Monday, July 30, 2012

Bonus Meeting - Dawn Colcott.

As many will know, Dawn Colcott was unable to attend the Bonus May Meeting we had scheduled.  Since then she has kept us in mind and again has an opportunity to do so.

We will be scheduling a special meeting for Thursday 9 August 2012.

This meeting will be held in an alternate venue due to the non-standard time.  We will be holding this meeting at the Albury Wodonga Community College.

The Meeting will begin at 5.30pm.

We will begin the meeting with an activity that encourages us to think about education as a whole.  The topic will be "What disappoints us most about education".  We encourage you to think a little about this on personal, school-based, regional, state, national and international basis.  We are going to limit you to a certain number of responses on the night so we DO encourage you to prioritize the issues you think modern Teachrs face in the world we live in.

Dawn Colcott from VIT will appear as a guest speaker from 6.30pm to 7.30pm.

This will be followed by discussion of Dawn's presentation (with Q&A time if people would like it), as well as further discussion of the "what disappoints us about education" activity and open member-driven discussion.

As usual, tea, coffee and hot chocolate will be provided as will a light evening tea.

You are welcome to join at 5.30pm to participate in the activity or join us at 6.30pm to attend the guest-speaker segment.

Please email Mel on wodongacrt@vit.vic.edu.au if you intend on attending.

Find full details on the following link;

http://wodongacrtsupportnetwork.blogspot.com.au/p/bonus-august-meeting.html


Regards,

Mel

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

2000 views in a month!

For the first time, our blog views (the main blog and PD information blog combined) have hit 2,000 views per month!




Thankyou everyone for your ongoing support and we hope you are getting what you need from our blogs!

Regards,

Mel.

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Johanne Butler, Lilydale CRT Network Coordinator

Johanne Butler, Lilydale CRT Network Coordinator!

Dawn Colcott from VIT emailed us a video today, from the "Today's Schools" YouTube channel.


Congratulations Johanne and thanks to Today's Schools for helping to raise awareness of CRT Networks!

Great job both of you, keep it up!

We have also added the Today's Schools to the list of YouTube channels in the sidebar.

Regards,

Mel.
Being Resourceful.

As a CRT we work in many classrooms, with many different classes and lots and lots of students.  Sometime we are given a program to teach and sometimes we are left to our own devices.

When I plan my own "fun" lessons as my backups, I try to use items that I would find in every classroom and does not take a huge amount of time to set up, make or need photocoping.  Knowing what you would normally find in the majority of classrooms you teach in can range from school to school and room to room.  Being resourceful is knowing where you can grab these things from and knowing there will be an amount suitable to your activity.  Art rooms are also a great place to familiarise yourself with.  Magazines and newpapers are usually always avaliable!

So lets start making a list of items you would find in MOST primary school classrooms.
  • grey lead pencils
  • white paper
  • coloured pencils/textas
  • ruler
  • newspaper
  • scissors
  • glue sticks/clag
  • books - story books/novels
  • whiteboard with whiteboard markers
I heistate to put coloured paper on the list at the this stage.  Coloured paper is something schools stock but students work their way through very quickly if teachers are not careful.  I try to use the colours that the students don't like to use for assignments or presentations because they are not bright or pleasing to the eye.  Brown, grey, white and black I find are the ones left over the most.  These colours are great if you direct the lesson in the right way.

The list above is not too bad but it's nothing that most of you don't know already.  We work with these things every day.  The spin I would like to put onto it is this;

Now it's time to work backwards. 

Rather than thinking about traditional activities or how to work these into these activities, work it the other way.  You know what you have and now you need the activities to go with these things.

Creating new and unique activities makes you memorable as a CRT.  New and unique activities are far more engaging than the things they have done many times before.

Because it's your activity, you know exactly what you want the students to get out of the lesson.  This gives you a firm grounding to work on the fly and modify the lesson to suit the needs of the class.  This is an excellent way to ensure you will be able to offer differential learning/inclusive learning in your activities.

Build in opportunities for student reflection.  Try and make sure there's "more than one way to solve the puzzle" to encourage the use of problem solving skills.

Try to include opportunities for some sort of personal aspect through the input of the student's imagination or something that has happened in their life.

Once you have this?  You now have a flexible activity usable at many year levels in almost any classroom.  If you get stuck without a lesson plan there's no scramble to get something working, you simply pull an engaging and enjoyable activity out of your bag and run with it.  You know precisely where to start, you know exactly where you are going and you have successfully turned a possibly stressful morning into an enjoyable activity for the students that will go off like clockwork!

