Christmas Holidays

Christmas Holiday Break

17th December, 2015

Well it has been an amazing couple of months since our blog for pre-service teachers went live at the start of October! We've received some extremely positive feedback from people and have had more than 2200 views. A big thank you to our dedicated team who managed to find time to post while studying and working. And a massive thank you to all our regular readers - you're amazing! The team will be taking a break over Christmas to relax and unwind, but we will be back at the start of January 2016! We hope you have a wonderful Christmas with your loved ones and an incredible start to the New Year - all the best!

- PST blog team

Seeing the world for what it truly is


 Seeing the World for What it Truly is

15th December, 2015

Claire, a guest blogger and pre-service teacher, talks about her experience teaching in Thailand and how it has influenced her views on the world

Many people all over the world experience an enormous amount of difference in terms of life-style, culture, schooling, relationships, family life, employment and religion. These differences can shape one’s life outcomes, how they view the world and reflections on life. I have been brought up in the same house, suburb, and city for my entire life and it has only been recently that I have had the pleasure of experiencing the diversity around my city and around the world.

I have currently just finished my 2nd year of a Bachelor of Education (Primary) and just in these two years I have learned so much about other people’s lives, their children’s lives and how much of an impact this and the schooling teacher can have on children. At the start of the year I traveled to Thailand to volunteer my teaching skills to a local school an hour outside of the Chiang Mai. I was only there for 3 weeks in total, however as a person and as a teacher I developed drastically. I loved it so much that I have booked a trip to Cambodia to volunteer my teaching passion for 4 weeks in 2016. Upon returning I was selected to work for my university in the Community Engagement section where little did I know I would be exposed to and confronted with a wide range of social issues.

In my job there are programs where I dealt with adults who had/were suffering from many different mental health issues, forms of addiction and abuse. I was heavily involved in running and facilitating another program with the local school called a Homework Support Program. This school was situated below the commission building houses where low socioeconomic status families live. These families are subjected to many of the same issues of mental health problems, addiction, abuse and poverty. Within these buildings a large percentage of people are refugees from Sudan and Vietnam. I had never experienced working with children from this background and it was definitely an eye opener.

All of these different programs and experiences have opened my eyes to the wider community and the world around me. From seeing blind, deaf, amputees begging on the streets of Thailand to having drunken, bashed up fathers barging into our homework club in order to take his son away, to dealing with mentally unstable adults dumping all of their emotions and state of events on to you. It has definitely influenced my outlook on life and my outlook on the teacher I want to be.

I do think all of my events and experiences have had a positive influence to me as a person and as a forthcoming teacher. They have taught me important lessons such as, don’t judge someone by how they look without understanding their background (yes, the classic saying of ‘don’t judge a book by its cover’), go with the flow in terms of learning how to live in someone else’s culture, and always have an open heart, mind and an ear to listen with for when it comes to people that both look like they need help, and for those who smile it away.

I believe all of these insights are very relevant for me as a future teacher. If I was to say one thing to fellow pre-service teachers it would be to experience as much as you can and learn from these experiences, even if it may look like it negatively impacted you, think of the positive outcomes.
I don’t believe I have seen the entire world for what it truly is, however I am definitely making my tracks through it.

- Claire Todeschini

Claire just completed her 2nd year as a pre-service teacher and also works as a Community Engagement Assistant for her University. Part of this role involves managing a homework support program for a local school.

End of Placement

End of Placement

13th December, 2015

Alex talks about his placement experiences at a rural school

After four wonderful weeks my placement has now come to an end – and what an experience it has been! I thought this would be a good chance to talk about some of the different challenges I faced, and the strategies I found worked well.

I had never worked with a composite class before, but now after having year 3/4/5 and 6 I’ve got a pretty good feel for how they run. Differentiating work is the main challenge, I found the best way to do this was to give each student the same task, but have different levels of difficulty within that task. This provides accessibility to the developing students and layers of complexity for the higher achieving students. While this may not work for all subjects, I think it’s a strategy I’ll use with my own class; within any year level there is likely to be a three-year span of capability, so it makes sense to provide a lesson where students can challenge themselves independently. It also linked in with the self-regulation learning behaviour my associate teacher was maintaining. Another good way to facilitate independent learning is through (and I never thought I would say this) rubrics. They work best in a senior classroom, but are great at essentially providing written success criteria and extensions for students. They put students in charge of their learning and achievement, which is great.

After spending four weeks in a truly positive classroom environment, I can’t stress enough the importance of strong learning behaviours. My associate teacher really strives to imbue each student with these and it shows in the way students behave; they act independently, challenge themselves, regulate their behaviour, and take ownership of their learning. Some examples of positive learning behaviours are:
  •  Attention to detail
  •  Focus and concentration
  •  Resilience and independence
  •  Allowing others to learn
  •  Thinking ahead
  •  Organisation
  •   Being accountable for my learning
It’s great to focus students in on these behaviours before each lesson just by talking about them, or give individual students certain learning behaviours to work on. Explicitly teaching positive learning behaviours and explaining, or modelling, how they are displayed will help establish an amazing classroom environment and give students a great mindset to learn with.

