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Showing posts with label 21C learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 21C learning. Show all posts
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An Updated Beginner's Guide to Hobsonville Point Secondary School

Click here to view the clip about HPSS on Seven Sharp



This post is an update on the original A Beginner's Guide to Hobsonville Point Secondary School. The updated version includes some changes made to our time table as a result of a Term 3 curriculum review. It is our hope that this post will need to be updated regularly as we plan for the timetable to evolve regularly to ensure we are always responsive an meeting the needs of our current cohort.

So what is HPSS all about and how are we hoping to evolve existing models of secondary education?

HPSS is a co-educational state school located in Hobsonville Point, Auckland. We are a MLE (modern learning environment) which means we are a large open plan school, typified by open flexible learning spaces, break out rooms and specialised learning spaces. The furniture is varied, including high bar leaners, mid-level desks, tables, low tables and bean bags. The space and fittings designed to move from caves, campfires to watering holes. We are also a PPP school which simply means that we have another company managing our property (from maintenance to cleaning) - which means we can focus on teaching and learning!

(Credit where credit's due - the next part is mostly poached and remixed from a range of existing resources developed by the Senior Leadership Team and Leaders of Learning!)

Vision
The vision for our school is to create a stimulating, inclusive learning environment which empowers learners to contribute confidently and responsibly in our changing world.

Principles
The foundations of our curriculum decision-making are to:
  • Innovate through personalising learning
  • Engage through powerful partnerships
  • Inspire through deep challenge and inquiry to develop empowered learners
The curriculum and student week is made up of three key components - learning hubs, specialised learning and project learning.

Learning Hubs
Learning Hubs will:
  • be small groups where caring relationships are fostered
  • provide learners with one key person who will connect with family and ensure learners are engaged in a relevant and challenging programme
  • explore learner interests in order to pursue passions, which can be linked back to learning
  • track progress and provide structures so learners, with their coaches and families, can maintain a learning portfolio
  • build on learners' capacities to be Inquirers and Self Directed Learners

Specialised Learning Modules
Specialised Learning Modules:
  • will enable all students to gain coverage of curriculum areas and fluencies
  • will include a range of teaching & learning modes: co-constructed, seminar, workshop, flipped, online etc.
  • will encourage critical and creative thinking
  • will be framed by inquiry and involve independent learning activities
Learning Coaches will work with the students to create a LearnPath by selecting a range of modules that ensure curriculum and skills coverage. Beyond 2014 students will be able to be placed into modules based on curriculum levels suited to their readiness rather than based on their age.

Check out Specialised Learning Leader Steve Mouldey's post here for detail about Learning Modules

Project Learning
Students will be engaged in at least one project at any time.

This allows student choice through personal interest and develops lifelong skills of collaboration and complex problem-solving.

Big Projects: 
  • larger scale, links with internal or external expertise/mentors, business partnerships, community links, encourage social responsibility & citizenship
  • apply learning across curriculum areas with focus e.g. Wetlands
  • exposure to wide range of learning experiences, scope for student participation across range of roles
Passion Projects: 
  • individual/team initiated and negotiated interest based projects
  • encourage curiosity, grow passions and achieve excellence
You can check out Learning Partnership Leader Sarah Wakeford's blog here for more details.

Timetable Structure

Term 4 Timetable 2014
The above image shows the new timetable structure as Term 4 2014. All modules run for a term.

The timetable structure consists of:

Specialised Learning Modules:
  • the Small Learning Modules (SLM) is a two session module that is made up of two learning areas and two teachers working together to lead an integrated module 
  • the Special Interest (SPIN) is a single session module that has a singular curriculum focus and is led by one teacher. 
All modules are designed to relate a term long theme (Term Four is Systems and how things work). Students select modules with support of their Learning Coaches to ensure curriculum coverage is achieved.

Learning Hubs take place every day, with two longer slots to allow times for one-on-ones, e-portfolio development and 'learning to learn' type sessions to take place.

The Big Project takes places every Tuesday. Professional Learning takes priority every Friday morning (with activities being offered to students who need to arrive early).

MyTime is a flexible period that will be used to provide curriculum specific support as needed and time for student led and staff supported interest groups and self-directed time (under the watchful eye of MyTime facilitators). 

