See you in Buenos Aries, Argentina
August 26, 2008
August 24, 2008
Oscar and Teuila visit!


For a complete article reporting the event please go to the page on the right of this blog:
”Oscar and Teuila Visit”
Sione’s Wedding film trailer
August 3, 2008
Social bookmarking using del.icio.us
Today I leaned why social bookmarking is cool – you can access your bookmarks from any computer, you can sort them and select them using tags and they are public so you can benefit from other people’s collections of tagged bookmarks on topics you also use. I’m tagging videos and pages about howto blog at the moment, using the tags ‘howto’ and ‘blogs’ on the platform del.icio.us
It’s very easy to download delicious from google and save it as a button on your internet browser. www.nzherald.co.nz uses this bookmark.
Learning how to post videos
Well, this is my first video post directly to my blog. Just for the record, folks, I am at the stage where I have a whole pile of gadgets I’m not sure how to use… you tube, vodpod, this blog with widgets, and del.ici.ous.
I want to be able to post videos from other blogs directly onto mine, and eventually I will sort out howto use my vodpod properly – i’d like to categorise my videos, and start collecting some without them going to my main pod which anyone can see on this blog. I’m not sure why one would use a vodpod – however my inspirational site has one, and almost as soon as I started using vodpod I recieved videos from Englishteachers on the otherside of the world- cool eh! This Titanic sequel was sent from Mike in England for my film study students!
July 28, 2008
Teenage heath and well-being in New Zealand
At the 2008 NZATE (English Teachers’) Conference in Takapuna, on the final day a keynote speech on teen health was given by Dr Simon Denny, MPH, FRACP. He is a Youth Health Physician working at the Center for Youth Health at The University of Auckland. Currently he is conducting Youth’07, following on from Youth2000, which was the first nationally representative health survey of students attending secondary schools in New Zealand.
Dr Denny opened with a number of quotes about ‘the state of youth’ that seemed to depict that things are worse these days, however the quotes turned out to date as far back as to Aristotle in 340BC!
Teens haven’t changed – but we can change their environment.
He explained studies which show that on their own, adults and teens will take a similar degree of risk. When the teen is with friends that risk behavior goes up dramatically.
The highest risk for teens: Driving at night with friends.
Harm minimization measures: restricted licensing laws.
Strengths based program
Focuses on healthy development, not just the illness.
For example depression- at 18% for males, 9% for females.
Moving home more than two times was the risk factor for depression that cuts across all other outcomes.
Interestingly, spiritual beliefs were a risk factor for depression. This may be connected with duties and obligations of religion. These beliefs were a positive factor reducing inappropriate sex and drug behaviors.
Resiliency developed through:
1. Relationship with parents
– even when flawed still the most important
relationship in teenage lives.
2. Connections with family
3. School connections
Ineffective Strategies for Violence Prevention
· Scared straight – exposure to jails etc
· Segregating aggressive students
· Alternative education – increases student
engagement but increases risk behavior x 3- 4
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Short-term interventions
· Identification of pre-violent adolescent –
unreliable tools
· Focus on providing information
Effective Strategies:
· Grounded in theory: healthy adolescent development
· Strengths based: build competencies and skills
· Strong Adult-youth relationships, connections
· Intensive and long lasting. Few quick fixes.
Teenage Identity
- behaviour
- environment
- stories you tell about yourself
- family and community
Assigning teens drama roles e.g. ‘director’, changes behaviour through identity.
Young people have no pre-set direction so they must forge their own.
School engagement:
Is increased by academic expectations and rigor, positive adult-student relationships and safety – physical and emotional.
Trusting relationships around students, teachers, staff and families.
Fostering high parent / family expectations for school performance
Every student feels close to at least one adult at school.
Safe and pro-social ways of researching controversial topics e.g. anorexia. Outwards looking approach.
Girls internalize. Boys externalize.
Teens are hard-wired for risk. Adults can provide different risks and challenges.
July 27, 2008
7 Day Plan
7 Days to a Perfect Classroom
by Tom Daly
http://www.adhdsolution.com/7dayclassroomg/index.cfm
My Summary of the Main Points:
Day 1: Encourage Extra Work
Avoid passive compliance.
