Learning curve

Man behind the model: Feilding Intermediate School principal Stu Trembath. His philosophy is to get the kids engaged with school. If they want to come to school, they’ll learn. If they don’t, they won’t. It’s that simple.

If kids want to come to school, if they’re interested when they get there, they’ll learn. If they don’t, they won’t.

It’s that simple, according to Feilding Intermediate School principal Stu Trembath.

He led his school into a new teaching model 10 years ago – grouping children in centres of interest for their learning, using those interests to direct their learning – and says simply that it works. Children are interested in what they are doing, and they want to be at school.

“That’s half the battle, right there,” he says. “If anything has been highlighted in these 10 years, it’s that the personalised interest leads to engagement. If they want to be here, if they’re engaged, you have the best chance to give them quality teaching.”

When he came to Feilding in 2002, he found a traditional intermediate school, doing a fairly good job, but with room to improve. Could do better, was Trembath’s pedagogical assessment, so he started talking to his teachers about better ways to grab kids’ attention.

“I said to one of my staff, how would you like to teach all the kids who love sport? Just those kids. Present their maths and their reading through sport. He said it couldn’t be done … and I asked why not.

“It snowballed from there.”

The sport trigger was Trembath’s own: he says it was his top interest at school. All he wanted to do was play cricket, preferably getting his mitts on the bat, but adults insisted on trying to teach him mathematics. Inside. Sitting at a desk. Telling him to listen, and then telling him that now it’s time to stop thinking about mathematics and start thinking about spelling. Young Stu, meanwhile, was thinking about cricket bats.

“If only one of those teachers had said, right, you write me the most exciting cricket match you can think of. Or told me to look at the mathematics of cricket: `Stu, you tell me the averages of these guys …”‘

He went to Palmerston North Teachers’ College, 1974 to 1976. He then went straight into the classroom in 1977, and slowly realised that when kids were interested in something, they learned. That plunk of thought spread out in a big ripple: Turn how we do what we do on its head. Don’t say to kids, you have to learn this, you have to be interested in that. Instead, find out what kids are interested in, grab their attention with it, and sneakily stuff in all the maths and reading and spelling and writing.

Trembath talks about engagement all the time. It’s the Holy Trinity of teaching: attendance, engagement, achievement. Get the kids through the door first. Then get them interested. Then they’ll achieve.

The school spent most of 2002 batting ideas around. Teachers had to rethink how they did what they did. They settled on centres of interest for learning, four initially, but refining into five as the method evolved. There’s Nga Toi, the arts centre; Hauora, based on health, sport and PE; Taumata, going beyond and higher, gifted and talented children do well here; Papatuanuku, hands-on learning, a lot of it outside the classroom in school gardens and working with animals; and Motuhaketanga, independence and self-management in more traditional classrooms – they suit some children very well. The children and their parents choose the centre and style of education to best suit the child.

Some parents were initially skeptical, thinking their children would be categorised or stigmatised by the centres. Some families left the school. The Education Review Office learned forward and looked hard. In 2004 the school’s ERO report said quality of education was variable, there was a lack of consistency in implementation, planning, delivery and assessment of the curriculum. More also needed to be done for Maori students.

Trembath and the teachers kept building, and when ERO came back in 2005 to have another look, its report talked about students being highly engaged and motivated learners; that achievement was improving. There was now rigorous identification processes to support children who needed extra help. Effective teaching contributed to progress at every level.

Trembath knew the centres of interest model was working, but it was nice to have official findings corroborate it.

He’s found out more about children and the way they learn since the centres started, and the physical environments in the classrooms reflect the personalities and learning styles of the children.

In Hauora, the four classes have between 21 and 26 children each. They’re predominantly boys; the kids are black-and-white about rules and are highly competitive, easily distracted.

“So we cover the windows; the classrooms are darker. I had a teacher say to me once that if somebody walks past the classroom bouncing a basketball, vroom, 60 eyeballs lift up off the work and go straight out the window. So we put work displays up over the windows, it’s a quiet environment in here, and when you give instructions, you explain why. They’ll push back otherwise.”

The newly opened arts centre is one of the proud spots of the school. Trembath shakes his head about physical plant; the bog-standard Kiwi classroom built to suit cost convenience, not teaching.