The most challenging aspect of the four weeks was trying to be organised and flexible at the same time! There is a lot going on at any one moment in the school year, especially at the end of term 4, so it’s vital that you always have a backup plan and are ready to quickly modify a lesson. I had a number of students absent with sickness over the first two weeks of teaching, which meant lots of groups progressing at different rates. I found that thinking a few lessons ahead of what you’re doing actually helps when students are ready to move on – you know the next step and can quickly whip up an activity for them to do. Ultimately there are some times where you won’t get everything completed, simply due to unexpected events popping up, and that’s ok – keep the big picture in mind!

I had such an amazing time on my placement; I truly fell in love with the school, kids and community! I’m missing them already and can’t believe I have to wait another six months before I can get back into it. I would definitely recommend completing a rural placement, there is really nothing quite like it. I know my school would love to have more PSTs and I wish there was more support for getting teachers out there! I hope everyone had a fantastic placement and learned a lot, a merry Christmas and happy new year to you all!

-Alex

Halfway Through Placement


Halfway through placement

22nd November, 2015

Alex talks about his placement experiences at a rural school

Given some pre-service teachers may never get the chance to complete a rural placement I thought it would be interesting to share my experiences. I’ve just finished my first two weeks of teaching and I can assure you the school and learning environment is like nothing I’ve ever experienced before.
The school is based in an extremely small town, about two and a half hours west of Melbourne. The current student enrollment is 38 and there are only two classes; foundation to year 2, and year 3 to 6. While I knew some of these details going in, the true reality of the size only hit home when I was standing at the whole school assembly on the Monday morning with 30 children. Needless to say, after my introduction to the school, everyone knows my name and who I am. In fact, I spent more time talking with the principal in one week, than I did with all the other principals of my previous placements combined!

The school is one of a few who are trialing a new integrated software platform that basically uses an online platform to create and store work. Every student has a computer and the school is well resourced; they even have a Polycon (a high quality camera system with monitor that allows them to video conference with other schools!).

But what does the school feel like?

From my first day I have become immersed in what can only be described as a truly community focused atmosphere. The teachers are genuine and the students are incredibly well behaved – it all feels like one big family. The outdoor area is huge and well utilised; they have a campfire area, sprawling veggie garden, chickens, basketball court and football oval. The other day in a garden lesson my associate teacher got the students to harvest some broad beans and leeks. The next day, during lunchtime, he cooked them up with some rice and the whole school had a communal feast.

Another interesting element is the kindergarten – it’s attached to the school! There are little ones running around during lunchtime and the transition to school is seamless. Perhaps all of these things add to the feeling of community and sense of belonging. While there was initially a sense of isolation (especially for me, being a city slicker) it becomes apparent that the internet and technology has connected people and communities to the essential resources they need. This school has an extremely strong and rigorous strategic plan for information technology, and makes excellent use of the online resources that are available.

My classroom itself is one of the most positive learning spaces I’ve ever encountered – largely due to my incredible associate teacher. He has made a point of not only encouraging a community of learners, but expecting students to support each other and regulate themselves. The students are incredibly proactive in seeking knowledge and managing themselves.  And the kids are fantastic. I thought teaching such a large composite class would be difficult, but my associate teacher has created an environment where students can progress through the curriculum at their own rate and focuses on 1:1 conferences with students about their learning.

All in all I’m in love with this school and the community it has created; I think there is a lot to be learned from their style of teaching. In my next post I will look more closely at what I’ve been teaching, how to work with a composite class, and how to create a positive learning environment.
Until then, all the best!

-Alex

Schedule Change

Schedule Change ... Again

22nd November, 2015

Unfortunately due to placement and general life events taking place I haven't been able to write a post to the quality I would have hoped! I will be posting one at the end of this week that will be a summary of the first fortnight of my rural placement. I'm hoping the extra time will give me a chance to truly reflect on the placement and write an informative/engaging piece! I hope all other pre-service teachers on placement are having a great time and working through any challenges!

-Alex

Off to placement


Off to Placement

15th November, 2015

The time has come for many pre-service teachers, including us here at the PST blog team, to take off to their next teaching placement! No doubt we are all looking forward to the fantastic experience of meeting new students, teachers and parents. However, as many would know, placement is an extremely busy time and so we not be following our usual posting schedule. Alex is taking off on a rural placement and will be posting weekly updates of his experience there. So please stay in touch and to all the pre-service teachers about to start their placements, good luck! We hope you have a fantastic time and gain some new experiences!

- PST blog team 

Circular planning

Circular Planning to Inform Lesson Planning

12th November, 2015

Aaron looks at the term 'Circular Planning' and how may it provide some assistance to pre-service teachers  

For anyone who has worked in the child services field, the term ‘Circular Planning’ won’t be new to you, it may be annoying at this point, but it certainly won’t be new. For those of you not familiar or irritated with the term, it basically functions as a tool to plan activities, games and experiences for children that are founded in their personal experiences, interests and ideas. The idea is that through careful observation, interaction and conversation we develop an understanding of how we can jump off and extend upon a child’s interests and ideas to create the opportunity for children to flourish in the activities we plan for them.

