Stanley Ave Sch, Te Aroha & Mt Maunganui

Monday 25th was a work day – some connections from home and email in the morning with meetings with e-learning team in the afternoon over coffee in the sun on campus. Good discussion and exchange of ideas. Singing praises of Martin Tim and Kit and the move to Moodle2 back home.
Tuesday 26th – was another of our days out with Garry generously covering huge distances in the Waikato car to ensure we got a good picture of the country’s educational institutions as well as some of its great scenery. So we had a great day at a school in the morning, a university campus in the afternoon and then a paddle in the Pacific at the end of it.
The school was Stanley Avenue School at Te Aroha under the leadership of Stuart Armistead for the past 4 years or so…really fabulous place. Similar to Leamington in some ways and also as great in different ways. Again, consensus and a concern for learner-centred dispositions are driving the curriculum here. Being child-centred and achieving highly can sit side by side. Let’s hope – as I said before – that they resist the relentless and senseless political interference that makes things not so great for teachers back home. We saw classes in which things were in balance with the new technologies and media integrated well. Traditionalists and evangelists for phonics back home would have been pleased by the focus on the basics on the walls. But those same consultants simply would not understand some of the other things going on. Children taking control of their learning, respect for teachers as learning professionals, that kind of thing. They seem to have things in balance here. Teaching “the basics” and innovating as well. You can do both and adopt the radical position in the middle. We saw two boys reading about Anzac Day and deciding to record themselves and upload it to their portfolio via an iPod touch. You could take the view that I am being a techno enthusiast in reporting this. But actually, no. This is not so much to do with the technology. The whole process is about learning to read, to evaluate reading performance and to store that – this actually works and has become a part of the lived experience of the school. It’s not an extra. Neither is it something that determines agency. They just do it! No drama.
But, speaking of drama, the school is, of course, in a truly dramatic setting below a mountain. Landscaped grounds have a swimming pool, a recreation centre, two climbing frames, a mini rugby pitch, a growing area…an enthusiastic staff which is blended together from older teachers and younger teachers – a new deputy principal who lived and worked in Bromley for two years and also knew Lee Manor from some supply work…all in all a great visit and lots to think about in terms of curriculum, media and tech use and whatnot.
We stopped for lunch in Matamata, near to Hobbiton the Lord of the Rings themed visitor centre but this being a work day we carried on up over the Kaimai mountain range and down to Tauranga, a small city on the East Coast with a campus of Waikato University. Once there we met with inspiring early years lecturers, Clare and Gill and Paora a man doing wonderful work on culture and identity, partly based around digital media but working in 87 schools throughout the country. Another great and inspiring conversation and more contacts to take home.
From there at the end of the day we pushed on to Mount Maunganui, a small settlement just across from Tauranga with a lovely beach just south of the centre. Here we paddled and Caroline got to see the Pacific Ocean for the first time. A busy and hectic day with some wonderful sights and memories.
Wednesday 27th was spent mainly on campus – again with inspiring people, including Sara who had emigrated from Lee Green, very near where I live, some 12 years previously. Had not looked back!
Long meeting and chat with her and colleague Rosina about areas of mutual interest…followed by a working spell in the library (for me) and catching up with Noelline (Caroline) and then an inspiring chat with Paul and Steve in the tech support/e-learning team – this is a complete “can-do” service, listening to what lecturers and students want for research and teaching. Unbelievable really, student centred at this level. It follows a philosophy of teaching and learning we’ve seen out in the schools too…

Taupo and around

Well, I alarmed some family and friends with my health scares in the previous post but I promise I am on the mend now and (take note anyone reading from Faculty HR) I kept working throughout; so it was not severe and I am feeling better each day especially after a weekend in Lake Taupo wth Garry and Helen looking after us and showing us around. I will need a separate blog for all the pharmacies I’ve visited in the southern hemisphere and the nice pharmacists I’ve met along the way.  Good people all of them.

