Friday, 21 November 2014

For every ending a new beginning

For every ending, a new beginning 

 Photo by Ffaalumni https://www.flickr.com/photos/ffaalumni/9045245222/in/photostream/

I began this blog with thoughts about embarking on a new journey. It has certainly been that for me. This was a new course with a new text and, of course, a new set of students. Stepping into new territory is usually scary – especially if you are on the journey because someone or something else determined you were going there. And this particular course was not a choice for you so… 

I chose this journey and this class. I like IS students and since my own background was secondary I feel comfortable in that environment.  Thursday was at an inconvenient time for me. And, I knew before I began that this would be an uncomfortable fit for some of you and that might cause tension. In spite of knowing this I ventured forth. Why? Why not chose a class at a time without a previous conflict and something easier (like a grad class with 10 or so students)?  Because I so deeply believe that education can and should look different than the traditional model that is no longer engaging students (if it ever did).  And you are the future. You can create the NEW STORY.

Self-assessment

So many of you want more description of what this looks like. But the learner determines what authentic self-assessment (AaL) looks like.  The goal of Assessment for Learning is to create a culture of learning rather than a culture of grades. The ultimate goal is for a student to have the skills to self-assess by the end of the K-12 journey. That is, students are capable of:

1.     Accurately assessing their own work for its quality and completeness
2.     Metacognition: Knowing how they learn and then applying this learning.
3.     Setting goals for future learning based on the self-assessment.

So I expect you to reflect upon your performance in this course. First you need to decide what is worth reflecting upon – hence some kind of assessment tool that sets out the criteria. Then you need to do the assessment – which needs to have a reflective narrative component.   Below is an example of reflection by yours truly…

My metacognitive journey

Applying my philosophy of teaching/learning

I learned what seemed to be the “secrets” about teaching and learning when I taught high school – Phys. Ed., Health, English and Science. I say “secrets” because I learned them by challenging experiences and baptism by fire and not because anyone told me at teacher’s college or that it was the norm in my school.  After some years of experimentation I was excited by my hard won results – nothing really worth learning come easily. Not only did my high school students learn, they were engaged in the learning. In other words, I discovered that learning could be both exciting and FUN.  It was a revelation and made teaching enjoyable instead of a job shoving information down kids’ throats who preferred throwing spitballs. (I am mostly talking about Health, Science and English here as Phys. Ed. already follows some of the principles I learned).

Here are some of the principles I learned and that I wanted you to experience in this class:

All can succeed.

I am determined that you all can and will succeed.  To translate this into grades this means 75 or above. We both have roles in this happening successfully.

I believe in the growth mindset and the plasticity of the brain. That means if you (one in a class of proven successful university students) engage in the learning then you will succeed. But the key here is that you need to actually be here to engage in the learning. I know that – given the grade culture that we live in at this university - you will show up for class if it is a large part of the grade.  This accounts for the high % for participation in your grade composition. 

But “bums in seats” is not the whole story. I need you really THERE.... engaged in the learning.  That is your job. Remember the success criteria we established as a class for engagement? How well did you demonstrate those criteria?

How can I try to insure that you are engaged from a pedagogical perspective? This is my responsibility.

I need to apply what I learned in my teaching days.


Learn by doing

I’m not so convinced about learning styles. I think EVERYONE learns best by doing. That is why I give you class time for collaborative curriculum development and collaborative blogging. To consolidate the learning (from the text and lecture) you need to APPLY it. And I also believe that if you learn collaboratively the learning will stick.

Relevance

I believe that you will engage the learning if it is meaningful to you. Sometimes that is hard if the material is not intrinsically interesting and the only reason to learn it is for the test. 21st Century learning and curriculum building may be interesting to you or may not. It is very interesting to me - as I have seen an evolution in this over my career and I have been a part of that evolution. I believe I can enhance possible relevance for you by giving you the opportunity for hands-on learning.  Learn by doing.

Finding passion

I love it when I see students who are excited about their learning. I know the pleasurable surge of endorphins from learning itself .  It surprised me the first time I experienced it in my second year university.  I also love it when I see students think outside the box.  They are accountable to the requirements of learning, but also demonstrate the outcomes in some creative way. So I am excited when I hear about the passion-based learning movement and Genius Hour. I need you to have the experience of preparing for Genius Hour or it will be only words on a page. 