Since my first placement in a school, planning lessons has always been the most daunting task for me. It’s something that I’m never 100% certain I’m doing right, and something that due to the strict nature of the paperwork we are required to plan with, is something that I’m never quite comfortable with how I’m being asked to plan out. However, this has changed in the last year or so since I realised, “Wait a minute; I effectively plan lessons for children on a daily basis at work!” Now these lessons may not relate directly to the Australian Curriculum, but none the less they require planning, and thoughtful consideration about how they will develop a child’s learning – and that really is the goal with lesson planning in the classroom.

In a recent unit at University, we spoke at length about ensuring students had the opportunity to relate their personal experiences to the lessons we plan for them, and how this was important for them to place value or interest in what we as teachers are teaching. Hearing this really helped me confirm my idea of using this Circular Planning technique in relation to my lesson plans for placements, and made me realise that I wasn’t just pinching ideas from work! Since this discussion as well, I have found myself really looking forward to the observation dates for my upcoming placement as this will really be my chance to soak up the interests and ideas the students in the classroom have, and use these observations to inform the planning that I have to do for the class.

I think this is something that really needs to be discussed more, and perhaps brought to the light a bit for PSTs, as we are regularly expected to plan lessons for students we don’t know, nor have any experience gauging their interests and how these interests will affect our lessons. I look forward to the opportunity to take notes on things I see in the classroom, and interactions the students in the classroom have to develop my lessons, and implementing this newfound realisation. Again I might just be harping on here, but I can’t stress enough how my experiences in Childcare inform my Education practices, but this one was too obvious not to bring up. I think the real thing this has made me realise though is that I’m excited about a skill I have developed through experience in the workplace informing my education and helping me in my further career aspirations, even though the two areas may not seem intrinsically linked. Further suggestions for anyone reading, look into the recesses of your mind, what experiences have helped you with your teaching in the past? Implement things that may not seem to link, it might help you in the long run!

- Aaron

Approaches to Technology in the Classroom


Approaches to Technology in the Classroom
10th November, 2015
Will discusses the simplicity of incorporating technology into the classroom. 

In my experiences in classrooms I have seen many different approaches and attitudes towards technology in the classroom. They can be broadly grouped into the three categories below which will be discussed in detail over my next three blog posts. At each stage I discuss implications for students and some suggestions for moving forward into a technology rich environment. No matter what stage you might consider yourself at, there are always opportunities to incorporate technology into the classroom. 
  • Cautious - “I stick to using the same technology as new technologies are unpredictable” 
  • Excuses (lazy) - “I don’t want hassle of dealing with technology breaking down – I teach how I have always taught” 
  • Welcoming - “I am confident with technology and want to always try new things”
This post will delve into a cautious technology teacher. These teachers might let students publish work using word processing software or know the basics of the interactive whiteboard, but they are reluctant to venture into the world of ever changing and advancing technologies.

Yes, new technologies can be unpredictable but so is anything ‘new’ – new students, new content or new strategies. If students are using the same technologies every day, in every curriculum area, are they really developing any ICT skills? What opportunities does this provide the students to become 21st Century learners? The beauty of incorporating technology is that it can take simple tasks that are familiar to students and make them incredibly powerful. 

As an example, a popular introduction to any unit of work is a brainstorm to establish prior knowledge and to question what content needs to be learnt. A conservative teacher might have students sketch this in their workbooks. A cautious technology teacher may even let students create the mind map in a program like Word or Inspiration. However, through the use of a mind mapping application, students are suddenly exposed to authentic technology use. An application such as Popplet (available on iPad and Web) allows students to easily create mind maps filled with text, colours, images and even videos; this appeals to a range of learners in Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences.

The most exciting part about using an application like Popplet is that it allows students to communicate their ideas and work collaboratively. They can invite classmates to view or collaborate on their map by entering their email address. But why stop there? Think of the benefits and possibilities or collaborating with another grade, another school, even another country? Now THAT would be ‘unpredictable’ - but imagine the learning, collaboration and motivation in your 21st century students!

In summary, if you are cautious about using a new technology, don’t over complicate it. Start small and simple and the outcome can be far greater than if you confined students to their stable, familiar, ‘always perfect’ technology.

- Will

In Conversation With Louisa

5th November, 2015

In Conversation with ... Louisa

Louisa is a year 6 teacher, as well as the sustainability and years 5/6 co-ordinator at her school. She completed a Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Teaching in 2008 and is in her seventh year of teaching. Her favourite aspects of teaching are being able to perform a multitude of different roles, and sharing in the joys and struggles of her students’ lives. Louisa’s specialty is mathematics teaching; it’s one of her passions and she is involved in developing the school’s mathematics curriculum.

Hi Louisa, thanks for chatting with us!

Can you remember your first day teaching? How did it feel?


I was a crazy mixture of nerves and excitement. I remember feeling like a bit of a fraud and waiting for someone to realise that I should not be left in charge of a class of 22 seven year olds all by myself; surely everyone would find out I had no idea what I was doing! Of course I was more than prepared to teach that class but being left on my own with a class for the first time, being the one that was completely responsible for them was pretty daunting. I have almost no memory of what happened throughout the day but I remember it all went well and I was exhausted at the end of it.

