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Peer-assisted professional development. Jolanta Pyra Maria Pinto John Wendel Sarah Peet. Why are we here?. Cheap entertainment Meet future significant other Rub elbows with important people None of the above. Professional Development - some popular attitudes. One free lunch
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Peer-assisted professional development Jolanta Pyra Maria Pinto John Wendel Sarah Peet
Why are we here? • Cheap entertainment • Meet future significant other • Rub elbows with important people • None of the above
ProfessionalDevelopment- some popular attitudes • One free lunch • A day off work • Passive learning • All of the above = BORING
Professional Development - attitude adjustment • Showing up for meetings • Journal writing • Scheduling time to watch other teachers • All of the above = WORK
Professional Development – attitude shift • Sharing of information • Setting and achieving goals • Watching other people’s strengths and weaknesses • All of the above = ADVENTURE!* * Maybe not exactly an adventure, but you’ve got to admit – it’s far from “BORING”
Student Perspective This class is: • Fascinating • Fun • Fabulous • Fantastic From: /f/ sounds in /foniks/ (phonics) 101
Observing fellow teachers Observing fellow teachers provides ideas for: • Teaching styles • Class management • Material presentation • All of the above
Being observed Being observed by others results in: • Greater self awareness • Constructive feedback • Positive qualities noted • Progress check
Project development Maria Pinto
Why? • Learning from peers • Experience not required • Cheap • Self-improvement
Group goals • Improve teaching through observation • Method sharing • Validation and reassurance
Personal goals • Classroom management • Teacher – student interaction • Engage students more • Konglishi very not • Sense of teaching style • Confidence
Self-observation • Taped • Agenda • Listened to in own time • Awareness-raising
Observing / Being observed • Agreed upon criteria • Observer took notes • Notes copied and shared • Taped feedback
Group meetings • Taped • Questions / agenda distributed a week in advance • reflection • journal writing • current and future directions • Forum for idea-sharing and problem-solving
Awareness and reflective practices John Wendel
Awareness • Can be painful • Can be disillusioning • Might create the feeling that we’ve lost face BUT • Causes us to suddenly see what we had not noticed before
Observation facilitated awareness • Objective dialoguing • Unintended noticing • Further reflection • Demystifies other classrooms
Discoveries and findings Sarah Peet
Individual discoveries • Maria – positive feedback • John – another set of eyes • Jolanta – peripheral vision • Sarah – sharing and problem solving
Resolution of personal goals • New goals recognised • Lots of fine-tuning • Student production increased
Group discoveries • Realisation that we all have the same problems • Confidence in the classroom • Awakening • Small is BIG! • No radical changes, but profound effects • Continual observation leads to continual small changes
Impact on teaching... so far • Stealing ideas • Willing to ask for help • Better communication • Respect for colleagues
What’s next? • One semester seems too short • Continual process • Redirecting the journey – student assessment • Sharing with peers
Question time John Maria Jolanta Sarah