26 research outputs found

    The influence of peer group response: Building a teacher and student expertise in the writing classroom

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    New Zealand students in the middle and upper school achieve better results in reading than they do in writing. This claim is evident in national assessment data reporting on studentsā€™ literacy achievement. Research findings also state that teachers report a lack of confidence when teaching writing. Drawing on the National Writing Project developed in the USA, a team of researchers from the University of Waikato (New Zealand) and teachers from primary and secondary schools in the region collaborated to ā€œtalkā€ and ā€œdoā€ writing by building a community of practice. The effects of writing workshop experiences and the transformation this has on teachersā€™ professional identities, self-efficacy, and their studentsā€™ learning provided the research focus. This paper draws mostly on data collected during the first cycle of the two-year project. It discusses the influence of peer group response ā€“ a case study teacherā€™s workshop experiences that transformed her professional identity, building her confidence and deepening her understandings of self as writer and ultimately transforming this expertise into her writing classroom practice

    Globalisation and the reconstruction of the literate child

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    In New Zealand, the turn from the welfare state since 1984 to a global market driven economy in the early mid 1990s has affected the way that primary curriculum documents have been developed and implemented. Those documents, together with teachersā€™ handbooks, have in turn affected the way that teachers teach. In particular, the construction of literacy and what constitutes literacy teaching in these documents have affected teachersā€™ work and have also constructed and are reconstructing childhood and the child literate. The way that teachers teach literacy depends on their constructions of children and childhood and that as their views of childhood and children change, so too do their views of the teaching of literacy. Against this background of locating childhood and children in educational and literacy discourses, other discourses of new technologies, cultural diversity, time and space of ā€œnew timesā€ are also challenging the construction of literacy, the literate child and childhood

    RE: Strategy 2.0 initiative template follow-up

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    Next steps to finalized strategy 2.0 deck on pipeline

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    RE: Oral abuse initiative

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    2015 Develop an Oral Abuse Solution Deck

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    RE: Next steps to finalized strategy 2.0 deck on pipeline

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    2015 Evidence Deck strategy 2.0 deck is due by 8 AM next Tuesday

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    RE: Initiative templates

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