Wednesday, 3 October 2018

Research schools thinking around ... the New Student Attitudes to School Survey Framework


These are the prompts on the Attitudes to School Survey under heading -
💥Domain : Social Engagement ðŸ’¥
🙋Student voice and agency ðŸ™‹
  • At this school, I help decide things like class activities or rules    Year 4-9
  • I have the opportunity to participate in decision-making at this school  Year 7-12
  • I have a say in the things I learn        Year 4-12
  • I have the opportunity to influence class discussions by presenting my ideas or opinions        Year 10-12
  • My teachers thinks my ideas are good       Year 4-6
  • I am encouraged to share my ideas          Year 4-6
  • I feel that I have a voice at this school      Year 10-12
  • My teachers incorporate student ideas in class activities       Year 7-12

Analysis
Today (July 26th), Westgarth PS, Wales Street and St Jospeh's Crib Point  .....
  1. recognised the AtSS as a statewide system tool
  2. noticed that there are other elements of learner agency that could support analysis of this component ie effort, learning confidence and motivation and interest
  3. unpacked the language in the learner agency/ voice section (8 questions- some just for primary)
  4. discussed whether the insights we gather from these question reflect what we as researchers of learner agency are making sense of / forming understanding around
  5. each school explored how they might strengthen awareness of focus of LA for students? for teachers? 
  6. each school then committed to an action in relation to getting further information to illuminate the understanding and experiences of agency and how the AtSS tool can provide an accurate picture of their 2018 (and beyond) efforts


Any other thoughts?

Term 2 Research Circle Day July 26th 2018 in a nutshell


A team of teachers, teacher leaders and school leaders came together, on July 26th2018, at Westgarth Primary School to share their experiences and wonderings around Learner Agency. The range of experience and passions in this area varied, from the appreciation of an inquiry pedagogy to surfacing and embedding learner agency in order to have growth in literacy outcomes, or so that creativity thrives. Whatever the lens that the members of the three schools have, there was a common aspiration to ‘create a culture of learning where learners have the agency to thrive and grow.’

Wales Street leaders shared their emphasis of learner agency being around the pedagogy with a literacy lens. They are seeking clarity around what does it look like on the ground level. Some groups in the school are exploring learner agency in a writing context. Currently rubrics for writing are being co-created with students. These rubrics have led to being part of the 3-way student conference scaffolds. The school noted this has helped translate their focus on learner agency seamlessly to parents, supported by regular newsletters articles about the benefits of this direction. The leaders are wondering if the learner agency layer could not be seen as ‘an add on’ but more of a surface and reveal concept?

Westgarth shared their focus using the Victorian Curriculum. They have refined the language in the framework as ‘I can’ statements in English and Maths. The students use these statements to reflect on and set goals. Assessment maps have been created and are supported by unnamed samples of learning from students. The impacts they are noticing are: improvements in students knowing where they are at and the next stage for me and the learning is more visible. Teachers are seeing students take care in editing their work and their learning goals are more accurate. Plus, the students are talking to others and are more curious about others ideas. The students are enthusiastic because they can see growth and have a real sense of achievement. One teacher stated “they like to track and see what is next… this warms my heart.” There are visuals to prompt and remind but are personalised not there just for the sake of it (white noise).
Ironically, both teachers were exploring the same idea of students tracking their learning but in different ways. This is due to the school leaders offering a framework and inviting their staff to ‘see what we can do with it.’ One teacher highlighted how she can’t wait for the staff meeting to share and hear about all the other teachers’ trials and the students’ responses in this area. The school leader did highlight that not all the sharing will be about successes there will be an opportunity, even an expectation, to share disasters. These early successes will provide a platform for further exploration into other curriculum areas where students track their own learning.
 Questions the rest of the group raised for the Westgarth research team were:
·     How can this move into other areas of the curriculum?
·     What might a high aspiration like curiosity look like as I can/ I be statements?
·     Will there be too many I can statements when all curriculum areas are explored this way?
·     What are the students offering as valid evidence of the I can/I be statements?

St J’s Crib Point have opportunities for student agency – book club, learning intentions/success criteria, growth mindsets and the school café. They are exploring when and how more agency can continue to develop and maintain strong structures for learning. They are clarifying the core/the essentials for their year 5 and 6 students. The teachers shared photos of some of their visuals to support students to monitor and support their learning. They noticed that if the teachers don’t point and highlight these visuals regularly and purposefully the students can drop off from using them. The teachers are aware of the context of engaging parents in the learning as challenging but worthwhile. The whole school focus allows for regular dialogue with leaders, parents, students and fellow teacher colleagues around learner agency.  This is now firmly on the agenda and the review year has incorporated many professional learning opportunities for teachers and students to have a voice. 

