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musings of a passionate inquirer

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First impressions and the inquiry classroom…

February 14, 2013 · kathmurdoch

Plato once said “The beginning is the most important part of the work”.  For teachers in Australia and New Zealand, the school year is now into its third week – or thereabouts.  Over the last three weeks I have worked in many of these schools and enjoyed the opportunity to sit with teams of teachers to consider how we might best ‘set the scene’ for a great year of inquiry. We are acutely aware that our students are forming impressions about how their year is going to unfold based on the way their teachers interact with them in these first vital weeks (I hear this discourse first hand at my own kitchen table!)  First impressions count. I wonder what impression we are making?

In this blog post, I share some of the questions we have asked ourselves.  Although our colleagues in other countries are now well into their school year – these questions are likely to remain relevant throughout and may still be useful for a moment’s reflection.  This list can be read as questions to ask yourself or – if you replace the ‘I’ with ‘we’ questions to reflect on as a collaborative team of inquiry teachers.  What questions would you add?

1.  Have I asked my students about what they want to learn about / to do this year?  Do I know what they hope to inquire into?  Are they sharing their passions and interests? What have the students revealed about themselves?

2. Am I learning about how my students see themselves as learners? Have I asked them to share the skills, qualities, strengths and needs they believe they have as a learner? Have I shared mine?

3. Have I invited my students to participate in decisions made about how the learning space is organised? Have we discussed the connection between the physical environment and effective learning? Have I helped them to own and care for our learning space? Is there  flexibility for learners in this space? Choice? Movement?

4. Have I considered how I will use the visual space to support inquiry this year?  And how will the students be involved in this? Have I started to use my walls as ‘second teacher’ ?  Have we begun to share:

- our big inquiry question/s

- the learning asset/ transdisciplinary skills signs and specific learning intentions

- a cycle/language for/ processes of inquiry as a common reference for the students

5. Have we started to build some menus/ anchor charts to assist students in selecting learning tools ( eg for thinking skills, team work, self management, research, communication)

6. Does this learning space nurture curiosity? Am I offering provocations such as visuals, objects, clips, wonderful literature….is this a place that I invites ‘awe and wonderment’ about the world?

7. Have I deliberately focussed on building an ‘inquiry community’ in which it is safe to take risks, share ideas, ask questions. Have we discussed protocols and ways of learning together that are respectful and communicative?  Are my students helping build a community for learning?

8. Am I staying open to possibilities of spontaneous inquiries linked to current issues/problems/events/ interests? Am I planning in response to student interest and need as well as curriculum demands?

9. Am I being a model inquirer to my students?  Do they see me as a wondering, curious, questioning person who is eager to find out about the world? Do they see/hear me reflecting on my learning? Am I thinking out loud?

10. Have I set myself an inquiry challenge? Am I working on or inquiring into something new at the moment?  Am I being an inquirer too?

11. Is this going to be a true inquiry classroom? Am I being an inquiry teacher…not just a teacher who ‘does’ inquiry sometimes….

12. Am I learning? Am I wondering? Growing? Reflecting? Am I enjoying the journey so far..?

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Posted In: Uncategorized
Tagged: classrooms, inquiry, learning, learning environment

Comments

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  1. whatedsaid
    February 14, 2013 Reply

    Thank you, Kath! As always a brilliant set of reflective questions. I think our idea of starting the school year with some form of inquiry into learning itself at every grade level means kids at my school are talking ‘Learnish’ already, which is a great start. Can’t wait to share and unpack these with my teachers.

  2. Alona Yildirim
    February 14, 2013 Reply

    You made me think again! Thank you!

  3. becclements
    February 16, 2013 Reply

    Thanks for another thought provoking blog entry!

  4. markwalker
    February 16, 2013 Reply

    Kath great list. I got down to question 3 about helping young people learn to care and own their learning space and I stopped to ponder. Teachers on the whole had not set up the classrooms this year as normal wanting to invite student feedback on how they wanted to set it up. I’m not sure we all got the point about what helps me learn therefore how should my learning space look like? On the flip side yet connected to this point some teachers are getting students to make common connections to each other in the believe that this work will improve relationships so that the level of student safety from put downs in the class when they make errors Improves. A provoking list.

  5. Jennifer Fenton  (@jennysfen)
    February 17, 2013 Reply

    Wonderful set of questions to guide teachers’ own reflections. It is too easy to fall into habits of ‘doing’ when we get busy ~ this enables a thoughtful stop. I especially love number 12. If we are excited by our own inquiries I think it helps us to remember how important it is to be open and curious, to create a culture of inquiry. Thank you ~ will use this list with my team.

  6. whatedsaid
    March 7, 2013 Reply

    Is this one going at IW? :)

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