Teachers taught importance of learning



Steven Katz, a researcher with the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto, spoke to educators at the P.E.I. Teachers' Federation Annual Convention. Guardian photo by Jim Day

Steven Katz, a researcher with the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto, spoke to educators at the P.E.I. Teachers' Federation Annual Convention.

Published on October 16th, 2010
Published on October 15th, 2010
Jim Day RSS Feed
Topics :
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education , University of Toronto , Charlottetown hotel

Learning how students can best learn is the strongest teaching tool for educators, says an expert in educational studies.

“Teaching isn’t just a set of methodologies,’’ said Steven Katz, a cognitive psychologist and researcher with the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto.

“It’s not just having a set of rules and routines and motions that we go through and then we just assume that learning will be a natural consequence. We actually start off with an understanding of the learning, of where kids are at, of what they can and can’t do. And the nature of what teaching means very much is as response to what we can understand about the learning.’’

Katz told hundreds of educators gathered in a Charlottetown hotel Friday for the P.E.I. Teachers’ Federation Annual Convention that the quality of classroom instruction is the single greatest predictor of student success.

“Nothing,’’ he told the teachers, “is more important than you.’’

Katz says the key question is not how to teach, but rather how to learn how to teach.

He says emphasis should be placed on determining what leaders need to learn to support what teachers need to learn to support what students need to learn.

He describes effective leadership as promoting and participating in teacher learning and development. The single most important leadership quality for administrators like principals is being visible in public and learning alongside their teachers.

“I see a lot of places there are many, many administrators who are marvelous lead learners as there are many who see their role as operational and not as instructional as we would hope to see,’’ he said.

“So it’s all over the place and that goes for superintendents (of education) and everybody else in the system.’’

Katz says he consistently hears people complain of structural restraints on how much they can and can’t move. He argues that even in a restricted environment, there is always a little room for constructive movement.

“So you just decide if a slight shift left or a slight shift right is preferable and so whatever degrees of freedom you have - however much movement you have - you want to be thoughtful and purposeful and intentional about the moves that you are making.’’

He also cautioned the educators from falling into what he calls the activity trap - doings that, while well intentioned, are not needs based and divert both human and material resources away from the school improvement focus.

Katz says it is “absolutely critical’’ for teachers to challenge one another’s assumptions about teaching and learning, to be receptive to feedback from their peers, and talk openly with school colleagues.

“We must move from an activity-based to a learning-based culture,’’ he said.

“You can say a lot of things about teaching,’’ he elaborated in an interview with The Guardian.

“You can say I’ve got my teaching objectives, I’ve got my teaching curriculum - I’m covering the curriculum. It doesn’t say anything about learning...that is not where the learning happens and that isn’t learning.’’

 

jday@theguardian.pe.ca

Comments

  • Username
    Typical Islander
    - October 18th, 2010 at 12:38:47

    This falls into what is an issue with PEI in general. Continuing education and professional development is a waste of time. Islanders want to get just enough education to get a job, and then that's it. "I don't need to learn. I already have a job" The average islander won't do anything to update skills unless they are unemployed or are about to be.

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  • Username
    Typical Islander
    - October 18th, 2010 at 12:38:31

    This falls into what is an issue with PEI in general. Continuing education and professional development is a waste of time. Islanders want to get just enough education to get a job, and then that's it. "I don't need to learn. I already have a job" The average islander won't do anything to update skills unless they are unemployed or are about to be.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    Exasperated
    - October 18th, 2010 at 08:22:59

    I am sure these "workshop" days have some limited value to the teachers, however if the student's education came first they would have these days or shops after regular school hours or on week-ends if they are so important. That should also be applied to parent/teacher interviews. Students should not have to miss important class time for this, especially when you consider the amount of academic material some students are expected to learn. Particularily in high school. Oh, and don't forget about storm days as well. If school happens to be closed for a storm on a workshop day, the workshop day is taken later! Another lost day for the student, and yet the student is still expected to cover the curriculum in the overall time allowed during the semester or school year. I might add that there are jurisdictions, some right here in the maritimes, that have operated in the way I have described for a long time with success. We parents can really only blame ourselves if we allow our public education system to operate in such a way that it is rated as among the bottom two education systems in the country. It is wrong to have teachers decide policy & corriculums virtually on their own. The provincial government, through the department of education and the minister of education, who must represent the public's interests, should make the overall decisions with regards to "Public Education" how the system will function based on what is considered best for the student's education. This may not always agree with the teachers asperations. The student's education must really come first.

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  • Username
    Pius from BC
    - October 16th, 2010 at 15:03:59

    Katz said, The quality of classroom instruction is the single greatest predictor of student success. I would disagree. A student's home instruction and environment are the greatest predictors.

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  • Username
    John
    - October 16th, 2010 at 15:03:41

    Blah, blah, blah. Another "expert" from Ontario or the US recruited to lecture on same old redundant cliches about education. I'm sure half the teachers on the Island would sooner be back in the classroom than have to listen to this tripe year after year. What a waste of time.

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  • Username
    John reads
    - October 16th, 2010 at 15:03:02

    I know - I loved that headline too.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    sean murphy
    - October 16th, 2010 at 08:31:18

    This headline can't be serious!

    Submit a Comment

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