Keynote Presentation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 59
About This Presentation
Title:

Keynote Presentation

Description:

Keynote Presentation – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:45
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 60
Provided by: clic6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Keynote Presentation


1
  • Keynote Presentation
  • Faye Brownlie
  • March 3, 2008

2
(No Transcript)
3
(No Transcript)
4
(No Transcript)
5
(No Transcript)
6
(No Transcript)
7
(No Transcript)
8
(No Transcript)
9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
(No Transcript)
12
My Premise
  • Teachers are doing the best they can with what
    they know.
  • Personal Experience
  • School Norms
  • Second Hand Experience
  • Research
  • Mandated Curriculum and Assessment

13
My Questions
  • Is this what we want?
  • Is what we are doing the best of what we know?

14
Scenarios
  • Of what we have been/are doing
  • Through the eyes of a teacher - the past 28
    years

15
Your Questions
  • Does this reflect your practice?
  • What does this practice show you believe about
    learning and learners?
  • Is this the practice that you want?

16
  • Late 70s and 1980s

17
Reading Programs
  • Ginn 360 or Language Patterns

18
Young Writers The Writing Process
  • A provincial initiative
  • Pre-writing, drafting, editing, proof-reading,
    publishing and presenting
  • Daily writing for an audience and with a purpose

19
Secondary English
  • One class novel
  • Comprehension questions
  • Grammar worksheets
  • Main idea booklets

20
  • Late 80s and 1990s

21

22

23
Thinking in the Classroom
  • Four areas of thoughtful learning
  • Questioning
  • Making connections
  • Representing
  • Reflecting
  • Based on integrated learning, teaching and
    assessment
  • 1991

24
  • Primary Program, 1990, 2000
  • Intermediate Program, 1990 (draft)
  • Year 2000 - A Framework for Learning, 1990

25
Principles of Learning
  • Learning is an active process.
  • Learning is an individual and social process.
  • Children learn in different ways and at different
    rates.

26
Research - Pearson Fielding, 1994
  1. Large amounts of time for actual text reading
  2. Teacher-directed instruction in comprehension
    strategies
  3. Opportunities for peer and collaborative learning
  4. Occasions for students to talk to a teacher and
    one another about their responses to reading

27
  • Inclusion - differentiation
  • ESL

28
  • Enhancing and Evaluating Oral Communication in
    the Primary, Intermediate and Secondary Grades,
    1988

29
The Classroom Context Study, 1993
  • Grades 3,7,10, 3 months, 2000 kids
  • Purpose
  • Assess communication skills within the regular
    context of classroom learning
  • Develop an understanding of Ss experiences and
    Ts practices

30
  • Findings
  • Classroom activities were focused around
    independent, self-contained reading and writing
    activities
  • Teachers more confident about teaching writing
    than reading
  • Little instruction in oral language

31
  • Are you a whole language teacher?

32
  • Are we still allowed to do this?

33
  • Do you believe in spelling?

34
Other derailers
  • polar opposites
  • mandates
  • politics
  • jargon

35
  • Late 90s and into the new century

36
The Age of Accountability
  • Grand events
  • DART, RAD, SMART
  • Day to day teaching
  • Building criteria
  • Descriptive feedback
  • Learning intentions

37
The Performance Standards
  • Describe the professional judgments of BC
    educators
  • Describe what student behaviour is expected to
    look like
  • Show various levels of achievement
  • How good is good enough?

38
  • Performance based assessment -
  • students applying skills concepts
  • Assessment that guides instruction
  • Assessment of/for/as learning

39
  • Appropriate Text
  • Guided reading
  • Literature circles

40
Preventing Reading Difficulties in Young Children
- NRC, 1998
  • Effective instruction in reading requires
    that teachers focus on
  • The relationship between letters and sounds
  • The process of obtaining meaning from print
  • Practice for fluency

41
Writing Next
  • Writing Next Effective Strategies to Improve
    Writing of Adolescents in Middle and High School
    (gr.4-12)
  • -Steve Graham and Dolores Perin
  • Alliance for Excellent Education
  • www.all4ed.org/publications/WritingNext

42
  • 1. Writing strategies
  • 2. Summarization
  • 3. Collaborative Writing
  • 4. Specific Product Goals
  • 5. Word Processing
  • 6. Sentence Combining

43
  • 7. Prewriting
  • 8. Inquiry Activities
  • 9. Process Writing Approach
  • 10. Study of Models
  • 11. Writing for Content Learning

