. What do you do when things that need to be done are neglected by those that should be doing them? Do you ignore it, act to fill a need or report it to get fixed (and to who?).
Given that no time is given to resolve anything (as TiC), I know there is little within the role I can do, other than ensure administrative tasks are done. This of course means that staff training, monitoring of progress, curriculum development and other roles traditionally in the hands of a HOLA will be neglected at times of the year as my teaching load demands attention.
At least things have calmed down this week - my classes are planned, notes are done and assignments are ready. From a teaching point of view it should all be good. Let's hope there's not too much else going on for a little while.
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Transition
I'm finding transition from one position to another is irksome. We just completed stage two of our IWB rollout, with eight more boards installed today. Testing each board and ensuring computers are set up correctly for teachers is becoming a troublesome task. Each installation had it's own quirk. One had a failed USB cable, another a bad monitor cable, another three had driver issues on their computer. Rooms had to be rearranged, teachers needed basic instruction. It's been uncontrolled chaos.
My own classes are a mix of classes transitioning from the old teacher in charge to my own. I'm finding our styles are vastly different, in that I prefer to teach each topic explicitly rather than rely on the text. It will be interesting watching how each group performs. Small groups have not been set, so it will be at least two weeks until programmes are finalised.
The eights were a mess as the room that the monitor cable failed was mine, leaving me without a working whiteboard. I believe it's fixed so I will need to deliver a ripper class to get them back on track.
I could have done without having to move from a class I had been in for 5 years. That in itself has drawn a lot of time that could have been used for other things. The students don't like it and I'm not a fan of the new room. I think the logic that I need to be in the main building is flawed. I need to be settled and organised - not subject to the constant disruption caused by being in the main building.
Picking up and dropping off my daughter to and from daycare takes time away before and after school that I have always spent on planning. You make the best of any situation, so I have to settle and get my classes running. It's time to just get on with it.
My own classes are a mix of classes transitioning from the old teacher in charge to my own. I'm finding our styles are vastly different, in that I prefer to teach each topic explicitly rather than rely on the text. It will be interesting watching how each group performs. Small groups have not been set, so it will be at least two weeks until programmes are finalised.
The eights were a mess as the room that the monitor cable failed was mine, leaving me without a working whiteboard. I believe it's fixed so I will need to deliver a ripper class to get them back on track.
I could have done without having to move from a class I had been in for 5 years. That in itself has drawn a lot of time that could have been used for other things. The students don't like it and I'm not a fan of the new room. I think the logic that I need to be in the main building is flawed. I need to be settled and organised - not subject to the constant disruption caused by being in the main building.
Picking up and dropping off my daughter to and from daycare takes time away before and after school that I have always spent on planning. You make the best of any situation, so I have to settle and get my classes running. It's time to just get on with it.
Sunday, January 29, 2012
TAFE roles and stage 3 subjects
Classes where students are taken out of school for a day and then remain in stage three courses in year 11, in the majority of cases are setting students up to fail. A student missing for a whole day each week, in a challenging course, lacking any evident independent learning skills is not destined to pass a stage three course.
The argument that they will make it up in directed study, to my mind, holds no water. These students fail because they have to catch up multiple classes in these study periods, lack specialist assistance at these times (teachers have to keep teaching).. and are generally borderline students in the first place.
I'm fully supportive of students participating in TAFE courses to complement their mainstream courses, I just believe that their mainstream courses should be kept at stage two levels to ensure that they can cope and succeed when year 11 reality and expectations kick in. Stage two courses such as 2C and 2A MAT are better suited as these can be learned independently more easily.
If we think about it, it becomes obvious why they fail. Firstly they lack a connection to the class, as better students tend to pair up with students that are regularly available. Notes on the board do not replace the peer and teacher assistance that they lose from not being in class. During directed study they cannot get immediate assistance from the teacher, particularly where the text is lacking in a particular area. Students tend to shy away from them as the questions they ask are perpetually behind the level of the class and take considerable time both from the teacher and from other students trying to catch up on a regular basis. This catch up process is exacerbated each week in multiple subjects. It also causes issues with homework and assignments as that day is often lost due to travel commitments.
I have said this before and I will say it again. We have to be careful with our subject selections and review them when students are out of class on a regular basis. We should not underestimate the impact that this has on learning for the student.
The argument that they will make it up in directed study, to my mind, holds no water. These students fail because they have to catch up multiple classes in these study periods, lack specialist assistance at these times (teachers have to keep teaching).. and are generally borderline students in the first place.
I'm fully supportive of students participating in TAFE courses to complement their mainstream courses, I just believe that their mainstream courses should be kept at stage two levels to ensure that they can cope and succeed when year 11 reality and expectations kick in. Stage two courses such as 2C and 2A MAT are better suited as these can be learned independently more easily.
If we think about it, it becomes obvious why they fail. Firstly they lack a connection to the class, as better students tend to pair up with students that are regularly available. Notes on the board do not replace the peer and teacher assistance that they lose from not being in class. During directed study they cannot get immediate assistance from the teacher, particularly where the text is lacking in a particular area. Students tend to shy away from them as the questions they ask are perpetually behind the level of the class and take considerable time both from the teacher and from other students trying to catch up on a regular basis. This catch up process is exacerbated each week in multiple subjects. It also causes issues with homework and assignments as that day is often lost due to travel commitments.
I have said this before and I will say it again. We have to be careful with our subject selections and review them when students are out of class on a regular basis. We should not underestimate the impact that this has on learning for the student.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Teacher in charge
Nothing like a promotion to bring in the new year. One of the stranger structures in the public education system is the Teacher in Charge(TiC). It's a position between teacher and Head of department(HoD). The pay rise is minimal, the teaching load the same as a classroom teacher and the responsibility is similar to HoD(albeit not officially).
The main issue with the TiC role is that in many implementations the actual responsibility for traditionally HoD roles lies with team and year leaders, yet little is done by them in this regard as team and year leaders are swamped with administrative and behavioural concerns. This has caused friction between the TiC and team/year leaders in prior years, as responsibilty is passed around like a hot potato depending on the amount of effort required. In particular, student guidance for non-performance is an area that is often neglected - particularly with students that are passively resisting work (work avoidant behaviours).
Secondly, early in the year, with full load, senior school teachers(the breeding ground for HoDs) are busy bedding down NCOS and small groups, leaving little time for assisting new teachers, examining curriculum, setting up IT structures(such as mathsonline/mymathsonline/matheletics), doing research on best practices (eg. IWBs, Tablets, NC texts, new pedagogy), entering competitions and addressing minor and niggling issues across the department.
TiC is a strange position as it is a promotional pathway to Head of department, which is a large pay rise and includes a reduction in teaching load. Small schools use TiCs where level 3 FTE is not available for HoDs. Unfortunately what this causes is a drain of talent from small schools to larger ones as TiC becomes a pathway to HoD - something prevalent in these times, as many maths HoDs are reaching retirement age. Our school is on it's third TiC in three years.
So, here I am entering the fray of promotional positions, doing the TiC role this year. It's exciting in that I have increased access to management thinking and can better understand the direction of the school. The negative is that I am used to senior management positions where robust discussion is a part of the job - my experience is that robust discussion is not always welcome in a school.
Here comes the new year!