Modeling

Since I believe in experiential learning, I needed to ask how will you really learn the big ideas in this class if they are outside your experience?  I need to practice what I preach. Take AfL for example. What is the point in lecturing about AfL and only giving you summative assessments (AaL)?  That is why I have tried to give you feedback rather than grades, and experimented ever so briefly with strategies like Popsicle sticks (but you see you did remember them, even if not fondly). 

I have also repeatedly tried to voice my metacognition and tell you why I am doing what I am doing – this in part to alleviate any discomfort with such a seemingly unstructured learning environment.  I spent a lot of time structuring the seemingly unstructured learning environment. I hope you could hear/understand that most of things I did with intention. I did almost everything for a reason grounded in my personal beliefs about teaching and learning. And why one of the outcomes for this course was for you to BE open to the new and possibly unfamiliar.


Lifelong learning and making mistakes.

As you know I have had many years of educational experience. Yet I am still learning and I can’t seem to be able to pull out last year’s lesson plan and repeat it. There are too many exciting things happening in the world of education to fall back on what I have known. BUT, this inevitably leads to situations where I need to say, “I don’t know how to do this” and ask for your help. I wish that there had been no glitches but there were and you were gracious about it – and helpful. Thank you for your patience and for being my co-learners.  

My report card.

And how have I done? Like you, I have no “grade” from this class. As in your self-assessment, I am not the sole author of this story.  You are my co-authors. I can only fathom my results from your feedback in such things as exit cards, blogs, your “presence” in class, personal emails, classroom conversations, and curriculum projects, Genius Hours etc. I feel vulnerable writing this self-assessment (as you probably will too). I am keenly aware that your assessment might be very different than mine. Like you, I have no exemplars. 

From my perspective, I think almost everyone of you has tried to understand what I am doing and why.  You have filled the "seats with bums" – and have been largely engaged and open to whatever is in front of you. You have written good to terrific blogs. Some of the blogs are most attractive with interesting images and links and deserve a wider audience. You delivered some terrific Genius Hours that went beyond the call of duty and demonstrated what intrinsically motivated learning can look like. You contributed beyond my expectations to the curriculum research forum.  I am confident that the pieces to the curriculum puzzle will fall in place and that you will feel a sense of pride in the results. (You need to trust me on this one.) I know that most of your self-assessments will be thoughtful, reflective and authentic and not just trying to write what you think I want you to write. 

So I base my success on your success and I expect you all to be successful.  
flckr.com

The wheel turns full circle.  Next steps.  

The really fun part for me is that the wheel has turned full circle. The things I discovered by trial and error and came to believe so passionately as educational principles are now a part of the “new story”.  It is not just my story, but also an international movement toward learning that is constructivist, collaborative, experiential and inquiry-based. I thank your for being a part of this journey and hope you will take it forward in your next steps. 

For those of you who chose to continue this direction in optional course 4P29 (21st Century literacies) I promise a rich journey. We will be a small group who now have the theoretical framework for a deep understanding of the real world of 21st Century teachers. I expect it to be a rich and fascinating exploration. 








Tuesday, 11 November 2014

Update on the rest of the course






Hopefully you remember the point of exit cards and the role of AfL in addressing student issues.  The course changes in response to student needs. You said you needed more time on the curriculum design. So I have revised the syllabus to make Dec 4th the last night of class. You do not need to actually come to class but send your assignments to Sakai.

Revised Syllabus

9
Nov 6

Design Thinking
Curriculum work time. 

Blog
10
Nov 13
Genius Hour

Prepare presentation




11
Nov 20
21st Century Ed
21st Century Presentations



12
Nov 27



Curriculum work time


Self-assessment
FINAL BLOG

Dec 4




Self-assessment
FINAL CURRICULUM


Genius Hour

There are still about 30 who have not signed up. It is difficult then to know how many time slots we need for the night. So I have decided to move the FINAL BLOG unit Nov 27. (Of course you can always prepare it for Nov 27th if you want to get it out of the way.) Time slots at the moment will be about 5 minutes of actual presentation time. You are to present what you explored…not the total of the exploration. Tell us why you were interested in the topic and briefly what you learned that you did not know before. The time slot can’t really be extended much longer so if you go too long expect to be “cut off” before you finish – the bell will ring.  I am confident that in 5 minutes you might be able to ignite the passion in others too. When the dust settles and if we have time we can use the extra time for curriculum design.

