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This article discusses the implementation of the multi-age program at St. Paul School, presenting the research behind it and how it aligns with Alberta Education's Inspiring Education initiative. It covers key components of multi-age learning, its connection to literacy and numeracy development, and its alignment with "Visible Learning" strategies. The article also outlines the plans for the pilot year and the vision for multi-age education at St. Paul School.
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The Multi-Age ClassSt. Paul School Presented by Sandra Cormican & Carmen Larsen
How We Got Here • Alberta Education changes the focus of education in Alberta • research completed over the summer on the multi-age program (Carmen – scientific studies, Sandra – how to implement it) • proposal submitted to Gerry • proposal approved • planning of the program begins
Direction of Education in Alberta • Alberta Education’s Inspiring Education is changing how education is delivered in Alberta and is calling on teachers and schools to change the way they teach students.
What is multi-age? • overview of multi-age learning • A multi-age class has students of different ages and abilities placed in the same classroom to learn a non-graded curriculum. • This is not a new concept or “fad.” The philosophy of placing students of different ages together to learn goes back to “the one room school house.”
Key Components • student-centered • students progress and are assessed on a continuum (developmental stages) • students work at own level and pace through common activities and projects • team-teaching • peer-tutoring • fosters social-emotional skills and development • promotes collaboration and cooperation
How does multi-age connect with Inspiring Education? • They both focus on literacy and numeracy development. • They both focus on collaboration, cooperation, a sense of community, responsibility, self-reliance, confidence and an appreciation of diversity. • They both focus on teaching students the skills to become independent learners and thinkers.
How does multi-age connect with “Visible Learning?” (John Hattie) • Many of the strategies shown to have the greatest impact on academic achievement are integral components of multi-age: • Student expectations, Piagetian programs, classroom discussions, feedback, teacher-student relationships, not labelling students and direct instruction. • Teachers should be working with each other, not in isolation. In the multi-age program teacher collaboration (planning and teaching) is central to the program working well. Different teachers bring their expertise to the table and learn from each other. • The focus in a multi-age class is students learning, not teachers teaching. Our conversations with each other need to be about learning not about teaching. • 8 Mindframes: Know Thy Impact as a Teacher
What are we doing this year? • As this is a pilot year, we are starting with one 3/4 multi-age class, which will be team taught by Sandra Cormican (full time) and Carmen Larsen (1/2 time). • We are going to educate staff and parents about the multi-age program through newsletters, blogs, show cases, open houses and presentations.
What will a multi-age day look like? • Morning Routine • Math Block • Gym • Fine Arts Block • Lunch • Literacy Block • Project Block • Dismissal • *The key is to have large blocks of time devoted to student learning. • **Learning is achieved through direct teaching, small group activities (teacher or student led), student discussions (whole or small group) and independent activities.
What is the vision for multi-age at St. Paul School? • We will be asking for teacher input to develop curricular themes for a 2 year cycle. • We will be asking for teacher input to develop assessment continuums for the primary skill areas (reading, writing and math strands). • We will be looking for other team-teaching units in order to expand the program next year to include 1/2 MA and 5/6 MA groups. • We will be encouraging parent and community support.