Did you feel unprepared? If so, in what way?

I don’t know that you can ever feel fully prepared when you first start teaching – there is an enormous amount that you learn on the job. In fact that is one of the things I love about teaching; it is always a challenge and you are always learning, not matter how long you have been teaching. I remember the main things I felt unprepared for was the administrative side of teaching. When you are a student teacher you really only have to worry about the lesson planning and teaching so I felt prepared with that, but as a student teacher you don’t really have to deal with all the other stuff that makes up teaching – the record keeping, the reporting, permission forms etc. It was that stuff that I didn’t feel prepared for.

What do you know now that you wish you had known on your first day?

I wish I knew that I wouldn’t use the majority of resources that I spent hours printing, cutting and laminating. I was so excited to finally be a ‘real’ teacher so I spent the summer holidays scouring the internet and books for resources and then making them. However you don’t know what is going to be useful until you know the kids and are planning your lessons. Plus most of the best resources are really simple like playing cards or kids books or are the resources that the kids make themselves. Most of what I made when I first started teaching spent a couple of years gathering dust before I finally got rid of it.

Do you feel your qualification adequately prepared you for your first few years teaching?


Overall I felt like my qualification had prepared me. There were definitely things that I learnt at uni that I have never referred to again but those things probably did help to shape my philosophies. It was definitely what I learnt on my rounds that prepared me the most. I do think that my uni prepared me really well for maths teaching and is why I became so passionate about it.

How have you developed as a teacher?


That is a really tricky question because I’m constantly developing my teaching practices. I’m getting better at being a tidy teacher with a neat desk but that is still a work in progress. One day the phrase “does anyone know where I put such-and-such” will not come out of my mouth.

What are three essential tips that you would give to any Pre-Service Teacher about to start their first day?

On my first day of teaching my principal gave me some really good advice: she told me to not worry about teaching anything on the first couple of days but to just focus on building a positive classroom environment. She said to me that as long as the kids and I left the first day smiling then it was a success.

Three essential tips:
  1. Be consistent – set up your expectations from the start and stick to them. You need to be firm but fair and the kids should always know what to expect from you (kids love boundaries). If you say you are going to do something then make sure you do it because kids never forget.
  2. Get to know the parents from the very first day. Be out in the yard saying hello and introducing yourself. Building a rapport with the parents is really important.
  3. Don’t live at school - Even if you spent 24 hours a day, 7 days a week at school, you’d still find things to do. Learn to prioritise and let go. Set a reasonable time to leave school each day and stick to it. A tired, overworked teacher is a bad teacher so take care of yourself and get enough sleep.
And here is one bonus tip – keep the receipts for anything that you buy for your classroom so that you can claim it on tax.

What do you think are the most important elements to being an effective teacher?

You need to be flexible and expect the unexpected. Rarely do things go to plan in schools so you need to be prepared to adapt and think on your feet.

You need to be rich in patience and have a sense of humour.

You need to love learning new things and be reflective about your own practice. What is working well, what isn’t and why. It is ok not to know things and you need to be willing to seek help from your colleagues.

You also need to be organised.

How could we improve Pre-Service Teacher education courses?


This is another tricky question. I would say the main thing is that there needs to be more emphasis on the practicalities of planning – looking through the curriculum to make yearly overviews and term overviews and taking these to make unit planners and then most importantly creating your weekly teaching program. How are you going to organise your week to fit in the maths and literacy you need as well as specialists and the myriad of other things that happen in any given week. Creating your weekly plan is something that I think unis need to spend more time teaching.

Really though, unless you have a class most things are just theoretical and easily forgotten, you learn best by doing. That is why rounds are so important and the more time pre-service teachers spend in a range of classes the better.

Louisa, thanks for taking the time to respond to our questions and good luck with the remainder of term 4!

Louisa has also been kind enough to answer some questions regarding the interview process of getting a teaching job, but they weren’t included here in an effort to keep the article short! Her responses will feature in an upcoming blog post.


-  Alex

Although Alex has regular contact with Louisa this interview was conducted via email, with the view in mind of allowing Louisa time to consider the questions and respond when she could.

 

Progression of learning a language


Progression of learning a language


3rd November, 2015
 

Adelle explores the natural progression of learning a new language


Update: the French student I am tutoring in English has his test this Saturday! I haven’t been able to see him face to face in the past two weeks, but regular phone calls and sending writing samples has kept up communication and he has improved so much! We have moved on from structures and now focus on specific vocabulary and grammar in his writing. He continues to use the structures I offered him and his writing now comes a lot more fluently. I am proud of what he has achieved and wish him all the best for this weekend!

When learning or teaching a new language to students, referring to the natural progression of language learning is a “can’t go wrong” structure. Coincidentally, the four key skills of the literacy curriculum are the same as the natural progression of learning a language. We focus on all four when teaching in schools.

