Te Kete Ipurangi Navigation:

Te Kete Ipurangi
Communities
Schools

Te Kete Ipurangi user options:


New Zealand Curriculum Online navigation

Our vision for English at Katikati College

Video Help

You need javascript enabled to view this content.

Duration: 3:43

Views: 211

Download the video clip for FLV player (28 MB)

Natalie Cowie, head of English at Katikati College, takes us through the process her department used to develop a vision for teaching and learning.

Transcript

Transcript

The school vision is three part, and it’s about making sure that students reach their potential, that we provide meaningful learning opportunities for them and helping them become valuable members of society. It came about after whole school meetings and consultation with the community.

In 2010 the process has been to take that vision and develop strategic intents from that and then after that was developed, it was taken back to faculties and we actually translated the whole school vision into one for our students. That process involved getting student voice, input from the teachers, so that the students and the teachers know what the vision actually looks like in an English context.

It’s necessary for a faculty to have a vision so we know where we’re going, we’re all on the same page, we’re all speaking the same language, and that’s essential. The kids know that we have a vision for them, which is really important, it’s in language they understand and we can actually say this is what success in English looks like and link it to our school vision.

We had a questionnaire on Moodle that was developed by a deputy principal who is in the English faculty and the students went on there - they were asked to talk about the school vision which we saw quickly as something they weren’t familiar with so we had to come up with the ways in which they would become familiar.

Then we talked about, part of the questionnaire was, what they valued in English, what they thought success in English was, what they wanted from English and that has formed part of the things that we have made up our vision with. And as I said by those three strands we can lead them through the activities and so forth, that will lead to that overall vision: meaningful, valuable, reaching potential.

The sort of things that they want to be able to get from English by the end of studying it was interesting. They’re very keen on the written skills, they realised the importance of them, they realise the importance of what we do do and teach. And that I think is often surprising, how much kids do actually pick up on what you’re doing and why you’re doing it.

Getting teachers onboard was relatively easy because it had been a schoolwide process the strategic intents had been developed and from there. Because we had them, we could take those to a faculty meeting, we had the feed in from the Moodle questionnaire and we talked as a faculty, we were able to come up with this faculty vision.

Now the students’ learning is more visible. They know what they’re doing, why they’re doing it and where it’s going to lead. That’s been tremendously important. And it also gives them more choice - the way that we’ve arranged our courses, the way that our goals are set up, they certainly have a lot more enjoyment - the reading goals in particular have been enjoyable for both staff and students to be working on this year.

The specific challenges of leading this vision actually were not as great as I expected because of the work that had been done as a whole school. The shift to the way that we’re looking at reading and writing has also helped as well because it’s less nuts and bolts and more on the big ideas, as are the thematic units.

Think of the big picture, what do you really want your faculty to look like? What do you want somebody who leaves your faculty to look like? What skills will they have? To actually start there.

Tags:
curriculum design and review
english
student voice
vision

Comments

    Cancel

    Add comment

    Required fields are marked *

    Terms and conditions

     

    LEGAL AND PRIVACY STATEMENT

     

    Copyright

     

    This website and its contents including pages, documents, online graphics, audio and video are subject to copyright laws of New Zealand and, through international treaties, other countries. The copyright is owned by the Ministry of Education (New Zealand), unless indicated in the body of the document.

     

    Copyright protects the original skill and effort of an author of copyright works from unauthorised replication of that work.

     

    For material copyright to the Ministry of Education:

     

    You may view this website and its contents and save an electronic copy, or print out a copy, of parts of this website solely for your own information, research or private study, but only if you:

     

    (a) do not modify the copy; and
    (b) include the copyright notice "© Ministry of Education, Wellington, New Zealand" on the copy.

     

    You must not reproduce, transmit (including broadcast), adapt, re-distribute or otherwise exercise the copyright in the whole or any part of this website for any other purpose except with the prior written consent of the Ministry of Education and any conditions specified by the Ministry.

     

    For material with third-party copyright:

     

    The permission to reproduce Crown copyright-protected material does not extend to any material on this site that is identified as being the copyright of a third party. Authorisation to reproduce such material must be obtained from the copyright holders concerned.

     

    Privacy statement

     

    You may browse and access information on this website without providing any personal information. Where you voluntarily provide information, we will only use that information to communicate with you. We will keep your personal information secure and will not disclose it to any third party. If you want to check personal information that we hold, please write to:

     

    The Privacy Officer
    Ministry of Education
    P O Box 1666
    Thorndon
    Wellington.

     

    For more information on privacy, please visit the Privacy Commissioner's website.

     

    Unsolicited email

     

    Persons or organisations wishing to send email material to individuals or organisations whose email addresses appear on this website must comply with the requirements of the Unsolicited Electronic Messages Act 2007.

     

    Web accessibility

     

    The Ministry of Education is currently in the process of redeveloping its existing websites. This process includes ensuring that we comply with the New Zealand Government's Web and Accessibility Guidelines.

     

    Until that exercise has been completed, if you have difficulty navigating or accessing any of the information that this site provides, please contact the Ministry on 0800 422 599 or email Web.Services@minedu.govt.nz, and we will endeavour to supply you with the information being sought.

     

    Disclaimer

     

    This site has been compiled from information obtained from sources commissioned by the New Zealand Ministry of Education, and within the Ministry, and is subject to change without notice. The Ministry has used its best endeavours to ensure that the information is correct and current at the time of publication but takes no responsibility for any error, omission or defect therein.

     

    Inclusion of resources or suggested sites does not imply endorsement by the Ministry of Education, nor does exclusion imply the opposite. In each instance, it remains the user's responsibility to:

     

    · conduct their own evaluation of a product, including consideration of the safety of students, the security of data and the accuracy and reliability of content (particularly with regard to social software or web 2.0)
    · give their own independent consideration to the license and other contractual terms proposed by the supplier.

     

    Links to external websites on Educational Leaders are intended for school leaders' professional learning. In using Educational Leaders, users agree to evaluate and bear all risks associated with the use of any content and associated links, including any reliance on accuracy, completeness or usefulness of such content.

     

    Educational Leaders contains links to Internet sites that may be of interest to viewers, but which are not owned or controlled by the New Zealand Ministry of Education.

     

    Registered users of Educational Leaders are invited to comment on its resource materials through an online feedback facility. While these comments may be of interest to viewers, they are not owned, controlled or necessarily endorsed by the New Zealand Ministry of Education.

     

    The Ministry of Education hosts principals' sabbatical reports on Educational Leaders as part of the sabbatical scheme agreements. While the sabbatical reports may be of interest to viewers, their content is not owned, controlled, or necessarily endorsed by the New Zealand Ministry of Education.

     

    Where PDF files of original material are held on this site, written permission has been sought and granted by the author or publisher. All summaries and citations have been correctly referenced to the original source. Where this does not occur, or the citation is incorrect, users or owners of material referenced are invited to contact the project director with the details to: leadership@tki.govt.nz

     

    The New Zealand Ministry of Education does not accept any responsibility for inaccurate, out-of-date, or misleading information. The Ministry does not have editorial rights over sites that are linked to from Educational Leaders and is not responsible for their content or the content of the links you may access in the resources listed.

     

    Any information, endorsements of products or services, materials, or personal opinions appearing on such external sites are not controlled, sponsored, nor approved by the New Zealand Ministry of Education.

     

    Published on: 13 Jul 2011


    Footer: