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The Concern

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Title: The Concern


1
The Concern
  • For a number of years the issue of secondary
    teacher shortage has been a concern across
    Australia (ASPA 2006). The 2003 Ministerial
    Council of Employment, Education, Training and
    Youth Affairs predicted potential shortages of
    20,000 to 30,000 teachers by around 2012.
  • In 2005 the Australian Council of Deans of
    Science found large proportions of secondary
    schools across Australia were having difficulty
    recruiting suitably qualified teachers of
    science.
  • 26 of physics teachers and 13 of chemistry
    teachers had neither a major nor a minor in their
    subject.
  • 16 of junior secondary teachers had not studied
    a science subject past first year at university,
    8 had not studied science at university at all
  • Teacher shortages are likely to be more
    pronounced in certain STEM areas such as
    Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry and ICT as the
    supply of education graduates has fallen in
    recent years.
  • Attracting good students in the numbers required
    into secondary science and mathematics teaching
    is a serious challenge.

2
  • A Department of Education, Employment and
    Workplace Relations (DEEWR) audit of STEM
    supply-side data reported in Participation in
    Science, Mathematics and Technology in Australian
    Education (Ainley 2008) noted that the number of
    graduates in Australia completing undergraduate
    degrees in science related fields over the years
    2001-2006 has remained substantially stable
    resulting in a decline in the percentage of
    domestic undergraduate course completions from
    40.4 to 38.7.
  • From a national viewpoint a flexible and highly
    literate STEM population raises the competitive
    advantage of Australia and leads to innovation
    and growth in productivity and wealth. The
    resulting national priority to promote widespread
    participation in STEM has lead to growing concern
    that Australias STEM trained population is not
    sufficient to meet current and forecast demand
    (Tytler 2008).

3
  • A recent report by Engineers Australia, SA
    Division, (Engineers Australia 2008), expressed
    concern in regard to looming shortages of
    engineers in Australia.
  • A 2006 Department of Education, Science and
    Training (DEST) Audit of science, engineering and
    technology skills concluded that Australia faces
    a cumulative shortfall of 20,000 scientists over
    the eight years from 2006 (DEST 2006).

4
  • In 2006 the Chief Executive of Engineers
    Australia remarked to a Parliament Enquiry into
    immigration that At the secondary level, there
    is a disturbing trend for students to lose
    interest in science and mathematics. The most
    recent figures show that about 46 of all
    secondary school students are not studying any
    science or mathematics subjects at all.

5
       Australian TIMSS Results      
  • Have a long tail of
    underachievement Are poor at
    the higher levels Have stood
    still while many countries have improved

6
Considerations
  • A number of countries (including Korea, Japan
    and Finland) are classified as high achieving
    locations in STEM subjects.
  • This is based on international data drawn from
    the (Pisa) or (TIMSS) assessments. In the high
    achieving countries there are a number of
    initiatives that have common attributes, one of
    which includes changing the science and
    mathematics curriculum to make it more engaging,
    hands-on and relevant to real-life situations.

7
  • The Finnish National Core Curriculum and the
    Helsinki City Curriculum comply with the
    pedagogical principles of the Frenchman Célestin
    Freinet, who underlines learning by doing and
    community orientation.
  • The Essential Concepts of Freinet Pedagogy
  • Pedagogy of Work - meaning that pupils learned by
    making useful products or providing useful
    services.
  • Co-operative Learning - based on co-operation in
    the productive process.
  • Enquiry-based Learning - trial and error method
    involving group work.
  • The Natural Method - based on an inductive,
    global approach.
  • Centres of Interest - based on children's
    learning interests and curiosity.

