成人抖阴

成人抖阴

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成人抖阴 Superusers: Teaching styles and learning philosophies

10 May 2021 | By viviedu

We asked a group of 成人抖阴 Superusers to describe their teaching styles and learning philosophies. You won鈥檛 see 鈥成人抖阴鈥 mentioned again in these fascinating responses, just a group of passionate educators putting into elegant words how they engage every student in their classroom. 

 

Rebecca Power 鈥 Emmanuel College 

鈥淚t鈥檚 grown as I鈥檝e been teaching. I鈥痺as very teacher-centered, standing at the front and imparting knowledge with little student involvement.鈥疘鈥檝e鈥痵ince learned from colleagues and through personal development, and now find I enjoy and鈥痟ave success with a more collaborative approach. We work together and鈥痵hare with the class, rather than just me doing the talking. 

 

Karen Gunasekara 鈥 St Augustine鈥檚 College, Brookvale鈥 

鈥淯ltimately,鈥痥ids learn better when they feel safe and happy.鈥疘t鈥檚鈥痑bout鈥痶rying to make learning fun while drawing on high-impact, evidence-based teaching strategies. For me,鈥痶hat鈥檚鈥痑bout having clear expectations, learning intentions, and success criteria 鈥 either I share them or build them with the class themselves.鈥疪egular feedback, peer and self-assessment and making learning as practical as possible鈥 providing those鈥痳eal-life links so they can see the value in what鈥痶hey鈥檙e鈥痩earning. I also try to use鈥痠nnovative learning spaces and technology, which means students鈥痟ave the ability to鈥痗ollaborate and synergize鈥痠n their learning.鈥 

 

Wendy Irwin 鈥 Thomas Hassall Anglican College鈥 

鈥淎 firm, loving hand.鈥疊uilding relationships is the key. You get things out of children when you build relationships.鈥疘鈥檓鈥痜irm, fair and consistent. The latter is very important in a classroom.鈥疢y learning philosophy is that鈥痚very child has something to learn and not every child will be an academic. We鈥痬ust鈥痜ind what it is with that child and run with it: sport, academia, other life skills like integrity, honor. We can really see that in our children, even鈥痜ive-year-olds. I want to maximize the potential of every one of the children in my class. See it, work out what it is, and run with it. 

 

Annabelle Wood 鈥 Thomas Hassall Anglican College鈥 

In this day and age,鈥痚verything is hands on. Lots of鈥痯ractical things.鈥疘t鈥檚鈥痠mportant to demonstrate, explain, and鈥痩et the children do their work.鈥疘鈥檝e鈥痓arely had any work in my maths books in the last few weeks,鈥痠t鈥檚 all been white boards or write-and-swipe boards. They enjoy that kind of learning.鈥疘t鈥檚鈥痠mportant to get to know each child. You might have children who are鈥痯oor鈥痑t maths, but they shine at English.鈥疶hey鈥檙e鈥痑ble to switch on and they just get it. Being able to support those ah-ha moments and what their interests are 鈥 they may not want to write an鈥痠nformation report on a tiger, but they have an interest in fishing and writing about really gets the juices flowing.鈥 

 

Erin Johnson 鈥 Thomas Hassall Anglican College鈥 

Collaborative.鈥疘鈥檓鈥痑 facilitator of their learning and I鈥檓 very hands-on鈥 using manipulative materials鈥痺ith the students,鈥痶rying to move away from worksheets and just feeding them information, and moving more towards enquiry-based learning. 

 

Thomas Schaab 鈥 Ambrose Treacy College鈥 

I like to get the kids to do as much work as possible and not talk at them for too long. When you have a bit of autonomy and a task you can do,鈥痽ou can do it at your own pace鈥痺ith as much freedom as possible, without giving them something they鈥痗an鈥檛鈥痙o.鈥疉 bit of instruction and then letting them do things on their own. 

 

Julia Oreo鈥鈥疪补诲蹿辞谤诲鈥 

My teaching philosophy is not as conventional as most music teachers.鈥It鈥檚 important to hook students for life whether they are performers, contributors, or consumers. I want them to appreciate it. They won鈥檛 all be鈥performers,鈥痓ut they can still make music meaningful in their life.鈥疘 use technology and take pieces that they would be listening to on the radio 鈥 it helps them make music meaningful to them. 

 

Michele Higgins 鈥 Waverley Christian College鈥 

Firm but fair. I have no issues with class control. The kids listen to me,鈥痶hat鈥檚鈥痟alf the battle.鈥疪elationships and respect are鈥really important. They need to respect me and I them. 

 

Dylan Koning 鈥 Mount St Michael鈥檚 College鈥 

I want them to be comfortable and enjoy the class. My subjects are not typically ones that students engage with 鈥 not fun sciences or PE. I believe as soon as they start enjoying it, they learn more and get more out of it.鈥疉fter that, everything follows well.