This week our COL teachers presented at our annual Burst and Bubbles event where we shared a snapshot and summary of our inquiries.
At the start of the year, the aspect of student learning my inquiry was focused on was how do I get my year 9 kids to engage and care about their local community so they would feel like they belonged and would want to look after it.
I identified this as my focus when I noticed that kids didn’t know much about this place, the place where their feet stood on nor why it was important or who it was important to. For example when I asked them what places were important to them they said school, church and Pak n Save. When it came to writing about these places, the tasks my boys were supposed to complete was usually rushed or messy and they would say that they didn’t really think it was important to focus on.
My boys told me they preferred pictures and images and wanted to verbalise their learning around these sources but when it came to writing they didn’t want to do it or started but didn’t finish.
So I decided to pause and pivot from the unit I was teaching and redesign a new one based on the concepts of identity and belonging. I aimed to have more visuals and images and less of the other stuff. I tried to link it more explicitly to places around our school in prep for our local curriculum Hikoi that we went on with Matua Harley. On the trip the boys were so engaged and respectful it was a game changer. My next challenge was to figure out how do I take that learning experience and support it from within inside the classroom.
I worked alongside Matua Harley in the classroom space which reinforced the learning and it worked for a time. Kids were engaged and talking about their experiences and felt connected because they saw who it was important to, they could hear and take on Matua’s perspective and cared. He was authentic and real for them.
One of the key pieces of literature that I drew on that helped me understand and make changes to my inquiry was Rose Hipkins report on weaving a coherent curriculum and how the capability of perspective taking is a key component to help our young people become actively engaged members of society’. That coupled with the new histories curriculum and it’s resources helped guide my inquiry better.
Another turning point came from an opportunity to meet with a local artist in our area Gary Silipa who really wanted to connect with our kids. He took us on a walking art tour of G.I where kids got to learn about the art pieces and the stories of how they got there. From this trip kids got to say what they saw and what they didn’t see. They didn’t see enough Maori or Pasifika art pieces or ones that they could relate to. Through lots of discussion and planning Gary has agreed to help our kids design a huge visual piece outside our school cafe that will show what’s important to them with a planned future assignment out in G.I. In class now, kids are focused on something real that they see themselves in.
Student feedback has been mostly positive but now the expectation is that we need at least one or two trips for every unit and we need experts to take us.
The most important learning that I’ve made about my inquiry is that authentic connections makes perspective-taking real and essentially helps our kids to care about what matters. The most important learning I made about inquiry was that it’s ok to take opportunities as they come and that the profile of student learning that I thought was important at the start can and will change and that’s a good ok.
Faafetai lava and Go Toa Samoa!
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