Wednesday, June 20, 2007

New Zealand

I am trying to make this a more regular thing. It seems that there is a lot going on at the moment. School has been hectic as you can imagine with reports (and the new VELS reporting to boot) and exams and marking. Things were made even more hectic for me due to the fact that in the middle of report writing time, I went to New Zealand as part of a study tour for 6 days to look at schools over there. It was an amazing experience. Aside from the fact that it meant that I had to mark 2 classes of exams and a class of essays in 2 days in order to get my reports done 4 classes in said 2 day period, the 6 days in NZ opened my eyes to the interesting things going on in education, not just in NZ, but in Victoria as well. The trip involved 13 principals and leading teachers from Victorian schools, and the aim of the trip was to look at some schools in NZ, and see how they were designing their curriculum, incorporating ICT, and designing their buildings. The majority of the schools we looked at had only opened in the past 5 or so years and were aiming to provide education for 21st Century learners. They focused on personalised learning, individual learning programs, creating community, integrated curriculum, self direction and reflection, and had designed programs that catered for their students' individual needs, learning styles and allowed them the freedom to cater their own learning program to their needs and preferences. Their buildings were also designed with this premise and they included lots of glass for high visibility, student breakout areas of varying sizes and varying quietness, meeting rooms for student groups, accessible technology or laptops for all, and classroom spaces with flexibility to be resized. All this and they still claimed to prepare students for the rigours of external assessment at Years 12 & 13.
So the NZ system is different from ours in Vic, but there are some similarities in the approaches they took to the approaches of some of the other schools in Vic who are being similarly innovative. They seem to have looked at the curriculum documents they are made to work with and stripped them back - eliminating the content to leave only the key learnings and the student skills that they would like to see as an end point, and then designed their curriculum to incorporate and work towards these skills and learnings. In doing this they are allowed a greater freedom to incorporate rich tasks, fertile questions and integrated learning, rather than teaching all these skills in distinct classes for different learning areas.
At the moment we are thinking about BYTES, including what is done well and what can be modified or improved and at the same time thinking about changes to Year 10 to incorporate a more authentic careers program and Digital Portfolios. We are also in the process of applying for funding for a new building for Year 7 students in order to get rid of some of the portables and to try and increase the Year 7's connectedness to the school. At the moment the Year 7's are split up as a year level between the last two blocks of the school, in ageing portables, a long way from the rest of the school. We are also looking at ways of improving learning for the Year 7's and this trip gave me so many ideas about what we could do.
It is important to remember that these NZ schools had all been either purpose built or purpose designed for the curriculum initiatives they were trying to develop. So our journey will not be without blockers. We have an intense focus on VCE results at this school and so anything done at junior year levels must not be seen to be losing the rigour and the focus needed to prepare our students for VCE. We also do not have the ability, due to timetabling etc, to totally rejuvinate the way we do things and begin from scratch. There will be no clean slate at our school to work with, only a chance to incorporate some of these learnings of other schools into the way we do things in order to help improve student connectedness and student learning outcomes. In some ways I see the amazing possibilities that a total reform would bring about but I am realistic about the chances of that happening.
I think that this is a really interesting time to be working in education and it is this sort of stuff that really interests me - curriculum and building design, innovation, and ICT. This is the path I would like to folllow in my career and there are a lot of exciting things going on to get involved in. It just also reinforces for me my confusion at where to from here in my career...

1 comment:

Scott said...

possibilities ... what a wonderful thing.