Each language skill has a different set or coinciding set of sub-skills taught to master the main skills.
The natural progression is as follows;
  • Listening
  • Speaking
  • Reading
  • Writing
It makes sense!
The importance to communicate and understand aurally and orally before text skills is of great concern to any human.

I have been lucky enough to do some travel and have visited France frequently. I have connections with various teachers of primary school aged students and due to the common bi or tri-lingual skills of the majority of Europeans; they have been faced with some challenges. One in particular had a student who didn’t know a word of French. I asked her how she taught that student. Body language and voice was her response. Before pushing this student to meet the demands of a curriculum she had to first ensure he could understand direction and develop his communication. Through constant use of and exposure to the French language, as well as her using gestures and body language, her student had progressed so much in four months that he was level with her French national students. She nurtured his development of the language and put the curriculum aside until he was ready or she felt she could challenge him further. Indicating things, using actions and relying on body language was vital.

This inspired me. Children have the ability to learn so much and be influenced so quickly. They are brilliant beings who can absorb so much and I feel it’s so important to remember this. We as teachers have the responsibility to know our students and what level they are at. This French teacher knew her student and helped him in what he needed before conceding to pressure from the designed curriculum. Prioritising is a part of the profession most definitely.

There is quite a long video from 1983 by the BBC. It explains various techniques when learning and teaching languages. It is really interesting and I’d encourage viewing it if you have a spare hour.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=utDs2tI14IQ

A key thing to remember, listening is a developed skill and through exposure listening will progress to speaking. Babies listen before they speak, crawl before they learn to walk. Having patience and giving opportunities for language students to progress on that natural scale is significant.

My upcoming entries will be coming from France when I have the opportunity to observe some different French classrooms. I am also learning French and will see how quickly my own language learning skills will advance being immersed in the language.
Just as doctors make the worst patients, they say teachers make the worst students. However, our profession is one that is constantly updated, changing and we need to have a growth mindset that enables us to adapt and change with it. We are always learning.

- Adelle

Who are these people?


Who are these people?

29th October, 2015

 Nick uses his personal work experience to discuss the role of an integration aide within the learning space and how future teachers can incorporate them into their teaching practice.

Including and incorporating all students within the learning space is of utmost importance. Within your class group there is a great likelihood of encountering a student with a special need; this will present many interesting and exciting challenges to you as the teacher. One of the greatest challenges that may be faced is how to include these students in every aspect of learning that takes place in the learning space.  In this situation you may be able to utilise the work of an education support staff member, specifically an integration aide.

The role of an integration aide varies from classroom to classroom depending on the needs of the student. As aides work alongside students with special needs it is important for them to be flexible in their approach to accommodate and ensure inclusion for each student. Some key roles of an integration aide are as follows:
  • To ensure inclusion rather than isolation within the learning space.
  • Collaborate with teachers to ensure delivery of educational programs to students with special needs.
  • Be conscious of the classroom teacher’s expectations for the entire class group and support the teacher with carrying out these expectations.
  • To be happy, friendly, warm, encouraging and supportive.

The idea of inclusion is something that is at the heart of my teaching philosophy and I am passionate about the notion of EVERY student feeling as though they are a part of the classroom environment. As an integration aide this means that when working with students in the learning space there is more to the role than assisting students in completing their ‘work’.  The idea of inclusion incorporates assisting students with social strategies as well as effective communication strategies. It may also mean providing students with assistance for mobility or other needs specific to that student to ensure they are able to actively engage within the learning space. These inclusion strategies may extend beyond the learning space into the playground.

How do I incorporate an integration aide into my classroom?

In my role as an integration aide I have been able to gain some insight into how teacher’s can best utilise an aide through collaborative practices. It is important to note that although your learning space may have students with special needs, an integration aide may not always be present, if at all.

Collaboration is vital within the school setting; whether it is between staff or with parents, it is the key to a successful learning environment. Teacher and integration aide collaboration is best achieved through effective and consistent communication to ensure the best outcomes are achieved for students. Allowing access to unit planners or weekly planners is a great way to ensure each party is working towards a common educational goal or outcome for the student. In particular, as a future teacher it is important to ensure these planners are specific to the learning goals of the child with special needs as well as being clear to anyone who reads them.  It is also important as the teacher to liaise with the aide during the session to ensure the student is on track. Alternatively, you can have a brief discussion post session to discuss how the student worked and what areas need to be improved on for the next session.

Overall it can be a great asset to have an education support member in your learning space. However, as discussed, it is vital that they be used effectively to ensure not only inclusion of the students, but to also assist them in achieving the best educational outcomes possible.

- Nick

In Conversation With Chloe

As part of my upcoming blog posts I decided to interview a variety of people who I believe can offer some useful information to pre-service teachers. Given I have about four or five interviews to post, I thought it might be wise to make the interviews into their own segment entitled In Conversation With... and provide the rest of the PST blog team with a platform for posting other interviews. I hope pre-service teachers garner some useful pedagogical tips or ideas from these interviews.

27th October, 2015

In Conversation With ... Chloe.

