The week of Feb 11-15th, 2013 has been packed with my own professional learning opportunities. I was fortunate enough to attend the"Navigating Change, Council of School Leaders Annual Provincial Conference ( #cosl2013) in Winnipeg, Manitoba on February 14th and 15th. It was here that I again became the learner and was reminded of the importance of being a reflective practitioner.
The Conference featured three amazing keynote speakers: Damian Cooper (@cooperd1954), George Couros (@gcouros), and Michael Fullan. Each speaker shared a different focus:
Damian Cooper - Redefining Fair: Leading Teachers to Excellence in Mixed Ability Classrooms.
Damian's focus was on the notion of redefining fairness and specifically that Fairness is not Sameness.
He discussed the five imperatives that should guide a teachers' work:
- Curriculum must be meaningful, coherent and relevant
- Instruction must be responsive to students' needs
- Assessment must be informative
- Grading must blend consistency with professional judgement
- Communication about learning must be truthful and transparent
Teachers must consider the idea of being responsive to learner needs. Our job is not to "cover curriculum" but rather to facilitate excellence and learning from all of our students. Information that is "google-able" is no longer relevant. This information is at their fingertips. We need to plan for and expect deeper understanding. We need to be flexible with all of our instructional plans.
Damian spoke a considerable amount about the program planning component of teachers' work. The idea of backwards design is no longer an option, but an imperative. When planning for a year/term/unit teachers need to approach their planning with the end in mind.
Step 1: Identify the targeted learning (understandings or skills)
Step 2: Determine appropriate assessments of those understandings or skills (both formative & summative)
Step 3: Plan learning experiences & instruction that make such understandings and skills possible.
- Start with the "why" of technology
- Learning is creation, not consumption
- We must do what's best for kids
- Learning and sharing are synonymous
- The biggest shift is in the mindset of leaders, teachers, students
- The learning culture needs to be participatory
- Data does not move people, stories do
- Principals need to believe it
- The longer you wait, the harder it will be. We need to go ahead and Jump - "Here goes something, I guess"
George's talk challenged me to rethink my own blogging practice. This should be the place where I consolidate my own learning. I myself need to be a learner and need to push myself to do the things that I believe in. I am not as eloquent as George and his posts on the The Principal of Change blogspot, but who's comparing:) As a result of my learning experiences last week, I realized that I needed to get back to my blog. This will be the place where I will consolidate my own learning, perhaps share a thing or two, and just be reflective of all the "goings on" of my work connected to teaching and learning.
Learn together, Lead together
Hi Julie
ReplyDeleteNo...not George, but Julie! Thank you for sharing your experiences. You are talking the talk and walking the walk - you go, girl! Inspiring! It is great to see you blogging, and I look forward to hearing more about your professional learning journey.
Thankyou, Sherri for your kind comment. It really is a great feeling when others read and respond to your work:) You were so right when you said that you want your students to feel this way....I love the collaborative learning environment that a blog provides.
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