The main issue with the TiC role is that in many implementations the actual responsibility for traditionally HoD roles lies with team and year leaders, yet little is done by them in this regard as team and year leaders are swamped with administrative and behavioural concerns. This has caused friction between the TiC and team/year leaders in prior years, as responsibilty is passed around like a hot potato depending on the amount of effort required. In particular, student guidance for non-performance is an area that is often neglected - particularly with students that are passively resisting work (work avoidant behaviours).
Secondly, early in the year, with full load, senior school teachers(the breeding ground for HoDs) are busy bedding down NCOS and small groups, leaving little time for assisting new teachers, examining curriculum, setting up IT structures(such as mathsonline/mymathsonline/matheletics), doing research on best practices (eg. IWBs, Tablets, NC texts, new pedagogy), entering competitions and addressing minor and niggling issues across the department.
TiC is a strange position as it is a promotional pathway to Head of department, which is a large pay rise and includes a reduction in teaching load. Small schools use TiCs where level 3 FTE is not available for HoDs. Unfortunately what this causes is a drain of talent from small schools to larger ones as TiC becomes a pathway to HoD - something prevalent in these times, as many maths HoDs are reaching retirement age. Our school is on it's third TiC in three years.
So, here I am entering the fray of promotional positions, doing the TiC role this year. It's exciting in that I have increased access to management thinking and can better understand the direction of the school. The negative is that I am used to senior management positions where robust discussion is a part of the job - my experience is that robust discussion is not always welcome in a school.
Here comes the new year!
Friday, January 20, 2012
Summer school
Today was the fifth and last day of summer school. It's an event we run for students destined for stage 3 maths in year 12. Students benefit from being ready from the start of term, are more organized and are given guidance on material to be presented during the new year. Teachers and tutors get experience working in a university environment.
Two of the presenters cancelled just before the first day, I had been sick for the majority of the holidays and I was left with the decision of cancelling the event or trying to do the event with a relief teacher, four pre-service teachers and some student graduates from 2011 that offered to help. I had three streams of students from year 10-12, 42 students and I couldn't do it on my own.
We went ahead anyway and everyone stepped up. The students were positive from the start all the way to the last day. Some had cancelled holidays overseas to be there. Brian, our ever ready math relief teacher, stepped in when I would have been overwhelmed otherwise. The pre-service teachers responded to each of their strengths - leading through preparation, personality, warmth and enthusiasm. They completed the tasks assigned to them with the year 10's and then stepped into the gaps left by the missing presenters for the 11's and 12's. It was a real team effort and awesome to watch. 30 of the 32 students that attended on the last day said that they would be back next year, with the 2012 year 12's showing real enthusiasm to come again and give the benefit of their experience.
All of the year 12 student helpers from 2011 were fantastic, but one really shone, as he showed the new year 12's how to navigate a wide range of problems. He stayed for the entire week and demonstrated what hard work could really achieve. He had nothing to prove by coming, he was our school dux in 2011, and I hope he saw what a difference he can make in the world.
With such a large number of people coming together and actively achieving something, (especially when I was at 50%) it quickly became another of the inspirational events of my career. To watch four summer schools, and then watch the benefit for attending students during the year and the growth in the pre-service teachers, it tells me that it is more than just another school event. Hopefully those involved understand the wonderful thing they have done. There's no doubt it could and will be done better, but that as they say, is a problem for another day.
Two of the presenters cancelled just before the first day, I had been sick for the majority of the holidays and I was left with the decision of cancelling the event or trying to do the event with a relief teacher, four pre-service teachers and some student graduates from 2011 that offered to help. I had three streams of students from year 10-12, 42 students and I couldn't do it on my own.
We went ahead anyway and everyone stepped up. The students were positive from the start all the way to the last day. Some had cancelled holidays overseas to be there. Brian, our ever ready math relief teacher, stepped in when I would have been overwhelmed otherwise. The pre-service teachers responded to each of their strengths - leading through preparation, personality, warmth and enthusiasm. They completed the tasks assigned to them with the year 10's and then stepped into the gaps left by the missing presenters for the 11's and 12's. It was a real team effort and awesome to watch. 30 of the 32 students that attended on the last day said that they would be back next year, with the 2012 year 12's showing real enthusiasm to come again and give the benefit of their experience.
All of the year 12 student helpers from 2011 were fantastic, but one really shone, as he showed the new year 12's how to navigate a wide range of problems. He stayed for the entire week and demonstrated what hard work could really achieve. He had nothing to prove by coming, he was our school dux in 2011, and I hope he saw what a difference he can make in the world.
With such a large number of people coming together and actively achieving something, (especially when I was at 50%) it quickly became another of the inspirational events of my career. To watch four summer schools, and then watch the benefit for attending students during the year and the growth in the pre-service teachers, it tells me that it is more than just another school event. Hopefully those involved understand the wonderful thing they have done. There's no doubt it could and will be done better, but that as they say, is a problem for another day.
Friday, January 13, 2012
Equation editor
The equation editor in activeInspire broke with the tickover of the year and a javascript error. This has been fixed in the latest update.
Russ.
Russ.
Friday, December 23, 2011
Merry Christmas to all
A Merry Christmas to all, may it be filled with joy, children and the gifts that fill your world with love and happiness.
Next year promises to be another great one. I look forward to posting again in the new year.
Russ.
Next year promises to be another great one. I look forward to posting again in the new year.
Russ.
National Curriculum
Here is a table that comes from a National Curriculum broadsheet. It contains some interesting insights.
The first is fractions and decimals finished at yr 6. I haven't seen many year 10 classes confidently performing four operations on decimals or fractions without a calculator.
The second is that I haven't seen many students enter year eight with adequate algebra skils.
With the movement of year 7 to high school we can address some of these issues but it does not really address the core issue of the declining ability of primary to progress students through mathematics outcomes.
The national curriculum writers seem to acknowledge this issue here, "In comparison to the Singapore mathematics curriculum, the Foundation to Year 10 Australian Curriculum: Mathematics content is introduced more slowly in the early and primary years to ensure students have the opportunity to develop deep understanding before moving on. By Year 10, the conceptual difficulty is similar to that described in the Singapore documents."
The responsibility has been placed on secondary school to accelerate through the course. This will have an negative impact on the second tier of students to be able to absorb the information in a developmentally appropriate method through upper school. It seems we may be revisiting the forgotten middle.
The issue of why students need extra consolidation in primary is probably more cultural than educational in origin. With the loss of value and payoff of education in Australia, families are not supporting education in ways previously found. With changes to compulsory education, the value of graduation has decreased as a workplace differentiator. There are clear payoff changes exacerbated by the relatively high incomes available for manual labour related industries during mining years. Unless of a recent migrant group - education is a social occupation.
Two parent working families have not been able to make the commitment to assisting students reach their potential. Sadly, even families making the commitment (to embed tables, assisting with homework, taking an active interest and are reading together regularly) are not gaining the benefit as the majority now lies on the other side of the divide. It is going to take considerable commitment by the department to turn this around, I think the community has already given up.
(...and Mackenzie reminded me of something today.. writing anything legible listening to Yogabba gabba is near impossible - having distractions in class for those who concentrate singly (like me) must be exceedingly frustrating.)
Thursday, December 22, 2011
The five years ago game.
Five years ago..