The group spent quite a bit of time on unpacking the idea of agency in reporting learning and growth. The burning question for any reporting decisions being around ‘What are the benefits to the learner?’ There was a statistic shared that ‘25% of parents opened the online reports, whereas 95% attended student led conferences or the IB exhibition.’ This concerned the group given the time and effort used at the school to report. Wales Street are actioning this concern with a team of community members to engage parents and ensure there are benefits to the learner. 
Maybe this is an area we are a Research Circle could problem solve further together? Any ideas?


Wednesday, 25 July 2018

Learner Agency at Princes Hill SC

At PHSC, the learner agency project was conducted with a Year 7 Humanities class. It was designed around the topic of Ancient Worlds and Early Civilisations -Ancient Rome.

Students completed a pre-project survey that asked them about their learning, what they valued and the types of tasks/activities they enjoyed. From this, it was clear that a mix of styles were in the room. Many students indicated they liked to work on lots of short but connected activities, but some identified that they liked to work on a sustained project that they could focus deeply on.

As a result, I developed a booklet that contained activities for each of the curriculum areas that students were required to learn about, as well as some consolidation activities that allowed students to synthesise their knowledge of the smaller sections into one big project.

After designing some activities, I showed them to the students, and they were happy with the direction, and also liked the fact they could negotiate their own activities if they were particularly keen to learn about something or express their knowledge a certain way.

I had trouble designing marking criteria that could be applied to so many tasks, and sought advice from some of my colleagues. I eventually adapted some of the activities to contain specific directive verbs that ranged in complexity according to mark value (e.g. outline v. analyse). I also explained this to the class, and asked them to help develop marking criteria with me. They were able to develop criteria that discriminated according to complexity. They handed in criteria in a few formats, and I used both formats in the final product.

The task was completed over 6-7 weeks, and all students completed the activity. Surprisingly, many more students selected a 'consolidation' activity than indicated in their pre-project surveys.

Monday, 4 June 2018

Our vision for the Learner Agency Research Circle Project is to build a culture of at WRSC where learner agency is valued, believed in and learning opportunities are designed where all learners (staff, students and community) can experience this!

Please see below our short to mid term plan towards our vision:

Date/Time
Task
Who
Responsible
30/5 – 13/6
Week 7,8,9
Research! Our kids are our research partners.
Leadership team to participate in the in school investigation where they have a conversation with 3 – 4 students about learner agency.

Document the research Leadership Teams

Reading: What is Student Agency?

All of Leadership
LE – AH and CC
AE – JB and HK
13/6
Week 9
Team to participate in Making Meaning Protocol

Personal Reflection: what has changed for you? Scaffold needed – see entry ticket from Edparters Day 2

Document all of this in Leadership  Teams
Share the last five questions on the edpartners blog.
All of leadership
LE and AE
19/6
Week 10
Research! Our kids are our research partners.
All staff to participate in the in school investigation where they have a conversation with 3 – 4 students about learner agency.

Launch in Professional Learning

Document the research in Teams PLT Teams

All Staff
LE and AE
Term 3
Week 1 or 2??
Team to participate in Making Meaning Protocol

Reading: What is Student Agency?

Discussion

Personal Reflection: what has changed for you? Scaffold needed – see entry ticket from Edparters Day 2

Document all of this PLT Teams


All staff
LE and AE

Week 4


Reflect on Student Voice and Student Agency continua.

Reading: capacity building series – student voice.

Where are we now?
What might growth look like?
What might the next stretch be?

Document this in PLT Teams
Share on edpartners blog


Tuesday, 29 May 2018

Day 2 WRSC Entry Tickets




St Joseph's Know Do Be

St Joseph's Know Do Be (KDB) - Ensuring students are learning with their head, heart and hands 

As teachers, we design the KDB for our teaching and learning experiences with the students. We share this at the beginning and throughout our lessons and refer back to it during reflection times. Our wondering around the KDB is, could we provide more voice and choice around the KDB development?

We invited some students to discuss this wondering and if they had the opportunity, what would they change about the KDB. Our student data was driven by boys, interesting enough, they are students who do not have a sense of learner agency; regularly mucking around and disrupting others as well as not completing work tasks. After discussing with them what learner agency means, we then led into a discussion around our continuums (DO) and our learning dispositions (BE). The students made the comment that they understand why we have our KDB, but do not use it often to see where they could improve their learning. We posed the question "Would you refer to the continuums more if you helped to make them?" The students said yes, as long as the teachers really helped them (scaffolding). One student also said he would like an emotional continuum or a tracker to show others and the teachers how he was feeling during the day. Our discussion continued, and another student said that he likes the continuums but he finds he doesn't always need to prove everything on the continuums as it isn't relevant to him.