44
Reading Next - Biancarosa Snow, 2004
  • Instructional Improvements
  • Direct, explicit comprehension instruction
  • Effective instructional principles embedded in
    content
  • Motivation and self-directed learning
  • Text-based collaborative learning
  • Strategic tutoring
  • Diverse texts
  • Intensive writing
  • A technology component
  • Ongoing formative assessment of students

45
www.all4ed.org
  • Infrastructure Improvements
  • Extended time for literacy
  • Professional development
  • Ongoing summative assessment of students and
    programs
  • Teacher teams
  • Leadership
  • A comprehensive and coordinated literacy program

46
15-30
  • Without -
  • professional development
  • ongoing formative assessment of students and
  • ongoing summative assessment of students and
    programs
  • Reading Next - Biancarosa Snow, 2004

47
Challenges
  • Staying the course
  • Wise pro d
  • Watching our language
  • Keeping our eyes and ears and hearts on the
    learner and the learning

48
Quotable? Quotes
  • We are considering a new computer program to
    teach phonics to all our primary students.
  • I love teaching Romeo and Juliet. It takes me at
    least 8 weeks, 10 if Im lucky.

49
Quotable? Quotes
  • Since the class is now going to read together,
    Ill get the ESL kids to take out their
    individual work.
  • We have finally agreed upon the correct levels of
    achievement for each term for our Guided Reading
    groups.

50
Looking toward tomorrow-for kids
  • Real reading, writing and oral language tasks
  • Choice in text and representation
  • Apprenticeship teaching - gradual release
  • Backward design - planning with the end in mind
  • Assessment for learning
  • Performance-based assessment
  • High expectations/standards for all

51
Looking toward tomorrow - for teachers
  • Focus on student learning
  • A spirit of inquiry
  • Mental models of teaching/learning
  • Teacher teams - to plan, to reflect, to revise
  • Respectful work environments
  • Professional responsibility for our autonomy
  • Ongoing, inclusive, focused professional
    development - MUST enter the school and the
    classroom

52

53
(No Transcript)
54
Unity in Diversity
  • By Paul Sopow

55
The diversities of race can be reflected by a
simple comparison.
Guitar vs Bass
56
Guitar supremacy
A common electric guitar has 6 strings. Which
immediately leads to the assumption of greater
mental function and superior sound. But why do
two instruments with relatively the same shape
and the same bottom 4 strings have such intense
conflicts? Are basses really the slaves of lead
guitars? Is it the other way around? Or is it a
unity between them both that makes music.
57
Racism of the ages.
  • Racism has many definitions, the most common and
    widely accepted is the belief that human beings
    are divided into more than one race. Members of
    some races being essentially superior or inferior
    to members of other races.
  • Racism and prejudice has always existed among
    men, but in different shapes depending on the
    time in history. The fear of the unknown is a
    natural reaction. Throughout the history people
    have made borders and strong defences to keep
    strangers out. In the effort to keep strangers
    out people are developing still stronger and more
    effective weapons. This striving toward safety
    has started several wars and killed millions of
    people. The bass can be said to be foreign to the
    guitar even though they are closely related and
    originate from the same type of instrument. This
    foreignness instils a sense of fear which leads
    to racist behaviour.

58
Differences and Similarites.
  • The electric bass guitar or the electric bass is
    essentially a bass stringed guitar played with
    the fingers (plucking, slapping, popping, or
    tapping) or a pick. The bass is similar in
    appearance and construction to an electric
    guitar, but it generally has a larger body, a
    longer neck and scale length, and the four
    strings are usually tuned one octave lower in
    pitch than the four lower strings of a guitar.
  • An electric guitar is a type of guitar that uses
    magnetic pickups to convert the vibration of
    steel-cored strings into electrical current,
    which is then amplified. The input that comes
    from the guitar can be electrically altered prior
    to being fed into an amplifier to achieve
    different effects which produces the final sound.

59
  • In direct relation, electric guitars could
    represent the Pashtun Muslims and the bass
    guitars could represent the Hazara Muslims. The
    guitars being the upper class with more
    privileges where as the bass is the supporting
    role which reflects the Hazara slaves.
  • As stated before. Racist behaviours can be
    brought on by fear of the unknown or invasion. In
    the case of Pashtun and Hazara Muslims they are
    old enemies and fought each other for lands in
    the past. Which then leads to a protective nature
    and intense racial conflicts.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com