I didn't know how to play guitar
I didn't own an awful lot of board games
I didn't have this blog
I didn't know how to teach well
I hadn't experienced 5 years of wonderful kids seeking to excel
I hadn't worked with some exceptionally dedicated peers
I didn't have the joy of my beautiful daughter and the perspective of a parent
I miss my nana and could probably be less cynical. All in all, I think, these past five years have been very good.
I didn't know how to play guitar
I didn't own an awful lot of board games
I didn't have this blog
I didn't know how to teach well
I hadn't experienced 5 years of wonderful kids seeking to excel
I hadn't worked with some exceptionally dedicated peers
I didn't have the joy of my beautiful daughter and the perspective of a parent
I miss my nana and could probably be less cynical. All in all, I think, these past five years have been very good.
Point Systems
Extrinsic reward point systems often end in probability based rewards to reduce cost. The more points in for the week, the higher the probability of winning a prize. Like most extrinsic reward systems they have instant impact and then reduce gradually over the year unless continually renewed.
The system though is fairly one sided and lacks the concept of the win/win. It's more the instant gratification/self gratification than something based in development of values, delayed gratification and development of the caring person.
I'm wondering if we could extend the points system to make a true currency of it.
Kids value when extra input is put into the classroom, they value when they can help someone else, they value when their effort contributes to something bigger, they value things that may help them improve. Or at least this is what we want them to value.
What if kids could:
donate points towards a teacher doing extra PD to bring a clearly stated idea back to the classroom (points not generated in that classroom)
donate points towards the charity child (and the school converts them back to cents/dollars)
donate points towards the house points competition
donate points towards evaluating an overseas event
donate points towards a school speaker / event
Kids want ownership of their environment and these sorts of ideas help them get a feeling of self worth by expressing their value beyond themselves. The feeling of self worth, I think, is a key goal.
Our kids are in an interesting place, I think it might be timely to investigate avenues for this type of idea.
The system though is fairly one sided and lacks the concept of the win/win. It's more the instant gratification/self gratification than something based in development of values, delayed gratification and development of the caring person.
I'm wondering if we could extend the points system to make a true currency of it.
Kids value when extra input is put into the classroom, they value when they can help someone else, they value when their effort contributes to something bigger, they value things that may help them improve. Or at least this is what we want them to value.
What if kids could:
donate points towards a teacher doing extra PD to bring a clearly stated idea back to the classroom (points not generated in that classroom)
donate points towards the charity child (and the school converts them back to cents/dollars)
donate points towards the house points competition
donate points towards evaluating an overseas event
donate points towards a school speaker / event
Kids want ownership of their environment and these sorts of ideas help them get a feeling of self worth by expressing their value beyond themselves. The feeling of self worth, I think, is a key goal.
Our kids are in an interesting place, I think it might be timely to investigate avenues for this type of idea.
Monday, December 19, 2011
Getting sick
Sickness is a constant issue as a teacher. By the end of term, we're all a bit run down and as soon as the adrenaline cuts out, you tend to hit the wall. If it's not the flu, it's migraine.. I'd estimate that at least half of the staff report to be susceptable to migraines.
As curriculum demands on teachers become greater and society itself is asking more of teachers, I suppose the maintenance of teachers will become more of an issue.
Well... this time has been a doozy. First four days after the end of term my fever has been spiking up to 40 every time the panadol runs out, sleeping 20 hours of the day and having lucid moments (like now) where I think I might just be getting better.
I knew there was a reason I looked forward to holidays!
Update: It seems having temps of 40C+ for 6 days indicates pneumonia. Off to get checked.
Update: This high temp thing is great, xrays and blood test in under 20mins. It was like an olympics.
Update: It is pneumonia (the second math teacher this year). The drugs are working now and the temp stopped overnight (yay!). Hopefully I'm on the mend.
As curriculum demands on teachers become greater and society itself is asking more of teachers, I suppose the maintenance of teachers will become more of an issue.
Well... this time has been a doozy. First four days after the end of term my fever has been spiking up to 40 every time the panadol runs out, sleeping 20 hours of the day and having lucid moments (like now) where I think I might just be getting better.
I knew there was a reason I looked forward to holidays!
Update: It seems having temps of 40C+ for 6 days indicates pneumonia. Off to get checked.
Update: This high temp thing is great, xrays and blood test in under 20mins. It was like an olympics.
Update: It is pneumonia (the second math teacher this year). The drugs are working now and the temp stopped overnight (yay!). Hopefully I'm on the mend.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
WACOT and the Teachers Registration Board
The King is dead. Long live the King.
For those that don't know, WACOT is being repealed and a new Teachers registration board is being set up.
I just read through the new bill. Teacher representation on the board is now at the discretion and invitation of the minister. Requirements for registration become the primary mandate of the board. The new bill gives the board the ability to define what a teacher needs to be and do for registration and re-registration.
Hopefully they will treat the new board primarily as a body for weeding out miscreants and keeping teaching institutions honest, not as a body responsible for monitoring and developing professional development. A school is the best level for monitoring, mentoring and developing teacher effectiveness, the mentoring programme organised by WACOT ended up being little more than paperwork. The change might be recognition that a registration body is not the right vehicle to monitor teacher competence. If a case ever reached the Teachers Registration Board, one would have to imagine that it would be serious enough to involve police.
Given that the registration board is nominated by the minister, embarrassing events such as the "Teachers for Australia" (the 6 week teaching course) being rejected by WACOT will now more likely be prevented.
With a fairly limited mandate, hopefully they can get on with getting the job done, not worry about costly fringe activities and keep the fees and paperwork down!
For those that don't know, WACOT is being repealed and a new Teachers registration board is being set up.
I just read through the new bill. Teacher representation on the board is now at the discretion and invitation of the minister. Requirements for registration become the primary mandate of the board. The new bill gives the board the ability to define what a teacher needs to be and do for registration and re-registration.
Hopefully they will treat the new board primarily as a body for weeding out miscreants and keeping teaching institutions honest, not as a body responsible for monitoring and developing professional development. A school is the best level for monitoring, mentoring and developing teacher effectiveness, the mentoring programme organised by WACOT ended up being little more than paperwork. The change might be recognition that a registration body is not the right vehicle to monitor teacher competence. If a case ever reached the Teachers Registration Board, one would have to imagine that it would be serious enough to involve police.
Given that the registration board is nominated by the minister, embarrassing events such as the "Teachers for Australia" (the 6 week teaching course) being rejected by WACOT will now more likely be prevented.
With a fairly limited mandate, hopefully they can get on with getting the job done, not worry about costly fringe activities and keep the fees and paperwork down!
Reflective posts
Four years ago, I started posting here to record the journey from practicum teacher to teacher. Stats on the blog have shown that reflective posts are the least interesting and posts that relate to improvement in the classroom are the most read.
I have often wondered why. It could just be that my reflective posts are boring. Personally, I find that they are the most important because they make me consider my own teaching practices and drive me towards the successful classroom interventions.
It could be that we don't want to know what we do badly and we do want quick fix band aids.
Often we don't want to be reflective or introspective - we don't have time, lack the will, we're scared of the results and are unwilling to make the effort. Given all I have learned here, having worked with the blog for a reasonably long time, it's fairly easy to say I think reflective practices are worth the effort.
I have often wondered why. It could just be that my reflective posts are boring. Personally, I find that they are the most important because they make me consider my own teaching practices and drive me towards the successful classroom interventions.
It could be that we don't want to know what we do badly and we do want quick fix band aids.
