Thursday, August 28, 2014

Back at the 'Chalk Face'.

Part of my role as a school leader is to carry out observations and modelling sessions with staff to inform professional development, ensure support systems where needed, set goals with teachers, observe best practice at work and stay informed of current practice.   I thoroughly enjoy this part of my job and feel very fortunate to be able to observe such professionalism and dedication at work.  I believe that as a leader, it's important that I stay in touch with 'teaching' and the nuts and bolts of the job. 
In reflection of this role, I have to ask myself - "Am I critical in my observation of others?" "Is the feedback and feed forward I am giving of high value?"   "How do I inform the practice of experienced and expert teachers?"
I'm of the belief that, as a leader it's important that I can 'walk the walk and not just talk the talk'.  So, this week I asked a colleague to observe me teaching a writing session in her class.  This is a very experienced teacher and I don't consider myself a 'model' of best practice to her, as all the new learning and PLD I've experienced has been alongside her and a few others since I started teaching at the school.  I asked if I could do a lesson in her room and if she would write up an observation.  You can see my plan for the lesson below, along with the teaching goals I had.  I was keen to see the lesson through her eyes and read her feedback and feed forward.

I felt the lesson went well, and I really enjoyed focusing on the 'dialogical practice' and generating 'learning conversations' with the year 3/4 students in her class.  It did go on a bit longer than I'd originally planned, and the duration of the lesson was noted during the obs.  I was a little unsure as to the level I had projected the lesson at, but I knew that I wanted to challenge the class with activities that required critical thinking, so went with the focus of careful scaffolding throughout the lesson.   The students responded well to the 'say it' structure of the conversations and this strategy proved very successful in developing the learning intention for the lesson which was to "elaborate on ideas".
The reason I wanted to do this particular lesson was in part in response to the feedback we received from researchers at the Manaiakalani Hui which took place on Friday last week.  We already recognise that our students benefit from sharing their ideas before committing to paper and researchers have found that 'expert' teachers promote co-construction of writing more than twice as much as others. 
Other feedback received focused on depth of thinking and expert teachers were once again acknowledged as promoting more critical and strategic thinking in their lessons than others.   I was very interested in what the researchers found around student activities and the reflection of synthesis and creation.  Expert teachers were identified as promoting DLOs (digital learning objects) and having students creating them, themselves.
They also used open ended templates, and gave more extended reading and writing opportunities.  This information further fuels my goals in coaching and guiding teachers in their professional learning and when given the opportunity I will endeavour to further my own practice in developing these areas.

1 comment:

  1. You are most Welcome Michelle. It is great to work with people who have true ethics for the profession.

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