At last we have opened our new building!
http:www.freemansbay.school.nz/entitypages/mediagallery/default.aspx?pid=21138&mgid=41830
The design of this two story classroom block is dedicated for flexible learning. The classrooms do not have sink benches in them or teacher desks. All the classroom spaces are dedicated learning spaces. The "Art Space" and "Teacher Admin" are seperate areas in the shared atrium - leaving the classrooms for teaching and learning.
The classrooms are wired for e-learning - with wireless throughout the building. Each classroom has a soundfield sound system, a Two Touch interactive board, and a cupboard to lock the netbooks with power for charging. An amplifier is also in this lockable cupboard which enables sound to go from laptops or other devices - to the speakers recessed in the ceilings. There is also hdmi ports for video and mixed media presentations.
There is a large shared atrium space for the students and teachers to utilise for a variety of activities such as assemblies, dance, drama, music or breakout groups. This will also have a drop down screen and data projector and a dedicated sound system set up as well as the hdmi port.
The building design gives teachers and students a lot of flexibility in the way it can be used for teaching and learning. For example teachers can team teach to larger groups of students and then use the classroom spaces for breakout activities.
There is a lot of glass doors and windows and you can see into five classrooms at once when you walk into the Atrium space.
Each floor has a teacher work area where there is a dedicated area for teachers workstation with shelving and cupboards. These areas also have a set of Lundia shelves for resources. Each floor also has a withdrawal area for teams to utilise for small group or individual work.
We have only been in the building for two weeks but it has lots of possiblities for flexible ways of teaching and learning.
This building was funded by the Ministry of Education. We were able build a new building because we had an old , 1970s open space teaching block that was subsiding. The school site is an old landfill site and this building did not have the foundations to mitigate subsidence. This block was demolished over Easter and we now need to demolish the concrete pad it was built on and turn this area into a courtyard.
This building work will totally change what our school looks like and provide a modern first class teaching environment for our students and teachers!
Hi My name is Sandra Jenkins. Across the globe there is a movement to re imagine education to provide settings that are learner led and relevant to the future lives of learners. This blog captures some of my journey as part of that movement
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Ultra fast Broadband
Well we have had some pricing done and it seems that we can get significant support to get the fibre to the comms room - the cost is $14K and we pay $4K. But the monthly cost is $900 compared to $150 a month for broadband. I dont know if the $750 extra per month would be worth the extra speed. The Ministry of Education is very keen for us to do this but there is no support for the extra monthly cost. Its a lot dearer. We need more competion for communication in NZ!
Saturday, March 26, 2011
School Vision and Strategic Plan
Last year our Board developed a new strategic plan to define out work programme for the next three years.
http://http://www.freemansbay.school.nz/upload/usermedia/files/11196/freemans%20bay%20school%20strategic%20goals.pdf
There are 10 goals that represent what we would like to achieve for Freemans Bay School.
Our Board of Trustees reviews progress on our strategic work plan every second Board of Trustees meeting. This keeps our strategic focus alive and is a meaningful, exciting way of working.
http://http://www.freemansbay.school.nz/upload/usermedia/files/11196/freemans%20bay%20school%20strategic%20goals.pdf
There are 10 goals that represent what we would like to achieve for Freemans Bay School.
Our Board of Trustees reviews progress on our strategic work plan every second Board of Trustees meeting. This keeps our strategic focus alive and is a meaningful, exciting way of working.
Student weekly reflections
On our online learning environment - "Knowledge Net" students post weekly reflections.
They do this as part of their reading, writing or mathematics tumbles. This is another way students can articulate their thinking about their learning and how they can impove.
The way it works currently is that the teacher posts questions for the student to respond to. The student cut and pastes the questions and writes their response.
Here is an example from a Yr 5 class:
The teacher had uploaded a video on friendship and posted questions to get the students thinking and reflecting.
This week in our learning pathways we are learning about friendship.
What is a friend?
A friend is someone who will compliment you, cheer you up when you are sad, let you win sometimes, remember your birthday, is fun to be with, and will make you smile.
2. Think about which Habit Of Mind have been used. list at least 3.
Wow, because the orange character said "Your groovy" and was blue character was amazed.
Make it right, because the blue character was sad and so the orange one made it right by cheering him up.
Persistence, because when they were on the bike the blue thing had to carry extra weight and persist to get the job done.
Here is an example from a Y3 student.
Teachers question:
Can you explain what you have learned in maths by explaining what partitioning is?
Partitioning is splitting numbers to figure it out more easier than making it harder, like if I had 2645 to make it easier it would be 2000 600 40 5=2645.