Often we don't want to be reflective or introspective - we don't have time, lack the will, we're scared of the results and are unwilling to make the effort. Given all I have learned here, having worked with the blog for a reasonably long time, it's fairly easy to say I think reflective practices are worth the effort.
Thursday, December 15, 2011
I must be an idiot
I'm an idiot. I really must be, because I don't understand and I can't understand the logic of the criticism no matter how the concept of "Empire Building" has been explained to me.
We have an inspirational maths department (not my words but that of a teacher outside our department). Kids say to us that they want to come to school to do maths and they're not always the geeky ones. We have a high level of energy in the department, kids actively choose our subject and we have fewer behavioural issues each year than ever before. Kids don't even look that embarrassed when we talk to them in the yard. We actively seek to help other departments and we do our share of tasks around the school.
And for this we are accused of empire building. By this (and I sought to get this clarified) it was meant that we have created a "cult" of mathematics where kids actively seek maths in upper school over other subjects. Let me be the first person in history to apologise for having engaged kids.
Now if we were preventing students from completing work of other subjects by loading them up with extra work, you might think this could be true. We don't. If we advised them to take higher maths without having grades and work ethics to suit, it may be true; but we are diligent documenting how we justify our subject selections and unfortunately now have to turn kids away in upper school. If we loaded up in school committees and ran an agenda (of any sort) and bullied them through, it may be said but we rarely volunteer for committees and are more frequently tutoring kids between classes than being in the staff room.
I don't think we're victims of tall poppy, but our relative popularity (??!!??) with kids seems to be threatening in some way. If a kid selected Drama, Phys ed, Computing, English or any other subject because they liked the teacher group not an eye would be batted. If this meant that they had to do a higher maths and they were motivated by their involvement in the other subject, we would work with them and find them a course that they could do. Another student with a viable path to uni - that's fantastic.
If year 7 kids are choosing our school because of maths one would think that the collegiate group (not just the principal) would go, great guys, we'll get behind you and create a wider vision for us. If kids are clamouring for a staffed and funded maths camp, what possible reason is to not get behind it. Five years ago we arrived and the atmosphere was toxic towards the ATAR classes, I don't think anyone believed we had long left before we became a vocational school. Today we have a growing group of TEE kids, a wonderful team that guides them into uni through ATAR and portfolio pathways and a teacher group that can and does support them in their final years.
... but we have a long way to go. When asking our year 9 class, "how many students went to university from our school", they said none and were shocked when we said close to 50% - they were more shocked when we rattled off the names from three years ago and told them how well they were doing. There are a number of much larger schools in Perth that can't do this and can't even run stage 3 courses.
I suppose this is a cautionary tale, because sometimes we all are a little disparaging and I can say firsthand how demotivational this last week has been for at least two of the maths department - we both have thick skin (and heads) but it is annoying to say the least. If others do not want to lead, get behind those that make the time and have the will to do so. Be careful with criticism especially if it is only to assuage your own conscience about what you should be doing as it can have toxic effects on your school. Be encouraging wherever possible.
We have an inspirational maths department (not my words but that of a teacher outside our department). Kids say to us that they want to come to school to do maths and they're not always the geeky ones. We have a high level of energy in the department, kids actively choose our subject and we have fewer behavioural issues each year than ever before. Kids don't even look that embarrassed when we talk to them in the yard. We actively seek to help other departments and we do our share of tasks around the school.
And for this we are accused of empire building. By this (and I sought to get this clarified) it was meant that we have created a "cult" of mathematics where kids actively seek maths in upper school over other subjects. Let me be the first person in history to apologise for having engaged kids.
Now if we were preventing students from completing work of other subjects by loading them up with extra work, you might think this could be true. We don't. If we advised them to take higher maths without having grades and work ethics to suit, it may be true; but we are diligent documenting how we justify our subject selections and unfortunately now have to turn kids away in upper school. If we loaded up in school committees and ran an agenda (of any sort) and bullied them through, it may be said but we rarely volunteer for committees and are more frequently tutoring kids between classes than being in the staff room.
I don't think we're victims of tall poppy, but our relative popularity (??!!??) with kids seems to be threatening in some way. If a kid selected Drama, Phys ed, Computing, English or any other subject because they liked the teacher group not an eye would be batted. If this meant that they had to do a higher maths and they were motivated by their involvement in the other subject, we would work with them and find them a course that they could do. Another student with a viable path to uni - that's fantastic.
If year 7 kids are choosing our school because of maths one would think that the collegiate group (not just the principal) would go, great guys, we'll get behind you and create a wider vision for us. If kids are clamouring for a staffed and funded maths camp, what possible reason is to not get behind it. Five years ago we arrived and the atmosphere was toxic towards the ATAR classes, I don't think anyone believed we had long left before we became a vocational school. Today we have a growing group of TEE kids, a wonderful team that guides them into uni through ATAR and portfolio pathways and a teacher group that can and does support them in their final years.
... but we have a long way to go. When asking our year 9 class, "how many students went to university from our school", they said none and were shocked when we said close to 50% - they were more shocked when we rattled off the names from three years ago and told them how well they were doing. There are a number of much larger schools in Perth that can't do this and can't even run stage 3 courses.
I suppose this is a cautionary tale, because sometimes we all are a little disparaging and I can say firsthand how demotivational this last week has been for at least two of the maths department - we both have thick skin (and heads) but it is annoying to say the least. If others do not want to lead, get behind those that make the time and have the will to do so. Be careful with criticism especially if it is only to assuage your own conscience about what you should be doing as it can have toxic effects on your school. Be encouraging wherever possible.
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Pay rise
I don't know if anyone noticed but SSTUWA negotiated a 3.75% pay rise (12% over 3 years + the 1/2+ year lost already) on 9 December.
It will be interesting to see what conditions have been traded and if it actually ends up covering inflation over the period. I shouldn't be skeptical, but SSTUWA are not the most effective negotiators.
News here. You may have to be logged into the intranet to view it
Oh, and as expected the news of 7's going to secondary school has been done in the last week of the school year to minimise discussion. They're all in secondary in 2015 (a bit late to save a few secondary schools but better late than never).
It will be interesting to see what conditions have been traded and if it actually ends up covering inflation over the period. I shouldn't be skeptical, but SSTUWA are not the most effective negotiators.
News here. You may have to be logged into the intranet to view it
Oh, and as expected the news of 7's going to secondary school has been done in the last week of the school year to minimise discussion. They're all in secondary in 2015 (a bit late to save a few secondary schools but better late than never).
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Numeracy drives literacy
It has been asserted that literacy initiatives can assist in developing numeracy in schools. In disadvantaged schools it is common to place high levels of effort into literacy programmes (often aspirational programmes with few measures attached and responsibility for results thinly spread throughout all staff). I can't count the amount of times I have been shown how to draw a mind map or a jigsaw in PD and then told that I need to implement them in my classrooms.
It's not that I haven't tried, it's just that there is little measurable improvement afterward. I think secondary teachers roll their eyes and think 'here is some more primary junk' (I'm censoring here) that doesn't apply well in upper secondary classes.
That's not to say that numeracy based subjects (particularly maths) do not have a part in driving literacy - especially at the pointy end of students heading towards university. In fact I would say that mathematics has a higher impact on the motivation of students to do well in English than English itself does.
