Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Week 6 Spotlight @MatuaNgaru

Tena kotou katoa!

Our focus for Week 6 has been based on developing our partnerships and thinking about what they might look like at Matua Ngaru School. We made connections with the community at the Community Consultation Evening and the community were able to meet with some of the partners that have joined with the school  

Communicative....
Community Consultation Evening

What an amazing night, many of our new learners and their families, joined us and our partners for an information night.  We were lucky enough to have our first books donated to the Library through Dorothy Butler Books. Our first book donated by a learner was Mackenzie. Many of our partners joined as and meet with parents to talk about things such as after school and before school care, BYOD options and banking needs.  Families were able to view the school uniform options with Argyle.








Creative....We finished the week doing Art with Anna Dickson.  The team had a fun time learning new art experiences to share with our learners.  We had fun with different types of clay and drawing on different surfaces.




Collaborative...
The whole team were lucky enough to join Sarah Martin the foundation principal of Stonefields School.  Together we learned about how they have successfully worked towards establishing their We vs. Me culture in the school and looked at the accomplishments they have had building strong collaboration across their school. It provided an opportunity for the team to learn about tools, system and structures to help us on our journey.

Curious...
Local Kindy visits

The Learning Coaches visited some of the local Daycares and Kindergartens around the area on Tuesday and discovered the amazing work being done with our younger community members.  Every one of the team had a fantastic time working with the children and learning from the talented teachers. Matua Ngaru is hoping to develop close ties with the preschools in order to make the transition to school smooth and to build better connections with our local preschools.

Visit to the school
This week the team have been lucky enough to have some access to the school grounds and have begun to look at furniture location.  It was marvellous



to see the quick developments of the building and the new playgrounds popping up outside. We all look forward to continuing to work within the building and setting it up for our future learners.


Have a great week

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Term 4 - Week 5 @MatuaNgaru Spotlight

Tēnā koutou katoa,



We have just got back from an AMAZING week in Christchurch exploring some of the schools that have recently been rebuilt, or that will be rebuilt soon. We made some great connections, packed our brains to overflowing with things we want to bring back to our own school, and got to know each other a whole lot better.

Creative…   

We stayed in two houses about a five minute walk apart. This gave us a great excuse to have a progressive dinner on the first night, where the learning coaches would prepare two courses at their house, the leadership team would prepare another two courses at their house, and we’d all spend the evening going back and forth between the two, hopefully walking off some of the feast we would devour.



It was a DELICIOUS evening. The SLT provided some delectable pre-dinner nibbles, the LCs made a scrumptious chicken and noodle salad (we’d definitely recommend the Conutdown recipe cards for last minute meal ideas!), the SLT sorted the main course, and finally everyone waddled back to the LCs place for desert.






Communicative… 

Most of our time in Christchurch was spent at schools or packed into the van traveling between schools. But the strike on Wednesday gave us a bit of time for other things. The amazing Amy lead us in some fun and rather challenging activities that helped us practice our collaboration and communication.

First we thought about the differences between connection, communication, and collaboration. The goal was to come up with and explanation of the difference between the three terms. Heike, Wendy, and Kirstin came up with this beautiful garden example:



Then we had to cross a river of lava with only a few scraps of carpet between our toes and the scorching lava below! We (mostly Michael) came up with a plan and the first few brave Matua Ngaru adventures set off. Before long a few of the carpet squares had been lost and a some of us had to be left on one side of the river - abandoned until the main group could reach the other side and send someone back to rescue us. Some of the carpet squares may have burnt up in the lava, but thankfully all Matua Ngaru staff made it safely across in the end.



For our final activity we became detectives and had to solve a mystery together by combining our clues to figure out the whole story in a tight time limit. It was pretty tricky, but we solved it with seconds to spare.



The activities definitely got us connecting, communicating, collaborating and laughing, but they also got us thinking. Some of our main takeaways were that listening is really really good skill to have, and it’s important that everyone has their voices heard. We also learnt that it can be quite difficult to collaborate in bigger groups, especially when you have a tight time frame, and sometimes it's better if someone steps into the leader’s role and the others just do as they’re told.