Chloe is a 2nd year graduate classroom teacher who completed a Bachelor of Education (Early Childhood and Primary) in 2013. Her favourite aspect of teaching is connecting with a diverse number of people and she specialises in creating a safe and supportive classroom community.

Hi Chloe, thanks for being our blog's first interviewee!

Can you remember your first day teaching? How did it feel?
 
Exciting, daunting and right.

Did you feel unprepared? If so, in what way? 

Not on the first day, but as time went on I found it difficult. You don’t know what’s around the corner so while everyone else is preparing for the next thing or getting ahead so they aren’t swamped when reports come or whatever, you are blissfully unaware and then it gets you!

What do you know now that you wish you had known on your first day?

 
From day one hit the ground running. Have the children decorating name tags, take photos of them, collect a writing sample, test them on their times-tables, ask them who they’re friends are, what they are worried about, learn their parents names and siblings, label books, rule margins, set up rules for the classroom.

Do you feel your qualification adequately prepared you for your first few years teaching?
 
Yes but experience will always do more.

How have you developed as a teacher?
 
So much! I communicate with my students in a very open and honest way, taking their perspectives into account. Telling them the options and why and then giving them ownership over the decision. I know what to look for with reading, writing and maths as cues for gaps in learning or students not achieving their potential.

What are three essential tips that you would give to any PST about to start their first day?
 
Students want to know what’s coming, so create the timetable and show them where they can locate it each day.

Students want rules and restrictions and they want you to be the overseer of that so develop them together.

They want to know you and you to know them so spend some of the first day playing getting-to-know-each-other games and get involved.

What do you think are the most important elements to being an effective teacher?
 
 Wow. Building relationships, organisation, preparation and balance.

How could we improve Pre-Service Teacher education courses?
 
Provide more time in the classroom.
Creating usable resources such as writing, reading spelling and math toolkits as well as assessment tracking resources.

Chloe, thanks for taking the time to respond to our questions and all the best for the rest of the year!

- Alex

Although Alex has regular contact with Chloe this interview was conducted via email, with the view in mind of allowing Chloe time to consider the questions and respond when she could.

Developing Confidence in the Field


Developing Confidence in the Field

22nd October, 2015 

Aaron looks into how involving yourself in work and experiences with young students can help you understand how they think, play, live and learn

Picture this, it’s the first day of a placement, you’ve had a chat to a teacher or two prior to your first experience in the class room, but the bell has just gone and you can see 25-30 children running up to the door. Butterflies start to build in great numbers in your stomach, and a little frog appears to be slowly making his way up your throat, and as soon as those children get to the door, you need to be switched on and in charge. “What is happening to me?!?!” you think to yourself in your currently jumbled mind, “PULL IT TOGETHER, THEY’RE STANDING RIGHT INFRONT OF ME!” is the next jump, and then you calmly say out loud, “Good Morning everyone, come inside, put your bags away and come sit on the mat.”

I have found in my experiences studying a Bachelor of Education that a large number of Pre Service Teachers are very nervous heading into their placements, and the root of this nervousness is often a lack of experience working with, or being in the presence of large groups of children. Often people begin studying this degree for relatively trivial reasons like “I LOVE KIDS” or “I’ve got three younger siblings, so I’ll be a great teacher.” Which may be a useful tool at some stage in your teaching career, but initially at least on your first experiences coming face to face with a group of children; I don’t feel like these things will really calm the ever growing butterfly population in your lower torso region.

What has been really fortunate for me, and to be fair, quite a large number of other PSTs, has been the ability to develop some experience working with larger groups of kids in various forms of child care, and Outside School Hours activity groups. Now this might sound like a no brainer, of course working with children will help build your confidence – but I think as a whole it really is something that a lot of people overlook, or maybe even turn their noses up at, when starting off in their education journey. Having worked in Child Care, Outside School Hours Care and Foster Care, prior to and throughout the time I have been studying, I feel this is something that has really helped me let go of the worries I’ve had about my ability to stand up in front of a class and it also has given me a wealth of activities and ideas that translate really well to the classroom environment.

An assurance needs to be made really quickly, that I am not writing this as some sort of weird recruitment letter to the masses who may be reading it, but merely sharing a bit of advice, that I think could be helpful to people who struggle with these butterflies and frogs, as I know we all do. Working with children whether in a child care centre, babysitting, tutoring, youth group mentoring or even being a scouts or girl guides leader, can be a really great experience, and work quite well with your timetables at university, as well as helping develop some skills that will really pay off when it comes to functioning confidently in the classroom. There is nothing more confronting than being hit with a question you don’t know the answer to when standing in front of a class, or notice the outdoor PE activity is taking a turn for the rowdy, and you need a quick new activity to round out the session, and this is where this experience really shows its worth.

All I’m really trying to get across in this maiden post (for myself) on the blog is that if working in this field alongside my time studying this degree, it’s that having this experience and comfort level around groups of children has really helped how I feel and inherently operate when standing in front of a classroom on placement. I think as with anyone experiencing something for the first time, we all need to expect some butterflies and throat climbing frogs. However, if we can do something to limit these, and be more in control of our feelings and our emotions when faced with a group of keen (or not so keen) learners, we will function better when standing at the front of the room, and will far more comfortably and confidently work through our lessons to deliver the best teaching that we can.