Thank you Marys class for reading my reflections!!!!!!!!!!!! and have a out-standing day!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Weekly reflections by students is now embedded in our practice at Freemans Bay School. I think the improved infrastructure of wireless and more netbooks has supported this to happen.
They do this as part of their reading, writing or mathematics tumbles. This is another way students can articulate their thinking about their learning and how they can impove.
The way it works currently is that the teacher posts questions for the student to respond to. The student cut and pastes the questions and writes their response.
Here is an example from a Yr 5 class:
The teacher had uploaded a video on friendship and posted questions to get the students thinking and reflecting.
This week in our learning pathways we are learning about friendship.
What is a friend?
A friend is someone who will compliment you, cheer you up when you are sad, let you win sometimes, remember your birthday, is fun to be with, and will make you smile.
2. Think about which Habit Of Mind have been used. list at least 3.
Wow, because the orange character said "Your groovy" and was blue character was amazed.
Make it right, because the blue character was sad and so the orange one made it right by cheering him up.
Persistence, because when they were on the bike the blue thing had to carry extra weight and persist to get the job done.
Here is an example from a Y3 student.
Teachers question:
Can you explain what you have learned in maths by explaining what partitioning is?
Partitioning is splitting numbers to figure it out more easier than making it harder, like if I had 2645 to make it easier it would be 2000 600 40 5=2645.
Thank you Marys class for reading my reflections!!!!!!!!!!!! and have a out-standing day!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Weekly reflections by students is now embedded in our practice at Freemans Bay School. I think the improved infrastructure of wireless and more netbooks has supported this to happen.
Goal setting conferences
This term we did our goal setting conferences a little differently. Each student now has a home page that has a section for learning goals. Prior to the conference the students set up learning goals in four areas: Reading, writing, mathmatics and habits of mind.
Most students were able to utilise the class interactive white board and present the goals to their parents. Parents were given log-ins to access the information from home.
As part of the work over the term, students will update their reflections on their goals. We are aiming for the updates to be scheduled twice a term.
We are hope to strengthen parent access through this and e-portfolios through our parent portal - this is work under development but should be fully available by the end of this term.
Most students were able to utilise the class interactive white board and present the goals to their parents. Parents were given log-ins to access the information from home.
As part of the work over the term, students will update their reflections on their goals. We are aiming for the updates to be scheduled twice a term.
We are hope to strengthen parent access through this and e-portfolios through our parent portal - this is work under development but should be fully available by the end of this term.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
E-learning Journey at Freemans Bay School
The metaphor of a journey , gives the idea that achieving the e-learning vision for our school is a journey and that a destination is expected. The journey is to: Utilise e-learning to transform learning. The destination of the journey is to ensure our school students are digitally capable and confident learners. I am hopeful that this journey will be accepted by our teachers as, aspirational , realistic , achievable and most importantly connected to the new revised curriculum which advocates the requirement of schools to develop students into “confident, connected, actively involved longlife learners” (MOE, 2007, p4) . This blog will address my own journey as a school leader, to meaningfully integrate e-learning with the new school curriculum and achieve our goal of embarking on an exciting journey . The challenge for me as school leader is to engage and motivate all classroom teachers and leaders in our school to commit to the journey and make it happen. This blog will record the progress of this journey, including the dead ends and blind allies! I am interested in others experiences of similar journeys
My E-learning journey in the vintage years!