Collaborative…

This blog post is nowhere near big enough to pack in all the amazing things we saw at the schools in Christchurch. We left each one feeling so grateful for the opportunity to see how others do things and brimming with ideas for things we could try next year at Matua Ngaru.

The biggest, warmest, smiliest thank you to our Christchurch hosts: Waimari School, Breen’s Intermediate, Ao Tawhiti Unlimited Discovery School, Rolleston School, West Rolleston School, Lemonwood Grove School, Halswell School, Bromley School, Haeata Community Campus, Marshlands School, and Pegasus Bay School, and the three schools that Di, Wendy, and Kirstin visited further south: Remarkables School, Limehills School, and Shotover Primary.


The connections we have made with these schools are invaluable. We hope we have the chance to welcome them as graciously as they did us when they (hopefully) visit our school some time in the future.



Curious…

Here are a few takeaways from each of the Christchurch schools:






Haeata


Haeata had structured their learning into three areas - one based on emotional and social needs, one inquiry focused, and one based on personal interests and passions (for this group of learners this involved a lot of sports) They didn’t teach specific learning/curriculum areas, but instead wove these into their 3 areas.

There was a big focus on dispositions and these were tracked and reported on in learning stories above all else.

This school is quite different from what ours will be like because of the demographic they have. We deeply admire the people who work there and think the biggest thing we can take from them is the idea that if they can survive their first year, we definitely should be able to.



Breens


Breens had lots of cool things we could take back to Matua Ngaru. They had 2 therapy dogs on site that wandered around and they had a neatly badging/licencing system set up by the kids as home learning with quite complex tasks they had to complete to get their licensees.

The Breens staff and community had embraced the change brought by the earthquakes, inviting schools and daycares that had lost buildings into their grounds and constantly striving to improve their teaching practice, even when settling into norms is so comfortable.



Bromley

Bromley was GREAT. We were there on Thursday, between their strike day and Christchurch Anniversary (so it could have been a muck around day) but the kids were on point with their learning and awesome to talk to.

There were heaps of things that we could bring back to Auckland: The kids were using twitter to share their learning, which was authentic and awesome. They had list of interesting tasks that they were working through, picking the ones that they wanted to do, and we saw some amazing photo editing (Bromley is an Apple distinguished school - so they were using a lot of apps on the iPads)
There was a Reggio focus running throughout the school. so there were loose parts set up in most of the areas, and all of the spaces were relaxing and calm with lots of pot plants and natural materials.
Despite the big chunks of the school being in the middle of a rebuild and lots of the classes waiting it out in portacoms the teachers were trying hard to stick to collaborative teaching practices despite the physical limitations and this seemed to be going admirably well.



Ao Tawhiti Unlimited Discovery

Discovery had a purpose built space in town that was destroyed in the earthquakes. They moved way out into the suburbs but have a new building in town that is nearly finished. Discovery is a special character school that operates with the idea that the child is central in directing his or her own learning so that the enthusiasm and love of learning is retained.

The kids seemed happy and to be truly loving their learning. They could talk about what they were doing and why and were (for the most part) keen to share.

There were a few things we thought we could steal: We liked that every child had say in their learning and think that's a philosophy worth weaving into our school. In their new space the younger kids will be with lots of older kids and we feel this idea of tuakana teina has great value for us too.







Halswell

Halswell is an old school (120 years old) with new buildings (4 years old). They have won an award for using their spaces well and we definitely agreed that they very well organised, planned, and laid out. Being well established they had lots of great resources - robots, imagination playground equipment, an amazing performance space, and a well stocked library

We liked that the started with play based learning that kids can get into as soon as they come to school rather than when the bell rings. This marked the transition into the classroom easier for the little ones (and therefore the parents) and having play at the very start of the day shows that the school clearly values it.

The acting principal talked a lot about collaborative practice and relationships between staff and clearly really valued and respected his teachers.



Lemonwood Grove

Lemonwood Grove was built in a high growth area, similar to ours. The buildings were FLE/open plan but had lots of divisions of space, kind of like ours are, and we felt like they used their space really well - they were obviously using it flexibly, but had areas for specific things like large and small group meeting spots and areas for individual/quiet work.

