Title: Imagination and Engagement
1Imagination and Engagement
- Quality and Equality in Learningthrough
Partnershipsfor Imaginative Education
2Imagination and Engagement in Shifting
Thinking about Schooling Kieran Egan, Simon
Fraser University in Building Culturally
Inclusive Schools Mark Fettes, Simon Fraser
University in Helping All Learners Reach Their
Goals Debbie Leighton-Stephens, BC School
District 52 (Prince Rupert)
3Imagination and Engagement
- in Shifting Thinking about Schooling Kieran
Egan, Simon Fraser University
4Development of childrens minds
- Social homogenizing
- Knowledge accumulation
- Psychological development
- Cognitive tool acquisition -gt kinds of
understanding - What are cognitive tools? 75,000 years ago to
today.
5Kinds of Understanding
- IE is based on five distinctive kinds of
understanding that enable people to make sense of
the world in different ways - Somatic Understanding (pre-linguistic)
- Mythic Understanding (oral language)
- Romantic Understanding (written language)
- Philosophic Understanding (theoretic use of
language) - Ironic Understanding (reflexive use of language)
6Somatic Understanding
- understand experience in a physical,
- pre-linguistic way
-
7Somatic the bodys toolkit
- Bodily senses
- Emotional responses attachments
- Humor expectations
- Musicality, rhythm, pattern
- Gesture communication
- Intentionality
little factories of understanding Ted Hughes
8With the development of language--further little
factories of understanding
How do the tools in the left column turn into,
blend with, develop distinctly from those in the
right column? How do the tools in the second
column develop, or develop distinctly, from those
in column one?
9Mythic Understanding
- understand experience through oral language
- no longer limited to making sense of the world
through direct physical experience - can now rely on language to discuss, represent,
and understand even things not experienced in
person
10Mythic Oral languages tool kit
- Story
- Abstract and affective binary opposites
- Affective images
- Jokes and humor
- Mystery and wonder
11From cognitive tools to planning teaching
12Examples
- Teaching place value in grade 2
- Teaching properties of the air in grade 3
13Romantic Understanding
- understand experience through written language
- realization of independence and separateness
from a world that appears increasingly complex - relate readily to extremes of reality, associate
with heroes, and seek to make sense of the world
in human terms
14Romantic cognitive tools from oral to literate
culture
- Cinderella to Superman Peter Rabbit to Hazel and
Bigwig - win in window at from cat stop and
watch the stopwatch - White bears on Novaya Zemla Blue shamrocks on
Sirius 5.
15Romantic Literacys toolkit
- Extremes and limits of reality
- Associating with the heroic
- Matters of detail
- Humanizing knowledge
- Romance, wonder, and awe
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17Examples
- Teaching about eels in grade 8
- Teaching interior opposite angles are congruent
in grade 7
18General principle
- All knowledge is human knowledge it grows out of
human hopes, fears, and passions. Imaginative
engagement with knowledge comes from learning in
the context of the hopes, fears, and passions
from which it has grown or in which it finds a
living meaning.
19THE LUCID PROJECT
- Imagination and Engagement in Culturally
Inclusive Schools - Some insights from a Community-University
Research Alliance - Mark Fettes, Simon Fraser University
- Funded by the Community-University Research
Alliances programof the Social Science and
Humanities Research Council of Canada
20Diversity, quality and equality
- Diversity is
- a defining feature of teachers work that schools
are ill-designed to accommodate, perpetuating
unequal outcomes - a fact of life in modern societies that requires
intellectual and emotional engagement and
dialogue based on knowledge and understanding - a potential resource for teaching and learning
that offers much of value for academic, social
and personal development in schools
21Inclusion through imagination
- A theory of learning that views all cultures as
educative and all students as capable of creative
and energetic thought - A set of principles for connecting the facts,
concepts, and skills of the mainstream curriculum
with the roots of human meaning - An approach to classroom teaching that works with
learners from diverse backgrounds and with a
diversity of abilities and needs
22Teaching in layers
- Look for the transcendent qualities of any topic,
such as wonder, courage, wisdom, ingenuity,
rebellion, power, beauty - Plan a narrative structure for the unit that will
allow your students to experience these qualities
for themselves, and incorporate cognitive tools
(tools of imaginative engagement) that keep
heart, head and hands working together - Draw on the resources of your students and their
communities to build an increasingly complex
picture of the human meaning of the topic
23Transcendent qualities
Narrative frame
Tools and Resources for Imaginative Engagement
Facts, concepts, skills
Strategies and activities
24Three examples
- The following teaching plans were developed by
teachers in the LUCID project, in BC School
Districts 33 (Chilliwack), 50 (Queen
Charlotte/Haida Gwaii) and 52 (Prince Rupert). - These plans have all been used in mainstream
school classes following the BC curriculum. - We have seen a consistent pattern of engagement
in these classes, in which students who are
typically disengaged, and may even be written off
by other teachers, show themselves to be
energetic and talented learners.
25The Spirit of Haida Gwaii A Grade 8 English
Unit By Leslie Puley, School District 50
26- Finding purpose in Grade 8 English
- Here we are at last, a long way from Haida Gwaii,
not too sure where were going, still squabbling
and vying for position in the boat, but somehow
managing to appear to be heading in some
direction. At least the paddles are together,
and the man in the middle seems to have some
vision of what is to come. - Bill Reid
- In this unit, the canoe becomes an image of the
classroom and all the characters on the boat are
all the students in the class. - Students will be imagining that life on the
boat is their time during high school when
theyre learning and figuring out their options
for the future. The big question is what will
happen to the characters when the boat lands?
