Greetings from Gail Chittleborough

Congratulations to you all for a wonderful start to this project. The evaluations of the summit were very positive. Your class blogs are a great start - all so interesting.

The researchers from Deakin - Filocha, Wendy, Peter and myself have enjoyed meeting with some of you and hearing how your work is progressing. We are keen to hear about your experiences - you may like to respond here on the blog and share with the other teachers in this project. Some quetsions you could reflect on include:

1. How is your work progressing?, Any stories of success or frustration? What response have you had from students?

2. There are five aspects of the project that we are investigating:

Higher-order thinking,

Metacognitive awareness (learning about learning)

Teamwork/ collaboration,

Affect towards school / learning

Ownership of learning.

Have your interventions had an impact in any of these areas?

Tom has been highlighting some of the thinking routines described on the visible thinking website - e.g. see-think-wonder, claim-support-question, stop-look-listen, There are a variety and you may be doing all this without using the label that the visible thinking website uses. I would live to hear of any examples from your students.

Gail


4 Responses to “Greetings from Gail Chittleborough

  • 1
    Di Scanlon
    September 7th, 2007 10:09

    Hi Gail.
    My students are finally making use of our (new) site on changing states. Most have moved beyond the “I think it’s cool…” type response to thinking about questions/stimulus material proposed and making a comment requiring consideration and thought.
    I have a few students in my class who would ask 20 questions each lesson if I let them. Yesterday a number of girls decided I should restrict questions in class to say 3 each, then any other questions had to be put into the blog in the interests of fairness. I think that’s a great idea.
    I would prefer to be using software where I could remove the unfamiliar terms like meta, blogroll etc as I think this puts the weaker students off.
    I am really pleased that my students are getting the idea that this is their class site and they should contribute to it’s development.

  • 2
    Mr. Barlow
    September 12th, 2007 10:18

    Hi Gail,

    I commented on this a while ago and it appears as though my comment may be awaiting moderation (it had a few hyperlinks in it). Do you want to check that out.

    Cheers,
    Tim

  • 3
    gailc
    September 12th, 2007 12:55

    Hi Tim,
    yes I would appreciate hearing from you- I did not see your earlier comments.
    G

  • 4
    Mr. Barlow
    September 16th, 2007 14:51

    Hi Gail,

    Good to hear from you and I hope the team at Deakin are travelling well.
    In terms of the project my class has completed a unit of work which I called ‘Life Learning’. I set up a classportals page to run my year 9 “Life Learning” unit from. The unit ran from the last four weeks of term 2 until week 4 of term 3.
    - It was designed to be relatively unstructured to enable students to be more self-directed.
    - I generally acted as a facilitator during the unit as all students were engaged in different topics. It didn’t happen all the time and not all students experienced it but I do feel that many experienced Csikszentmihalyi’s “Flow” at times which was fantastic.
    - Students presented their learning this term and I was very happy with the results. On several occasions during the students final presentations I learnt things from the students that I didn’t know before - clearly I hadn’t told them - so that was great.
    - I do feel that students were still extrinsically motivated by marks, however, there was also some intrinsic “need to know” going on too.
    - I feel that I never achieved 100% learning purely and simply for the sake of learning. The problem probably lies in the fact that assessment and reporting are such a big focus at schools. So in an attempt to help my students love learning and want to learn I set up another site (http://mrbarlow.wordpress.com/) which is my blog of interesting things going on around the world. I have given the site to the 80 kids I teach this year and in eight weeks this term since it’s introduction it has got about 1500 hits. So I feel it is somewhat successful at helping kids want to learn and as such I plan on keeping it going.

    Overall I feel that ‘Life Learning’ was a really successful unit, the students approached it with a great attitude and really extended themselves.

    - In terms of higher-order thinking the projects the students created were certainly at the top end of Bloom’s revised taxonomy. ie. Analysing, Evaluating and Creating. So it was terrific in this regard.
    - The metacognitive side of the unit was probably a bit weak although the students did complete some fairly basic self and peer assesment at the end.
    - I really tried to encourage teamwork and collaboration via groupwork (which worked well) and student posts on the classportals site (which didn’t work as well).
    - In terms of the students attitudes to school and ownership of learning I feel my class was really positive. I really tried to push the Choice aspect of CEQALL (as I believe it ties it all together) and I really think this had a positive influence on the students experience.

    Finally as a science teacher I think that improving student’s thinking skills is a really important part of my job. As such I try to implement a variety of structured thinking tasks in my classes regulary. As such I have used some of the thinking routines listed above and found them to be great :)

    Cheers,
    Tim

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