I have a number of these activities and here's the most important part;  You can now enjoy your day as much as the students.  You can recognise the unique solutions to the activity and wonder at how ingenious even the very young can be.  You simply don't get this by giving them standard worksheets where completing them is done in the standard way.  Often the only sense of achievement students will get out of these sorts of activities is being the first to finish.  With your own, unfamiliar, activity?  This opens up the opportunity to congratulate not only the first to complete but congratulate each and every one of them on their own unique solutions.

You can walk away at the end of the day with each of them having learned, each of them having a little more self confidence and the satisfaction of knowing they will welcome you back next time.

Regards,

Mel.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Inspire Magazine - July 2012 Edition

Here is the June edition of the DEECD's Inspire Magazine.  Clicking on the picture will take you to the online version of the magazine.

Alternatively you can download the PDF version on the following link;


Happy reading,

Mel

Monday, July 16, 2012

Faezeh Parkes - CRT video - Behaviour Management.

We recieved an email today out of the blue from a Teacher named Faezeh Parkes, a Primary and Secondary CRT (mostly secondary) working in Melbourne, asking us to share her video with members.


Faezeh is a Mother of 3, now all grown up!  She has travelled the world including such far flung places as Laos, Ghana, Cook Islands, India, Japan and Iran.  She believes this experience helps her bring a sense of exuberance with her to the classroom and gives her a passion for inspiring students to be globally minded adults, tolerant of the differences they see in others.
"Secondary teaching is better for me...as I can then enthuse students with the concept of global citizenship!!  So much so that in the school, the students come up to me and say two things...either "Ms, remember I am a precious jewel"  (because that is my philosophical base and the students know it) or "we too want to be global citizens...and how do we go about it?"  To which I answer if you can be accepting of your boss - when you grow up -  being a Jew, a Christian, a Hindu, a Bahai, a Buddhist, a Moslem etc...then you can be global citizens" For some it has taken nearly three years to be accepting of any other religion other than their own.  So it takes time and I have that time to give them global awareness. They still to this date are unaware of where I was born and it is of minimum interest to them."  
Under this video in Youtube there is about 3 pages of comments including added tips from other secondary teachers.  If you feel like reading them or adding your own advice, you can do it here;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BDAEBMFycIk&feature=player_embedded#!

Thank you Faezeh!  We need more like you willing to step up, spread the passion for teaching and the wisdom they have gained from being a CRT.   Keep up the good work.

Regards,

Mel.
Dyslexia Support Services;

This is the website of Karen Starkiss who recently presented her "Creating a Dyslexia Friendly Classroom" PD for us.


On it you will find a number of resources for teachers and parents dealing with dyslexic students and children.

This is now a permanent feature in our Sidebar under the "Websites of Interest".

Enjoy ;)

Mel.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Encouraging Student Reflection!

While looking for presenters that were not only educational but thought provoking for our workshops, I ran across some research that students learn best when they are active participants in their own learning.  I've known this for a long time but I kept reading anyway to give myself a bit of a refresher course.

Yet again I found myself slogging my way through a lot of information that's really meant for full-time Teachers, based around long term planning and strategies that take time to implement and get the students engaged in.  That rely on being in the same classroom every day and integrating certain things into the normal function of your classroom.

For example, one of the things you run across is to tell students that "they own their own learning".  The last thing I need is a frustrated teacher telling me stories of how little Johnny or Jenny piped up and said "But Mrs L told us we own our own learning"...  Theories like these need time to implement and a guiding hand over a period of time so that the students gain a full understanding of what "owning your own learning" really means.

This doesn't mean this tool is taken out of your toolbox as a CRT!  It just means you need to integrate it into the way you teach or the way you plan your activities in a way that encourages the students to "own their own learning" without telling them about it.

Worksheets are the backstop of our profession.  When all else fails, there they are to give the students access to some learning when something has happened that leaves you totally unprepared.  Lets use these as a basis to explore ways to get students to "own the learning" with word searches.

Integrate Choice into your activities.

