Friday, September 13, 2024

Manaiakalani RPI Course - The Highlights

This is by far, the best PLD I have been on regarding reading. I completed a one year Graduate Diploma in Teaching and Learning after 30 years away from University and my initial Law degree. This one year diploma was mainly theory with 14 weeks of placement. Although we learned how to plan etc, a lot of it was not very practical as to how to set a reading programme up, what to do with the kids, how to do rotations, what to put in rotations, it wasn't even explained why we use rotations!  It was an eye opener to get into our practicum classes and see how things were run. Different teachers did different things, for different reasons with different theory behind it. WHAT WAS I TO DO?

I had a fabulous Mentor Teacher and colleagues who I gathered information and ideas from and away I went. We were always changing things up but I had a few misunderstandings practically which have given me a good laugh in retrospect, but the revelations in the Manaiakalani RPI course came thick and fast.

The practical advice and modelling backed up by robust research was very very helpful. My favourite sessions involved vocabulary and the create session. I am the first to admit that I am not very creative at times and find it difficult to come up with engaging content for the tamariki digitally. The suggestions and the way to develop these was extremely helpful. It made me feel more confident I could actually do things that make the tamariki use their brains and new found knowledge into new contexts to help it transfer to their long term memories.

Vocabulary is a passion of mine, but the way to teach it was varied and this course gave me a clear pathway to teaching it. My teacher's aide, Te Arani made an amazing vocabulary tree for my class and brought my vision to life. It has been hard to actually keep up the use of it, but that will come with repeated use and reminders to myself!

I have changed the way reading is presented to my tamariki and the independent work is more aligned with their learning objectives. Before it could be a little hit and miss at times, but things have slotted into place now. Six years of teaching and I'm still learning the basics it seems sometimes. There's so much to choose from, so many things thrust at you and so many ideas about what is good to do, it is nice to have a clear path to take with reading.

This does not mean I didn't enjoy the other sessions. I absolutely did. I have slowly put into place nearly everything now that I have been taught. I had to ensure that I didn't just change everything straight away, but be sure that the tamariki in the class were ready for change and that I could model it, practice it and embed it before I added more change into the mix. Some of my tamariki do not like change so I had to take moments that I knew I would succeed or succeed with most of the kids otherwise it would be a disaster. I did get a bit excited once or twice and have to back a change out due to the tamariki becoming discombobulated! Nothing like a sense of chaos to upset the apple cart.

The reading pillars, or pou, are extremely helpful in developing my classroom programme. What I am doing, what I need to do, where I am going and how I am going to achieve the lift in reading we need to see. The checklist makes it eminently practical to implement. Moving forward I am going to continue to blog about how I am going with ensuring my programme refers to and uses the different pou. If I haven't done a blog in a few weeks about this - comment and give me a kick in the proverbial!!!

I'd like to thank the facilitators of the course, particularly my group leader Anna for her caring attitude and down to earth understanding of the pressures teachers are under at times. It made for great sessions and learning opportunities. 



1 comment:

  1. Kia ora Vicki

    Thank you for your kind words about the team and the RPI programme! We totally agree that Anna is such a supportive and knowledgeable facilitator. We are also thrilled that you found a helpful balance between the practical advice and modelling backed up by robust research across the days.

    I totally agree that there is huge merit in being able to view reading practice and pedagogy through the reading ‘pillars’ lens, not to mention as a reference when planning, to build cohesive, principled design for learning across the literacy programme.

    All the very best for the future and some well-deserved non-contact time over the Term 3 break. Do keep in contact and continue to share the innovation in your classroom!

    Nga mihi
    Naomi R.
    Literacy Facilitator - Manaiakalani Reading Practice Intensive

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