Part of a question sheet our Principal asked to be filled in this week and part of a bigger conversation on Pedogogy I have been having with myself this year - especially in this latter half where I have been part of some astounding progress that has occurred outside of the traditional school environment/timeframe with some of the most at risk young people I am directly responsible for this year.
While writing it I was constantly drawn (guilted?) into viewing my response through the 'academic' lens I mention at the start - "Doesn't this sound like I am making excuses for a lack of academic achievement in my students?"
But actually there is progress, of course, and pressuring myself and my students to conform to the ideas of where they should be created by a government with a traditional view of education as something that produces a rich elite chained to a routine of gaining vast amounts of material possessions and mass producing minions to cater to the needs and whims of that elite.... wait.. I am monologuing (not to mention in danger of digressing!)... you probably get my point.
I am not dodging the question of progress. There is progress (and in many cases big progress and undoubtedly unacknowledged progress) PLUS I truly believe in my heart that the following is the greatest asset to pass on to my fellow learners...
1. Consider the overall
progress in learning so far this year. How do you think things are going?
Learning
is a holistic dynamic and learning success, therefore, cannot be fully appreciated through
a purely “academic” lens.
I can see that all Nile Room students’ readiness
for learning has increased; they have an ever-increasing awareness of their
needs and the importance of being open to learning and putting in effort/work
to attain goals.
Their
ability to access the curriculum has improved as well as their awareness of
themselves and relationship to others. They have a vastly different set of
needs (from each other) and have such a tolerance for where each other are at
with their own goals.
All have made important progress in their
greatest areas of need. For some this is purely academic and for others it is
in learning to overcome (and better understand) their own academic progress barriers
and actually allow themselves to progress and enjoy having academic success.
In
the forefront of my mind is preparing them to be happy and successful in the
world after school. Writing legibly, reading fluently, knowing three different
mental strategies to problem solve and understanding the concept of fair
testing are important and certainly things worth knowing – however, I believe,
the skill that will inevitably prove most useful to them (and keep them
connected to the positive world of learning those important things and striving
in their lives) is the ability to manage themselves through adversity, whatever
life will throw up, with confidence and self assurance.
The life experience that
forms the foundation for this needs to start here... and now.
Hoping to work on a more expanded form for this blog this weekend (although, like most of my blog posts lately {and hence professional learning} it falls at the end of the never-ending list of squeaky wheel tasks linked directly to National Standards and reporting...).
And just for my own benefit, so that I don't forget later (which probably quite often happens but I forget so obviously don't notice it much...), another key component in my line of thought here is the lack of resilience/persistence that students are teaching themselves by repeatedly copping out or taking the easy path. Ironic really because if they knew that they actually were employing the very skill they need to make academic progress to actively not make academic progress, they would create the very life experience they need for their foundation of confidence and self assurance.
Hmm, I need to create a name for that little cycle of irony and start a lecture circuit!
And just for my own benefit, so that I don't forget later (which probably quite often happens but I forget so obviously don't notice it much...), another key component in my line of thought here is the lack of resilience/persistence that students are teaching themselves by repeatedly copping out or taking the easy path. Ironic really because if they knew that they actually were employing the very skill they need to make academic progress to actively not make academic progress, they would create the very life experience they need for their foundation of confidence and self assurance.
Hmm, I need to create a name for that little cycle of irony and start a lecture circuit!
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