For students in disadvantaged areas, the vast majority of students get to university through math/science pathways rather than humanities pathways. This is 'generally' due to the raft of reasons students fail to enjoy reading at an early age. (I say generally as this is not a simple topic and has been the subject of a lot of angst amongst teachers. I do not claim to have the answer for this other than to continuing to encourage parents to read to kids and then continue to investigate ESL pathways, bridging courses and technological innovations for avenues to develop reading and writing).
For math/science kids, their fundamental barrier to university entry is in English as English in some form is compulsory. Math and Science teachers are cognisant of this and draw attention to comprehension and literacy at every opportunity. We teach explicitly the meaning of words and how to construct strictly logical arguments through proof. Students learn method and can apply the method with the reasonable understanding that the endpoint is a correct answer (which can be abstracted into other subjects). We teach students to identify teaching moments, take and make effective notes and prepare effectively for examinations. These are tangible and measurable improvements to their English language usage/literacy!
We emphasize to students to work hard in English - often to the detriment of our own subjects. Students have motivation to work in English because it is a necessary evil. Without success in mathematics and science, they would not even try to succeed in English, what would be the point? They cannot in most cases succeed in a purely humanities pathway. They would be relegated to non university pathways as quick as you can say.. well.. Ingrish.
I think in our school I can say that in upper school Numeracy drives Literacy. Without Maths and science, our stage 2 and 3 English classes would be considerably smaller and we would have far less students with the motivation to even try.
It's not that I haven't tried, it's just that there is little measurable improvement afterward. I think secondary teachers roll their eyes and think 'here is some more primary junk' (I'm censoring here) that doesn't apply well in upper secondary classes.
That's not to say that numeracy based subjects (particularly maths) do not have a part in driving literacy - especially at the pointy end of students heading towards university. In fact I would say that mathematics has a higher impact on the motivation of students to do well in English than English itself does.
For students in disadvantaged areas, the vast majority of students get to university through math/science pathways rather than humanities pathways. This is 'generally' due to the raft of reasons students fail to enjoy reading at an early age. (I say generally as this is not a simple topic and has been the subject of a lot of angst amongst teachers. I do not claim to have the answer for this other than to continuing to encourage parents to read to kids and then continue to investigate ESL pathways, bridging courses and technological innovations for avenues to develop reading and writing).
For math/science kids, their fundamental barrier to university entry is in English as English in some form is compulsory. Math and Science teachers are cognisant of this and draw attention to comprehension and literacy at every opportunity. We teach explicitly the meaning of words and how to construct strictly logical arguments through proof. Students learn method and can apply the method with the reasonable understanding that the endpoint is a correct answer (which can be abstracted into other subjects). We teach students to identify teaching moments, take and make effective notes and prepare effectively for examinations. These are tangible and measurable improvements to their English language usage/literacy!
We emphasize to students to work hard in English - often to the detriment of our own subjects. Students have motivation to work in English because it is a necessary evil. Without success in mathematics and science, they would not even try to succeed in English, what would be the point? They cannot in most cases succeed in a purely humanities pathway. They would be relegated to non university pathways as quick as you can say.. well.. Ingrish.
I think in our school I can say that in upper school Numeracy drives Literacy. Without Maths and science, our stage 2 and 3 English classes would be considerably smaller and we would have far less students with the motivation to even try.
Friday, December 9, 2011
Disengaged students
Being given a class of disengaged students is a difficult task. It's not something that I can do year after year, although after a break of a few years; the challenge isn't as daunting as the thought of doing it for the third in a row.
I'm not particularly talented with this group of students - I certainly can't get them energised and self motivated, but I can get them working and start them on a path to regain their self esteem. If I remember this as my goal I can see progress. If I focus on grades, I put my head in my hands in despair. Success comes (I love the kids that get to say - "this is my first B ever" knowing that it isn't a charity grade and that they have had to work for it), but it is hard, constant work with a lot of negative feedback from the students.
My top ten tips for working with disengaged students in year 11 and 12.
1. Do not allow students to do nothing. If a student refuses work, accelerate through the strategies for teacher intervention and pass them on to admin to hit consequences that might be meaningful for them. If they are in a re-engagement programme, teachers have already tried the 4001 strategies for re-engagement, outside intervention is probably required.
2. Be real. Students will know if you are faking it. Their life skills relate to outside the classroom, they have a bullsh*t meter that can detect it at 40 paces. If you don't want to be there, they will understand, let them know that you have something in common and get on with step 3.
3. Be something they don't expect - be prepared with material suited to their level of work. Reduce the amount of content on the board or page, increase the number of boards or pages over time.
4. Have clear expectations of behaviour - no swearing, be on time, be respectful of others. Make them aware of what they are doing and why they need to do it. Tie it to graduation if possible, being changed out of their class into a work programme for repeated failures, use punitive responses as a last resort, but don't be afraid of using them (such as suspension from class) if necessary to ensure a minimum level of work. Work closely with the social worker to assist students learn classroom behaviours and how to code switch.
5. Celebrate their achievements using intrinsic rewards. Extrinsic rewards don't work with these kids, apathy is rife and you will too quickly accelerate through the extrinsic rewards required to bribe work. With these students, extrinsic rewards are just not a good idea. Everything about these kids is self esteem related. Build that honestly, just a little, and it is success.
6. Find out their stories (where appropriate) and share yours, especially with indigenous students. Often by talking to students you will find out what does motivate them and all of a sudden you have a re-engaged student who is seeking your approval for those 5 minutes of talking about manga cartoons or about how to become a chef.
7. Do it quickly, be patient and forgiving. They have 10-11 years of negative inertia to overcome, so if it takes a few times to change a behaviour it is ok (and forget as quickly as is appropriate if an honest effort to change the behaviour is being made). They will run out of steam whatever you do, so get as much as you can early. If they are working do a wad of assessment (by term three you will be pulling teeth to get assessment at a normal rate).
8. Ask teachers about the students. Someone will know something positive about them and it will give you an in to start a lesson they may engage with.
9. Acknowledge their existence in and out of the classroom. You might be the only person to say their name in a week. You may get a grunt or a finger in return behind your back, but over time they will realise that it is ok to say hi back.
10. Make it clear that it is ok that they don't have to like you and vice versa. In many cases they don't know how to like, they have been practicing the opposite for so long. All of a sudden you become the one person that isn't giving them a hard time and you are the one getting the most amount of work.
Just be aware, if you get good at re-engaging kids, you run the risk of being the disengaged student expert and will get them year after year. If this happens you need to be strong when you have had enough and insist on a break from it, or seek another school where you can get that break - timetabling will see you as a very valuable commodity whilst you are doing the role. These students can break your confidence and deprive you of your will to teach - if you feel this is happening, seek assistance and return to normal classes.
I'm not particularly talented with this group of students - I certainly can't get them energised and self motivated, but I can get them working and start them on a path to regain their self esteem. If I remember this as my goal I can see progress. If I focus on grades, I put my head in my hands in despair. Success comes (I love the kids that get to say - "this is my first B ever" knowing that it isn't a charity grade and that they have had to work for it), but it is hard, constant work with a lot of negative feedback from the students.
My top ten tips for working with disengaged students in year 11 and 12.
1. Do not allow students to do nothing. If a student refuses work, accelerate through the strategies for teacher intervention and pass them on to admin to hit consequences that might be meaningful for them. If they are in a re-engagement programme, teachers have already tried the 4001 strategies for re-engagement, outside intervention is probably required.