Provide a POSTER of options for those who have done the task as well as they can so they have something meaningful to do while you help the slower kids.
Writing: poems, songs, letters, reviews, newspaper reports
Ongoing Activities: grammar, spelling, vocabulary, journal
Reading: books, journals, short stories, teen magazines
Drawing: maps, timelines, comic strips, characters, settings
The original full report for Day 1 is at:
http://www.adhdsolution.com/7dayclassroomg/day1.cfm
Day 2: Welcome all your students
Students are motivated by positive relationships with people
When they notice you are glad to see them students feel valued and welcomed in your class. When they like you their motivation to be disruptive will disappear.
The 3H’s: In the hallway greet them with a handshake, a hi or a hi –five. ( Give them the choice of which ?)
This shows affection and acceptance and may restore a good mood in some cases.
You have a chance to monitor music players etc before they enter the classroom.
Peer-tutoring- in tutor group buddy up different ages in pairs doing homework on certain subjects.
This is more important that the lesson plan, at least it is much more effective than having your back to the kids writing etc. as they enter.
The original full report for Day 2 is at:
http://www.adhdsolution.com/7dayclassroomg/day2.cfm
Day 3: Emotional Intelligence
Good grades are not everything…
Optimism is a better predictor of success in life
Increase self-monitoring and reflection on actions and results
Emphasizie how we can choose to feel, think and act
Develop understanding of others and frame decisions in terms of principles
Teaching optimism: De-personalize Failure
Model it yourself – be non-judgmental and positive. Change ‘frustrating’ to interesting.
Reframing – change a negative event into an opportunity
Analyse WHY something failed – What happened at this point? What was the effect? Attributing something to a cause and effect prevents pessimistic ‘fatalism’ or low self-esteem.
The original full report for Day 3 is at:
http://www.adhdsolution.com/7dayclassroomg/day3.cfm
Day 4: Walk and Talk
Problem students are challenging you to reach them
Spend ten minutes out walking, and talking about anything except school. No agenda.
Don’t fish for what makes them interested- if you listen more than you talk they will reveal this to you..
Choose students by raffle or draw
Ask them to walk with you and help with tasks
A positive way for them to get attention
The original full report for Day 4 is at:
http://www.adhdsolution.com/7dayclassroomg/day4.cfm
Day 5: Find out What They like Most
A Fun Survey of their likes, dislikes, interests. – not superficial ones such as favorite colour, but deeper, more specific interests and values they are passionate about.
Some students say they are not interested in anything,
so the survey is a way around that.
Do the survey in the first week, also when new students arrive during the year. Use what you find to help them make a real connection to their schoolwork and to you.
The original full report for Day 5 is at:
http://www.adhdsolution.com/7dayclassroomg/day5.cfm
Day 6: Some Kids Need a Different Approach
For example a kid who is not good at traditional reading and writing may respond well to a magazine on their interest.
No, this is not provided for everybody – but for this kid who was struggling –it worked!
Hand-on activites work well “ people remember about 80% of what they do but only 20% of what they hear.”
Use computers, technology.
Make it feel like a game, a joke.
Topic is ‘real’ – relevant to life, important to student
Kids do something they will tell /show their friends
The original full report for Day 6 is at:
http://www.adhdsolution.com/7dayclassroomg/day6.cfm
Day 7: Solving the Mystery of Behaviour
Be a detective. Unemotional. Observer.
Watch from the students’ point of view.
Look for clues:
Who: is present/absent
What: happened before, during, after
When: time elapsed in lesson? Time of day
Where: does this happen anywhere else?
How: How did the event build up / slow down?
Use tally marks:
Frequency
Duration
Force / intensity
Listen to other adults in this child’s circle
Objectively analyse your data.
Formulate a simple to-do plan
Tackle one thing at a time
Try each intervention for at least 2 weeks.
A question to try:
“Why would you say that?”
The original full report for Day 7 is at:
http://www.adhdsolution.com/7dayclassroomg/day7.cfm
July 26, 2008
Maori and Pasifika Achievement
How we together can make a difference.