Self-assessment Task 
Now due Dec 4th, 2014

You also said that you wanted more explanation on the self assessment. You need to create an assessment tool to assess your own performance in EDUC 4P19 this fall.It can be a checklist, rubric, portfolio, etc. First you need to decide on the criteria for success in this course. See the outcomes at the beginning of the Syllabus. This is an important decision because the tool you use can determine the depth of your assessment. If you look only at frivolous things, the assessment is frivolous. It should be about 5 to 6 pages and we don’t want just surface knowledge things, but any insights that you had in the course – deep knowledge hopefully (enduring understandings that you will carry with you).

In the course out line it suggests you consider:
Attendance-Engagement
Group contributions
Blog reflections/responses
Curriculum design
What I learned… See outcomes for this course
Content – KNOW
Skills – DO
Be


Rubrics for all activities


Criteria
Comments
Uses “I” rather than third person

Integrates personal experiences with other resources and course material.

Offers anecdotes or stories that are detailed enough to catch the reader’ attention.

Reflects upon connections to uncover new insights

Deals with significant issues or concerns

Demonstrates insights, and understands the appreciation of issue complexity. Considers various perspectives and viewpoints

Uses language conventions properly. Paper is well organized, coherent and is reader-friendly

Reference list if necessary



Hope this does it for your key questions up until this point. Don’t forget to send me your curriculum design for Part 1 by email. It is really important to get this part right or else the whole curriculum falters. This will be feedback (AfL).

Wednesday, 22 October 2014

Professionalizing Your Already Very Good Blogs

I have enjoyed reading your blogs. Lots of thoughtful comments and some evidence of deep understanding of the new story and its fundamental tenets. I wish I could read all of your bogs, as some are very illuminating and I learn a lot from reading them. In the next course EDUC 4P29 Critical Literacies across the Curriculum (an optional winter course) we will be looking at teacher blogs and seeing how a professional blog looks and the exciting things that teachers are actually doing with their blogs and professional learning.  But for now, I would just like to make a couple of comments on making your blogs as professional as possible. You have probably seen from your blog group how intriguing one can make the blog. Great images, interesting links and relevant YouTubes make blog reading a fascinating experience. I try to look at every link that is provided and some have taken me to new territory (thanks). This intense experience also makes assessing the blogs a very time consuming task.

Because we are giving comments online that can be accessed by anyone I have not been offering constructive criticism. So I'm asking you to do a little self-assessing.

  • Have you edited your blog thoroughly? There are some that have small, but telling, grammatical errors. (Maybe ask a critical friend to help edit it).  
  • Have you discussed something that connects to the course (readings or lectures)?  
  • Have you added relevant images, links and YouTubes? Have you given credit where credit is due? 
  • Connections to other blogs? literature? Are your references at the bottom of the page? 

Jeff Bullas.com

All these factors contribute to writing a great blog and prepare you for a future as a 21st Century teacher.  You can be the difference! You will be the .... 


afmie.org


Monday, 6 October 2014

Hands-on curriculum design - coming next!

One of the exit card questions is what I wanted you to learn this semester. The answer is in the KDB of your course outline. The biggest thing that I want you to demonstrate is OPENNESS to something new and WILLINGNESS to plow through the hard work of learning something new. 


There is still some confusion re assignments. For Genius Night preparation the week of Nov 11 to 13 you will create an inquiry on 21st Century education based on your own interest.  You will create the question and then explore/research the answer. You will present your research on the following week in some kind of multimodal presentation 9i.e. you use technology). This is a part of the participation "grade".

For the research article you will summarize the key points of an article you found on integrated curriculum (multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary or transdisciplinary).  This article is best if it has some numbers in it or evidence of some kind in it. It does not need to be an article that "proves" that integrated curriculum is the greatest. Some sources are Edutopia, Smart Brief, Professional Learning, Forum, Education Canada, OR Susan's Live Binders (see Resources in Sakai). Refereed articles would be great - especially with numbers - see high school journals or elementary ones. The level of education is not important. Also topics such as project-based learning or gifted education are good sources. You will write your review and post it on the Wiki in Sakai. This may change into a google.doc as we move through the course. Again this is a participation "grade".  

