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Space in education is often perceived as a valuable asset, yet it's the learning process itself that holds true significance. Traditional values emphasize socially popular characteristics like being the best artist or runner, which are easily assessable and safe. However, in the 21st century, students need to develop new literacies such as self-motivation, collaboration, and the ability to work in teams. Emphasizing real-life projects and problem-based contexts, quality teaching should focus on student achievement and foster skills that extend beyond mere content knowledge.
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Space and Learning • Does it matter?
Traditionally it is..... • One of the best musicians • Socially popular / well liked • Good at everything she / he does • Happy • Involved in lots of activities • The best readers in class • The best at numeracy • The best artist • The best runner in the class or school • One of the best at team sports
Why? • It’s easy to see • It’s what we’ve always valued • It’s what we have always done • It’s safe • You can assess it • It’s known • It can be standardised
What are the 10 skills that have been identified by many researchers that we should be teaching?
Self-motivation • Self-discipline • Perseverance/commitment • Balance/sustainable • Coachable • Self-managing • Courage/tenacity/drive • Social confidence/ assertive • High self-esteem/happy • Self-efficacy
All schools still value literacy and numeracy, however......What are the new literacies? What do they need to learn?
Our students will need to learn to • To deal with massive amounts of data • Have global communication skills • Self direct/Self motivate/Self start/Self regulate • Organise/Collaborate/Plan/Reflect/Assess (self, peer, expert) • Have multi-level relationships • Sustain their learning • Learn in purposeful ways- blended • Learn through real life projects/inquiries (OECD conference in Finland “Grasping the Future” identified this as crucial for the future of the young)
Why? Catching the Knowledge Wave -Dr Jane Gilbert (Gilbert, 2005) Chief Researcher at the New Zealand Council for Educational Research. In the 21st century knowledge has a new meaning... • is a process, not a ‘thing’ • does things, has an impact • happens in teams, not in individual ‘experts’ • can’t be ‘codified’ into ‘disciplines’ • develops to be replaced, not stored
In the 21st century learning has a new meaning... • involves generating knowledge not storing it • is primarily a group - not an individual activity • happens in ‘real world’, problem-based contexts • should be ‘just-in-time learning’, not ‘just-in-case’
BEST EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS- (ALTON LEE, 2003) • Quality teaching is focused on student achievement (including social outcomes) and facilitates high standards of student outcomes for heterogeneous groups of students. • Quality teaching is responsive to student learning processes. • Pedagogy promotes learning orientations, student self-regulation, meta-cognitive strategies and thoughtful student discourse.
Quality Teaching Synthesis-(Hattie, 2003) Expert teachers... • Adopt a problem solving stance • Anticipate, plan and improvise as required • Have a complex perception of classrooms • More adept at monitoring and providing relevant feedback • Test hypotheses about learning problems • Have high respect for students • Are passionate about learning and teaching • Develop students’ self regulation and esteem • Provide appropriate challenge • Enhance deep learning
What we teach probably isn’t what children learn.......... • ......that a large proportion of each students significant learning experiences • were self-selected or self-generated • even in traditional classrooms. • Nuthall 2007
Learning Habits in School • Being right • Creating ideas • Listening to teachers • Questioning things • Working alone • Being active • Remembering facts • Showing initiative • Following instructions • Self-evaluating • Being adventurous • Copying down • Discussing with peers • Accepting what you’re told • Working with others • Sitting still • Imagining possible solutions • Showing respect • Taking responsibility • Being evaluated
Outcomes 19th century clerk? 21st century explorer?
21st century explorer? • Being adventurous • Creating ideas • Discussing with peers • Questioning things • Working with others • Being active • Imagining possible solutions • Showing initiative • Taking responsibility • Self-evaluating 19th century clerk? • Being right • Copying down • Listening to teacher • Accepting what you’re told • Working alone • Sitting still • Remembering facts • Showing respect • Following instructions • Being evaluated
DREYFUS MODEL Rule Governed Behaviour PPK Basis For Action Read the Context Novice Beginner Competent Proficient Expert
TRANSFORMATIONAL LEARNING - Edwards and Butler L + clear understood flows time THEPIT confusion frustration angst L -
How we teach matters!It’s the practiceIt’s the structuresIt’s the WHYIt’s making it visable
Be Flexible • Foster Inquiry by scaffolding curiosity • Design opportunities for participation • Teach kids not subjects • Provide opportunities for experiential learning • Embrace Failure • Don’t be boring • Foster joy/fun • Share/reflect/share/reflect- with who?