In Victoria, in recent times, we’ve had two or three days of school based professional development at the beginning of the school year. Most of our organising and other preparation we do in what the public at large see as our very generous holidays.
At School for Life we have just had two weeks of preparation and professional development before the students’ lessons start again and there is another week to go. It has been so worthwhile!
Our Head Teacher began the PD schedule with the Varkey Instructional Program for our eleven new teachers. It ran over three days. Varkey is an Anglo-Indian philanthropist, who has made his money owning and operating expensive private schools in Africa and the Middle East. He has put money into developing training systems for teachers in under resourced schools in the developing world to encourage activity based learning and child friendly teaching methods. I have seen the system used both well and poorly by teachers here and when used well it is very effective. The newly graduated teachers will have been exposed to ideas that are completely missing from the teacher training they've had. In the TTCs they will have learned the "Lecture", "Discussion" and "Demonstration" methods.
Next we had four of the Ugandan National Examination Board (UNEB) examiners for 3 days. I found this especially interesting. I had to hold my tongue so often! (Actually I sometimes didn’t and my face would have given me away anyway!) Exams here are designed and marked for children to fail. Children who write the correct answer in a maths exam can lose marks if they have not shown every small step in working, even when those steps are not explicitly asked for.
A question such as
੬ is the natural numbers ≤ 10
੬ is the natural numbers ≤ 10
Set A = {2, 4, 6, 8, 10}
Set B = {4, 5, 6, 7}
What is n(A ⋂ B')? is worth two marks.
For the mathematically challenged, it is asking how many ‘things’ are in Set A but not in Set B.
For the mathematically challenged, it is asking how many ‘things’ are in Set A but not in Set B.
If a student writes just 3 as the answer she would get 0 marks, even though she is correct. If she writes n(A ⋂ B') = 3 she’ll get 1 mark. To get full marks she needs to write (A ⋂ B') = {2, 8, 10}, n(A ⋂ B') = 3. She has to define the set even though only the number of elements is asked for! It is asking students to read the examiner's mind! The rationale is that the student has given extra information so deserves extra credit. So we have to train students to guess what extra information might be worth marks.
In English, Social Studies and Science students can get zero on a question because of one small spelling mistake or error in punctuation! The question may be “Mention one of the rift valley lakes in Uganda.” An answer of “L. Albert” may get a mark of zero because "Lake' has been abbreviated.
It was good that the teachers had these workshops. They will be able to train the students not to fall into the traps that are set. They will help the students to get, not the best education, but the best marks. It is a horrible system but we will all have to work in it and do our level best. I showed the UNEB examiners some examples of maths questions used in Australia’s NAPLAN testing. I explained how I do marking. The examiners’ view was generally that giving half marks for answers that are nearly right encourages sloppiness and lack of rigour and accuracy so is not to be entertained!
It was good that the teachers had these workshops. They will be able to train the students not to fall into the traps that are set. They will help the students to get, not the best education, but the best marks. It is a horrible system but we will all have to work in it and do our level best. I showed the UNEB examiners some examples of maths questions used in Australia’s NAPLAN testing. I explained how I do marking. The examiners’ view was generally that giving half marks for answers that are nearly right encourages sloppiness and lack of rigour and accuracy so is not to be entertained!
You’d think the teachers would have had enough but they have all participated enthusiastically in my workshops in the second week. I have run four workshops, each around 2 hours, from morning break until lunch. The teachers have used the mornings and afternoons to do their Schemes of Work and Lesson Notes. They basically have to handwrite into foolscap size ledger books the whole year’s course for every subject they teach and all the notes they are likely to put on the whiteboard for the students to copy. These are then approved by the Dean of Studies. There has been a great deal of co-operation between the new and current teachers and they will know each other well before the school year officially starts, which is a very good thing. The two groups have worked well together in the various workshops.
Having my workshops over four days was much better than the one full day as originally planned. It gave the teachers more time to do some background reading. I had given each of the established teachers “Holiday Homework” reading and some had even had a go at it. The new teachers received their reading in the week before the workshops. The generally poor reading skills of the teachers and the time it takes to get through even half a page of text, especially if it is aimed at the reading level of an Australian or British teacher, has really slowed things down more than I had expected. I have tried to simplify where possible but some concepts resist using simple language!
All the workshops were predominantly activity based and group-work oriented. Each of workshops 2, 3 and 4 began with a review of the previous day addressing the concerns expressed in “Any other comments” from the evaluation sheets. The two school nurses also participated in the first three workshops.
The workshops were
o Child Protection Policy. We had some interesting discussions on what constituted “Child Abuse”. Most teachers have no problems with the policy as written and few barriers to implementation were raised. It is the local community who may not see its value.
o Behaviour Management. This was a good follow on from child protection as a few teachers wanted to know how to manage behaviour when you can’t use a stick! I needed to show it in practice the next day and I think everyone understood finally. The rules and consequences method is such a foreign concept.
Workshop 2 |
o Teaching Techniques. This was the one that was really slowed down by slow reading, especially for those who had not done the pre-reading. I’m planning for it to continue during Term I with each teacher doing a model lesson to show a new teaching technique. Some may do Snakes and Ladders - the teachers really enjoyed the game.
The debate involved all the teachers and the nurses. Everyone who wanted a say had a chance – it was more a free for all than a formal debate in the sense that we know debating though there was lots of Honourable So and so and Points of Order. The Head Teacher was Chair and I was Secretary as we were the only impartial people present. The result was close – 48 to the Proposers and 46 to the Opposition. One of the funniest lines was Emmanuel suggesting adolescent students couldn't line up together as they might start breeding!
The Great Debate |
We now have two days of cleaning and setting up classrooms and then the teachers get three days at home to get their personal lives organised, some will be sending their own children off to boarding school, before they move into the teacher housing and the school year begins in earnest. Steve and I will be having a long weekend at Lake Mburo NP.
In other news we now have four laptops at Katuuso to use for computer lessons to up-skill the teachers in ICT. I have devised a checklist of essential skills of general computer use and Microsoft Word. Lessons for the teachers will run after the children’s classes finish, a couple of afternoons a week. The staffroom desktop computer is also back in action after Liam heroically fixed it by blowing out the dust and removing a desiccated lizard!) Steve and I will continue with small group and individual training until all teachers have at minimum basic word processing skills.
Also thanks to Baimbridge College science staff for their donation of a laptop computer to the Head of Science to help him with his studies. Good job guys!
I hope all my teacher friends and rellies have a great start to the year!
Jenny
In other news we now have four laptops at Katuuso to use for computer lessons to up-skill the teachers in ICT. I have devised a checklist of essential skills of general computer use and Microsoft Word. Lessons for the teachers will run after the children’s classes finish, a couple of afternoons a week. The staffroom desktop computer is also back in action after Liam heroically fixed it by blowing out the dust and removing a desiccated lizard!) Steve and I will continue with small group and individual training until all teachers have at minimum basic word processing skills.
Also thanks to Baimbridge College science staff for their donation of a laptop computer to the Head of Science to help him with his studies. Good job guys!
I hope all my teacher friends and rellies have a great start to the year!
Jenny