Early morning Lake Taupo, Saturday 23rd Feb

Early morning Lake Taupo, Saturday 23rd Feb

Ok – So…Taupo. A town on the northern shores of Lake Taupo which is a lake that’s slightly bigger than Singapore in the middle of the North Island.  We had arrived by the end of the previous post and yesterday – Saturday 23rd – set about some exploration of the local area.  This included visiting hot springs, spectacular water falls, thermal plunge pools and more. Today – Sunday 24th – this included seeing mud erupting out of the ground in bubbling hot mini-geysers and wading in a Hot River.  This is a river that is hot. Very hot. And full of mineral goodness  – but also the possibility of Amoebic meningitis if you duck your head under and accidentally swallow any.  Given my recent track record I judiciously kept my head above water throughout…

This is indeed a strange and beautiful country.  More anon…and more in the way of pictures from my Flickr page below…

New Zealand: The first week

Finally – a blog post on my travels.

It’s been an eventful week; I’ve been derailed by illness and jetlag and panic about my seminar presentation.  These – well some of them – being the excuse of any blogger…  And on this blog in particular, almost 2 and a half years have gone by since I last posted.  But hey ho – it’s mine and only the people who want to know will take a look. Otherwise it will just float around with all the other blogstuff out there, little untended unobserved satellites and bits and pieces of throwaway things.

View through window onto Lake Taupo

View through window onto Lake Taupo

So here I begin summarising – or trying to – the first eventful week in New Zealand.  Here on the shores of Lake Taupo – a weekend retreat with Garry and Helen and Caroline. As I write, the late afternoon sun is lighting up the spray from a water skier out on the deep blue waters of the lake. Waters which reflect the deep blue sky and stretch out to the mountains and volcanoes on the far shore, over which tiny wisps of clouds are settling.  It’s really very nice here. And my first time on the North Island and my first time in a spa hotel in such a place…

Yesterday was also a first. The first time I’ve given an hour (well more than an hour) long seminar with pneumonia.  I didn’t know I had pneumonia at the time. Just had to keep apologising for the cough and playing video clips when I was particularly breathless. People were kind enough to say it was good afterwards though!  The diagnosis was only confirmed this morning when I went to the doctor at the suggestion of one of the technical team (thanks Paul)…but enough of the moaning about my physical condition.  That’s only for inflicting on close family… so I’ll draw a veil over it except to say that the doctor was fantastic and had an amazing array of gadgets like Bones McCoy had.  It was like going to a doctor in the future.

By the lake at Waikato Hamiton campus

By the lake at Waikato Hamilton campus

So – ok – what – why who etc.  I am on an academic exchange to the University of Waikato on the North Island of New Zealand. I am travelling with a colleague from the IOE, Caroline Daly, and being looked after by Associate Prof Gary Falloon and his wife Helen.  We are funded fully by Waikato apart from some living expenses. Their generosity is a little overwhelming.  This extends beyond the financial aspect into the even more precious commodity of time.  Everyone wants to meet with us and everyone wants to hear about us and we want to learn about and from him or her.  We are interested in the learning lives of people around technology and digital media with (generally speaking) a focus on children (me) and teachers (Caroline) and an age phase interest of primary (me) and secondary (Caroline). We are doing a seminar each to faculty members and a joint seminar they day before we leave at the end of week 2.

First morning at school of Education, Waikato

First morning at school of Education, Waikato

How and when did we get here? In an enormous Airbus with an upstairs and everything (though not for us) last weekend…  Straight through from London to Sydney with about half and hour off in Singapore airport for good behaviour and to enjoy yet more airport security…  About two hours off in Sydney then waiting for the plane over the Tasman Sea to Auckland where Garry met us and drove us to Hamilton – about an hour south – to the Novotel for week 1 (after Taupo this weekend, we move to Garry’s house. Generosity again. See what I mean?). So the journey began on Saturday night and ended on Monday afternoon, 18th Feb, in Hamilton.