     - Aaron

5 Ways to Prepare Your Classroom for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

5 Ways to Prepare Your Classroom for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

20th October, 2015

Matt talks about creating a classroom space that caters to children with ASD and passes on some tips from an Occupational Therapist 

 

When I first set out to write about students with ASD and their unique position in the school environment, I originally planned to create a top-ten or top-five list of ways to engage with such students. Upon conducting some research, however, I found that this approach was at best short-sighted. Having recently assisted in the coordination of a social skills program for primary school students with ASD, I became aware of the variance in difficulties a teacher can face with ensuring that an environment is supportive for such students.

I find it important to mention that although the creation of classroom environments conducive to the learning of those with special needs has formed part of our teacher education, it is extremely vague. Not that it wasn’t useful; it taught us about the importance of doing so (though that is common sense). It was simply that it gave little attention to specific special needs. With ASD diagnoses becoming more common in the modern day, I personally feel that learning as much as we can about catering for diverse learning needs will prove useful in our future teaching careers.

Therefore, to do my best to comprehensively cover this topic, I have decided to write a series of articles, each of which will focus on tips and advice from a professional Occupational Therapist (OT) on how to integrate children with ASD safely into the school environment and thus best provide for their learning needs.

I decided to start from the beginning; how can one prepare their classroom to be (using classic university language) a safe, supportive and inclusive environment for children with ASD. These ways will refer to mostly physical aspects of the classroom; there will be more information at another time on classroom processes. To reiterate, this is not a top-five list; each of these is equally important.

  1. Bags/Lockers: As most of us can recall from our schooling days, when students go to the ‘bag area’, whether to hang up their bags, retrieve their lunch or leave school for the day, it is loud and chaotic, with students arguing, pushing and generally causing a ruckus as they try to be the first to reach their luggage. One of the first facts people learn about children with ASD is that they can become distressed when exposed to uncomfortably loud noise, and many children with ASD also dislike being touched or crowded. To avoid this as best as possible, set aside a specific bag hook or locker at the end of a row, so that the student can access their belongings without being fully subjected to the chaos.
  2. Quiet Area: If your student is starting to become overwhelmed, it is important that they have a place to retreat to, where they can begin to calm down. This can be a designated area of the classroom such as a reading corner or a quiet table, or a space just outside the classroom like the hallway, an office or similar. This will depend on the preferences and requirements of the student. It may also be useful to, in the classroom, seat your student near their quiet area so that they can access it quickly and easily if needed.
  3. Schedules and Timetables: Predictability and routine are very important in an ASD-friendly classroom; sudden or unexpected change, as well as not knowing what is coming next or how long activities will take, is very distressing for most such students. Schedules and timetables should therefore be prominent in your classroom and presented in a variety of formats. To further alleviate student anxiety, students can be provided with a timer to support the student and allow them to keep track of the length of activities. According to my OT consultant, these schedules are absolutely ESSENTIAL no matter the age of your student.
  4. Sensory tools or objects: Tools that engage the senses, particularly the tactile sense, are very useful for helping children with ASD to maintain focus on activities, process information and keep calm. These could include safely chewable items such as pen/pencil toppers and chewy necklaces, or toys known as ‘fidget toys’ which are often bendable. If you are worried that students will become distracted, I can assure you that I have seen these in use; although sometimes they can distract other children and make it appear that a student is not listening to you when in use, it does sharpen focus, as the children in my focus group were able to easily recall information given to them as they engaged with their sensory tools.
  5. Seating Position in the Classroom: This aspect does not just involve their seat at a table; this also includes seating during time on the mat, assembly and school events. It is important to optimally position your student according to a number of factors; who they are sitting with, how close they are to distractions (such as the bookshelves or computers, depending on their interests), proximity to the teacher and to sensory distractions; these can include areas of greater/lesser light, louder noise or hanging objects. As aforementioned in discussion of quiet areas, some students will prefer to be close to a door so that they can leave if required.
Although it is not simple or easy to prepare a classroom to be safe and supportive for students with ASD, with adequate preparation many uncomfortable and anxiety-inducing situations can be avoided. I hope that you have found these classroom preparation tips useful. Check out next time, where I will discuss five ways to design classroom procedures and processes to be inclusive of children with ASD.

-Matt

21st Century Learners

"Wait, are you telling me that MySpace is NOT a website about planets?!"
  21st Century Learners
15th October, 2015

Will reflects on the children in classrooms today, their technology-rich environments and the impact this has had on the curriculum.  

 

In 2006 I started secondary school and was part of the laptop program. My shiny new ‘portable’ device was bulky and weighed the best part of a brick, but I didn’t care because I had my generous 256 megabyte USB. Jumping forward just nine years we can pick up a 16 gigabyte USB for around $10 (a storage increase of over 6000%). Technology advances exponentially and it is clear to see we are in the rapid growth stage when you consider computers double in capabilities every 18 months. 

