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Inquiring into the effectiveness of literacy teaching

The importance of developing personal critical consciousness (if leaders are to challenge the status quo for Māori learners and whānau in Aotearoa). the role of PLD in school-wide communities of practice, and the role of the literacy leader.

Kaiako supports students working in the classroom.

Tags

  • AudienceKaiako
  • Curriculum LevelAll
  • Resource LanguageEnglish

About this resource

This resource discusses Te Hurihanganui - Te Ira Tangata principle, emphasising the responsibility of educators to be critically aware of themselves and their students to achieve effective teaching and culturally sustaining relationships. This resource also discusses the importance of professional learning communities and inquiries to address inequitable outcomes in education, particularly in literacy, and highlights the significance of ākonga agency in the learning process. 

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Inquiring into the effectiveness of literacy teaching

Every person is a taonga: born of greatness and full of inner potential. This brings with it the responsibility to be critically aware of ourselves, our world, and each other. 

Te Hurihanganui - Te Ira Tangata principle

This statement is a reminder to kaiako that every ākonga deserves effective teaching, high expectations and culturally sustaining relationships. It is also a reminder that, to achieve this, kaiako need to continually strive to be critically aware of themselves and their ākonga. Berryman (2018) identifies the need for kaiako to be critically conscious of the impact of colonisation on school leadership, systems, and their own practices. There is an overwhelming body of evidence and research about how and why schools and kaiako fail to respect the strengths or meet the needs and aspirations of ākonga Māori (Berryman, 2019). Principals, other school leaders and kaiako need to challenge deeply embedded beliefs and attitudes to the normalised, Euro-centric discourse about what works for ākonga in education, since this has been proven to fail a significant number of ākonga, particularly Māori and Pacific learners. 

The development of personal critical consciousness is imperative if leaders are genuinely committed to challenging the status quo for Māori learners and whānau in Aotearoa. As Mason Durie (2006) says: “The challenge for those who provide whānau support is to shift from a paradigm of deficit and risk to one of potential and discovery.” 

Despite the establishment of teacher inquiry and school professional learning communities, the issue of inequitable outcomes in relation to ākonga engagement, success, and sense of belonging and wellbeing remains. It is unclear whether this is because not all schools operate as professional learning communities or because their priorities for inquiry do not focus on challenging the status quo. 

Narratives by young people about their experiences at school continue to indicate that the system is not delivering for all ākonga, as evidenced in the Children’s Commissioner’s report Education Matters to Me: Key Insights. 

The principal, other school leaders, and kaiako must take responsibility for delivering an equitable and excellent education and for growing the knowledge and capability of their organisation to deliver such an education. This process starts with school leaders and kaiako exploring their own assumptions and practices. They need to question their own and others’ beliefs in the light of the narratives of ākonga and the degree to which ākonga experience success at school. 

Six Kaiako sit at the table smiling at the camera.

Often, schools receive professional learning development (PLD) to address apparent inadequacies in literacy knowledge and skills for their kaiako. Evidence suggests that opportunities to participate in a professional community of practice are more important than the location of the training (i.e., whether it is school-based or outside the school). 

In research, professional learning development programmes involving core literacy studies were based both within the school and outside it. Nearly all included participation in some kind of community of practice, but such participation on its own was not associated with change.  

The communities of practice that were most effective in bringing about change were those that provided teachers with opportunities to process new understandings and challenge problematic beliefs. Their focus was on analysing the impact of teaching on ākonga learning (Timperley et al. 2007). 

Such communities of practice also require school leaders and kaiako to review and reflect on: 

  • the quality of culturally responsive relationships  
  • the extent to which adaptive expertise is driving deliberate and effective teaching, policy and practice 
  • the extent and effectiveness of home, school and community collaborations. 

The impact of such inquiries on the literacy knowledge and expertise of kaiako can provide a powerful incentive for change in the school community. However, a focus on the classroom as the core nexus of change is not enough. It is essential to also address the core business of schools and to position the principal and other senior leaders as instructional leaders (or leaders of learning) in their schools. 

When kaiako are members of a professional community of inquiry, in which they are acknowledged, supported, and challenged, and where they feel it is safe to take risks and share information, they can review and modify their teaching practice so that it makes a real difference to ākonga.  

The effectiveness of classroom literacy programmes is greatly increased when the teachers form a professional learning community in the school. This engages teachers in a shared process of enquiry to improve the effectiveness of their teaching practice.  
An inquiry must involve active learning by the kaiako, including professional reading, discussion and action research with a focus on a specific aspect of practice to improve particular outcomes for learners. The focus of the dialogue shifts from a deficit view of the underachievement of identified groups of ākonga to one that acknowledges their strengths and creates a thriving learning environment for all. 

Key aspects of an effective school-wide community of inquiry include: 

  • understanding that effective literacy practice is linked to effective teaching practice across all learning areas and the development of emotionally safe learning environments 
  • commitment by the principal and other school leaders to the inquiry process and to leading the development of school-wide goals for improved ākonga outcomes, along with systems for reviewing them 
  • establishing goals for kaiako and leader appraisals that are linked to culturally sustaining relationships and pedagogies 
  • leading collaborative analysis of quantitative and qualitative information on ākonga learning to help set individual goals for kaiako  
  • establishing a literacy leadership position in the school for a kaiako who is a skilled literacy practitioner and has coaching skills. 

The role of the literacy leader includes: 

  • observing kaiako practice at least once a term and holding learning conversations to support the next steps in bringing about change  
  • recognising the assumptions and beliefs underpinning teaching practice and challenging kaiako without alienating them  
  • being deliberate, explicit and specific when working with kaiako  
  • selecting readings and arranging discussions specifically related to kaiako needs  
  • working effectively with kaiako who are finding it difficult to change their practice, respecting their differing perspectives while insisting on ākonga needs as a priority 
  • recognising that sustaining change requires ongoing inquiry and checking in on kaiako pedagogical content knowledge as well as their adaptive expertise in teaching.  

School leaders and kaiako need to understand the changes in the New Zealand Curriculum refresh and the implications for leadership and teaching in general, and for their work at particular phases of learning. 

The curriculum is designed to be cumulative across five phases of learning: years 1–3,  
4–6, 7–8, 9–10, and 11–13. Leaders and teachers need to know the expectations before and beyond the learning phase they are working in. Each phase includes progress outcomes that describe what ākonga should understand, know and be able to do at that phase. Mātauranga Māori sits at the heart of the curriculum, with key competencies, literacy and numeracy explicitly woven into each learning area.