Further thinking:

Could we give student access to our learning continuums, where through technology students are using them as a journal to show their thinking, provide evidence and share with their teachers? How would we ensure this is visible?

Can we trial allowing the students to create the learning disposition, getting them to articulate their thinking of what they needed to BE, and what skills, strategies they used as part of their success? Would this allow other students to be more willing to develop their own dispositions in learning and to improve their learner agency?

Thursday, 24 May 2018

Research Circle Day 2

The structure for Research Circle Day 2 - May 2018
  1. Entry Ticket – to give you time to think about and document what has become a bit clearer since last time + any actions you’ve taken to progress your own understanding of learner agency. We have discovered from our visits that it might be helpful to provide time during our research circle for documenting as life is so hectic in your schools. 
  2. Triad Discussion – to share the above and make sense of our learning progress
  3. Offer of a mini-research booklet to support you to analyse your in-school investigations (including methods involving students as co-researchers)
  4. Wrestling with the relationship between student voice and agency – and creating our own continua.
  5. Practical planning for Terms 2 and 3.

Pre-investigation

Reflection before our Term 2 Learner Agency Research Circle Day


1.  what was revealed in your Learning Conversations with a) students and b) teachers for a summary for the research?
2.  what are you noticing are strengths in your context and what are some challenges or tensions you’ve uncovered?
3.  what question or wondering did you decide to investigate further/next? 
4.  who will you partner with to undertake this research? 
5.  what would benefit others for you to post?  what action/s to continue your learning and investigations will you commit to before our next day together?


PLEASE BRING ALONG

Any documents or artefacts that illustrate what learner agency currently looks like in your school. This can help to create useful continua that grow from where you are now. 


We also have a reading on student voice – this is attached in case you have time to peruse before next week. 

Resources

Day 1 Resources
The Explorer
Rationale and Evidence for Student Agency reading

Day 2 Resources
Readings
Michael Fielding - Student Voice- Patterns of Partnership and Demands of Deep Democracy

Other Readings
Student Voice - Transforming Relationships
Motivation, Engagement and Student Voice

Thursday, 17 May 2018

17th May 2018 Team meeting reflection

Reflection 2
Today Megan, Ellen and Kelli began to discuss the teams research into Learner Agency. We used the GROW conversations protocol to help guide our dialogue. Our goals were to:
  • seek clarity and possibilities on how the team, teachers and leaders enable agency in our learners.
  • identify where we were at
  • post to the Research Group Blog our thinking and evidence of our learning.
We were situated in the middle of the new learning space. This lead to opening new and practical opportunities in linking with the space and students.

We felt we might need to explore Learner Agency frameworks and theories further. This could be looking into the constructivism model for learning and the Zone of Proximal Development theory.
We identified that some constraints to the flow of enabling agency is the tight hold and frequency of the Know, Do and Be for teachers and students. We were wondering if we could loosen this up a bit to seek creativity and spontaneity.  One options to explore this further was to scaffold students to identify their own learning through the BE lens.  We will offer ELLI statements around learning dispositions as a reflection in their learning in the future. ACTION 1

The teachers felt that the students aren't that committed to the teacher designed continuums, however they see this as very helpful to the students articulating successes and next steps in their learning trajectory. We were wondering if the students could be more involved in the creation and recording of their growth. This lead to accessing some of the students who were closeby to ask what's happening and how can we support them in being successful learners and controlling their learning.

Tully and Max joined us first and shared when they have learnt something because they wanted to. Max shared his extensive knowledge around bike fixing, wiring and building. Tully shared his exploration into kicking a football, he did this to have fun. We used this experience regularly during the conversation with these students.