 

So what does this have to do with PSTs, teaching and the 21st century classroom? Well, have you considered that the students you will teach in the near future were all born in the 2000’s or even the 2010’s? (I know, they were deprived of the glorious 90’s). What must be considered is the fact that students today are technology natives. The 90’s generation were the 1st generation of technology natives; they grew up and adapted to 21st century technology. Children today are 2nd or even 3rd ‘Net-generation’ and born into a world saturated with digital technology that enhances connectivity and accessibility. For some of us, this may mean accepting that little Johnny’s ICT skills are far superior to yours. 

 

So how can we prepare ourselves for such an environment? Whilst I find it astounding that my current course does not have a core unit solely devoted to the topic, I was fortunate enough to do an elective on technology in education. In an upcoming series of blog posts I hope to share some valuable insights I gained. One resource I would encourage you to start using (if not already) is Twitter. Twitter is an interconnected web of educational resources, ideas and experts. To get started I would suggest following some of these: 

 

One of the general capabilities in the Australian Curriculum is Information and Communication Technology (ICT). This means ICT is a dimension that will be harnessed across all learning areas and as 21st century educators, it is our job to facilitate an environment where students can use ICT to: 
  • Access, create and communicate information and ideas 
  • Solve problems
  • Work collaboratively
Furthermore, technology in education does not just exist for students. In the minefield of software and applications in the Education category, technology can also be used by teachers and parents to implement fresh approaches to feedback, assessment, planning, collaborating and communicating. 

To finish, I would like to pose a question: in what ways have you seen technology used in the classroom? Before you answer, exclude the obvious, overused and generalised answers of ‘Microsoft Word’, ‘PowerPoint’, ‘Interactive Whiteboard’ and ‘iPads’. What specific ways has the technology helped the student or teacher in the areas discussed and how did it shape them as 21st century learners?

- Will 

Accommodating for English Language Learners


Accommodating for English Language Learners


13th October, 2015
 
Adelle explores the diversity in the classroom when students who are learning English as an additional language are involved.


Recently I have begun tutoring an adult, older than myself, in English. He is French and needs to sit the IELTS exam to be sponsored and therefore, extend his visa to remain in Australia.
On the initial session with him, he told me he mainly needs help with writing and listening. After discussing a topic for 10 minutes, I was confident that he understood what he had to do and he was able to discuss his ideas well, so I assumed his writing should reflect this.
I was very quickly surprised by the struggles he had in doing this.
The concept of writing for an audience flustered him and he was not sure where to begin.

This got me thinking, wouldn’t this be true of a child as well?
Discussing ideas and speaking is a very different concept than writing. Whether it is formal or informal writing, putting your words onto a page can quickly make you doubt yourself as a student, and your abilities in the language you speak.
I don’t know how many of you have attempted to learn or have successfully learnt another language, but more often than not you will find your own strength whether it be listening, writing, reading or speaking. Can you imagine only speaking English, moving to a new school in a foreign country and having instruction in the native language? Then be expected to participate in all four areas (reading, writing, speaking & listening) of the literacy curriculum and then be assessed on that?


What a daunting prospect!

A focus on oral language acquisition has been dominant when implementing strategies to help these students, however the need for focus on the other areas and giving explicit instruction is integral in them gaining confidence in all areas of English. However the need to not look at their work as critically as other students is just as important.

I read an article just last week on a new concept called “generous reading”. Ultimately it’s an assessment strategy to use with ELL’s and it involves viewing the student’s work as;

"Writing, that is, as legitimate text, with the assumption that it does make sense, carries its own internal logic, is justifiably studied as any other text, literary or expository”.

This strategy is used for students who are not yet ready for critical review of the grammar, cohesion and spelling in their work. It instead focuses on questions for the teacher to think about when reading the child’s work and gaining knowledge
of how the child is influenced, their viewpoints and what they have learnt due to mimicking etc.


The angle I took with my student was to initially work on the structure and give him some sentence starters and sentence patterns to remember. I used the ‘generous reading’ strategy initially with my student’s work, only looking for structure and if his ideas were being expressed as he wanted them to be.
We focussed on persuasive writing and developed structures together that included an introduction, outline or points and summary. I used topics that he was interested in so he could build confidence in his ability to create a cohesive piece.
Just adding some simple sentence starters; Firstly. Secondly, Therefore, Whereas, For example, Lastly, or the phrase; On the other hand, his writing improved dramatically.

Further along, I will focus on his grammar, spelling and punctuation once he has accomplished confidence in expressing his ideas in an organised way for a writing task.

I believe giving children an initial structure to follow is a starting point that can be further expanded after developing knowledge and confidence in the language. Using generous reading as an assessment technique not only enables teachers to build stronger relationships with students by learning who they are and where their writing skills are derived from. It also turns the focus away from grammar and writing concepts and instead focuses on the child perspectives and if they are able to express their thoughts on paper. Although grammar, punctuation and spelling is important, it is not the priority when beginning to express your thoughts on a page.
The article “Generous Reading: Seeing Students Through Their Writing” - Lucy K. Spence, can be found here http://www.jstor.org/stable/25656174


Check it out; I would love to read your thoughts.

- Adelle