Monday 11 July 2022

Good inquiry happens in teams

Ehara taku toa i te toa takitahi engari, he toa takitini
Success is not the work of one but, the work of many

I have been supporting my colleagues with their teaching as inquiry. I find a lot of value in the professional discussions we have when we are discussing how we can improve our practice to accelerate the progress of our students. 

Reflecting on our practice
A very important aspect of professional discussions about teaching as inquiry is around what is currently happening in the teacher's practice. Our practice determines how students learn. If we want our students to change their current achievement or accelerate then we have to reflect on what we need to change in our own practice. I understand there are times we feel we are doing well in our practice and that is great but if our achievement data is showing our students are not achieving where they should be for their year levels then something needs to change. 

The importance of data
I have this saying "data tells a story". When I analysed our school data last year, I was amazed the learning I gained from looking at the school wide data. The student achievement data do tell us a story about the learning of our students. It is very important for your TAI to gather the starting data for your sample group at the beginning of your inquiry. This will be your measuring point for the end of your inquiry.

Student voice
As the recipients of our practice, our students views and voice is vital to our teaching as inquiry. As well as having conversations, I like to collect student voice through google forms. It is good to give students time and space to think about their responses and that is why google forms are effective. Below are some student voice I collected last year for my TAI about self efficacy. I have always been surprised by what students share through their student voice and it often challenges my own beliefs about what I am doing in my teaching. 


Record your TAI journey
TAI is a learning journey for teachers. Reflections are very important because it enables us to analyse what is currently happening and our next steps. Whether you have a professional blog or not, it is important to document your teaching as inquiry. It is a learning journey which you can look back on.

He waka eke noa
Having professional discussions with your colleagues and professional leaders about your TAI will be a great resource for you. On going discussions are much more valuable than one off presentations at the end of TAI cycles. We need to be challenged and questioned about what we are currently doing. When we explain our rationale for what we are doing in our practice, we often explore aspects of our practice we did not think about before. 

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