Sunday, November 29, 2020

MIT KPMG Hui Term 4

So what now?

What will the hui look like for the launch of my site?

It will have a focus on home learning during any future lockdowns, the ENGAGE site will fit beautifully within this.
  • Invite one of my student's whanau to share their lockdown experiences and how they accessed learning and supported their child. They can share experiences in Tongan as this would be far more powerful coming from teachers. Show the data of students who participated in home learning and celebrate success. 
  • Physically share Engage games so parents can see their children playing the game.
  • Share Engage at home within the context of other aspects of home learning e.g. Google Hangouts, class site navigation, a checklist for parents.
  • Share food and have this as an informal meeting of teachers, chance for teachers and whānau to develop relationships.
  • Advertise at prize-giving hui date and time
Include ENGAGE Site on Transition to school site (Thanks for the idea Kiriwai!) as well on all Junior class sites.

Reflection Of This Years Journey; Shoulda, Woulda, Coulda

Woulda
I woulda if I'd known about covid...have the site up and going for the first lockdown with student and whanau at the forefront of my mind. I would have started earlier. Now I am finding that it is too late in the year and not the right time. For me now I feel it is best to be strategic in the timing of the launch to get maximum whānau uptake/ buy-in.

Coulda
I coulda but circumstances challenged....total implementation of ENGAGE across the whole team but capacity to take on ENGAGE wasn't there for some teachers in my team. Also creating videos during lockdown didn't happen even though I had put it out there as a project for students.

Shoulda
I shoulda taken action sooner instead of being stuck in the thinking/planning stage.


Saturday, November 28, 2020

What happens when light hits an object?

What happens when light hits an object?

My CoL inquiry has been looking into developing student's oral language using two week, high interest topics hands-on learning tasks. 

This weeks topic has been light.

This has been my lesson sequence:

1) Look at our shadows outside in the play ground. Why do we have a shadow? Does anything else have a shadow. Introduce the words; shadow, opaque, the concept of light coming from a source (the sun) and an object blocking the light's path. 

2) Read in dual language book 'Shadow Sleeps' . Students listen to audio in their first language and take the book home to share with their family.


3. Introduce the concept of reflection e.g. like light bouncing off. Discuss that some objects reflect light. Sit in a circle and students role play light traveling in waves to another person and bouncing off of them. Students take turns to walk across the circle and pretend to bounce off someone. 

4. Give students a torch, mirror, paper plate and magnifying glass.students make a prediction what the light will do when it hits the object. Gift students the words penetrate (meaning the light goes through it), reflect (meaning the light bounces off it), or block (if the object is opaque). Students ten experiment to see what happens. 



5. Explore making rainbows. students say and do as they 

Say And Do Activity

Students say and do as they

  • Fill up a glass of water.
  • Put the glass of water at the edge of a table.
  • Balance it slightly over the edge of the table.
  • Put a piece of paper on the floor next to the table.
  • Shine the light through the water to make a rainbow.

The students then write what they have learnt about light.





Evidence of student learning:

The hand-on activities allowed students to use the new vocabulary in context. Me modelling simple and correct sentence structures using new vocabulary resulted in students themselves copying these structures. For some this was challenging and took effort, however all achieved this. The amount of talking during these sessions was awesome. There were questions being asked and problem solving (critical thinking) happening everywhere you looked.
The student's writing showed the increased fluency due to having 'lots to say' and engagement. Sequencing of ideas and use of new vocabulary. I have also noticed a marked improvement of sentence structures. 



Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Learning About The Water Cycle

When asked the question where does rain come from the only answer my students could give me was that it came from God or "I don't know", with a shrug of their shoulders.

Their amazement during our first activity of simply painting water pictures on the concrete and watching the water evaporate showed that this was a new experience and something they hadn't thought of. Because previous to the experiment we had talked about the sun heating up water and evaporating it, this language transferred easily. 

"Look the water is evaporating...it's going up to the clouds!"

Such simple everyday phenomena brought such amazement and when given the words my students could put these words to an experience that although they had witnessed many times before had never contemplated or understood. 

The second activity we learned about condensation by making a water cycle in a bag. Here the students could see the condensation on the side of the bag as the water heated up and then turned to water vapour and then cooled. We made lots of connections to steam around their house and why the mirror was wet after a shower. We gifted and gifted and gifted more vocabulary!


The third activity was creating a cloud in a jar to show what happens when clouds become heavy with water droplets. This was incredibly exciting and a great way for the students to see what happens. Explaining what words mean is a norm within our classroom therefore if the students didn't know what a word I used meant they would ask. I would take my time to explain the word sometimes using pictures, diagrams as I talked or role play.

The last activity was creating a water filter to understand what happens to water as it runs off the land into our streams and lakes. They were then able to make connections to our drinking water and water conservation that we had touched on earlier on in the year. 

The discussions and writing that resulted from this topic were incredible. All students understood the basics of the water cycle and concepts of evaporation, condensation and precipitation. They loved using the terms and extremely easily explained how their water filters worked.

To collect comparative data I compared an EASTTle writing sample recounting doing one of the experiments to writing about something they did in the weekend. Nearly all the students in my class wrote better quality recounts about doing the experiments than their weekend experiences (bearing in mind it was Halloween). In particular, the organisation of their writing and ideas noticeably improved. I feel this is because they had a lot to say and their ideas flowed naturally in a clear sequence. 

Earlier in the year many of my students struggled to put anything onto paper so this change is huge.

I also believe that these concepts and experiences are now able to be built on throughout their schooling. When my students come across content related to water they will be able to draw on these experiences and have the foundational knowledge that can be built upon. We may not see the benefits of building oral language now but I believe that results will be seen further in their schooling.


Evidence of Student Achievement


In the water cycle, the sun heats the water to do evaporation. It goes up to the cloud to be condensation and if the cloud gets too much water it's going to rain. That's called precipitation. 

By Elijah


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