This week you will begin your actual curriculum design. Some of you have asked what the final product will look like. If you follow in your text you will find the pieces necessary for the project. If you are choosing a discipline-based project then you will follow the process outlined in Figure 3.1 and Figure 3.3. The chart below shows the steps if you are doing an interdisciplinary process but it works for disciplinary too except that there is not necessarily a horizontal scan (In English however there will be one). 





What will your work LOOK LIKE? 






Sample Unit - Grade 10 History - Canada's Person of Influence.


Presteps: Table 3.1, Figure 3.3

Step 1: What is most important to Know, Do and Be? 
Table 3.2, 3.3, Figure 3.4, Figure 3.5.


Step 2: How will you know when you know it? 
RPAT: Shadowed box on page 70 that describes the RPAT ( (table 3.4 gives you a checklist for the quality of the RPAT).
Assessment tools for the RPAT - Table 3.5, 3.6, 3.7 (you should have at least 2 samples).

Step 3: What will I do each day to prepare students for the RPAT? 
Table 3.8
Table 3.9 (Complete the chart for one learning goal).
Finish with at leaf 2 assessment tools that show how assessment is embedded into the instructional activities (Samples on page 78-88).

Checkbric for your work  Table 5.10

Checkbric for an integrated curriculum unit
Comments
Know your curriculum
Have I considered the unifying framework for my province (if there is one)?

Have I scanned the front matter of the curriculum documents of the subjects involved?



Know your students
Have learning preferences been considered? multiple intelligences?
Is there variety in both instructional strategies and assessment?
Have I differentiated or personalized curriculum in appropriate places?

Brainstorming for connections
Have I brainstormed for possible places where I might make connections with other subjects? teachers?
Have I brainstormed for possible experts in my community/ globally who might support the learning in this unit?


Scan and cluster
Have I done a vertical scan of two grades below and one grade above the target grade for each subject?

Have I clustered these outcomes into bundles that represent critical learning?

After reviewing the target grade in the horizontal scan, have I selected broad-based outcomes for a KDB?

Topic
Have I identified an age appropriate, relevant topic that is interesting to my group of students, yet linked to outcomes?

Unpacking curriculum outcomes


Have I unpacked broad-based curriculum outcomes and put this in a chart?

KDB Umbrella



Essential Questions
Have I created the KDB Umbrella to act as the focus for my unit?
Have I created Essential Questions to guide planning that are connected to the KDB?
Do my Essential Questions encourage inquiry and have the potential for complex answers?

Exploratory web
Have I brainstormed for activities/ assessments that are linked to outcomes and the KDB Umbrella in an exploratory web?

Rich performance assessment task
Have I clearly described a RPAT that will engage and challenge students?
Do students need to demonstrate the KDB? Is the Essential Question(s) addressed?

Assessment tools
Have I developed assessment tools to accompany the rich performance task?
Are rubrics created with explicit, meaningful and relevant descriptors?

Essential Question Web
Have I created a web to brainstorm for mini units for each Essential Questions? Have I revisited my instructional strategies/assessments so that they address the Essential Questions? Are all the instructional strategies aligned with  KDB and the RPAT?

Daily instructional activities/assessments
Have I created daily instructional activities/ assessments that lead to the rich performance task?
Are students receiving instruction in all aspects of the task that they need to demonstrate?
Have I created tools for instruction and AfL?
Is assessment as learning included?
Have I considered differentiation? personalization?
Are students active learners?

Alignment check
Have I gone back and forth to insure that my curriculum is aligned?  Is it aligned?


Table 5.10  A checkbric for reflection on designing an integrated unit

EDUC 4P19 co-created a participation checkbric. Here is what we have decided as a group will be assessed. Don't forget that completion of Genius Hour and the Research article are also part of participation. (A checkbric is like a rubric in that it describes the criteria for success but does not give levels of success - there is a space for comments only.) 

Learning Goal: I demonstrate engagement in EDUC 4P19.
Success Criteria are:
Attendance and lates (early leaving)

Engaged body language

Involved in discussions and furthers the discussion of others.

Using technology as a tool and not as a distraction

General engagement level
Self-assessment
Blog engagement level
Peer assessment of blog discussion



Looking forward to seeing you this week. 



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