8
  • One of the most significant areas of concern to
    emerge from research studies is that school
    science and mathematics is perceived by many
    students as being irrelevant and boring
    (Goodrum et al., 2001 Mcphan et al., 2008
    Tytler, 2007). One means of addressing these
    issues is to move towards a contextual approach
    to teaching of science with a greater focus
    around the relevance of inquiry and investigation
    along with the need for students to develop
    higher-order thinking and problem-solving skills
    (Barnes, 2000 McPhan et al., 2008 Williams,
    2005)

9
Inquiry-based Learning
  • ? Inquiry implies involvement that leads to
    understanding.
  • Furthermore, involvement in learning implies
    possessing skills and attitudes that permit you
    to seek resolutions to questions and issues while
    you construct new knowledge.
  • ? Unfortunately, our traditional educational
    system has worked in a way that discourages the
    natural process of inquiry
  • ? Students become less prone to ask questions as
    they move through the grade levels.
  • ? Students learn not to ask too many questions,
    instead to listen and repeat the expected
    answers.
  • Some of the discouragement of our natural inquiry
    process may come from a lack of understanding
    about the deeper nature of inquiry-based
    learning.
  • Effective inquiry is more than just asking
    questions.
  • A complex process is involved when individuals
    attempt to convert information and data into
    useful knowledge.
  • Useful application of inquiry learning involves
    several factors
  • ? a context for questions,
  • ? a framework for questions,
  • ? a focus for questions and
  • ? different levels of questions.
  • Well-designed inquiry learning produces knowledge
    formation that can be widely applied.

10
The Hallett Cove School solution
  • Recognising the need for a change in the way
    that the mathematics and science curriculum is
    conceived and delivered, the Administration and
    Governing Council made the decision to commit the
    school to focusing on improving outcomes (both
    academically and in vocational pathways) in the
    learning areas of mathematics and science. This
    commitment has been written into the Site
    Learning Plan and a new position Assistant
    Principal, Mathematics and Science was created by
    the amalgamation of the two separate Coordinator
    positions.

11
  • We are currently in the process of developing a
    contextualised, inquiry-based, fully integrated
    mathematics and science curriculum, from years 8
    10, that will engage the students and encourage
    them to continue with their studies of advanced
    mathematics and science. Working with the
    teachers in the Mathematics and Science Areas of
    Study, the new curriculum for year 8 was
    developed and subsequently implemented for trial
    in 2009.

12
So how did we go about developing this new
integrated curriculum?
  • In 2008 I introduced the notion of Rich Tasks to
    the faculty (now a combined Ma/Sc faculty)
  • In Learning in Technology Education Challenges
    for the 21st Century
  • a Rich task is defined as "a culminating
    performance or demonstration or product that is
    purposeful and models a life role. It presents
    substantive, real problems to solve and engages
    learners in forms of pragmatic social action that
    have real value in the world. The problems
    require identification, analysis and resolution,
    and require students to analyse, theorise and
    engage intellectually with the world. In this
    way, tasks connect to the world outside the
    classroom. As well as having this connectedness,
    the tasks are also rich in their application
    they represent an educational outcome of
    demonstrable and substantial intellectual and
    educational value.
  • To be truly rich, a task requires
    transdisciplinary learnings which utilise
    practices and skills across disciplines while
    retaining the integrity of the disciplines.
  • Queensland example of a Year 6 Rich Task
    Design, Make and Display a Product. Students will
    design, or improve the design of, a purposeful
    product, and make the product or a working model
    or prototype. As part of a public display
    promoting their product, they will flesh out a
    (restricted) marketing plan and explore the
    suitability of materials for mass manufacture.

13
We began by first developing Assessment Rubrics
based upon SACSA Outcomes
14
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15
Began the process of finding and/or developing a
series of Rich Tasks that would address the SACSA
Outcomes across both Maths and Science
  • A Sticky Subject Some of the tasks are quite
    specific with
  • Factor Game Fast Fun Factors their
    instructions to get them started
  • Fat Chance while others are deliberately
  • Filling Bottles quite vague. It is up to the
    students to
  • Kitchen Renovation fill in the gaps by
    researching anything
  • About Me that they dont understand. A
    discussion
  • Bringing Down the Solar system between the
    students and the tutor will
  • Wriggly Worms help determine the level of
    assessment
  • Blue Lake achieved.
  • Barbie Bungee
  • Coins and Weight
  • Distance vs Time
  • Don't Get Boxed In
  • Double Up
  • Energy and Water in the Kitchen
  • Take a Chance
  • Waste Not Want Not
  • Tiling
  • Bombs Away