“That’s the challenge for the next decade, to get the physical environments right for the children.”

Nga Toi, the arts centre, is a long, wide-open block. Four classroom spaces can be divided with partitions, but the three classes in here mostly use the full space for performance. Small stages are well-used at each end of the block; children’s tables and seats are in random clusters and there are quiet areas for thinking, for using digital resources. Everyone’s up on their feet, talking, brainstorming, waving their arms to make points.

“Dance, drama, music and the visual arts. These are not students who happily sit still. They’re right there, in your face, spontaneous and active and on the go. It’s how they work; they’re wired to be up and about. Traditionally they’ve been told to sit down and be quiet, and these are kids who boogie across the room to fetch a book. And why shouldn’t they?”

The open-plan environment suits them and their teachers, but it’s not for everyone. People who like a more structured environment feel insecure. Trembath proved this on swap day, the one day that teaching staff all swap classes; each drawing a class out of the hat at random.

“And when I came over here that day, all the room dividers had been pulled shut. Different teachers, who liked to teach in a more traditional style. It was an interesting day for everyone … and it proved to me that those teachers were in the right place in a more traditional classroom.”

The Papatuanuku class is the hands-on environment; a lot of work done in the school gardens and with animals. Trembath nods at the rose garden outside his office, which is netted shut so the chooks clucking inside it can’t escape. The hens are having a wonderful time, grubbing up weeds like white bindweed, tradescantia and oxalis.

“They did that, measured up the area, built the pens … maths, environmental studies, co-operation … it’s all there. These students raise and sell plants, and they produce vegetables and eggs for the technology classes. They do a lot of outdoor education; canoeing, scuba diving.”

Taumata – going beyond and higher – is for children who are very academically able. Independent, often gifted learners apply to go there, but not all the school’s gifted children are in Taumata; some prefer to be in other centres.

“The teacher there is working to the side, encouragement, support; the students are firing on all cylinders, directing their own learning. Often we find these children have been isolated in other schools, they’re academic, they’ve sat back in class, being held back by their classmates. They come here and suddenly they’re surrounded by like-minded children, and they have friends for the first time.”

Gifted children are often uneven in their development; at 11 they might read and compute like first-year university students, but they’ve never had a best friend who really cares about black holes in space the way they do.

“New ideas, new concepts, all the time here. You don’t extend these children by giving them more of the same. You give them new things to think about.”

The three classes of Motuhaketanga children are in more traditional school classrooms – “but without the naughty kids holding everyone back. Look, kids are only naughty `cause they aren’t interested and they aren’t suited to that style of learning. Get them in the right place, and the behaviour just melts away, they’re interested and engaged and learning.”

Trembath’s emphatic that the centres of learning aren’t fads or gimmicks. That’s the curse of education, leaping on a bandwagon because it’s new, and assuming that changes will suit every child. Digital classrooms are examples of this; not all children like a wholly digital format. Better to use the technology as tools, in a way that suits children’s individual learning styles.

The proof is children’s achievement.

The school’s last ERO report (2008) did not identify any areas of concern, and wrote approvingly of the inclusive school culture and measures taken to improve Maori student achievement.

To read more go to: Learning curve

By LEE MATTHEWS

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 30 March 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

Schools blind to bright Maori

Jill Bevan-Brown 

Jill Bevan-Brown

Gifted Maori children are being overlooked in the classroom because teachers are failing to recognise their unique genius, says a researcher.

Massey University education associate professor Jill Bevan-Brown said schools tend to focus on academic subjects but giftedness in Maori students is broader.

“Not all teachers are aware of Maori concepts of giftedness – and because they are not aware of those concepts they won’t see them.”

A Maori child may also feel uncomfortable or undervalued in the class so they purposely hide their abilities, she said.

Ministry of Education figures show Maori students lag behind the rest of the population when it comes to school success.

Dr Bevan-Brown said it is time for schools to take a Maori perspective.

Often a quiet, well-liked Maori pupil will bring out the best in other children in the class or playground, she said.

Although a confident leader, the child doesn’t seek recognition and may be overlooked if they fail to shine in maths and English.

