Guiding questions |
What are community, connections, and relationships about and why are they important? | Strategies we use? | How do we know when it's working? | Issues/Questions/Comments |
Need to build trust and need to be connected to share ideas together | Multi-modal ways of sharing | They keep showing up (this is a form of engagement) | Community, how to sustain it? |
Whanaungatanga is a special way of relating that has an important connection to te ao Māori | Know when to intervene if a disconnection is arriving | Attendance | How to balance modular courses and developing relationships |
Know me before you teach me | The old e-learning days to connect face to face | They talk | Can be difficult to build a sense of belonging when you have multiple enrolments from one school, as these students can clump together |
Humans = social creatures | Start with relationships and community as a central thing and keep circling back to this regularly | They give feedback | Lockdown. During this time there were different kinds of connections that developed. Often students were more engaged. |
Learning happens in a positive social and emotional environment. In languages, there has to be a safe positive rapport for students to feel comfortable speaking and learning from mistakes | Tell us something about you that you want all of us to know | They come | Having no previous connections might make some students feel alienated at the beginning of the course |
Learning that matters is always constructed with others | Flexible course design to allow room for relationship and assessment sits in the background | When you see the online sessions reflected in the work | |
Belonging to a course/community is building relationships and confidence in learning | Student feedback - seek it and use it | When they ask questions | |
Relationships foundation to e-learning. Keep coming back to it. | Begin with digital mihi connecting where from | When they interrupt to ask a question | |
Important as a source of motivation and accountability | Connect with prior learning and celebrate this | Uploading their own resources to the community | |
Trust | Sharing on a human level | Their feedback (shows they care about the learning and the community | |
Even participation | Work out who needs extra awhi and support | Feel that they can help each other. (Teacher as a facilitator rather than a dictator) | |
Belonging is important so that I 'students' know I am not alone. | Humour - make it fun | They'll turn up | |
Get to know me, don't judge me, work with me, talk with me not at me. | Collaborative spaces | They'll participate | |
I belong, this is my community, I am connected. | Get to know lots about them and who they are | They'll communicate | |
Learning as a community, acknowledging what they bring, their backgrounds | Kahoots about each other | Students start connecting on a human level with each other and the teacher | |
Social/confidence, support/fight isolation | Use Tuakana - Teina relationships to encourage students | They act on feedback (from the teacher and each other and seek it in an ongoing way | |
Supports, similar interests | Students have to trust you. Shown through: Consistency, positivity, show you care through consistent regular communication, gratitude for the input, and interest in them | The way the students behave, e.g. students running the class when the teacher has technical difficulties | |
Seeing where you fit, connections, relationships | Use break out rooms for small group discussion to put students at ease, providing a safe space to discuss ideas | They feel comfortable to contribute | |
Feel confident to share ideas, safety. | First 5 minutes an icebreaker every VC | | |
Trust, so that students feel comfortable. If they feel comfortable they are open to learning | Students leading a starter topic | | |
Belonging and connection are important. Learning a new language requires some risk and vulnerability, it also requires students to communicate. Language is connected to culture -> can't be separated. | Word games | | |
| Create collaborative docs, which increase visibility | | |
| Make video introductions show who you are | | |
| Checking in Checking out each VC | | |
| Remembering what's happening in their world | | |
| Connecting each week discussing topical things | | |
| Staying eternally positive | | |
| Don't overwhelm students, build up to the assessment through learning activities | | |
| Reinforce the development of student profiles and using these during the year | | |
| Using the support of the teacher and the e-dean to help engage | | |
| Be proactive | | |
| Encourage students to share whenever possible | | |
| In Social Studies students can plan social actions as a unique response to the needs of their community | | |
| Invest a lot of time in building community and relationships initially, continually build on this throughout the year | | |
| Students leading things like 'catch up questions' | | |
| Start with small silly things to get them comfortable to talk | | |
| Hit the answer with a question | | |
| Showing you are human and it is ok to make mistakes | | |
| Use jigsaw activities to distribute responsibility and encourage collaboration | | |
| Question time, everyone asks a question at the end | |
No comments:
Post a Comment