Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from June, 2017

ACP -PROFESSIONAL ONLINE SOCIAL NETWORKS - Week 6 (week 30)

Using Social Media in the Classroom and Professional Life. Week 30 Applied Practice in Context I remember with real clarity the excitement and awe, a PLD session being taught (on a large desktop computer) how to search on the www and to connect by email, the possibilities at that time amazing, I was hooked. 25 years or so later I still embrace the concepts and platforms, after all social media is, due to its asynchronous nature, a powerful tool useful for opening the door to a multitude of learning opportunities for teachers and students alike, not bound by time nor location. There are a myriad of social media platforms developed and redeveloped, that are able to help teachers provide learning that is needs based and flexible with both time and location. “Volcanics “, and VLN being key access tools I believe in, safe sites where students and staff alike can seek information, share ideas and contribute to further knowledge. However the potentiality of social media enli...

Week 5 Applied Context in Practice

Legal and Ethical Considerations  According to the Code of Ethics for Certified Teachers, the professional interactions of teachers are  governed by four fundamental principles: ·          Autonomy  to treat people with rights that are to be honoured and defended ·          Justice  to share power and prevent the abuse of power ·          Responsible care   to do good and minimise harm to others ·          Truth  to be honest with others and self   When I read about the ethical problems considered by teachers today, and then also reflected on the huge paradigm shift we as teachers have been required to undertake as technology has been embraced in many fields in education, the technology field is to me the largest development to manage appropriately, however in whose eyes? Our st...

Applied Practice in Context Week 4

Indigenous Knowledge and Cultural Responsiveness in my Practice I personally am in the advanced years of my teacher practice. I know as a new teacher exposed to cultures that I had little or no knowledge of, and a pedagogy of the time that did not define collaborative or cooperative teaching, I was part of the sense of “blame” that was generated around historical colonialism was a societal concept that had been around for thousands of years. However, there was transition happening, family moves saw me interacting in different communities to the background of my early years. A large extended family who embraced inter cultural marriages,but had a lack of knowledge of their backgrounds saw a search for links in the family tree, a journey offshore to trace my own cultural history and the impact individuals decisions had on that history. Going to places where I could sense an incredibly strong sense of belonging and understanding of self, opened my receptiveness to those ...

Week 3 Applied Practice in Context

Contemporary Issues or Trends in NZ - Week 27 Modern Learning Environments The current  trend influencing and shaping Education both in New Zealand and globally is the building of, or re-purposing schools as Modern Learning Environments. Working in a new MLE (Modern Learning Environment) I see both the benefits and drawbacks, I still believe, as research shows, that the flexibility of the classroom, the collaborative learning that can, and generally does take place is we guide our students to being “21st century learners” who are, where possible,  digitally connected to a wider more global community has many benefits for most, however, evidence does state that, “academic research has traditionally struggled to isolate the impact of the space on learning.” The evidence, however, “does demonstrate the importance of a teaching and learning programme suited to the space. It suggests that the learning space must be explicitly considered as part of planning and deli...

Week 2 - Applied Practice in Context

Wha t is My Schools Culture? We are new this is our 5th year of operation, we are still developing, we are creating fresh beginnings, as we paddle our Waka together, the Culture is transitioning from a creation that was developed by the Ministry of Education with consultation from Community, The Establishment Board of Trustees, and the Foundation Staff. To a School which is proud to be developing a strong Culture of MANA values. - "Where MANA flows" Manaakitanga,  Ako,  Ngakau - Pono,  Awhina. Kawerau is a town labelled as "a mill town", a town with "many unemployed" a town with a  "Socioeconomic deprivation profile"  ehinz.ac.nz/indicators/population-information  however  that does not underpin who we are. "The total population of the Kawerau District was 6,363 at the time of the 2013 census, a decrease of 8.1%, or 561 people, since the 2006 Census. [7]  The population ranks 64th, out of 67 districts total, based on populatio...