2. Be real. Students will know if you are faking it. Their life skills relate to outside the classroom, they have a bullsh*t meter that can detect it at 40 paces. If you don't want to be there, they will understand, let them know that you have something in common and get on with step 3.
3. Be something they don't expect - be prepared with material suited to their level of work. Reduce the amount of content on the board or page, increase the number of boards or pages over time.
4. Have clear expectations of behaviour - no swearing, be on time, be respectful of others. Make them aware of what they are doing and why they need to do it. Tie it to graduation if possible, being changed out of their class into a work programme for repeated failures, use punitive responses as a last resort, but don't be afraid of using them (such as suspension from class) if necessary to ensure a minimum level of work. Work closely with the social worker to assist students learn classroom behaviours and how to code switch.
5. Celebrate their achievements using intrinsic rewards. Extrinsic rewards don't work with these kids, apathy is rife and you will too quickly accelerate through the extrinsic rewards required to bribe work. With these students, extrinsic rewards are just not a good idea. Everything about these kids is self esteem related. Build that honestly, just a little, and it is success.
6. Find out their stories (where appropriate) and share yours, especially with indigenous students. Often by talking to students you will find out what does motivate them and all of a sudden you have a re-engaged student who is seeking your approval for those 5 minutes of talking about manga cartoons or about how to become a chef.
7. Do it quickly, be patient and forgiving. They have 10-11 years of negative inertia to overcome, so if it takes a few times to change a behaviour it is ok (and forget as quickly as is appropriate if an honest effort to change the behaviour is being made). They will run out of steam whatever you do, so get as much as you can early. If they are working do a wad of assessment (by term three you will be pulling teeth to get assessment at a normal rate).
8. Ask teachers about the students. Someone will know something positive about them and it will give you an in to start a lesson they may engage with.
9. Acknowledge their existence in and out of the classroom. You might be the only person to say their name in a week. You may get a grunt or a finger in return behind your back, but over time they will realise that it is ok to say hi back.
10. Make it clear that it is ok that they don't have to like you and vice versa. In many cases they don't know how to like, they have been practicing the opposite for so long. All of a sudden you become the one person that isn't giving them a hard time and you are the one getting the most amount of work.
Just be aware, if you get good at re-engaging kids, you run the risk of being the disengaged student expert and will get them year after year. If this happens you need to be strong when you have had enough and insist on a break from it, or seek another school where you can get that break - timetabling will see you as a very valuable commodity whilst you are doing the role. These students can break your confidence and deprive you of your will to teach - if you feel this is happening, seek assistance and return to normal classes.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Class centric schools
Last post I talked about making a class rather than a group of individuals and how that was important to how I tried to teach. It reminded me of a large organisation that I did work for. They changed the name of their administration centre to store service centre (or something like that) to change the thinking in the organisation from an administration 'ruling' the stores, to a service model where they were enablers that assisted stores to sell more product.
The admin vs teachers conflict is a common enough malady and sometimes I think I understand why. Empire building is not uncommon and importance is placed upon being a gatekeeper for projects to become viable - goodwill needs to be developed before a project is considered. Multiple consultations are required before a project can get the go ahead and if someone steps outside of unwritten rules, the project leader is sent back to their classroom tails between their legs after doing considerable work to check that the project is both viable and has clear student support and benefit. I have no problem with the gate, it's the pre-requisite of goodwill that is the problem.
This scenario is a recipe for reduced initiative and is quite clearly poor management. An alternate method is to encourage the person seeking the initiative (if valuable) and then assisting in enabling the person make the event happen, to mutually decide it is unviable or send the idea to the third umpire. Encouragement of initiative is a quality of a good manager. Let's face it, rarely is a student event fun for teachers - but the kids get a lot out of well run events and it is something that they remember well after school (let's hope for the right reasons).
I like projects that can run with little assistance from admin as I tend to think there are things done best by teachers and other things done best by administration. I think, a project that can be run without generating large amounts of cooperation from 9 members of a committee is more likely to succeed. I normally accompany committee involvement with a swear word - a small skilled selected team is nearly always a far more effective method than a voluntary committee. Maths Academy, Summer school, board game clubs, the edmodo rollout, the IWBs rollout, 8-12 integrated maths programmes, creation of the maths lab, centralised marksbooks, programmes, newsletters, assessment and electronic resources are all initiatives that were able to be done with little if any admin assistance. All of these Maths Dept initiatives had clear and purposeful gains for the school as evidenced by the development of a changed profile for year 11 and 12 MAT and MAS classes.
As a team there are things we cannot do, that admin can. Streaming in year 9, pastoral care intervention, school direction, staffing profiles, funding and the like. These things have large impacts on the classroom and to be honest we are better reacting to most of these than being involved in these decision making process. We can have input but probably informal discussion is enough. Long drawn out processes help no-one where a little leadership of both teams can make a decision happen. In many cases even a sub optimal solution is better than developing a perfect one (after the need for it or benefit has passed).
In a class centric environment, if the teacher has evaluated that an event is in the best interests of students and a teacher is willing to assist making it happen (in addition to their normal roles as a classroom teacher) it is incredibly poor form to be anything other than encouraging and assisting to make things happen. When we fail to do this, we need to ask, is it in the best interest of the school, the class and subsequently is it in the best interest of students.
Russ.
The admin vs teachers conflict is a common enough malady and sometimes I think I understand why. Empire building is not uncommon and importance is placed upon being a gatekeeper for projects to become viable - goodwill needs to be developed before a project is considered. Multiple consultations are required before a project can get the go ahead and if someone steps outside of unwritten rules, the project leader is sent back to their classroom tails between their legs after doing considerable work to check that the project is both viable and has clear student support and benefit. I have no problem with the gate, it's the pre-requisite of goodwill that is the problem.
This scenario is a recipe for reduced initiative and is quite clearly poor management. An alternate method is to encourage the person seeking the initiative (if valuable) and then assisting in enabling the person make the event happen, to mutually decide it is unviable or send the idea to the third umpire. Encouragement of initiative is a quality of a good manager. Let's face it, rarely is a student event fun for teachers - but the kids get a lot out of well run events and it is something that they remember well after school (let's hope for the right reasons).
I like projects that can run with little assistance from admin as I tend to think there are things done best by teachers and other things done best by administration. I think, a project that can be run without generating large amounts of cooperation from 9 members of a committee is more likely to succeed. I normally accompany committee involvement with a swear word - a small skilled selected team is nearly always a far more effective method than a voluntary committee. Maths Academy, Summer school, board game clubs, the edmodo rollout, the IWBs rollout, 8-12 integrated maths programmes, creation of the maths lab, centralised marksbooks, programmes, newsletters, assessment and electronic resources are all initiatives that were able to be done with little if any admin assistance. All of these Maths Dept initiatives had clear and purposeful gains for the school as evidenced by the development of a changed profile for year 11 and 12 MAT and MAS classes.
As a team there are things we cannot do, that admin can. Streaming in year 9, pastoral care intervention, school direction, staffing profiles, funding and the like. These things have large impacts on the classroom and to be honest we are better reacting to most of these than being involved in these decision making process. We can have input but probably informal discussion is enough. Long drawn out processes help no-one where a little leadership of both teams can make a decision happen. In many cases even a sub optimal solution is better than developing a perfect one (after the need for it or benefit has passed).