We often use word searches (for example) but word searches are just... word searches.  The words are there to find.  You either find them or you don't.  It's pretty cut and dried but how do you create some choice in the activity?
  • Choose a word search that lists the words to be found and look for the good ones that give a range of words (or find online tools to make your own!).
  • Now tell the students that they have to find 5 words, then stop.  They are only allowed to find 5.
  •  They then have to take those 5 words and write a sentence that says something about themselves, a friend, a toy they own or a memory.
 Now watch what happens.

The activity can now be approached in a number of ways.  They can search first and find 5 words then try to fit the words to one of the topics.  They can read the list, pick out 5 generic words that will fit almost anything.  They can decide what they would like to say up front and then pick 5 words from the list that lets them say it.

They have a choice in how they approach the activity now.

Focus on Process.

When they are done, talk about the choices the students made.  How did they approach it?  Could they have approached it another way?  Why did they choose that particular topic to write about?

Encourage them to explore why they, and others, did it a certain way.

Model.

Do the activity yourself.  Pick something interesting to them to write about.  Choose your words based on that topic.  Take your turn in explaining how you approached the activity, why you chose what you did, etc.

Then ask what they learnt.

This is an important one and again will give you a view into the thinking of your students.

This, in essence, shifts the focus from the activity from their result to what they have learnt.  It helps them understand that grades aren't the ultimate goal, they are just the way to measure how much you have learnt.  In the young ones it is a way to get them understanding that school is all about learning even though their parents and teachers put a heavy emphasis on "scores" when their report comes out.

For the older students it starts to become an arena for collegial learning.  By discussing these aspects they can see how other students have approached the given problems giving them access to alternate problem solving skills and schools of thought.  They can see that alternate answers that may not be as eloquent as their own receive a higher "score" because it contains more information than their own.  It will help them understand that paying attention in class, further research and essay writing skills all play a part in good grades and help them to understand the best place to spend their time.

In the example above, a high school student is given the information necessary to come to the understanding that their essay writing skills are the least of their worries.  They need to spend more time on further research, as an example, rather than redrafting their essay that extra two times to get it "perfect".

It is the difference between "what to answer", which is the essay question, and "how to answer", which is how to choose the most relevant way to answer the question.

Think of this in terms of your own time too.  As a CRT you may not have the time to make yourself available after class for students to visit you and discover why they only got 25/50 for their latest essay.  As a full-time teacher, dealing with this in class is not only a learning experience for the students, it maximises the time you have available for students who need genuine help rather than those who simply need a nudge in the right direction.

Regards,

Mel.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Your Voice - take care of it!!

Winter is in full swing now with this morning's temperture being 1 degree (celsius) at 8.30am.  You may be noticing that many full time teachers have been taking time off due to illness.  All the coughing going on for them and you can have a serious impact on your voice!

A couple of weeks ago, I didn't really have a voice.  This is only the second time in my eight years teaching that I have lost my voice (the first time being in my first 9 months in the profession).  During this week I continued to teach but looked at different strategies that I had seen other teachers use or talked about.  This was interesting, my main behaviour techniques would not work and I felt a little lost.

Now don't get me wrong, I don't yell.  I have come a long way in my time teaching and I found out early on that yelling doesn't work.  I try to keep my voice in the middle of the volume range and sometimes when I need the classes attention, I would raise my voice for one word.  This would grab their attention allowing me to drop the volume and talk to the class normally.

I had a conversation a couple of years ago with a group of career full time teachers at lunch time.  In between sandwiches, fruit and coffee, we talked about which engagement techniques they had seen work in classrooms.  Quiet teachers!  I nearly feel off my chair.

What?  How could this be?
I continued to listen carefully to the conversation and what unfolded in front of me was a technique that challenged my way of teaching.  The conversation turned from different techniques to why this technique in particular works.

Take a class of students sitting on the floor listening to a story.  The lower your voice is the more the students need to lean in and pay attention.  The leaning forward reaction supports the engagement as students don't have as many distractions between themselves and the teacher.  As long as the students were not sitting on top of each others laps, I found this technique intreged me. 

The second was the tone and volume of the teachers voice.  The lower it got, the more the students needed to work to listen.  This, I thought, could work both ways.  The quietier the teacher got the more students you would have fooling around or losing interest so I was a little skeptical.  In the end I gave it a try and I found that it works wonders.  I found I wanted to talk quietier for the benefit of the engagement with the students.  Students were paying more attention to what I was saying and understanding instructions better.