Or, metaphorically what will happen to the
students in their lives after school? How will
they contribute to society? - Bill Reid asks us if there is a purpose to the
journey at all
27Activities Discuss metaphors for community
in poetry and art Write about a character in
Reids sculpture Listen to Reids essay and
the teachers adaptation of it Read Haida
stories about the canoe characters Practice
comprehension, vocabulary, etc in variety of
ways Watch the video Spirit of Haida Gwaii
Compose a portfolio for one character
(description, poem, resume, achievement award)
Engage with a speaker from the community who
talks about Haida storytelling traditions and
their relevance to contemporary life Apply what
you have learned to produce something relevant to
your own life and future goals (using writing,
art, music, etc).
28Mosquito Woman
- An oral language teaching cycleby Tannis
Calderin collaboration with School District 33
29Oral language in place
- The program was initially designed for a school
where about a third of the students are
Aboriginal, and traditional reading programs have
had little success - Each cycle of activities is based on a
traditional narrative of the Stolo, the River
People - A transcendent quality central to the story
provides the overarching theme of the cycle - Activities are carefully ordered to engage the
students with increasing levels of challenge and
reward
30A multi-week cycle
- A cycle lasts 3-4 weeks and progresses through
four stages - First Encounter (listening to the story told
orally, exploring it through guided imagery) - Preparation/ Immersion (learning the story
through rhyme/rhythm, building vocabulary through
Mystery Words and other games) - Creating/Inventing/Reimagining (one-minute talks,
short role plays, and other short projects) - Celebration/Integration (dramatic retellings,
enactments, audio and video recordings)
31Some engaging verse
- When darkness fa!s and mothers call
- For all their children big and small,
- Thowxeya with her basket deep
- Seeks out to snatch those not asleep.
- Thowxeyas evil appetite
- Is sated only with a bite
- Of young, sweet children who neglect
- To hurry home before sunset.
32Some mystery words
- The first part of the this word means bad or
wrong. - This is what happens when something goes wrong
when listening or talking - The last part of the word comes from the root
word common. It means shared by all or
together. - Miscommunication
33A skipping rhyme
- Thowxeya, Thoweya, big and mean,
- Push her in the fire and hear her scream,
- It wasnt a joke,
- There wasnt any smoke,
- How many skeeters came out to poke?
- 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.....
34Achieving multiple goals
- Students normally silent and passive become
active and thoughtful participants - Aboriginal culture and values infuse part of the
regular curriculum - Families are brought closer to the world of the
school - The focus on written, formal language is enriched
by a new appreciation for the beauty and power of
spoken language - Mythic understanding is retrieved and developed
- Power relations in the classroom shift toward
co-creation (become more horizontal)
35By Colleen Pudsey and Raegan Sawka, School
District 52
36We would like to recognize the Elders of the
Tsmsyen Nation, Smalygax Language Teachers and
the First Nations Education Services Department
of School District 52 (Prince Rupert) for their
hard work and dedication in developing the
cross-curricular units and resources for our
district. Their mentorship and these materials
played an integral part in the development of our
Imaginative Yearlong Framework.
37- A Year-Long Journey
- Each student is part of a Crest group symbolized
by an animal (wolf, raven, eagle, orca) students
without a crest are adopted in a December feast - The crest animals represent heroic qualities
that are also to be found in each curriculum
topic and in traditional true tellings (adaawx) - The curriculum follows the rhythm of the seasons
and of community life - Culminating activities affirm students
accomplishments throughout the year
38Five Curriculum Phases Clans and Crest Phase
(September) Community, narrative, history,
identity Creation Phase (October-November) Astron
omy, geology, exploration, physical fitness Feast
Phase (December) Art, nutrition, formal
speaking, cooperation Energy Phase
(January-February) Physics, technology, natural
resources, sports Survival Phase
(March-June) Ecology, biology, literature,
outdoor skills
39LUCID and educational change
- Working with teachers
- Workshops, M.Ed. Program, planning, teaching,
assessment - Working with districts and First Nations
- Good collaboration but hard to change systems
- Working with students and parents
- Units are relatively easy, consistency is hard
- Developing curriculum resources
- Greater use of / demand for local resources
- Imagination means struggle
40Imagination and Engagementin Helping All
LearnersReach Their Goals
- Debbie Leighton-Stephens
- District Principal of Aboriginal Education
- School District 52 (Prince Rupert)
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43 Sagaayt Hakalelsm (Work together) Hagwil Yaan
(Walk slowly) Haawks (Believe)
44Sagaayt Hakalelsm
- - build positive partnerships that are
- genuine
- respectful
- and appreciate diversity
45Hagwil Yaan
- take time to develop relationships - listen
learn - build trust - change takes time
46Haawks
-know your learners -believe in your
learners -high standards -empower - dont save
47Engaging Imaginative Learning
Teaching from our Feast halls -everyone has a
place -everyone works together -everyone has a
purpose
48- hearts and minds are involved in learning -
learning is challenging relevant - learning is
fun interesting
49Research Protocol
PRINCIPLES
- Researchers will conduct research in partnership
with Aboriginal people. - Researchers respect the culture, traditions and
knowledge of First Nations people. - Researchers have an obligation to understand and
observe the protocol concerning communications
within the Aboriginal community.
50Signing the protocol agreement
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52Students EngagedIn Learning
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