There were a few things we would like to bring back. We felt like they were doing play based learning well. Kids had a lot of choice, there was a group making a blanket fort, kids rolling barrels down hills, wooden sword fights, inventing games on the playground, and kids playing with sand and water. There was room to do quite big things (like the barrel rolling) and kids were truly in charge.

Another thing that seemed to be working well was having the school vision very central to everything. They had a big golden circles display in the staff room and the principal talked about it a lot.




Rolleston

Rolleston follow the Reggio Emilia Philosophy. Their scrapbooks following learning journeys were amazing and the classrooms were full of wonderful displays and artifacts. We won’t be full Reggio, but there are lots of things we can take away. We really liked the scrapbooks documenting their process and how this covered the classroom walls in many classrooms. We felt that this showed the staff and kids really value the things they were doing and made their learning process clear for the learners, other teachers, and staff. We know this would be a lot of work, but we feel it’s something worth doing.

The art was FANTASTIC - lots of it looked way above the level of the kids who had done it and they seemed to have a big focus on careful observation skills when doing everything (art, book making, research etc.) and repetition in order to get better each time which really paid off.



Waimairi

Waimairi was planning to rebuild just before the earthquakes. When the earthquakes hit they were bumped down the list of schools needing new buildings so they have been waiting a long long time for their build to begin (But its close! And this give them the chance to really think about how they wanted their spaces to be).

Mike, the principal, spoke of his high trust levels in his staff, the value of having different spaces for different things, and had a great connection with his learners.

The junior school was really nicely set up with different areas named for animals and linked to the actions of those animals (e.g. pukeko = noisy group space, Kiwi = head down bum up) There was a gentle way of easing kids into school in place by mixing the ECE curriculum in with the NZC
Lots of cool art brightened up the classrooms and made even the more tired ones look and feel lovely.


West Rolleston

West Rolleston is a really new school that opened only last year in a new area and experienced rapid growth. The spaces were MASSIVE and were really open. We liked that they had one breakout space - the basket - set aside for brand new new entrant learners so they weren't just dropped straight into the huge spaces but instead given time to adjust slowly.

We liked their idea of teachers marking together as a team at the end of the day so that they could have an informal meeting at the same time. They also seemed to have good structures in place for meeting/getting to know new kids - they got together with their first group at a bookshop so that they families could buy a book for the school if they wanted to, the teachers called parents in the first week, and they have fish and chip evenings for new new entrant cohorts.




Pegasus Bay

This school was very interesting. They had some very strong views about what they were doing. One of the driving factors in the design of the school and how it ran was the idea of being "fantastical." Several spaces definitely followed this idea and the children did seem to have a good amount of say in what they did. The oldest children, in particular had 12 options during the week, of which they had to choose 5. There were a lot of outdoor areas and the children had a huge say in what was out there.





Marshland 


Marshland moved from their old site to their beautiful new buildings 3 years ago. The layout of their learning spaces was very well thought out with areas for large groups, small groups, and individual work. The spaces were full of light and very welcoming.

They had moved from single cell classrooms but had found a system that worked for their school in the larger spaces of their new building. Parts over their old school ,like their lovely old playground tractor, had been woven into the new site.













Coming up:


  • ‘From ME to WE’ with Sarah at Stonefields School
  • Lots of time on site at our new school!
  • ECE visits
  • Whanau Focus Group - Te Reo and Tikanga Wednesday 21 November


and.... we hope to see you at the Community Consultation Evening - Nov 22, 2019!


Saturday, November 10, 2018

Term 4 - Week 4 @MatuaNgaru Spotlight

Tēnā koutou katoa,


We have carried over our focus from Week 3 into Week 4 'Curriculum & Inclusive Practices' as we continue to develop our curriculum, and creatively design our collaborative action plans for enacting our vision. We have also begun to prepare ourselves for our trip to Christchurch coming up in Week 5.

Communicative...  

Thank you so much to the parents who attended the Curriculum Whanau Focus Group on Tuesday. It was such an awesome opportunity to get to hear your awesome ideas and opinions on what we can do as a school.
An extra thank you to parents who offered resources/contacts to anything that can be of benefit to Matua Ngaru. We really look forward to strengthening this community relationship.