The other technique I used, and I have always tried to use in my teaching, is some sign language.  I teach my students specific signs that I am able to use to ask questions or identify silly behavours and emotions.  These signs don't need any voice and the students help others that struggle to remember the signs.

I also use small messages on the whiteboard.  For the 2/3 class that I had during this week, I made sure the words were age appropriate and the sentences were simple, sometimes including a picture or drawing.  It turned my husky voice into an engaging and thoughtful activity that the students had to participate in to make work.

I found that not having a fully functional voice made me look at different teaching techniques and strategies that I wouldn't normally look at.  As CRTs we have many different things stopping us from exploring new techniques due to the nature of our work.  I encourage you to try different things and reflect on how these techniques change your classroom, how students react and how that effects their behavour and engagement.

Below is a video on how to take care of your voice aimed at teachers.


Sorry, the uploader has disabled embedding!

As well as some articles


Regards,

Mel

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

How powerful can internet learning be?

I don't think I have brought this up before but my husband flies Radio Controlled aeroplanes and has been doing so for almost a year now.  Very early on he was flying with a friend who had more experience than himself but he moved away for work, leaving my husband mentorless.

He used blogs, youtube videos, websites, online forums and the like to teach him quite a lot.

Both to build


and fly his planes.


As you can tell it's not just the basics he's been able to come to grips with and he's been flying RC planes for under a year.  He's learnt about flying, construction, electronics, aerodynamics and the physics involved in inertia and momentum.  Answering one question often leads him to another and he's always able to go out and find the answers.

You may have also watched some of our PD workshop feedback videos which is something he does for the Wodonga CRT Support Network.  He's continually improving how he puts these (and his own) feedback videos together, using the internet as his main source of information for new tips, tricks and tecnhiques.

The point here isn't to stroke my husband's ego (although he'd like me to inform you that you should feel free to point out how awesome he is at any time you like).  It's to illustrate, in a visual way using something people understand is difficult, how potent a source of information social networking and the internet in general can be.  In just about any arena you want to learn in.

If there's something you or your students want to know?  It might take a while but you can find it, and you can find out a lot. Between Facebook, Youtube and online forums just look at what my husband has learnt to do.  You and your students can do it too!

Regards,

Mel.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Blog Spotlight; "What Ed Said"

"I once spent a whole day in a professional development workshop for second language teachers and I learned how to make a fold-up book. That’s all. Nothing else."

I found the post that is quoted from shortly before my first full run at being a presenter for a workshop (my "literacy games" workshop).

I'd also been to a workshop the week before where I learnt the name of something I already do and got a flowchart I'd never seen before.  Not that there was no useful information on offer, far from it, I'd just seen the majority of it before.

Needless to say Ed's post really hit home.  It's well worth the read if you are presenting workshops, looking at starting to present workshops or just want a few tips for the classroom.

10 tips for workshop presenters any teachers… on "What Ed Said".

What Ed Said is one of the Teacher blogs in our sidebar and I often wander over and have a look at "What Ed Said".  This time though, rather than just leave it in the sidebar, I think it's worthy of putting a spotlight on the post!

Regards,

Mel.
The 2012-2013 funding is in!

This year's funding is in.  Budgets are tight everywhere in education and being funded through the DEECD means their tight budget has made our budget a bit tighter too!  It's less than we have received in previous years but there is absolutely no reason to panic!

We will keep operating the way we have been operating in the last 9 months.  Between the new funding, the amount left over from last year and our Officeworks sponsorship we have more than enough funding and supplies to keep the status quo for the next 12 months.

There will be absolutely no drop in the number of workshops we offer, no drop in the quality of presenters we can offer and the catering quality can stay exactly where it's at too!

Meetings have always been funded through the Network and not the DEECD so there will be absolutely no change in those either!

Everything is right on track for the 2012-2013 financial year!

I would like to say congratulations to all VIT CRT Network Coordinators!

When the initiative that funds PD was announced, it was made clear that it was only guaranteed for 2 years.  This year marks the 3rd year of funding!  Network Coordinators have done a job worthy of continuing the CRT Professional Learning Support Initiative for another year.

If you have made use of the PD offered by a VIT CRT Network?  Please send your coordinator a letter thanking them for the job they are doing, keeping you supplied with CRT relevant PD.

If you aren't a member but have attended CRT Network PD?  You can find a list of the networks with contact emails here;

http://www.vit.vic.edu.au/teachersupport/Pages/CRTnetworks.aspx

Regards,

Mel.