On day 2 – Feb 19 we had some orientation time in the morning though extremely disorientated by everything else. Jetlag. Plus (in my case) a feeling of deep, deep lack of wellness…  But the sunshine and the welcome and the fact that Caroline was presenting first, certainly helped…She did a great job and set the bar very high, talking about the complex and fascinating Welsh project and evaluation of e-learning which was actually useful… Plenty of questions and a healthy audience and lots of discussion of teacher professionalism…  They have a healthy respect for teachers and learners in New Zealand and – so far – a refreshing lack of catastrophic and unwelcome interference by ignorant politicians. Like I say, everything is a little odd for English people.  Unfortunately there are signs that they might be moving to some of our greatest hits which have done so much to destroy morale and wreck our own system: National published testing, punitive inspection and so on and so forth.  We should be looking at what they do so well and learning from them, how they produce such amazing teachers in beautiful classrooms, confident learners.  Hey guess what? It could be they do the opposite to us.  Seems to be working…

Leamington School Sign

Leamington School Sign

And a school visit bears this out on the next day…bright and early on Wednesday the 20th to beautiful Leamington Primary in Cambridge, a small town south –east of Hamilton.  Schools in England are little fortresses these days, but we strolled through a sun-filled playground past a series of well maintained low rise wooden constructed classrooms, an outdoor swimming pool, a climbing frame, a growing area, trees, fields, into a classroom where the teacher Tonya welcomed us in.  It would break the hearts of some teachers back in the UK to see the space and furniture, the equipment, the light and the rest.  There are so many great teachers back home doing so much with very little in the way of resource or respect. And here I think they have both in abundance…

Leamington School boardwalk

Leamington School boardwalk

Leamington School going out to play

Leamington School going out to play

Into the headteacher’s office to talk through some of the issues and his philosophy…  They teach children. Not the curriculum.  It takes me back.  And it appears that in spite of this crazy child-centred approach they manage to take in phonics and real reading alongside one another (because I know you need both) plus some interesting things: Creativity, Independence, Excellence and more…They manage to achieve things with these children. Without OFSTED. Imagine that.

iPads in Year 6

iPads in Year 6

After that we go on walkabout to Leesa’s class where we look at the children using iPads 1:1, alongside all the traditional paraphernalia of primary classrooms because you can do both these things.  You don’t have to be an evangelist for one or the other.  Here the children are adept with writing in all forms of media, making movies and music, playing games of all kinds and working together or alone. The furniture has had to be redesigned hereabouts and so there are a few traditional tables but lots of beanbags and inflatables to sit on.  The atmosphere is productive and managed by a teacher who is clearly trusted and valued by the head. Trusted to experiment and innovate…Incidentally they have a great relationship with Waikato, benefitting hugely from support with equipment and offering in return their use as a site for research…

Later in the day we learn from Gary about his work, tracing the learning trajectories and activities in the use of iPads by means of some very clever research techniques.  He’s working on papers and frameworks to account for these and it will be well worth reading when it comes out in the fullness of time (academic publishing being what it is).

Coming almost up to date we have Thursday 21st to account for with me presenting in late afternoon and working most of the day on trying to feel well and on taking my presentation apart and putting it back together again.  This was all back at Waikato University Hamilton campus and I do believe I have not yet mentioned what a beautiful place this is. In addition to being populated with generous and inspiring people, the setting is unmatched really.  Student shops and cafes around a lake, ornamental gardens, woodland areas, a brand new library…really really good.

I was pleased I got through the presentation in which  I mainly covered my research into learner lives and digital cultures. I had some god searching questions, including a bunch from Terry Locke who edits a great online journal and is a professor there who knows several people back at my workplace.  A gentleman and a scholar and also a poet. We spend the early part of the evening at dinner with him and it’s a fascinating conversation ranging far and wide.  I only wish I felt a little better and more able to enjoy it all (but enough of that because there is not much interesting about other people’s illness).

And so we are at Lake Taupo for the weekend, taking a break from work at the uni and so that will be the subject of the next episode…