As an elearning leader we have spent a lot of time trying to put this in place at our school. We have been struggling with how to keep this direction straight with 50 or so staff and that whole bell curve of change with the early adopters at one end and the laggards at the other. We want to pull together where we are and align it, but it is clear that how we have started this journey in comparison to the model we have taken on, does have more of an impact than I initially wanted to accept. This is going to lead us to change our methods of leadership and direction.
Generally, we need our structural conditions to change or at least keep pace with our changes in pedagogy in order to be absolutely effective in making lasting change to 'the way we do things around here'. We would usually expect this structural change to come from the top down - government policy would change, the flavour of the month in how we design our buildings would turn around, funding systems would be revised and statements about why, how and what we do from government analysists, hopefully, backed up by academic research would be released to support it all. There would be a good chance that a pilot programme with a healthy funding fish hook would be attached to entice schools to be ready.
The original Manaiakalani set of schools made their own structural changes, without government systems to guide them, because no one had done this before. Mutually developed and agreed upon pedagogy (LCS) at Point England School came before devices. Point England School were doing what was best for their students over what was the done thing at the time, or what was expected of low decile schools. First by introducing devices to a community who was considered by most, too poor and then providing internet infrastructure on their own to back that up. They used the devices for the pedagogy, once it was already in place. Second, by sharing the learning with their neighbouring schools, rather than using this to promote their own worth within the community. A community of learning beyond 'your own patch' in the midst of a system that sets us up to compete in the 'educational market' (tomorrow's schools) was put in place - Manaiakalani.
Then structural conditions from the top were in fact changed, based on the success of schools like Point England in Tamaki pioneering and proving this was a healthy 'way we do things around here' providing accelerated success for students who start education under the line of whatever we have decided is normal western intelligence. That point may still need some fleshing out, another time though.
We always knew we were jumping into devices without establishing the pedagogy first. We were even carefully warned that this was going to make a difference to how things progressed for us in Hornby. I clearly remember both Dorothy and Russell stating this fact in our initial presentations around Learn Create Share. Optimistically I hoped this would not matter so much because we had been warned, we'd sort it out!
So here we are, new principal from when we started with our outreach, quite a few new staff, and we are still struggling with a consistent direction for LCS. It is harder at some levels in a high school, with multiple siloed disciplines.
Having pulled together the data from our most recent staff meeting, it is clear that the confusion still lies with 'Learn'. If we substitute the word for 'Activate' or 'Ignite' (thank you Kelsey), we have it. The rest of our time is Create and Share, bouncing back to 'activate' as needed. It is fluid, not isolated. Maybe more so at a high school level due to that change from concrete to abstract thinking.
While pondering this, it occurred to me that way back in the day when I was training to be a teacher, the best advice I got about planning lessons, units and the year of learning, was to break everything into three phases that you go back over and move forward from, repeatedly; "Catch'em, Teach'em, Learn'em". It lacks the depth of pedagogy and thought possibly of LCS, and you cannot see 'share' so obviously, except that as an Art teacher, that is implied. Art is not Art if it is not shared with an audience. 'Catch' is 'activate' or 'ignite'. Excite that desire to learn, engage prior knowledge - the best part of being in a classroom so often is seeing the ignition happen. 'Teach' is providing the students with new skills and ideas to create their own work with and 'Learn' is giving them the freedom and time to be able to do exactly that. Yip, 'Share' is just not there... But it is a useful start in my own analysing and breaking down how some of us get there and some of us don't in embedding the pedagogy.
Right in amongst all of that is a part of the confusion; Learn in LCS is not the Oxford dictionary definition of Learning. Hence when you come into LCS cold, you easily confuse yourself. Likewise, if you only pay lip service to it when your school says staff meeting is LCS based, and it is not within your planning and classroom practice explicitly, you end up talking yourself around in circles.
Our next steps must be: working with individual departments to help re-direct some individual thoughts over LCS, aligning the departments in how this looks, but managing this with distributive leadership in mind. We need to make it explicit in our way of doing things starting with planning within the department - a whole school way of managing this. We cannot rely on whole staff meetings once in a while to get that message across clearly, there is just too much to be done. Likewise, we cannot rely on outsiders coming in once in a while to 'upskill' staff, as that is not the pedagogy that is being addressed (though it is still helpful). We cannot 'do' this for everyone, it needs to develop for us to become ours and be 'the way we do things around here' long after myself and the other elearning leader have moved on. It is time to start infiltrating ourselves rather than asking politely would you like help. Nicely of course.
Thanks so much for this thoughtful piece Rowena. You have teased out the challenges so helpfully. I do wonder if using Ako instead of Learn would be useful? Ako Hanga Tohatoha.
ReplyDeleteOur issue was that Learn Create Share actually emerged out of seven schools, not just the one. One school is easy. You con-construct what seems right to the group of people in your school community, create a pretty group of logos and infographics and you are good to go. With seven schools the co-construction was year 1-13, state schools, primary schools, Catholic schools and one intermediate. Each with pretty firm notions about Ako or even Activate in your recent definition. Trying to include carefully designed learning models, taxonomies such as SOLO, values and beliefs etc etc is what led us to the very simple word Learn. We felt that under that umbrella we could all retain our rangatiratanga as we implemented the NZC.
You implied Part 2 is coming. I'm looking forward to it.
Dorothy
Kia ora Dorothy, i didn't see that you had posted a comment! i wonder if my settings need adjusting. Yes, a few of us have started to use Ako along side Learn. I think it does work rather nicely too and we could work to replace it with Ako altogether. Yes we are currently working on what will be essentially the follow up to this, with departments individually. I feel that further shifts in thinking are in fact more likely or possible thanks to the new build that has the specialist areas working inside it, which I hope will continue through to the general Kahui buildings coming up too. Thank you for your feedback on my thinking, I appreciate you taking the time to read it and think on it.
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