Changes in Education
In our
changing global climate, education reform is inevitable as the demands of the
information technology age have created a whole new culture. The old education
model is already obsolete, though granted a lot of current theory and pedagogy
is still relevant in these initial stages of this paradigm shift.
I have come
to teaching as a mature adult and have been trained in the first wave of future
focussed education. When I got my first teaching position as a BT, I naively
thought all schools were well underway with 21st Century learning
skills. I began to realise the size and scope of the huge educational wheel
beginning to turn its cogs towards change. I have seen teachers in resistance to
the change, and I began to be afraid I would be left behind in a school system
that had not yet embraced the changes needed.
The Influence of Mindlab
Mindlab has
upskilled me and replaced this growing fear with excitement and knowledge. I am
passionate about deeper approaches to learning and engaging students in
critical thinking, problem solving, collaboration and self-directed learning.
The way that students engage with these 21st Century skills is
astounding, they are hungry for this new model of teaching and learning.
Our current
catch phrases of diversity, student led, lifelong learners and digital
classrooms are the new vocabulary that is helping to shape the pathway forward.
One of the
themes I have incorporated into my classroom from my experiences with Mindlab
is “Changing the script” (MOE, 2012). I
enjoy sharing knowledge with my students as much as any teacher, but I also understand
they have access to instant knowledge at their fingertips, therefore
understandably this role needed to change from teacher directed.
Self-Regulated Learners
I began to
utilise student voice in my classroom last year before this course, and
realised how informative it was to guide my practice and make the students feel
valued. I had also been an advocate of collaborative classrooms, creating a
community of learners. However, the Self-regulation 21st CLD
learning activity rubric (ITL
Research, 2016) made me
aware that a barrier to actual self-regulation in my classroom was that I was
still providing the structure and follow up to their lessons. There was not
opportunity for the students to plan their own work.
I began to
trial this with a group of students and was immediately able to see the depth
of response from my students. Initially I scaffolded through this transition,
offering ideas for guidance, but the students quickly adapted and created their
own learning goals and follow ups. This has led the students to feel greater
freedom and yet more ownership of their learning, to engage their critical
thinking skills and collaborative learning, and to problem solve together.
Freedom in the Classroom
The
majority of my students moved quickly away from teacher directed into
independent learning. I have found this has freed my time to be able to engage
and tune in with all my students in a lesson, rather than be tied to a guided
group in a fixed rotation model. Both me as a teacher, and my students feel
more in control in this rethinking of learner’s and teacher’s roles style of
learning.
This is
most definitely a knowledge building learning environment, as we learn from each
other on this journey. Teachers no longer need to know everything, as we too
have access to it all at our fingertips, and students are the richest resource
available to us.
ITL Research. (2012). 21CLD
Learning Activity Rubrics. Retrieved from https://education.microsoft.com/GetTrained/ITL-Research