“Generally we focus on the academic areas. There is a hierarchy of subjects and other areas of giftedness suffer,” Bevan-Brown said.

“Social giftedness is just as important. Being outstanding in manaakitanga [hospitality] for example, is just as important as being gifted in maths.”

Around 15% of the population are estimated to be gifted but 15% of the Maori population are not in special programmes, she said.

It is important for Maori children to have their abilities recognised because they are from a minority group and children are aware they are already at a disadvantage, she added.

Bevan-Brown called on teachers to recognise students for different reasons, such as those with a sense of social justice or concerns for the environment.

“It’s so important we do because we want gifted leaders who have great sense of social responsibility.”

Despite her concerns, she said there is a lot to celebrate.

“Many gains have been made in recent years, and I feel real aroha for those teachers that are doing a wonderful job.

“There is lots of really good work being done by Pakeha teachers in this area but we need more Maori teachers – not instead of, but as well as.”

Bevan-Brown was presented with a Te Manu Kotuku award last month for her research into gifted children.

MARIKA HILL

Article found here: Schools blind to bright Maori

– © Fairfax NZ News

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 30 March 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health)

page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

The secret story of violence in schools

A teacher is punched in the face, another is shoved in the chest and their lunch stolen, one is regularly verbally abused while another has their car vandalised.  But at the schools’ request, none of it is reported to police.

Post-Primary Teachers Association president Robin Duff called the situation “intolerable”.

He said, in the PPTA News, the teachers’ union could not continue to be “complicit in this conspiracy of silence” that concealed the level of violence within schools.

He said competitiveness in schools gave them an incentive to hide issues of violence towards teachers and staff, and some schools didn’t want police involved because it could lead to negative publicity.

The national executive was “particularly concerned” to learn that some schools were actually forbidding teachers from reporting instances to police.

In one case a teacher was sitting in their classroom eating lunch when a student walked in and punched them in the face. The school told the teacher not to go to police because it would be dealt with internally. Nothing happened.

Another a teacher was shoved in the chest and their lunch was taken.

There were also numerous reports of teachers being punched, kicked or threatened, and property including cars and houses, being vandalised.

One teacher said every teacher knew a colleague who had been verbally abused, physically threatened or suffered instances with students out of control and a risk to themselves and others.

“Senior management of schools are under pressure to reduce instances of suspension and expulsion and we all know of instances where there is pressure not to report assaults on persons, or criminal damage to teachers’ property.”

As a result the PPTA had issued members with an instruction to report assaults on teachers to police.  By issuing an instruction rather than a recommendation it hoped teachers in “all kinds of schools would do it” making it less likely that individual schools could be singled out.

It also reissued an anti-violence toolkit with a 10 point flow chart on what to do in the event of an assault.

It said teachers should seek advice from a PPTA field officer and not return to work until the school had taken every practical step to eliminate, isolate or minimise hazards.

A trivial application of force in the course of everyday interactions, “mere aggressive behaviour” or an incident where there was no intention to cause harm did not constitute assault it said.

Figures supplied by Statistics New Zealand show there were 567 instances of common assault in schools or other educational institutions reported to police last year.

From 2001 to 2011 the number of serious assaults resulting in injury rose from 50 to 81, and the number of sexual assaults more than trebled  from 33 to 116.

The Secondary Principals’ Association was reluctant to support the  PPTA’s move.

President Patrick Walsh said he had not seen any evidence of a conspiracy of silence, nor was he aware of principals banning teachers from reporting assaults to police.

“Principals take the issue of staff safety very seriously. We know staff are our greatest asset in the school and we want them to be happy,” he told the Sunday Star-Times.

He agreed that principals should be referring any serious assaults to police, regardless of whether the victim was a teacher or student.

“The days are gone where we define [assaults] as bullying or right of passage. When a student hits a student  that is clearly assault and a crime, and should be dealt with.”

Walsh said some schools could be worried by bad publicity associated with assaults, but principals would be foolish to cover up violence against teachers because it could result in a personal grievance case against the school.

