Monday, September 11, 2023

RPI Day 9 - Sharing Reading


Sharing with a range of communities is essential for learners to connect to not only other learners but the world around them.

Sharing a range of tasks on their blog also keeps the learners engaged in their learning and blogging. Changing the create tasks and giving them agency over their blogs can help learners keep up with their blogging.

By providing opportunities to give feed back and feed forward on their blogs, this can give learners goals and next steps to improve their blogs. 


RPI has taught me so much. I have felt my overall knowledge regarding developing my own reading programme has improved. It has been very beneficial to reflect on my programme each session and speak to my mentor regarding this. I have had so many recorded observations which have enabled me to rewatch and adapt to improve my lessons. 

My favourite session was Day 8 - Create. This had so many simple yet effective ideas I have since brought into the classroom. It was also such a fun session, that Toreka and I shared back to the staff meeting.

I have thoroughly enjoyed my RPI sessions and look forward to the next Reading PD.








Monday, September 4, 2023

Teacher Inquiry Blog Post 4

As part of RPI we started to include different create tasks. I previously would stick to posters and Google Draw, however I started to add videos, animations, AI creations, advertisements, fact sheets and more. I have been giving my learners more agency over how they want to present their work. This has skyrocketed engagement for my learners. They are thriving with the option to choose their work presentation. Below are a few examples from one week of work.

Another create activity we did was working on collaboration games. I found our learners struggled when it came to listening to others. As a way to combat that in reading, we did a listening game. The goal of the same was to draw exactly what your partner described and compare the two drawings. They were back to back to ensure they couldn't see what the other was describing. This was not only fun but taught them to listen to each small detail others said.


What didn't work? The RPI programme brought the Teachers Workbook for us to trial. I tried it out for a few weeks to keep track of my learners work, progress, planning, etc. However, I didn't find it effective for my teaching. It was a lot of extra work that was placed in my other paperwork. For example, the guided reading was all on my site in the group slides. I found the learners were getting too confused with all the links. So I adapted a few things that were already in place. I also changed the way my slides were set out, it included a few tasks to do before the guided reading lesson.