Sunday, November 17, 2024

Burst and Bubbles 2024

 My inquiry is to explore effective ways to help my Year 13 Statistics students prepare for tertiary studies by setting up a quasi-university style approach in class. This approach mirrors tertiary study methods by integrating flipped classroom model , rewindable learning, and tutorial-style sessions. As an Assistant Head of learning, my personal goal is to improve Mathematics achievement in Years 12 and 13, contributing significantly to this and  Department, and Manaiakalani goal.

Through my years in education, I have seen how crucial it is to ensure a smooth transition from secondary to tertiary studies. Readiness for tertiary education greatly influences how students adapt to the academic culture and expectations of higher education. This awareness drives my commitment to support my students’ transition as seamlessly and empowering as possible.

I developed this approach using multiple data sources, including student feedback, past results, and topic tests, to comprehensively understand my students’ learning needs. 

This is a mixed-ability group of 14 students, consisting of five Samoans, four Tongans, two Cook Island Māori, two Māori, and one Asian student. Last year’s NCEA results revealed that seven of these students had come from the Statistics pathway, while the rest had varied backgrounds in Mathematics.

This Year 13 course includes five internal assessments, two externals, and a Scholarship program. To provide targeted support, I divided the class into three groups focused on internals, an external preparation group, and a scholarship-focused group, the first such initiative at Tamaki College. 

The changes I implemented in my teaching include:

  • For Internals: Using the PEEL (Point, Evidence, Explanation, Link) structure, Miro online boards, and rewindable video lessons.

  • For Externals: Introducing the Chunk-Chew-Check strategy, collaborating with the Pacifica Academy, providing annotated handwritten exemplars, study sessions, and working in partnership with Epsom Girls Grammar and Mount Albert Grammar.

I am grateful for the guidance of Dr. Janni for Designing my inquiry, Dr. Marion Steel Director of Mathsmatics Epsom girls’ grammer, Michael Walden( Mount Albert Grammer), Katalina Mau Pathway Manager Auckland University , and Matt Goodwin in making these adjustments.

Challenges-Teaching Statistics at the Year 13 level to students without prior Statistics experience poses challenges, as does managing deadlines and maintaining scholarship-level content.

  • Qualitative Shifts: They became self-directed learners, prioritizing well-being and adopting a growth mindset.

  • Quantitative Shifts: All students have achieved 14 credits, meeting the partial qualification requirement for tertiary readiness. We are now awaiting external results.

I strongly believe in the power of collaboration. Working with other teachers allows us to identify shared challenges, analyze data together, and refine our instructional approaches. You are welcome to view my blog for further insights.




Saturday, November 9, 2024

Extra for experts

 One of my students successfully completed her Statistics scholarship examinations yesterday. She really enjoyed the exam and this is the first time for Tamaki College.

 Scholarship Statistics is a three-hour exam covering all NZ Statistics curriculum areas. The exam has four questions consisting of multiple sub-parts and problems often link the learning from multiple achievement standards. The main focus is on data analysis so the report-based internal achievement standards are assessed more than the probability externals. Students do not need to be in the Scholarship Statistics course to consider taking this exam, but a strong work ethic is needed to learn new concepts. Students who enjoy engaging in discussion and those who can write concisely and insightfully generally do very well in this examination.

The topic content is as follows: Four internals and three externals have been taught. We worked hard to reach this point, and this would help her do a Statistics paper in university. Dr Marion Steel Director of Mathematics Epsom Girls' Grammar School and Michael Walden from Mount Albert Grammar helped me to make it successful.












Monitoring


Sunday, November 3, 2024

Monitoring CTD

 My learners finished their school year last week and will come to extra classes during study break until examinations. 

Here is the update:








Here is the final internal update:





Fourteen learners in this class have met tertiary partial qualifications: two for Law, one for Sociology, two for health science, one for flight attendant, one for Economist, two for tertiary, one for business school, two for study abroad, and one for vocational pathway.










Burst and Bubbles 2024