We explored the assumption that students aren't connecting to the continuums with the boys. Tully and Max shared that they don't always use it. They are motivated by "being the best they can', setting goals using the continuums was not what they are motivated to do. They were keen to see if making continuums together would be more inviting to set goals. ACTION 2


In terms of accessing help in their learning the three boys (Toby has joined in due to curiosity) felt that the teacher has to help the whole class so helper teachers would be a good support. Also having an expertise wall where people nominate others or themselves in areas they are able to teach/ help others in. This could be linked to the current practise of "I wish my teacher knew..." box/ messaging. ACTION 3

The students felt the learning buddies role can be strengthened. they felt it would be worth expanding the groups for a broader option of help support and were hoping to have student choice of who their learning buddy is in the future. ACTION 4

Finally the group explored the initial wondering from the teachers as to when is the preferred time in the learning to access help. They asked 16 classmates and these were their results. The team will further explore this. ACTION 5

We ended our session reflecting on our learning and highlighting the next actions (labelled above).
Kelli - EdPartnerships

17th May 2018 Megan's reflection

Reflection 1
As we began our discussion with our learner agency partner we began to realise that in order to really facilitate learner agency we need to have some student voice within our discussion.
We gathered three students from our year 5/6 community and sat and listened to their understanding of learner agency and what they feel would be of great benefit to them to help engage students in having more learner agency in their class.

The students gave great insight into what they felt would be really beneficial to enact learner agency within the community. Their first piece of suggestion was to have experts in certain areas when we are learning so they have other people they can go to if they are in need of assistance. They explained that they can learn from their peers as well as their teachers but aren't always sure about who the right peer might be to go to when working on certain tasks. From this information, we discussed as a group, an idea of having an expert wall somewhere within our learning space, where students can access someone who believes they are an expert during a certain task for assistance. Students voiced that this would need to be quite visual so that all peers could have access to it and understand that if they are in need of assistance during any part of the lesson, beginning, middle or end, that those experts would be the person they could go to. This was also a way that the students felt they could share their knowledge and understanding with others so that each person within the community could be an expert at some point in their learning as we all have different strengths and can use them to help others at different times.

The other point of conversation we had with students was the idea of having someone to converse with during learning time, such as a working buddy. The students also acknowledged that there needed to be some other option for working buddies if a working buddy was away. as the students discussed and used their agency to explain that maybe it would be more beneficial to have working groups with a set of two learning buddies in each group so that if one working buddy is absent for any reason, that child is not left on their own to try and work through their activity. The students voiced that they found it hard to work through activities without having someone to share their thinking with and learn from. Fro this, we asked the students to show us on our working buddies wall, how they would like to have this displayed for them so that we can help them with this agency.

We will be documenting the use of these two ideas for our student's learner agency over the next two weeks and have data and evidence to help us reflect, with the students, about this process hand what else the students feel they need to help their learner agency.
Megan

Monday, 19 March 2018

Driving Question

How can we create a culture of learning where learners have the agency to thrive and grow?

What is your thinking about this question? 
What is your thinking about the language in the question?

Saturday, 17 March 2018

Research Circle 1

What can a research circle be or do?
We said...
  • create a product for all
  • problem solve
  • observe, question
  • build a collective understanding
  • understand their context
  • support each other
  • share ideas
  • plan-do-study-act-reflect-roll out to the group
  • find out something we didn't know before
  • find a real problem and subsets of the problem... ask why
  • context dependent 
  • the journeys will be different along the way
What isn't a research circle?
We said.....
  • one person doing all the work
  • has a beginning and an end
  • not a linear process
  • not passive
What it means for me personally is ......
that it's going to be reflective, that it will be hard, frustrating, requiring commitment to explore and trial, finding time, intellectually demanding, requiring an openness to new learning, challenging my beliefs and habits, making my thinking public to the system, synthesising, analysing, being evidence-informed, being an explorer and being prepared for the hard questions.

Friday, 16 March 2018

Wales Street Circle Day 1 Reflection

Christian and Robyn wondered...

  • What does our AIP offer to explore Learner Agency?
  • What is Learner Agency? What isn't it?
  • What does it look like in the classroom? What will learners be doing?
  • Is there a desire and will for all?
  • What blocks Learner Agency?
  • What difference will Learner Agency make more of?
  • What does covering the curriculum enable/ disable?
  • Does class size make a difference?

Circle day 1 reflection

Sue and Megan wondered....
  • what can we let go of?
  • what questions can we ask about Learner Agency?
  • do our documents and culture enable learner agency?
  • what is our role in enabling Learner Agency across the school?

Wednesday, 28 February 2018

Research Partners

Research Circle 1 Schools
Elizabeth Murdoch College, Langwarrin
St Joseph's Primary Schools, Crib Point
William Ruthven Secondary College, Reservoir
Wales Street Primary School
Westgarth Primary School

Research Circle 2 Schools
Princes Hill Secondary College, Carlton North
Drysdale Primary School, Drysdale
Newport Lakes Primary School, Newport
Berwick Fields Primary School
Melbourne Girls' College