Friday 30 September 2011

28 September: Session 2.

This session was much more practical, and we started with the mentor training material, so you would know what your mentors have been told. Most of what we discussed is in the main handbook, but there are some aspects covered in more detail in the second half of the mentors' handbook, which you can download from here, where you will also find the presentation.





After discussion, these were the items you suggested for the observation schedule for micro-teaching; you'll be able to carry on with refining that with Peter W next week. Feel free to make comments!

In discussion, too, we talked about the apparent requirement to use technology nowadays. Remind me to talk at mind-numbingly boring length some time about the "messages" sent by different forms of technology in the classroom. But I did promise I'd point you to the argument that the only medium for teaching maths properly is the chalkboard, here (pdf).

This is the initial schedule for micro-teaching. I did pick up some concern about starting so early--I've no objection to putting it back a week, and bringing the stuff on referencing forward to 12 Oct.




Name

Topic
12 October Rebecca
Louise
19 October Lesley
Jacky
2 November Emma
Louise
9 November

See you on 12 October!

28 September: The idea of education and prep. for observation and micro-teaching

On reflection, I don't think I gave you quite a clear-enough steer for the Unit 1 material yesterday. Peter H had told me that he did not really get a chance to go through the unit content, because of the need to get you registered, but I did not properly check what you did know about the unit, at the start of the session; nor did I explain how what we did fitted into to the whole sequence. Elementary errors on my part, which I blame on unusual circumstances (of course) but which just go to show that we can make them too... And that is not at the level of compliant ritual about reciting objectives, it is at the severely practical level of not confusing you any more than necessary.

This unit is "synoptic". It is designed to provide an overview of a lot of content and to give an idea of how it all fits together, so that when we re-visit it in more detail later, it will make more sense. And I didn't tell you that (although Peter H may have done last week...). And it so happens that the starting-point, the meaning of "education" is what you will re-visit in unit 7 at the end of the course.


So we started by exploring the meaning of the term, "education". What it means to you. Which is much more important than learning a set of sterile definitions in the literature. (More important? Yes, because you can move, as we did, from specifics to principles, more easily than applying principles to practice. We'll revisit this in unit 6 next year, and touch on it in unit 2 next term.)

The exercise was of a kind outlined here. (You may recognise the second example).

Your response and discussion of contested items suggested:

"Education" implies formality, in your view; informality means "learning" rather than education. That's an interesting distinction because it implies that "education" is learning with baggage, which takes the form of values and assumptions which are built into the selection of topics to be taught, the way learners are treated, what kind of thing counts as evidence of learning (assessment) and so on. We returned to that point later in the presentation.

You also made the point that education requires a degree of engagement with a topic; it is not enough just to go through the motions by "attending" a class. You need to "attend to" the subject. And people emerge from education different from the people they were when they went in.

I wonder to what extent this discussion was informed by your own baggage, in terms of your educational background and current practice. Would an engineer have taken the same line?



The presentation in the second half was based on this:


  • The Riesman model is discussed briefly here
  • There's more on cultural influences here
  • The code of practice from the Institute for Learning is here
...and having got to that mind-map of all the organisations telling us what to do, at the end, we had the quiz, the point of which was just to underline how horrendously complicated all this is.

Friday 23 September 2011

Welcome!

...to this blog, intended to support you through the PGCE/Cert Ed programme, by providing resources and links to material we have discussed in class.

The university thinks this should be done through the VLE. I can in some measure sympathise, and I concede that if you make this blog your first port of call you will miss out on what is going on in the rest of the network, which would be a pity, because our network is a significant strength of the programme. So do use BREO, and find your way around it. The more it is used, the better it gets.

The same goes for PCET.net, which plugs into an even larger community--and as we discovered today, we have a fairly direct connection to the founder!

But there are reasons for adopting this strategy, as well as, and not instead of, the VLE.
  1. It's easy. Not just because it is easy for me, but because it is easy for anyone who wants to enhance their teaching with a little techie pizzazz. I get lost in Facebook (I've done my best to erase my minimal presence) but blogging is very straightforward. Sign up, select a format/template, and post. That's it.

  2. It's open. A bit of a two-edged sword, this. It's open to mentors, prospective and former students, colleagues, and anyone you want to give the address too, so that they know the kind of things you get up to on the course. On the other hand, openness imposes some obligations, so that if and when you comment--as Peter, Peter and I hope you will--please be aware that you are writing for public consumption.

  3. It's free. I know some of you operate in settings where you can't use the internet. That's at one end of the scale. At the other end those of you in mainstream FE will be familiar with colleges' VLEs, which cost a bomb to set up and maintain. This blog is an illustration of what can be done for no money, and just a little time, for those of you who work in the middle--in adult and community education, for example. There are actually free resources which will go much further than just a blog, of course; see here for some which course members introduced at a Study Day last year. (Don't worry, I'm not going all techie on you.)

We actually addressed more in an introductory session for Unit 4 than I have ever known before, which augurs well!
  • Among the topics we discussed were issues around compliance and accountability and originality... Peter and I wrote about that, and this course, in this paper.
  • We got on to a consideration of Kolb's learning cycle. The page I tried to show you is here. It does go into rather more detail than you probably want at this stage of the game.
  • The book I recommended by David Perkins is discussed here. The full reference is: Perkins D N (2009) Making Learning Whole; how seven principles of teaching can transform education San Francisco; Jossey-Bass
  • Speaking of which, here is some more guidance on referencing with a "slidecast" at the end, which I shall probably use whenever we get round to doing the session itself.
I'm not including the schedule for the term, partly because you won't know the address for this blog until we meet again, and partly because there have been recent developments which will require changes.