So why and how?
The tamariki have had three years of Covid. Time away from school through lockdowns, teacher and student illnesses. During this period a lot of activities have also been curtailed. We completed no trips away, weekend activities were almost non-existent for long stretches of time. Interesting experiences with lots of vocabulary were few and far between. An increase in screen time for everyone as activities went online has meant less time with other people, more gaming time for kids and less interaction at home with their whānau. Note, this is not ALL whānau, many many parents made and still make, huge efforts to get their kids doing things outside, sports, hunting, fishing, trips to places and a lot more and have enriching discussions with their tamariki.
From observation it appears that parents across the world have become more protective of their children. They don't want to upset them and want to protect them from any adversity. This is not surprising due to the way the past few years have been. Children are now more anxious and their attendance has reduced as a group. Parents aren't willing to force their children to school when they aren't feeling safe even in their own homes.
This is a big issue with multifaceted causes and it will be years before research can really figure it out, if ever. In the meantime, what do I do?
Action taken - General Cognitive Understanding
- Instructions given verbally, written, and recorded for those who need it.
- Checking in by having kids repeat what I instructed if needed.
- Opportunities given to be leaders in class to build skills.
- Working independently - short time periods at first, extending these times as they get better at it. They are not used to working independently well.
- Choices given - but limited at first. Then more and more offered as each child progresses.
- Education on making decisions. How to make a good decision.
- MANA value discussions every day.
- Rewards given to those who show they are working hard (trying). Rewards for those who come and ask for help.
- When asking for help, working on exactly what help they need. They are not good at giving specifics and sit and wait for me to do it as their teacher. Working on getting them to explain exactly where they are stuck. The questions usually started when they were told to begin our activity. They oftentime haven't even got their pencils out when they say "they don't know what to do". They seem to know, but they can't identify their sticking point, apart from having to do the mahi!
- Each term the tamariki have gotten better at working independently.
- They can all work for about 30 minutes independently after I give instructions.
- They feel better at asking questions of me.
- Their questions about the work are more precise and targeted. I am not taking "I need help" at face value but questioning why? On what? What is hard? Can someone help you that isn't me? etc. It seems to be working well.
- Still working on making choices - finding the information first before you make a choice. Trying to ensure they all have one choice that they find interesting/like the method of creating etc to increase engagement
Action taken - Knowledge Building & Vocabulary
- For two terms, and now the third, we are working with our Inquiries with reading as well as dedicated inquiry time. Not only are we reading and researching our in inquiry area, but covering knowledge related to that inquiry, whether it is based on questions the tamariki have or not. T-Shaped literacy is behind every choice also. Multi-modal options are being offered so that every tamaiti is able to access the learning and show me how much they know even if they can't read or write well.
- Daily Warm ups - every morning we hit random topics on a slide show. Things that are related to maths vocab, daily words, general knowledge, inquiry topic words, ANYTHING that increases their general knowledge. Sometimes we get waylaid with discussions and the kids ask questions about things that really interest them which is awesome.
- It has resulted in more questions. I am trying to teach them to ask better questions by modelling great questions and asking them good questions. Trying to get them to think better! With limited experiences and knowledge, it is hard for them to wonder a lot. They don't seem at times to have any wonderings at all, but these sessions have opened up a lot of good questions and answers. It's fun and the kids like doing it.
- ReadWorks - a reading comprehension online programme. This involves 5 mins of reading preassigned, levelled reading passages about non-fiction themes I choose. They have to read them, (or listen if they aren't reading at all, or poorly) and then write down two or three things they want to remember into their online "book of knowledge". I am considering having them write it down using handwriting too, but won't change that until 2024. Research shows that handwriting information gets it stuck in our brains better than typing. These small tidbits of knowledge they find interesting is also often a springboard for discussion about the topic. For those that can't type their answers, I quiz them on what they listened or read about verbally to ensure they understand what they read. I try to align these readings with the inquiry we are doing, but it isn't always possible, so random items can pop up, but that all adds to their general knowledge.
- TIP Charts. I have loved these since I saw them on a PLD in either 2018 or 2019. I update them each inquiry to cover words we may come across. The vocabulary is gone through thoroughly so when they see it in their readings, it isn't new to them. Well, that is the hope!
- Base & Root words work. I began teaching morphemes. Each day we focussed on one morpheme and then used those words all week. For example dec = 10, TW = two etc. The kids LOVED this. They could understand what some words meant when they knew what part of the word meant. They had to think hard and use their ability to find clues like word detectives. This enabled them to make connections to multiple words with that morpheme and decipher what they MEANT. Not just how to say them. I can decode te reo Māori kupu and pronounce them ok, but I do not know what they mean. If I can decipher some of the part of a word though, it usually gets me on the right track. This is the same for English too.
- I won't see any benefits from this until we do the final assessments of the year.
- I see a change in their thinking with the increase in vocabulary
- The research says to start knowledge building earlier rather than later. I can't fill in all the information that these tamariki have not yet been exposed to, but I can only do my best.
- I feel that later teachers may benefit more from their increased general knowledge than I will.
- Their reading assessments will only be better if I have covered off a topic that is in the assessments. Chances of that, slim! It isn't that I want to give them the answers, but I want them to understand what key words mean so they can understand the reading and interpret the questions and answer them correctly. If they don't know what some of the key words mean, they are stuck. That isn't done by decoding the word, but whether they know the meaning of it.