He said some schools had handled situations badly in the past, such as that at Hutt Valley High School, which was the subject of a damning Ombudsmen’s Office report last September. Pupils were subjected to torture, extreme violence and sexual abuse, but school authorities failed to protect victims, alert parents or report numerous attacks to police, the report found.

IMOGEN NEALE AND MARIKA HILL

Last updated 05:00 08/04/2012

– © Fairfax NZ News

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 30 March 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health)

page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

Teenagers sentenced for brutal attack

Two New Zealand high school students have been sentenced to four months’ juvenile detention after breaking a girl’s neck during a brutal attack.

The attack on the 14-year-old victim in November at Flaxmere College in Hastings was filmed on a cellphone.

Three girls were expelled from the school following the attack.

Two teenage students were this week sentenced to four months’ juvenile detention and a year’s supervision, TVNZ reported on Saturday.

The victim was left with serious spinal injuries and has become a recluse, unable to attend college or play sport, the broadcaster said.

Her mother, Moana Hawkins, said her daughter had been let down by the school.

“You don’t expect to send your child to school in the morning and then two hours later you’re rushing down there because your child’s been bashed.”

This news report is found here: http://news.msn.co.nz/nationalnews/8448136/teenagers-sentenced-for-brutal-attack

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 30 March 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health)

page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

 

Home-schooled actors tell a tale

STEPHANIE FAWCETT

A Winter's Tale Cast 

Stephanie Fawcett

ACTING OUT: From left: Irene Corbett, 15, Regan Crummer, 15, both of Papatoetoe, Daniel Tizzard, 16, of Pakuranga and Tai Nimo, 12, of Mangere. The four are part of a home school theatre group putting on a production of William Shakespeare’s A Winter’s Tale.

A group of dedicated thespians has been working hard on a tale of jealousy, anger, forgiveness and redemption.

The Shakespeare Group has been studying William Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale for six months and now members are ready to bring the bard to Papatoetoe and the masses.

The home-schooled cast is aged between 6 and 18 and has been rehearsing an abridged version of the famous play.

“We’ve been studying it for about six months now and we’ve been breaking down the characters, analysing them and learning the language of Shakespeare,” home school educator Wendy Crummer says.

“The reason we abridged it is that we’ve found a lot of audiences can’t sit through three hours of Shakespeare but there’s no need to worry, it’s all true Shakespearean language and we’ve kept the integrity of the play,” she says.

The Shakespeare Group has been performing together for about four years and has also staged Julius Caesar, Twelfth Night and an outdoor production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

The Winter’s Tale tells the story of a kingdom plunged into chaos by the jealous and deluded King Leontes and is a tale of deception and suspicion, hatred, broken friendships, love, laughter and reconciliation.

Regan Crummer, 15, who plays the suspicious king, says his character is driven mad by jealousy and accuses his pregnant wife of having an affair with his best friend.

“He suffers from morbid jealousy. His friend has been staying at the palace with them for months and he starts getting ideas,” he says.

Daniel Tizzard, 16, who plays Leontes’ best friend and fellow king Polixenes, says he loves getting into rehearsals with the group after studying the play for so long.

“It’s really great to get on stage and start developing the characters and seeing their little quirks and how they react to others.”

The costumes have all been made specifically for them and Mrs Crummer says they have been working with a theatrical director.

“We’ve been working with a man named Douglas Roberts. We stumbled across him when we were doing Julius Caesar and it’s just grown from there really. He loves Shakespeare,” she says.

“The parents have been hard at work making costumes and props. There are probably two or three costumes for each cast member and we prefer to make our own rather than hire them.

“We don’t want people to go away and think `that was pretty good for a kids’ production’,” Regan says.

“We really aim for quality and we want to make Shakespeare more accessible to various audiences including schools.”

The Shakespeare Group’s production of William Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale will be performed at the Spotlight Theatre, Tavern Lane, Papatoetoe, on March 30 at 2pm and 7.30pm and March 31 at 7.30pm.

Tickets are $20 for adults or $15 for students.

Email tickets@shakespearegroup.co.nz or call 5765794 for more information or to book.

Rad about this here: http://www.stuff.co.nz/auckland/local-news/manukau-courier/6638318/Home-schooled-actors-tell-a-tale

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 24 February 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

 

This link is motivational:
https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/