At the 2008 NZATE (English Teachers’) Conference in Takapuna, the closing address was given by Professor Russell Bishop, professor of Maori Education at the University of Waikato School of Education. His Iwi/Hapu is Tainui /Ngati Awa.
Kia kaha
Kia toa
Kia manawanui
Be strong, brave and steadfast!
What works for Maori works for everybody
40% of young Maori leave school with no qualifications.
In the NZ Herald 60% of jobs required tertiary qualifications
2% require no qualifications.
Underachievement is not caused by poverty – in fact underachievement causes poverty.
Internationally, countries such as Korea and Japan achieve a high standard of education and high equity – or equality of education regardless of income. These countries are mono cultural.
New Zealand, the UK, Australia and the USA are multicultural. They have a high standard of education for some, but low equity.
Historically in NZ we have dramatically raised girls’ achievement to the point where we had 3 women as Heads of State – so we can do this for Maori and Pasifika.
Up to 2002 a total of 50 Maori had gained PhDs. From 2002 to 2008 another 500 Maori achieved PhDs.
In the classroom:
What works for Maori works for everybody
Te Kotahitanga Project found that students said having teachers who believed in them and created a non-threatening environment made them want to learn. The teachers in Te Kotahitanga Project boosted academic performance for all cultures by having high expectations and quality classroom relationships.
Relationships
Interaction
Studies show students of a similar culture to their teacher have many turns speaking in conversation. Non-similar culture kids have few turns.
However, don’t go thinking someone else is better suited for this job. You and I are there, so we are best suited to do it.
Adding value – relating and interacting.
Creating environments where young people can bring themselves into the classroom.
Culture Counts (1999) Bishop and Glynn
Sustaining and Extending Theory- Based Educational Reform Bishop, Berryman and O’Sullivan.
Ministry of Education:
Ka Hikitia: Maori Education Strategy
- Lynette Bradham
Pasifika Team – Rosemary Mose, Kolose Lagavale,
Dorothy Fotuali’i McGeady
Despite all the work done, Maori achievement has not increased over the past 8 years.
Maori determining relevant outcomes: e.g. a lawyer can help the Iwi with land claims.
PASIFIKA
73% of all Pasifika people live in Auckland.
40% of all NZ newborns at Middlemore Hospital, Mangere.
What are the kids’ backgrounds? Who is important in their lives?
Focus on doing the right things- not trying to do things right.
Don’t tell me why -
just show me how!
-
Turbocharge engagement.
-
Build trust- walk down the spiral path together
-
MOE Pasifika Strategy launch in August 2008
http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications statistics, indicators, research reports
Te Kotahitanga Research Project
Presenter: Pip Martin, Literacy Coordinator, Huntly College.
3 day intensive hui –
What is an effective teaching profile?
Culturally (Maori and teenage culture) appropriate
- pronouncing their names correctly.
Manaakitanga – caring for Maori as culturally located humans.
Manamotuhake – care for the performance and learning of Maori
Nga Whakapiringatanga – teachers can create and maintain a secure, well-managed environment:
§ format to lesson
§ negotiated rules
§ clear expectations
§ respectful relationships
Who is the adult in their lives that they can connect with?
Also – Every student should have at least one adult at school they feel close to. Dr Simon Denny, Center for Youth Health, University of Auckland. ( another keynote speaker).
Deal with behaviour in a positive way that leaves the student’s mana intact.
I think we could do it this way but I want you to tell me if you can think of a better way.
Teacher as the scribe- if no-one will write down ideas.
Next step – maybe someone else can put these in sequence?
Co-enquiries- enquiring together.
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Learning Intentions
-
Success criteria
-
Critical reflection
July 23, 2008
Hello world!
Thank you to Natalie Cowie from Katikati College who gave an inspirational workshop on blogs, wikis and more at ‘Navigating the Textual sea’, the 2008 NZATE ( New Zealand Association for Teachers of English) Conference.
It’s all explained on this link to her conference material:
http://textualsea.pbwiki.com
This link goes to the fabulous blog Natalie has created for her lucky students!














