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CPD Team

Archive for June, 2012

Online professional learning links

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Welcome to colleagues from the Ministry of Education in Singapore and from closer to home, the Dyslexia Scotland steering group. You will find the proposed community to support the Addressing Dyslexia toolkit at http://bit.ly/dyslexiahome

(Please note that we are having an intermittent issue with adding pictures to Glow when you join. Please try it just once and get in touch if there is any problem get in touch!)

This Prezi focusses on the PL communities on Glow

Here is the short version of the updated links.

National PL Community Journey to Excellence from HMIE, LeadMeet, Learning Rounds, TwitterCPDFind, CPDMeet12, Teaching Scotland’s Future (aka the Donaldson Report), Quality and Improvement in Scottish Education

And yet more if you are still awake! ;)

Influences

Collegiality and impact – Richard Elmore’s work is highlighted here

Types of CPD – See a previous blog post on this topic

To find out more about the 4-stage model of CPD, read Margaret Alcorn’s paper on Teachers for Excellence

Education Scotland tools and sites

Education Scotland online service and learning blog

For specific CPD opportunities, try CPDFind

Journey to Excellence from HMIE

Oh did I mention joining  the National PL Community on Glow?

Seen it, done it

Unconference links - TeachMeet home page, LeadMeet, GregMeet, ADES CfE Professional Learning from Gordon McKinlay

Social networking

Have a look at the Pedagoo community

Read and comment on Ollie Bray’s blog

Some CPD from CPDFind on Social Networking

Follow Margaret Alcorn @cpdc or Con Morris @cpdscotsman or even CPDFound )!

Glow CPD links (some of these need a Glow username)

Find out about Glow in your part of Scotland

 

The new Glow offers a real opportunity to further integrate and improve the provision of online support for teachers. See these blog posts for some working principles:

 

 1. Share once, see many              2. Learn locally, share nationally                                3. Educators leading their own learning                 

4. This time it’s personal!

Some more fun stuff for CPD sessions

Random name picker (aka the ‘CPD Puggy’) from @russeltarr

Random Activity Generator from @johndavitt

Sir John Jones: The Courage to Lead

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At last year’s Scottish Learning Festival Sir John Jones became the first ever keynote speaker to get a spontaneous standing ovation.

And at last week’s Edinburgh Learning Festival (ELF!) he once again moved, challenged, amused and re-energised a large group of senior educational leaders.

His theme was the need for inspirational teaching and quality leadership to become the norm in every Scottish school. He spoke of our calling as educators, and the need for each of us to develop and show passion, wisdom and – most importantly – righteous indignation at the educational experience of many of our children and young people. These three elements need to be glued together in the relentless pursuit of excellence and in the context of a culture of UPR – unconditional positive regard for every child.

On a personal note he took me right back to my days running the Returning to Teaching programme in Edinburgh where this quote by Haim Ginott used to form the core philosophy of the sessions on positive behaviour:

“I’ve come to the frightening conclusion that I am the decisive element in the classroom. It’s my daily mood that makes the weather. As a teacher, I possess a tremendous power to make a child’s life miserable or joyous. I can be a tool of torture or an instrument of inspiration. I can humiliate or humor, hurt or heal. In all situations, it is my response that decides whether a crisis will be escalated or de-escalated and a child humanized or de-humanized.”

In the second part of his address Sir John turned his attention to the learning experience of children. He quoted Ken Robinson who says we are trying to prepare our children for the future by repeating what we did in the past. He challenged us to consider whether our schools are more than centres of standardisation and conformity, where learners play the “Let’s guess what is in the teacher’s head” game, and where teachers forget to teach the love of learning in order to focus on content.

For success our young people need to be helped to move from logical, linear thinking to inventive, empathetic, conceptual thinking as described by Daniel Pink. Technology changes everything, he believes, by bringing infinite choice.

Sir John argued that the most successful systems such as Finland and Singapore had a new focus on curiosity, problem-solving, collaboration, initiative, personal responsibility, etc and had moved to a belief that to teach less was to learn more.

Mick Waters, who many of you will remember from the Selmas conference this year, says that to achieve deep learning, we need high engagement, and our lessons need to be relevant, interesting, and ideally naughty and with a giggle.

As educators we need to reconnect with our moral purpose – our righteous indignation – to deliver opportunities regardless of poverty, family, post code, and to remember that good schooling doesn’t just make the difference, it makes all the difference. We need to change some of the negative metaphors that describe our work, and change the script to change the picture.

Sir John challenged all of us to dare to think differently and to strive to be “Magic Weavers” in all of our schools every day. Our pupils will remember us for ever if we achieve this.