The leadership team would also like to thank the families who came to our 'Curiosity Quencher' session to learn more about our school.  It was a wonderful opportunity to connect with members of our community.

As part of our emerging curriculum work, we worked together to ideate and design what the various pedagogical approaches would look like in action and then on Wednesday we all choose which pedagogical approaches we would like to share and design on our curriculum website. We are excited that the input from our whanau aligns with our emerging curriculum design and have some exciting new ideas to weave throughout. We look forward to to sharing our final product with the community.

Creative...   
This week we have been working on getting our curriculum programmes up and running. We divvied up our action plans an each learning coach is leading and contributing immensely. We have allocated these out so that each member of our team can work on areas they are most passionate about. We have lots of exciting ideas to implement for next year.

We have also begun our device procurement for 2019 and have been working alongside New Era IT who will be our technical support provider in 2019.  We are excited to use a variety of powerful devices and digital technologies in creative ways within our future focused kura.


Collaborative...
On Thursday we had Spotless, our property management team, come in and go through
some training with us. It was lovely to also be joined by some of our Arohanui Special School
team. We are really looking forward to working with them more closely.


Through our Spotless training we got to know some of the quirks and exciting features of our school. We are looking forward to continuing our positive and collaborative relationship with them.
As a team we have had time to discuss what we want our Home - School Partnership to look like, sound like and feel like. We ideated how we would get everyone involved and feel welcome. We also looked into the idea of narrative assessments and how we can use our Linc Ed Ubiquitous Learning Pathways to flip learning and assessment @MatuaNgaru.

In other news, we worked together to co-construct our role descriptions for 2018-2019.  
This was an empowering process that provided us with some clarity within our 'greenfields'
situation. And we had some great bonding time this week with our first team photo. We
certainly felt a sense of belonging to our #DreamTeam with everyone wearing our Matua
Ngaru shirts and a crazy hat.


Curious... 

On Tuesday we got to visit the stunning Garden School in Manurewa. We were absolutely blown away by the awesome systems and homely environment. All of the staff and learners at the Garden School were enthusiastic, which was great to observe, especially after all the tough challenges of unsafe buildings they have been faced with along the way. We were impressed to learn that 19 of the staff participated in the Mindlab Post Graduate Diploma programme together. A real committment to staff professional learning and providing time to develop their approaches.

We definitely got lots of ideas that we can implement at Matua Ngaru School. Thank you for your hospitality! :)


On Tuesday afternoon the Learning Coaches worked together at Hobsonville Point Secondary School. As a staff we got to further explore Minecraft with the experts who attended the workshop in Week 3. There was lots of perseverance involved and new learning. We are looking forward to using Minecraft as a learning tool. We also spent time working on our Self Directed, Gamified, Badging Induction extravaganza of learning. We are all learning so much, collaborating and creating amazing artefacts that we can use with our learners in our kura to help uncover the cultural narrative and foster learning with digital technologies.

This week we also looked into UDL (Universal Design for Learning) with Kirstin and Wendy. A very powerful way to have our team visualise how to employ the principles of UDL was to embark on the challenge of designing a menu for a dinner party for 30 guests with many, varied, dietary requirements. Check out our sketchnote  for key ideas we discussed and activities we completed.

Our BEAUTIFUL school - site update!!
Our curiosity continued as the remaining Learning Coaches and John the Principal from Huapai School were able to get the latest viewing of our school construction site. Kate and Michael were especially excited by all the maker spaces available. Anoushka loved the garden outside and the outdoor music equipment, which is part of the sensory playground. We can't wait to visit our kura more in the coming weeks and the expected handover remains as December 10 - fingers and toes are crossed!

Coming up:

  • Educators visits to South Island Schools
  • Effective Educator Matrix drafting
  • Learning Model drafting
  • Collaborative Practices work with Amy
  • Whanau Focus Group - Te Reo and Tikanga Wednesday 21 November
  • and....we hope to see you at the:

Community Consultation Evening - Nov 22, 2019


Come meet the Crew at Matua Ngaru - 
get together for 2019 New Entrants on Nov 29, 2019