IMPORTANT: Please delete this slide after reading - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 14
About This Presentation
Title:

IMPORTANT: Please delete this slide after reading

Description:

By Paul Madsen. ICT teacher. Auckland Normal Intermediate. pmadsen_at_ak-normal.school.nz ... It is based on the model developed by Dr Linda Selby, Head of Centre, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:34
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: nicoleb62
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: IMPORTANT: Please delete this slide after reading


1
Great DiscoveriesBest Practices with ICT in
the New Millennium5th - 6th April 2000
2
Auckland Normal Intermediate
  • Mentoring as a Model for Professional
    Development in Information Communication
    Technology.
  • By Paul Madsen
  • ICT teacher
  • Auckland Normal Intermediate
  • pmadsen_at_ak-normal.school.nz

3
Overview
  • This presentation will focus on
  • What is Mentoring.
  • How is it implemented as a Professional
    Development Program.
  • How it is evaluated.

4
What is Mentoring?
  • It is based on the model developed by Dr Linda
    Selby, Head of Centre, Auckland College of
    Education.
  • It is a formal training program.
  • It involves a mentor working with their mentee on
    a regular basis.
  • It is driven by the mentees learning needs.

5
Why Mentoring
  • The key focus is on integrating ICT into the
    classroom program.
  • It is a long term program.
  • It takes place in the mentees class and with
    their equipment and children.
  • It is flexible but sustained.
  • It is not driven by an expert from outside

6
How was it organized
  • Each school in the Cluster chose their own
    Mentors based on a range of criteria.
  • These included
  • Technical skill
  • Already implementing ICT into their classroom
    program.
  • The ability to work with other teachers in a
    training program.

7
Training of Mentors
  • A day of training for the Mentors with Dr Linda
    Selby.
  • Covered the key components of Mentoring and the
    Mentors role.
  • Each school wrote a draft Mentor Training Program
    Action Plan.

8
Action Plan
  • Who the program was to be for
  • How it was to be funded
  • How the school would evaluate the success of the
    Mentoring Program
  • How they would evaluate the Mentoring Program in
    their school

9
MentoringWithin Each School
  • Each school decided on own Mentees.
  • At ANI we had Mentors approach people they
    thought they could work with.
  • Mentees identified a goal or objective they
    wanted to achieve in their training, based on
    their needs.
  • Mentors and Mentees decided on time that was
    suitable to meet and length of training eg 1 term
  • Some release time available for this ( varies
    from school to school).
  • Meetings are formal, a written record is kept and
    logs kept by Mentor and Mentee.

10
Monitoring of Program
  • Each school has Lead Teacher who monitors the
    program within their school.
  • Cluster Coordinator keeps in regular contact with
    Lead Teacher.
  • Once a term Cluster Coordinator has meeting with
    each Mentor and Mentee.
  • Reviews written logs
  • Discusses program and any changes made, or
    difficulties encountered.

11
Evaluation of Mentoring
  • Overall the program will be evaluated on how well
    teachers are implementing ICT into their
    classroom program.
  • Individually the evaluation will be against the
    written goal(s) of the Mentee that they
    identified at the beginning of the Mentoring
    training.
  • Each school will evaluate themselves against the
    Action plan that they have written

12
Review of Mentoring Program
  • At end of term 2 this year we will have a formal
    review of the Mentoring program across the
    Cluster.
  • Schools will be asked to identify Mentees or
    other Teachers on their staff who could be
    trained as Mentors.
  • We will look to run another Mentor training day
    in term 3 for those people identified.
  • They will then work with another group of Mentees
    in their school

13
Possible Opportunities
  • Later in the program have Teachers from one
    school act as Mentors to teachers at another
    school in the Cluster.
  • Depends on skills required
  • Cost
  • Practicality
  • Benefits include
  • Sharing ideas and skills among schools
  • Sharing understanding of how other schools in the
    Cluster work

14
Summary
  • Mentoring is
  • Long Term
  • Mentee driven ( their needs are paramount)
  • Aimed at delivering ICT into classroom programs
    not teaching ICT skills per se.
  • Evolving process as Teachers become more skilled,
    more confident and as new teachers arrive at
    school.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com