In a class centric environment, if the teacher has evaluated that an event is in the best interests of students and a teacher is willing to assist making it happen (in addition to their normal roles as a classroom teacher) it is incredibly poor form to be anything other than encouraging and assisting to make things happen. When we fail to do this, we need to ask, is it in the best interest of the school, the class and subsequently is it in the best interest of students.
Russ.
Monday, December 5, 2011
Teaching unruly students
I teach at a school with a few social problems(I'm a little prone to understatement).. I get knowing looks from people when they find out where I teach. I can hear them thinking, "Who in their right mind would want to teach there? Can't you do better than that!"
Truth be told, the students are ok and once you understand how they think (since I grew up around my school, I probably picked it up quicker than some), they gave me a job when I needed one five years ago and I have enjoyed it. Not the most glamorous job, but it is challenging and rewarding.
Probably the hardest time is capturing the kids and positioning them for learning. Each teacher does it a little differently, but I do have a few tricks.
The most effective strategy is creating a rapport with the kids by making them understand that teaching 30 individuals is near impossible, but everyone benefits by being part of a class. My strategies for this are quite primitive, but they are effective, especially with the second tier of students - where my teaching interests lie.
Struggling students know that they find it hard to rival the top students and seek attention in other often negative ways. To counter this I leverage a range of rewards and penalties that focus on team behaviour. The class gets a high test average (greater 70% mean), I get the class some party food. The class is working hard, the entire class gets reward points. Groups of students working well also receive reward points. The class gathers 100 reward points, we have a game session (to get 100 points we're ahead of the programme anyway). Students now have a real reason to help each other. Contrariwise, if some students get disruptive, the whole class is penalised by being kept in after class (I did say primitive!).
Gasp! - penalise the whole class - that's not fair. Surprisingly, it is fair, because the class as a whole has the responsibility to maintain order, not just the teacher. I'll manage the class if I have to - but I'd rather teach than be constantly punitive. Peer intervention is often more effective, can be less disruptive and the student-teacher relationship strain is reduced - attention seeking behaviour from peers quickly turns negative and the behaviour stops. It doesn't work with the next tier of students (as groups of disengaged/struggling students need other strategies and higher levels of intervention). It's a strategy you have to be careful with and you need the goodwill of some students in the class to make it work.
If it is working, the good kids won't object because the more popular disruptive students are quickly getting less popular.
Individual achievement is celebrated but rarely extrinsically rewarded. The exception is that I'm always on the lookout for kids that have discovered what it takes to be a future focused 'student' and promote them into higher classes. It's always a pleasure to say to a former challenging student, "Grab your bag and head down the hall. Your work here is done."
Truth be told, the students are ok and once you understand how they think (since I grew up around my school, I probably picked it up quicker than some), they gave me a job when I needed one five years ago and I have enjoyed it. Not the most glamorous job, but it is challenging and rewarding.
Probably the hardest time is capturing the kids and positioning them for learning. Each teacher does it a little differently, but I do have a few tricks.
The most effective strategy is creating a rapport with the kids by making them understand that teaching 30 individuals is near impossible, but everyone benefits by being part of a class. My strategies for this are quite primitive, but they are effective, especially with the second tier of students - where my teaching interests lie.
Struggling students know that they find it hard to rival the top students and seek attention in other often negative ways. To counter this I leverage a range of rewards and penalties that focus on team behaviour. The class gets a high test average (greater 70% mean), I get the class some party food. The class is working hard, the entire class gets reward points. Groups of students working well also receive reward points. The class gathers 100 reward points, we have a game session (to get 100 points we're ahead of the programme anyway). Students now have a real reason to help each other. Contrariwise, if some students get disruptive, the whole class is penalised by being kept in after class (I did say primitive!).
Gasp! - penalise the whole class - that's not fair. Surprisingly, it is fair, because the class as a whole has the responsibility to maintain order, not just the teacher. I'll manage the class if I have to - but I'd rather teach than be constantly punitive. Peer intervention is often more effective, can be less disruptive and the student-teacher relationship strain is reduced - attention seeking behaviour from peers quickly turns negative and the behaviour stops. It doesn't work with the next tier of students (as groups of disengaged/struggling students need other strategies and higher levels of intervention). It's a strategy you have to be careful with and you need the goodwill of some students in the class to make it work.
If it is working, the good kids won't object because the more popular disruptive students are quickly getting less popular.
Individual achievement is celebrated but rarely extrinsically rewarded. The exception is that I'm always on the lookout for kids that have discovered what it takes to be a future focused 'student' and promote them into higher classes. It's always a pleasure to say to a former challenging student, "Grab your bag and head down the hall. Your work here is done."
Western Australian Secondary Mathematics Teachers Group
If you are a WA secondary mathematics teacher and would like to join a local online teachers forum (there's 25 or so of us so far), join Edmodo as a teacher (it's free and takes half a minute to join) and use groupcode tp39qk. There's a discussion on national curriculum, IT usage and a growing list of upper school investigations.
After a week or so I'll change the group code to keep kids out, so join soon if this may be useful to you!
Russell.
After a week or so I'll change the group code to keep kids out, so join soon if this may be useful to you!
Russell.
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Survey and stats results
I quickly graphed the survey that's been running this year. It's interesting to note that the majority of readers are teachers and students (students form the majority of the other category). The proportions have stayed roughly the same after a spike with a load of students at our school realising that I was posting calculator tips here.
From analytics, I can see that students are most interested in graphics calculator help, many hits from the simultaneous equations page, and for teachers many of the entries about IWBs and pay claims are read.
Parent spikes in usage come around NAPLAN time.
This sort of information gives me better guidance about what people want from the blog, what to write and when.
Similarly I can see that the readership is growing steadily, although growth has been impacted by my masters, as I've posted fewer articles. Hopefully this will improve as I become better at managing my time.

I try and keep readership around 20% (<5 secs indicates that a reader has not found what they are looking for). Generally, the 20% is what forms a readership. Cold canvassing rates are <1%, so I consider 20% reasonable since people have actively searched for information to find the blog.
Nearly all searches are done through google.
From analytics, I can see that students are most interested in graphics calculator help, many hits from the simultaneous equations page, and for teachers many of the entries about IWBs and pay claims are read.
Parent spikes in usage come around NAPLAN time.
This sort of information gives me better guidance about what people want from the blog, what to write and when.
Similarly I can see that the readership is growing steadily, although growth has been impacted by my masters, as I've posted fewer articles. Hopefully this will improve as I become better at managing my time.

I try and keep readership around 20% (<5 secs indicates that a reader has not found what they are looking for). Generally, the 20% is what forms a readership. Cold canvassing rates are <1%, so I consider 20% reasonable since people have actively searched for information to find the blog.
Nearly all searches are done through google.
Promethean IWBs, Equation editor, fxDraw and Classpad manager
This is a momentus day for those of us using Promethean boards.. Activboard now has equation editor - the one we know and love/hate from Word.
Yay! Go forth and press that update button.
Oh, and those of you that wish to use classpad manager and fxdraw on a mac winOnX does the job for about 5 dollars (thank Hieu for that!) but lacks some functions for updates and the clipboard.
Those of us that need a mac to run Excel in a windows environment (because Excel on mac corrupts our marksbook files), classpad manager and fxdraw can try VMware, but it requires an IT guy to fiddle with it (whereas winOnX is simple but has less functionality).
