Sunday 25 March 2018

Week 32: My Reflective Post


Step 1 (What): Identify one key change in your professional practice 
The key change I have identified within my practice is from the Standards for the Teaching Profession within Our Code, Our Standards (Ministry of Education, nd) and this is:
Teaching - Teach and respond to learners in a knowledgeable and adaptive way to progress their learning at an appropriate depth and pace.

A key change in my professional practice that I have acquired from the Mindlab course is the knowledge and skills to adapt my teaching practice toward the future focussed learning that is underpinning the direction of the new educational model, in particular personalised and self-regulated learning.

Within the code, the Teaching Standard requires educators to ‘Teach in ways that enable learners to learn from one another, to collaborate, to self-regulate and to develop agency over their learning (Ministry of Education, nd).
Mindlab has given me the confidence to build on my practice. Previously, I had identified a need to change the way students engage in their own learning, and take more ownership and agency within this. I already had strengths in guiding students to build a collaborative class community and to learn from one another, and I wanted to teach the students in a responsive and adaptable way to self-regulate.
Step 2 (Now what): Evaluate the identified change
When I identified the required change (that students needed to develop self-regulation skills), I immediately ran into barriers in the educational setting I was working within. Firstly, senior leadership did not want me to teach outside the current curriculum model that was the status quo. As it was identified in Osterman & Kottkamp, (2015, p.71), the conflict occurred between my need to cover the material and the desire to engage students in challenging and personally relevant learning experiences.

Secondly, as I began to gain the knowledge and understanding gained through the Mindlab course of how to implement and set up students for success in self-regulation within the classroom, I ran into the next barrier; realising that there was a discrepancy between what I would like to do (my espoused theories) and aspects of my practice (Osterman & Kottkamp, 2015, p.71-72).

As I worked through the four stages of the Cycle of Experiential Learning model (Osterman & Kottkamp, 2015), Problem identification, Observation and analysis, Abstract reconceptualization and Active experimentation, I became excited during Stage four, (Active experimentation), as this was when I saw the success of implementing this change taking place as I implemented the new change and strategies into my classroom programme.

Step 3 (What next) Share your next plan(s) regarding your future professional development or your future practice.
The confidence I have gained from making this change within my practice has clarified and become a foundation skill set for my classroom programme. Although this change was not 

initially encouraged by leadership at my school, the outcomes speak for themselves. A coincidental benefit at the same time that I was implementing this change, was the change in government and the ensuing change in assessment practice for schools.

What this means is that schools are no longer locked into a cycle of reporting National Standards, and therefore are opening to change and new ways of teaching and learning. This meant that personalised learning has become a new catch phrase in my school, with professional development beginning to address this. I have found that I am many steps ahead of my colleagues (with the exception of other ‘Mindlabbers’ on staff), due wholly to what I have learned and practiced along the Mindlab journey, and can be a supportive agent for change in this transition.

Assignments and reflective practice has allowed me to continually feed back into my own Teaching as Inquiry cycle, such as how to resource and use rubrics for feedback, develop and refine formative feedback methods, include student voice as inclusive practice, and develop self-regulated lifelong learners, engaged in their own style of learning within a supportive and collaborative classroom community of learners.

REFERENCES:
Ministry of Education (nd). Our code, our standards. Retrieved fromhttps://educationcouncil.org.nz/content/our-code-our-standards
Osterman, K. F., & Kottkamp, R. B. (2015). Reflective practice for educators : professional development to improve student learning.(2nd ed.) New York: Skyhorse Publishing.