Children and Schools Today: Changing Times - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Children and Schools Today: Changing Times

Description:

What has changed in the way they behave and how you had to behave? ... play stations, mobiles, tablets, blackberries, PDAs, online blogs, U Tube etc) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:117
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: ministrye
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Children and Schools Today: Changing Times


1
Children and Schools Today Changing Times
  • Challenges
  • Opportunities
  • CEC North Shore Training, February 2007

2
OVERVIEWChallenges and Opportunities
  • Our Children Today
  • Our Schools Today
  • Our Future in Schools

3
Our Children Today
  • So what is different from when you were a child?
  • What has changed in the way they behave and how
    you had to behave?
  • How is their child world so different from our
    childhood world?
  • Discuss then share

4
Children are more confident and self assured
  • Implications
  • The now generation instant gratification
  • They are more confident and expect more freedom
  • More outgoing and challenging
  • They can be more demanding and materialistic
  • Their range of choices is amazing

5
The children come from varying backgrounds
  • Implications
  • Boundaries set may vary greatly and not always
    followed
  • Parents often spend less time with their
    children
  • Varying family care circumstances (solo, joint
    care, joined families etc)
  • Most come from secular homes
  • Only a minority have any church, Sunday school or
    bible experience

6
The children of today learn differently
  • Implications
  • They are encouraged to have opinions
  • They expect individual attention
  • They are used to inquiry learning getting
    involved, discussing, working in small groups
  • They thrive on variety and action in varied
    teaching styles
  • They expect to have interaction, to have their
    say
  • Often group work / group presentations are used
  • Opportunity to choose their own learning
    content/topic

7
No longer the generation gap rather the
generation lap
  • Implications
  • They are digital natives we are the digital
    immigrants
  • They are used to IT, computers and hi tech
    equipment (e.g. flat screens, power points, web
    design, web cams, i-pods, play stations, mobiles,
    tablets, blackberries, PDAs, online blogs, U Tube
    etc)
  • Exposed to a huge amount of learning content
  • To an extent control their own learning contexts
  • Real learning contexts authentic learning

8
Our knowledge of childrens learning needs has
changed
  • Implications
  • Thinking skills are in - memorization is out
  • They learn in small chunks or bites
  • Many of them even know about their preferred
    learning style!
  • (auditory, visual, tactile/kinesthetic etc)
  • Have high expectations of what they can and will
    achieve

9
Knowledge of childrens learning needs has
changed (continued)
  • Multiple intelligences are accepted
  • e.g. Howard Gardiners 7 intelligences
  • Increasing numbers have short attention spans
  • Wide ranging reading/writing skills
  • English is a second language
  • for growing numbers

10
MOE School Statistics The changes are coming
  • 2006 59.6 school age children European/Pakeha
  • 2021 - 61 projected Maori, Pacific, Asian,
    other

11
Our Schools Today
12
Schools are fast paced environments
  • Implications
  • Very, very busy places
  • Continuous change
  • Multiple pressures
  • Get to know the key people you need to
  • Dont expect to see a lot of the principal
  • Schools are consultative and open minded
  • They strive to support all cultures and beliefs

13
There is always a shortage of teaching time
  • Implications
  • Time is precious and in very short supply
  • Schools are in continuous change mode
  • Huge curriculum pressures
  • 15 - 20 hours quality teaching time per primary
    school week - BiS eats into it
  • Extra teaching time appeals to many teachers,
    principals and BOTs
  • Be well prepared - start and finish on time

14
The State school curriculum changes and we must
adapt
  • Implications
  • We live in the age of knowledge explosion
  • Curriculum change seems continuous
  • The current push in schools is on learning and
    teaching
  • Within that the focus is on Literacy and
    Numeracy
  • Inquiry learning and constructivism feature
  • (build up knowledge from many experiences)
  • Research and consultation are featured in
    programme development

15
Curriculum change (continued)
  • Curriculum is no longer static
  • Frequent curriculum changes
  • Schools have freedom to adapt to suit their
    students
  • Where does our work fit into the new draft
    curriculum?
  • How do we participate in the response option?

16
The future shape of curriculum?
Where does Chaplaincy fit?
17
(No Transcript)
18
Schools and teachers are people focused
  • Implications
  • Establishing good relationships is important
  • Get to know something about them as individuals
  • (e.g. Family, special interests, their
    responsibilities in the school etc)
  • Put yourself out for them and the school - if
    an appropriate opportunity arises
  • Tell them what you like about their classes
  • Try to become a supporter of them, a friend

19
Teachers have different teaching styles
  • Implications
  • No two teachers or classes are the same
  • What works for one wont necessarily work for
    another adapt your lessons
  • Learn about how individual teachers manage their
    students and classroom organisation
  • Follow their systems
  • Ideally ask to sit in and observe or ask them
  • Ask about students with specifically special
    needs

20
Schools are accountable and come under close
scrutiny
  • Implications
  • Parents speak up if they are not happy about
    something
  • School Boards can be powerful
  • We must accept criticism, listen to complaints
    and consider them
  • Never discuss criticisms with the children
  • Ensure you are culturally sensitive, acknowledge
    and respect different ways and beliefs

21
Local Boards and Principals make the decisions
  • Implications
  • Compliance issues are important
  • to them
  • They value their self management role
  • Constructive positive relationships with BOTS are
    critical
  • Consider communicating your successes with them
  • When Boards change chaplaincy and BIS can be at
    risk
  • (BOT elections April 2007 currently being
    advertised)
  • When Principals leave our continued involvement
    may not be assured

22
Our Future in Schools
23
Keep improving the quality of our mission and
our workers
  • Implications
  • Reach appropriate standards
  • Verified quality training of our volunteers - new
    and experienced - is essential
  • Ongoing upskilling of all our workers
  • Continue to review and update our programmes to
    ensure relevancy
  • Keep improving our programmes and sharing
  • Utilise the web and web resources

24
We must commit to securing our future in schools
  • Implications
  • Celebrate our successes promote them
  • Continue to develop positive relationships
  • Flexibility and adaptability to adjust
  • Responsiveness and support
  • We are privileged to be working in them
  • Consider promoting chaplaincy options in your
    schools
  • Support your committee get

25
Our future (cont)
  • We have an amazing product and the market needs
    it
  • Work to improve our funding base and structures
  • Love the children and always be there for them
  • Show the children that God cares and we do too
  • Pray for them, their schools and their teachers
  • Whosoever shall do and teach them, the same
    shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven
    (Matt. 519)
  •  

26
Contacts
  • Cedric Wilson
  • Business Manager/
  • Chaplaincy Coordinator
  • CEC Auckland
  • cedric_at_cecauckland.org.nz
  • www.cecauckland.org.nz
  • Office 09 526 0052
  • Mobile 027 28 29 202
  • Home 09 272 9266
  • Lets spread the word
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com