It was very reflective reading about the vintage years of e-learning in New Zealand schools by Nola Campbell and Murray Browns article on the use of computers in New Zealand schools. Campbell's article looks back into the 1980s and 1990s into the early pioneering days of e-learning in our schools where ICTs in the classrooms were utilised for communication through electronic mail prior to Internet. Brown's article also looks back at the history of computer use in our schools and aligns this history with his own experiences with computers and significant world events. Brown offers a critique of what makes a good ICT educator - one "who uses ICT will have a well developed philosophy of teaching which is based on a contempory understanding of educational theory". (98:7) Well these articles took me back to where I was in these vintage years of computing in New Zealand Schools, what the issues were that we were dealing with then and their relationship with todays e-learning issues. In 1989 I was appointed to my first principal appointment position by the Hawkes Bay Education Board, prior to Tomorrows Schools. This school was Ruakituri, which is nestled between two sheep stations on the edge of the Urawera National Park, not far from Lake Waikaremoana. We had four Commodore 64 computers, bought from fundraising efforts from the parents. The school had plenty of money in the bank account as the parents donated free labour doing the crutching of the sheep for the local sheep stations and the school got paid the fee. However money in the bank, did nothing to offset isolation and flaky technology. Often the phones did not work and we had party lines. They also did the docking - (removal of the lamb tails). This was done up in the paddocks and everyone joined in. Big sacks of poopie lambs tails were put in special freezers at school and we had BBQ lambs tails for weeks - which the big boys chopped the wood for and did the cooking over an open fire. (Just a bit of contextualising here) Anyway in the second week of my tenure, there was a big snow storm and all the telephone poles and power poles on the ridge fell like dominoes and we had no power or communication for two weeks - except for radio telephone through the local civil defence. Even when the power and phone was OK it was very flaky - so no electronic mail for us. We had to utilise the fourth Commodore 64 for parts for the the other three, so that we had three that worked. I racked my brain trying to remember what we used these for. I know we developed a spreadsheet for the school budgeting system, and wrote several school policies with the introduction of Tomorrow's Schools Boards of Trustees system. The children played games on the computers, but there was no linking to the curriculum. The game "Bombjack" was particularly popular - especially since we had colour computers, we did not let our isolation in the country hold us back! The focus for us was getting the gear and then getting more - it was not related to how it was going to be used in teaching and learning - just that it would be good to have. In 1991 I was appointed to my second position as principal to another remote school called Kohukohu which is on the inner reaches of the Hokianga Harbour. At this school we really got into computers in education and yes, we did link ICT to the curriculum. I enjoyed giving students the opportunities to utilise ICTs in their individual learning research projects and we did use electronic mail to mail experts. They had to do this in the school office of course where we had a PC. In the classrooms we used our "Apple" computers for word processing, drawing and research off specialised floppy discs. The computers in the classroom were integrated into our inquiry learning programme. The students still continued to play computer games whenever they could!We purchased our first digital camera and that was considered really magic! My daughter remembers doing a research project on Antarctica, and emailing the scientists at Scott Base. We also spoke to the scientists via a speaker phone system - it was very exciting. However, though I was into this style of teaching and learning in my classroom, did not mean that this transferred to the other classrooms. It was seen as a senior class thing - and probably a result of having a quirky principal. I became the North Island Rural School Principal representative on NZEI Principals Council in the 1990s. The Principal Council had several consultation meetings with Carol Moffit, in her role as project leader developing strategy for ICT in schools. The resulting launch of the programme called Interactive Educational Strategies for Schools (Ministry of Education 1999) was considered seminal, as it meant the New Zealand Government now recognised the role that ICT could play in education. In 1998 I took on my third principal post at Mangonui School on the East Coast, Doubtless Bay, just north of Kaitaia. Like many schools we were able to increase the amount of hardware in our school, and we put in our first networked system. Each classroom had its own email address, and had access to the world wide web. However having the gear did not mean that ICT was being used effectively across the school for teaching and learning. The Education Reveiw Office Report (ERO, 2000:2) suggested that "many schools are unable to point to specific improvements in teaching and learning that have been brought about by the use of ICT" This report recognised that there was a need for specific professional development for teachers to successfully integrate ICT into their classrooms. At this stage, we recognised this need for professional development to integrate ICTs and learning in our classrooms of our small rural school in Mangonui - but how to access it was an issue. We actually ended up contracting Lane Clark, who was in New Zealand at the time working at Tahitai Coast School for a 3 day course. Lane's emphasis was on linking thinking and inquiry with ICTs and learning. We were using CD Rom, Websites, Internet and email for enquiry learning. The three day course did not really do it across the whole school either. Since 1998 as part of the "Interactive Education" strategy the Ministry of Education has been letting out ICTPD contracts to clusters of schools. I have been involved in two of these. One at Mangonui School - (but I have to say the funding mainly was used to set up the technical infrastructure) and one as principal of Glenbrae School in 2005 - where we were in the Point England ICTPD cluster, and was fortunate enough to have Dorothy Burt as facilitator. So I guess for me being able to reflect on the vintage years in these articles and parallel what I was doing in education during this time and up to today has given me food for thought. We are more than ever grappling today with the issue around maximising the technologies for learning. Given the recent development in Web 2.0 technologies, the role of the teacher in planning and managing the e-learning environment is even more critical in today's classrooms. Effective teaching still requires effective professional development to enable our teachers to engage in maximising the benefits for learning. Brown, M. E. (1998). The use of computers in New Zealand schools: A critical review. Computers in New Zealand Schools, 10(3), 3-9. Campbell, N. (2004). The vintage years of e-learning in New Zealand schools. The Journal of Distance Education, 8(1), 17-24. Education Review Office (2000). In-service training for teachers in New Zealand Schools. Available at http:ero.govt.nz/publications/pubs2000/inservicetraing.htm Ministry of Education (1999). Interactive strategies for schools. Wellington. Ministry of Education
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