Wednesday, 28 July 2021

Implement and Try #3...

During the holiday break I took some time to reflect on my teacher inquiry so far. Wanting to build on the foundations of what I have in place I started looking at ways other teachers get the talk going in maths lessons. One blog I found highlighted the reasons why we talk about maths. The bullet points below are the main takeaway I took from this post.

  • Talking about maths allows us to share our thoughts.
  • Talking about maths helps us clarify our own thoughts.
  • Talking about maths helps us understand what we do and do not understand.
  • Talking about maths prepares us for the future.
I know I've talked about this with my students but I now need to check that they understand these reasons. Talking about maths allows us to think about our own understanding of a concept or strategy. It allows us to use our own connections to agree or disagree with an idea. The power here comes from being able to justify our thinking by using maths language and strategies to show others why we think the way we do. Additionally being able to see how someone else's thinking is a more efficient way to find the answer helps to close gaps in knowledge. 

This week I introduced another idea I saw online. Instead of setting a challenge with an unknown answer I gave my students an incorrectly solved addition problem and challenged them to find, explain and fix the error. To help the talk flow I used the prompt 'How can you prove your answer is correct?' After solving the mystery the groups naturally moved around the room, eager to see if the others had found the error. 

I stepped back and listened  through the excited chatter to what was being said and heard that the LS2 Moves prompts we had been using, with absolutely no prompting from me, were being used to guide the conversations. The slide below shows the student voice collected. It was done very quickly but told me this style of facilitating conversation was a success.




I sourced this initial activity from Teachers Pay Teachers. My next steps will be to look at how I can incorporate and adapt some of the ideas in this resource to align with the content of our maths lessons. 



This is early days but I can't wait to see where this type of maths challenge takes us.

Monday, 26 July 2021

How I'm helping our staff as the in-school COL teacher for PBS...

As the in-school COL teacher for PBS part of my role is to guide the teacher inquiries of our staff. I have held this role for a number of years and because of that have had the opportunity to adapt and refine the ways I do this. If you're new to this role this post might be useful to you.

In Term 1 shared an overview of the purpose behind teacher inquiry at a staff meeting. Doing this helps us all get on the same page. Like many schools we have new staff this year so giving a shared message helps get the dialogue going. Graeme Aitken asked, “How can we come together and integrate our expertise and our knowledge to address significant problems?”  At our school we look at our data and use that information to guide our overall shared focus. We have found that by doing this for a number of years we get better traction as we have each other to bounce ideas off.  

From there teachers look at their own practice along with the data from their class, and begin thinking about how they are going to move forward in a way that allows them to grow professionally. It is at this stage that teachers are reminded that an inquiry into teacher practice is about the changes we make to help our students strengthen their connections to the learning. It is our what we do and how we do it that we unpack, reflect on and adapt.

The focus for Term 2 was to form our individual focus questions, choose a focus group, capture time point 1 data, and create a causal map to guide our inquiries. All of this data is then shared in a blog post that teachers can use as a foundation to build their inquiries on. To help ensure everyone is on the same page I created a google presentation (shared below) that aligns with the one the COL teachers use. This is a step by step 'how-to' so that everyone is empowered to begin their spiral of inquiry. I chose to share this DLO with a tern by term focus as that way no one is overloaded and everyone walks the journey together. 


In addition to this I have termly 'check-in' chats with everyone. This helps us stay on track and helps teachers to keep their inquiries alive by talking about what they have done so far and what their next steps will be. It is an opportunity to ask questions and have rich and real conversations that help us work towards our goal of accelerated shifts in student achievement. 

Sunday, 4 July 2021

Coding in Blocks and in Python...

Last week I was inspired by the coding challenges Karen Ferguson was teaching my Year 8 students so I jumped online and ordered my own micro:bit.Today I joined in the coding lesson and experimented with coding using Blocks and using Python. 

Blocks is the best place to start if you are a complete novice like me. However with Karen's help and by following the tutorials I was able to use Python successfully. 


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