16
Mapped the Outcomes across the Tasks
17
  • As we wanted to also develop a technology- rich
    curriculum we began to acquire teacher resources
    and data-logging technology from Texas
    Instruments and Vernier.
  • Meanwhile I informed the parents of the incoming
    2009 yr 8 students about the new curriculum and
    that they would all need to acquire a TI 84
    graphics calculator at a cost of 160 (socio
    economic factors allowed for).
  • Saved money by reducing Science bulk order and
    reduced need for text book replacements for yrs 8
    10 (no Maths or Science text books issued to yr
    8s in 2009)

18
I looked at the physical layout of the
laboratories and made changes where possible to
enable a blocking of two lines of three classes
of yr 8 Maths and Science. This required the
cooperation of the timetabling committee as a
priority after the yr 12s.
  • before changes after changes

19
  • Students attend 10 lessons per week of
    Investigative Studies (in Mathematics and
    Science)
  • Their teacher/tutor is responsible for normal
    administrative requirements like marking the roll
    as well as monitoring and recording their process
  • For the majority of the time they choose their
    own groups (to a maximum of three)
  • They then choose what task they wish to undertake
  • They are responsible for determining what is
    required to undertake the task and ordering any
    equipment/supplies.
  • They must also complete the Risk Assessment for
    each activity before having this verified by
    their tutor
  • Students are trained in the use of the
    data-logging equipment by a knowledgeable
    teacher, in which case they achieve an expert
    certificate which then enables them to borrow the
    equipment as well as train other students (who
    receive a certificate of competence, which
    enables them to borrow and use that particular
    sensor/probe but not train other students)
  • All students are issued with a coloured nametag
    which they must wear if they want to borrow
    equipment or move out of the classroom
  • Each task is able to be re-submitted to their
    tutor/teacher so as to improve their assessment
    result

20
  • We started the year with some common experiments
    to get them used to laboratory safety rules and
    experimental technique
  • Explained the SACSA Outcomes and assessment
    rubrics
  • Ran a couple of sessions using the data-loggers
    and probes
  • Got all the students to fill in an Attitudes
    Toward Maths Science survey which I modeled on
    a survey of students attitudes toward
    introductory statistics developed by C. Shau.
    The items fall into four subscales affect
    (attitude), cognitive competence, value, and
    difficulty.
  • They will be re-surveyed every term
  • --------------------------------------------------
    ------------
  • Along the way, apart from the Rich Tasks, there
    will occur
  • Explicit teaching of how to learn for tests
  • Learning how to learn
  • Sessions about specific learning and thinking
    theory
  • A focus on Depth of Learning rather than
    superficial learning
  • A reduction in the content covered as we focus on
    the learning, thinking and problem solving skills
  • Rote learning of the times tables

21
Problems
  • Big initial workload for the lab manager
    (requiring a change of practice in the
    organisation of the supply and preparation of
    equipment lots of small groups rather than
    class sets, different types of requirements
    necessitating more shopping expeditions)
  • More difficult to keep track of student progress
    and to ensure that they stayed on task (some
    students tended to abuse the apparent freedom
    offered by a task orientated curriculum)
  • Teachers needed to be more vigilant in what each
    group was doing so that supplies werent wasted
    and checking that everything was returned at the
    end of each session
  • The teachers tended to find this significant
    change to be quite stressful and there was a
    tendency to want to revert to their comfort
    zone of how they have always done it before (ie
    shut the door, teacher dominated with explicit
    teaching)
  • We reduced the number of tasks that each class
    could choose from to make it more manageable for
    everyone (especially with limited data-logging
    equipment)
  • This enabled some explicit teaching to the whole
    class to occur that would be relevant to the
    group of tasks being undertaken (rather than only
    having any explicit teaching occurring as the
    students required it for their particular task)
  • We redesigned the assessment summary to make it
    easier for the teacher to keep track of each
    students progress
  • We had to find a compromise between the school
    based assessment for reporting against the SACSA
    based assessment as outlined in the assessment
    rubrics

22
Assessment Summary
23
This is a work in progress
  • We will be refining our current Rich Tasks, and
    developing new ones, as we go alongSo lets
    look at some of our Rich Tasks
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