Yay! Go forth and press that update button.
Oh, and those of you that wish to use classpad manager and fxdraw on a mac winOnX does the job for about 5 dollars (thank Hieu for that!) but lacks some functions for updates and the clipboard.
Those of us that need a mac to run Excel in a windows environment (because Excel on mac corrupts our marksbook files), classpad manager and fxdraw can try VMware, but it requires an IT guy to fiddle with it (whereas winOnX is simple but has less functionality).
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
The last week
Looking back over the week, kids have been preparing for exams in year 8,9 and 10. There is a decided lack of urgency in their preparation which is something that needs correction. In designing the exams, I focused on the DET C grade descriptors which provides a broad brush of what a C student should be able to do. From classwork I'll select the A's and B's.
I'll admit to being frustrated with the exam process. Test the A candidates properly and the 2nd tier lose motivation, fail to test the A candidates adequately and they get lazy and overconfident. The middle ground where an exam works for both can be hard to find and I'm loathe to split the exam as this hasn't worked in the past either.
At least their final assessment for the term we identified those with independent learning capabilities. It was a quadratics investigation run over two periods followed by a test. 3A candidates were able to identify connections to prior learning and make connections between turning point form and transformations. C students missed the connection even after being taught the material explicitly.
The edmodo portal is filling the OTLS hole well. Past exam papers, course outlines, grades, homework and boardwork are all being exposed to students at point of need. It has been a few years coming but it finally fills the gap between the digital student and the classroom.
The next two years will be challenging, finding ways of delivering my yr 10's to university. Mixed 11 & 12 classes have a breadth of spread of ability and maturity. Although we have an above expectation pass rate and we now deal with late maturation a lot better than in the past, we still have a long way to go.
I'll admit to being frustrated with the exam process. Test the A candidates properly and the 2nd tier lose motivation, fail to test the A candidates adequately and they get lazy and overconfident. The middle ground where an exam works for both can be hard to find and I'm loathe to split the exam as this hasn't worked in the past either.
At least their final assessment for the term we identified those with independent learning capabilities. It was a quadratics investigation run over two periods followed by a test. 3A candidates were able to identify connections to prior learning and make connections between turning point form and transformations. C students missed the connection even after being taught the material explicitly.
The edmodo portal is filling the OTLS hole well. Past exam papers, course outlines, grades, homework and boardwork are all being exposed to students at point of need. It has been a few years coming but it finally fills the gap between the digital student and the classroom.
The next two years will be challenging, finding ways of delivering my yr 10's to university. Mixed 11 & 12 classes have a breadth of spread of ability and maturity. Although we have an above expectation pass rate and we now deal with late maturation a lot better than in the past, we still have a long way to go.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Higher education
As a wannabe researcher, I look forward to research cycles and finding things that I can bring back to the classroom. It's also good to know things that can refocus a discussion in a direction that can be more fruitful in terms of outcomes.
My thing for today is edmodo - a web2.0 technology bringing a limited facebook environment to the classroom. It may be what we all hoped OTLS was going to be. It's being used in some of the private schools around Perth and may be worth a look.
This has been a strange week as I decide whether to restart my research or seek L3CT as many have recently suggested. One process enhances my ability as a teacher and the latter recognises my achievements whilst providing a significant increase in salary. As someone seeking continuous improvement, I'm not sure I could sustain my interest long enough to complete the L3CT process for fundementally only monetary gain nor am I sure that I have the resources and support available to complete my postgrad whilst on full load.
My thing for today is edmodo - a web2.0 technology bringing a limited facebook environment to the classroom. It may be what we all hoped OTLS was going to be. It's being used in some of the private schools around Perth and may be worth a look.
This has been a strange week as I decide whether to restart my research or seek L3CT as many have recently suggested. One process enhances my ability as a teacher and the latter recognises my achievements whilst providing a significant increase in salary. As someone seeking continuous improvement, I'm not sure I could sustain my interest long enough to complete the L3CT process for fundementally only monetary gain nor am I sure that I have the resources and support available to complete my postgrad whilst on full load.
At this time in a career it can be difficult, watching those around you seek and get promotion whilst trying to remain focussed on why you started teaching. The L3CT benefits are particularly suspect when considering the choice in this way.. No sane person starts teaching for the money - and that's the primary benefit of L3CT.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Games that work in the classroom
The following games are the ones I've found best work in the classroom. They're quick to learn, easy to find, under an hour to play and a bit of fun.
I'd have a set of these in every classroom with kids over 12:
Citadels
Dixit (replaced Apples to apples on this list)
Carcassone
Ticket to ride (longest game on list, most bits to lose)
Nuclear war
Set
For Sale
Lupus in Tabula
Gloom (be a little careful with this one)
The following games have worked with subsets of kids:
Wrath of Asharladon (for kids wanting to try D&D)
Battlelore or Stronghold (for kids liking medieval warfare)
Pitchcar (for kids that like building things)
Tumblin Dice (for kinaesthetically minded)
Space hulk (small skirmish game)
No connect four, chess, draughts, chinese checkers, uno, monopoly or scrabble. I leave these to other classes.
I'd have a set of these in every classroom with kids over 12:
Citadels
Dixit (replaced Apples to apples on this list)
Carcassone
Ticket to ride (longest game on list, most bits to lose)
Nuclear war
Set
For Sale
Lupus in Tabula
Gloom (be a little careful with this one)
The following games have worked with subsets of kids:
Wrath of Asharladon (for kids wanting to try D&D)
Battlelore or Stronghold (for kids liking medieval warfare)
Pitchcar (for kids that like building things)
Tumblin Dice (for kinaesthetically minded)
Space hulk (small skirmish game)
No connect four, chess, draughts, chinese checkers, uno, monopoly or scrabble. I leave these to other classes.
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Different forms of compromise
There are different forms of compromise. The common and often poorer solution is to take two productive but polar view points, mash them together and end up with a result worse than either of the original suggestions. In this instance often neither side is willing to respect the view of the other and a compromise is the only solution - ill will felt on both sides and the solution is truly compromised.
A second type of compromise is to allow one or both methods to proceed and then objectively evaluate which is the better method. This is much harder to do, is rarer for the management required to position the parties positively, but shows real leadership when done well. Hopefully a third solution could be developed in this instance, superior to the original ideas and developed by all interested parties and that was not compromised by process (in the true spirit of searching for a win-win).
Sadly, in our land of committees and the wariness of managers to take the time required to make gutsy decisions, the perils of the first solution occur all too often. It is also frustrating to watch scrutiny be attacked as criticism when questioning whether a method is valid or whether a better solution exists. The scrutiny is interpreted as disharmony and the opportunity for developing innovative solutions is lost.
A second type of compromise is to allow one or both methods to proceed and then objectively evaluate which is the better method. This is much harder to do, is rarer for the management required to position the parties positively, but shows real leadership when done well. Hopefully a third solution could be developed in this instance, superior to the original ideas and developed by all interested parties and that was not compromised by process (in the true spirit of searching for a win-win).
Sadly, in our land of committees and the wariness of managers to take the time required to make gutsy decisions, the perils of the first solution occur all too often. It is also frustrating to watch scrutiny be attacked as criticism when questioning whether a method is valid or whether a better solution exists. The scrutiny is interpreted as disharmony and the opportunity for developing innovative solutions is lost.
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