Sunday, 20 December 2020

Farewell...

 

Wow! I'm so incredibly grateful
to have been part of
the Pt England School whanau
but... after 4 (and a bit)! years, 
it's time to say farewell.

I will leave with a 
heart full of many precious memories 
of my life at PES.

To the staff at PES
Thank you for your friendship
your willingness to share ideas,
 your passion for educating young people 
and plenty of good laughs!

To my students - past and present:)
I learnt so much from each of you -
thank you for being my teacher!
My deepest wish for each of you is
that you find a way
to step into your amazingness
(yes - this is now a word!)
and show up as
the best you can be!
Ka kite Pt England, 
Team 5 and Room 2 
- it's been a journey!

Arohanui,
Ms. Tapuke 

Tuesday, 1 December 2020

MIT2020 - My MIT Presentation




Here is a recording of my Manaiakalani Innovative Teacher (MIT) presentation for 2020 and below are links to the digital tools I developed as part of my MIT journey to design a tool to support Year 8 students to be better self-managers who will transition with confidence to high school.

Taha Challenge - a digital tool to encourage Year 7 & 8 students to manage themselves during lockdown by completing a series of challenges based on the Māori health model, Te Whare Tapa Wha (April 2020)

Get Ready!  - a digital tool to guide and assist Year 8 students in their organisation and preparation for Leadership Camp in Term 3 (5th -8th August, 2020)


A huge thank you to Dorothy, Matt and each member of the 2020 MIT cohort for your advice and unflagging support throughout our design thinking adventure this year.

He rau ringa, e oti ai te mahi  
Many hands make light work! 

UPDATE: May 2021

Before leaving Pt England School at the end of 2020, I prepared a new  Get Ready! site with updated digital content all set to roll out for 2021. The school camp for Year 8 students at Pt England School went ahead in May (Term 2, 2021) and anecdotal feedback from students suggested that the updated site had (like the original version) been useful for both students and teachers in their preparation for the annual leadership camp.

Looking to the future, I'm now convinced that a digital tool based on the Get Ready! site could be modified to support the Year 9 transition and bring to fruition my original design thinking  The key component being the tuakana-teina  relationships between current and past students.  

I am now aware of successful student mentor programmes using older students such as  at Wellington East Girls High School (with Year 12/13s) and in the  MATES Junior programme  (with University students). Both of these initiatives involve regular face-to-face contact to build up close relationships over time.

My vision would be to offer a digital platform with current Year 9/10 students (tuakana) sharing their advice and experiences on how to cope in the first year of secondary school through a set of multi-media resources they create and feature in.  Incoming Year 8s (teina), their whānau and teachers could then access the tool anytime - not just within school hours - for guidance from their older peers on effective ways to cope with the first year of secondary school.

I anticipate that the main challenge will be convincing colleges and  feeder schools of the value in collaborating with each other to leverage the tuakana-teina  connections between the Year 9/10s and intermediate students from within their learning community. 

Ultimately, I believe the effort to get all schools on board will be worthwhile especially if this tool can  equip successive cohorts of Year 9 students to have a positive experience when starting secondary school and give them a toolkit of ideas and information to help them stay the distance and ideally finish their schooling, right through to Year 13.

So, who's ready to tag team and take up the challenge?