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Friday 16 April 2021

Reading Observation Hui conversation

Hui - Dr Rebecca Jenson 

Talk about change to making the change.

We know that we are going to be judging the teaching, we know this implicitly. The teachers we view also know that they are being judged, even if we say we aren't. It is implicit. 

A way of thinking is about taking the snapshot and having those professional conversations.

Snapshot - 'taking a photograph' of what is happening and then comparing it to what it looked like before. (Summative) This is what has always been done by Woolf Fisher but now moving towards us doing this.

When you see something you code it as ... i.e. when you moderate writing it gets coded as ...

Formative Leadership functions to have professional conversations to make a change. 

In terms of the snapshot, we are looking for what we have seen and what we haven't seen. 

Is it a vase or a cup? = when we see an item with flowers but has a handle, we need to know if we are deciding if it is a vase or a cup.


Diverse Texts:
Windows & Mirrors - our students need both when learning.

Teach Learners to Think and Question:
It is the ako part - working with the learners to shape this.

Discussion around the question: What do we see is the strength in our classrooms around these 5 things?
  • When teachers are working with learners are they creating learners who think and answer, not think and question. 
  • The variance between teachers/schools is huge, so it is hard to answer the question "what do we do well already"
  • What barriers do cultures create around the idea of questions?
  • Do we teach the skills to disagree with each other?
  • Saying to students  - How does talk help you learn? Write down the rules for your classroom around talk. These two questions/thinking can create a picture of the realities of talking in the classroom
  • One member reflected on the energy put into the create tasks as opposed to the teaching of the task. Perhaps this isn't the best for students. 
The observation tool is built around the 5 areas above. 

One way to think about it in terms of observations: We are looking at how much pollen is in the hive, so if one bee only brings back a small amount it doesn't matter. 

Why? Our reading data  - principals have looked at the data are wanting to focus on improving reading 
Identify trends to improve student outcomes 
Wide range of snapshots across the country 
Identify the good oil 

School leaders PLG - ask them to summarise the why? Why are we doing these observations?





Manaiakalani TOD Workshop 1 & 2

Workshop 1

Surfing Semantic Waves 
Dr Jannie van Hawes

Semantic - meaning-making

We want to take students from text simple to text complex.

Newsela Max - you can change the level of complexity of the texts to fit with your students.

We want to surf our students down and then up again in the complexity of text. 


When we put together the 'learning' we need to start with the nugget of the learning, the key to what we want the students to walk away with and then moving onto what we need to do to create support in order to help them get to the complex. 

The workshop did leave me with some questions around how taking texts, rewriting it for the learners supports the high leverage practise of authentic texts? I also wonder if we as educators set glass ceilings for our students because we 'know' where they are at? Finally, I wondered about how, with many of these things being focussed on ESOL, this concept sits after our morning session looking at valuing the first languages of our learners?

Many questions to ponder and discuss with others that attended this session. 

Workshop 2

Engage the high school reader with Multimodal Resources
Maria Krausse and Kerry Boyde-Preece from MET


When using Multi-Modal are looking at two types of engagement - behavioural (the hook) and cognitive (T-shaped/text sets).

Many different places you can find content. 


There are some practical suggestions for high school teachers to make it more engaging.


I really liked the idea of using a snapshot from a student's blog and then linking to the actual blog. 

The presentation was really practical and allowed for teachers to see many examples of how they could take multi-modal and fit it within a high school context. 










Manaiakalani Teacher Only Day - Key Note - Dr Rae Si'ilata and Kayla Hansell

 Link to Presentation

Rae and Kayla began by sharing their pepeha, helping to establish where they have come from, who stands behind them and who helped to shape where they are today. 

Rae shared how she started a school in Samoa but that she would do it again by coming at learning from the place of language ... using bilingualism to shape learning. Language revitalisation is the key to connecting to our learners and their whānau. This is directly linked to culture and language and revitalisation.

Pikipiki hama kae vaevae manava - Join the outriggers to share life


Privilege the native speaker in the room!

High Leverage Practises are underpinning why were are focussing on Reading. 

In second language spaces, we do not separate the reading, writing, listening and speaking. We integrate.

Listening reading viewing - input channels
Speaking writing presenting - output channels
6 modes of communication we need to be integrating. 

What are Māori medium doing that isn't happening in English medium - they are achieving much better in Māori than in English medium. 



ESOL = English for Speakers of Other Languages - they are NOT ESOL children - we need to add English not replace other languages with English.


The government gives some system-level support for 5 languages but not all Pacifika languages. We need to give support for ALL Pacifika languages. Due to the colonisation of Pacifika places, New Zealand has the constitutional responsibility to care for these places. 