Professional Learning 


To support this curriculum structure there is of a course need for a robust professional learning programme that will support our educators to conduct continuous inquiry into the needs of their learners and the success (and areas for improvement) of systems and structures. The following provides an overview of how we hope to achieve this.
  • Teaching as Inquiry – This will underpin the professional learning that will take place throughout the school year. The staff will work in Professional Learning Groups (same as their Learning Community) on individual inquiries and will focus on future-focused strategies being used to improve student outcomes and ‘Powerful Partnerships’.
  • Critical Friendships – The team will be establishing a process for all teachers observing and being observed at least once, usually twice, a term. This will provide feedback and feed-forward for Teaching as Inquiry projects and e-portfolios. We will facilitate PD around being a good critical friend/coach. Senior Leaders will also be conducting fortnightly walk-though observations of all staff to ensure teaching and learning reflects the school vision.
  • Future-focused Leadership training – The team will also be developing a Future-focused Leadership programme for all staff to complete throughout the school year.   
Future-focused Pedagogy support
  • Digital Citizenship – The professional learning team will completed a Digital Citizenship Professional Development pilot project at the National Library last November. This will help the team to develop an ongoing Digital Citizenship professional learning programme for staff and students in 2014.
  • ICT PD – The professional learning team are developing online PD courses to support the teachers in their use of Moodle, Google and MyPortfolio.
  • Responsive Pedagogy - The professional learning team will be responsive to teacher and student needs and will also help with strategies to ensure pedagogy is responsive to the needs of students (including use of student voice, shadow coaching and sharing best practice). 
  • Teacher e-Portfolios – The professional learning team will be working with staff to establish e-portfolios for all teachers. This will provide them with the opportunity to develop an online portfolio for reflecting on sharing their professional learning as well as providing a process for gathering evidence and artefacts for Registered Teacher Criteria and attestation. Students will also be developing e-portfolios through MyPortfolio.
This of course is all a moveable feast, is all a work in progress and as we conduct a continuous cycle of leading and teaching as inquiry systems and structures will continue to involve. 

Basically, if we ain't adaptive experts already, we soon will be!
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Hack Your Classroom: Week Nine - Making future-focused innovative teaching infectious!


Welcome to the last official post for Hack Your Classroom!

First up, a great big thank you to everyone who participated either by blogging and sharing or by simply joining the conversation via Twitter. It has been heartening to see so many teachers willing to reflect so openly and publicly whilst sharing and inspiring lots of folk along the way. It's impossible to say exactly how many people have participated, but the number of people I have encountered on and offline up and down the country (and across the world) suggests the reach may have been greater than one might suspect.


So here we are, a term into hacking our classroom and developing and encouraging future-focused teaching. So, what do I mean when I say 'future-focused innovative practice'? I mean everything we have covered in the #hackyrclass curriculum and then some - developing a growth mindset, getting to know your learners - hacker style, design thinking, maker culture, blending learning, universal design for learning, handing the power over to the learners, free range learning and students developing robust self-direction plus all those other future-focused skills such as complex communication, critical thinking, collaboration and basically anything that helps students (and teachers) to become adaptive experts. The innovative part comes in because I believe it can't just be about looking back to the tried and true, we also need to be willing to try the new along side the proven pedagogical approaches. We need to willing to take risks and see our responsibility to extend our students beyond National Standards, NCEA or even University Entrance and more about helping students to help their future selves and our future societies and economies.

So what? What now? For me the biggest hope of something like this is that it can provide a trigger or plant a seed for ongoing innovation and sharing. So how might we encourage the #hackyrclass and growth mindset to continue to propagate? For a starter, if that everyone of us takes the responsibility of purposely infecting a handful of others around us to start questioning their practice and to start sharing their practice we could expand the amount of educators engaging in future-focused innovative practice with relative ease. Think of it as viral marketing of awesomeness.

Source: http://www.sanketj.com/2013/03/viral-marketing-pointers.html
However our major challenge will not be continuing to encourage the converted to whom we mostly preach to, or those who encourage and support us with the confines of our conference, meet ups and online echo chambers. It will be the challenge of engaging the others - the unaware, the disinterested, the disheartened and even the 'happy oblivious' who have been lulled into a false sense of security bought on by good or even great National Standard and/or NCEA attainment.

So, what are your suggestions? How can you/we lead the charge and lead change from the ground up? How can we make future-focused innovative change less daunting and more delightfully infectious?

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EduTECH - A compelling case for capacity building for 21st Century capabilities


A short but power packed session with Bruce Dixon from the Educating Modern Learners and Rowena Ulbrick from Expanding Learning Horizons. Great messages about the beef to develop 21C learning capabilities. I won't attempt to capture all of the learning from this session but keen to share the following websites! All worth an investigation if you are even vaguely interested in 21C learning.

Modern Learners Website

Anytime, Anywhere Learning Foundation

ITL Research

ITL 21C Learning Design Program
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