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Icon Three key themes

Three key themes

The ULearn08 programme is structured around three key themes focusing on aspects of learning and leading. Delegates are able to follow a theme through the conference, or explore different combinations of each theme. When making workshop selections, you can choose to use 'Key Theme Alignment' as a filter to view what is being offered in each breakout.

Collaborate

Collaborate: Connecting and developing relationships

Collaboration is acknowledged in literature and understood by teaching professionals as a key driver of quality leadership and effective teaching and learning. Educationalists recognise the benefits of connecting, sharing and developing strong collegial relationships.

This strand will consider the spaces and places, the most appropriate technologies, and the impact of online environments in supporting learning. Workshops will explore who connections can be made with. Partnerships which exist between the school and home, the student and the wider business community will help provide context. Because ICT enables both closer collaboration and personalisation, we must consider where learning takes place and how it is facilitated and moderated. We can choose to look locally, nationally and internationally at options emerging to support student learning.

Think about it ...

  • What are the ways that you promote collaboration within your classroom/centre?
  • In what ways do ICTs enable collaborative activity and relationship building?
  • How do you foster relationships with children’s homes and the wider business community?
  • How do you go about establishing collaborative learning relationships at a national or international level?

Innovate

Innovate: Innovation and sustainability

Innovation is driven by our need to seek improvement and evolve new opportunities. To be successful, innovation needs to build sustainability and empower further development. In this strand, workshops will focus on building processes, materials and resources which support learning, within and outside the educational community. Presenters will explore creativity, thinking and effective learning emphasising how new pedagogies and practice can help teachers meet this imperative. Teachers will be challenged to meet current and future needs by adapting practice, making new connections, and changing structures to suit new paradigms for learning in the 21st Century.

In sustaining such change, there is a need to consider new and improved infrastructures, innovative systemic structures, timetables and assessment. New connections are required with enterprise. Leaders require a new range of understandings and literacies. Participants will be asked to reflectively challenge current views and opinions to seek new ways to prepare learners for an uncertain future.

Think about it ...

  • What are the particular skills and competencies required by students to participate in a 21st Century world? How are these developed in your classroom/centre?
  • How is innovation and creativity encouraged in your classroom/centre?
  • How do you assess these competencies in your students?
  • What changes have you explored and/or made to existing structures such as timetables, assessment, school day, subjects etc, to enable such innovative approaches?

Educate Educate: Learning

Teachers are challenged to engage, enable and empower the learner in a technology rich and fast changing environment. Schools need to consider values and vision as they seek to interpret appropriate ways of delivering the New Zealand Curriculum. They must provide appropriate learning opportunities which consider learning dispositions, the essential learning areas and key competencies. Teachers must examine the most effective ways to measure learning outcomes through appropriate assessment and effective reporting.

In this strand, presenters will examine how new pedagogies and practices can be integrated and appropriated and how new technologies are assisting teachers to engage in new ways with learners’ expectations and needs. Many schools are undertaking their own journey towards answering the questions: "What is powerful learning?” and “What is it powerful to learn?".

Think about it ...

  • What are the theories of learning that most influence the way you teach?
  • What is the most recent new pedagogical approach that you have tried in your classroom/centre? What happened? Who have you shared this with?
  • To what extent are ICTs used to support your implementation of the NZ Curriculum/Te Whariki?
  • What are the ways that you know what and how your students are learning? How do you gather the evidence to support this? How has your teaching approach changed as a result?