Bilingual = On top it looks like one tree but underneath the ground, it is many roots combined. Input one language - make meaning in main language - output in 

School English isn't the only English 

"Each learning area has its own language or languages."
An anecdotal story of a Science Teacher who was a Mandarin speaker, who allowed her mandarin speaking students to unpack the learning in mandarin and then output in English and their English understanding went through the roof. 


We want our tamariki to be critical of power.

We all carry our own worlds around in our heads ... we make predictions based on our own context.

Fill in the blanks:


What do you read here? Was it close to what is below?


Kayla Hansell shared some practical things to consider as we plan for our classrooms.



Slide 68 and 69 from the slide presentation have specific links to examples of reo being used to encourage engagement and amplification through a non-english worldview. 

















Facilitator Day - Hui (Day 3)

An overview of our Facilitator Day

Pat Sneedon

Pat, the Chair of the Manaiakalani Trust, came along and shared today. He discussed what a treasure we are, how our rolls allow us to move our kaupapa forward. We are here to give support our low deciles schools to move our learners forward. To bring equity to the education sector. 

Pat was compelling and rousing, bringing reality and vision to the room. As a colleague said, it is always great to hear from Pat.

Makaore 

If Māori and Pacifica aren't achieving then it isn't them, it is us!

Demographics = 40 kura are Rumaki/Immersion and 33 Ruareo/Bi-lingual within the wider Manaiakalani Programme Outreach

Level 1 = 80% or more in Reo

Level 2/3/4 = Bi-lingual

Lesson in Ngā tūkapi - Pronouns

Makaore took us through some work on using pronouns. It was a great session, with Mak using some 'friends' to help explain. With support from Vicki and Amie I was able to understand how to use them. It does feel a little confusing and I think it will take more than one session to get my head around it. 

I created a drawing based on Makaore's explanation and our activity. Thankfully it was a 'get up and move' activity which helped to understand what it was all about. 


DFI - Vicki Archer

Tuhi Mai Tuhi Atu and Cybersmart Curriculum




Saturday 13 February 2021

Dare to Lead Podcast

Brenē with Abby Wambach on the New Rules of Leadership

Wolfpack by Abby Wambach 


Abby and Brenē break down the 8 rules that Abby has written in order to turn around the rules that women in leadership often live by. 

Leadership based in honour is so important. 

Failure: Making failure fuel, you have three choices to make - blame, shame or claim. 

Angel City Women's Football Club

What a challenging kōrero these two women had. I was really inspired by the way Abby talked about how we as women need to be less afraid to put ourselves forward. I find that hard to do at times. Something to continue to mull over. 

Wednesday 20 January 2021

Apple iPad Training - Using Classroom (the teaching assistant) on an iPad

I attended an online training session into Classroom for the iPad today. Simon Shaw and his team are overseeing a range of trainings in a back to school series. 

  • Classroom is available on Macbook and iPad
  • Free to use
  • Only the teacher iPad needs Classroom installed
  • There is a difference between managed and unmanaged classes.

Unmanaged Classes 

Teachers sign up on their app - setting up their class and teacher name first. 





Students then go to their settings and add the code to their app. This will then push the student's iPad to the teacher so they are now able to be seen by the teacher.


Open = guided access so that you can lock them into that app

Navigate = navigate to a specific bookmarked site or use airdrop to push out sites you come across during a lesson

Hide = Takes students device back to the home screen

Mute = turns the sound off on all student iPads. Great if the sound is getting out of control.

Lock = Locks all the student iPads so you can have their attention. It is important to note that students can turn their iPad off and this will disable the lock screen.

Screen = this gives you the view of the live screen of each student. You can zoom in to see the screen for individuals. Screenshotting this will allow a record of the students work.

Groups = allows you to set up groups inside the classroom, such as a reading group. 

When you end a classroom session you will receive an overview of the session allowing you to see what apps have been used, the amount of time used. You can also drill down into individuals or an app to see more detail. If you want to keep the information simply take a screenshot.

Managed iPads (School owned devices)

The difference is that the school would have assigned Apple Id's that are used to sign up teachers and students. This way the IT gurus manage the iPad. Very similar to Hapara, but with the use of Apple ids. 

Helpful Resources:


Classroom for Mac

Application for my role:

Classroom seems like a sensible way to manage the use of iPad's for a classroom. I have seen this in action, mostly in the use of lock or sharing to an Apple TV. I think it would make sense to push this application for all the 1:1 iPad classes. The flexibility of managed and unmanaged would mean each school can work out how it uses them for their own context.

Something I need to find out is how each school manages their iPads so I am aware.

I would like to show teachers in the iPad classes the full range of functionality and will do so as part of the time I spend with them this year if they aren't aware.