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Title: Being a new teacher in NZ secondary schools


1
Being a new teacher in NZ secondary schools
  • Making a difference
  • Team Glenda Anthony, Ruth Kane, Beverley Bell,
    Ronnie Davey, Sylvie Fontaine, Mavis Haigh, Susan
    Lovett, Ruth Mansell, Kate Ord, Brian Prestidge,
    Susan Sandretto, Cheryl Stephens
  • The research was supported by the TLRI fund.

2
The Making a Difference Study
  • Mixed method national study
  • Questionnaire to graduating teachers (n 855)
  • Sample of 100 secondary school teachers
    interviewed at 6, 12, and 18 months.
  • Mentor on-line surveys at end of Year 1 (n43)and
    Year 2 (n44)
  • Decision to choose teaching, sense of
    preparedness, experiences of their induction
    support and guidance, and teacher learning.

3
Does induction really make a difference?
  • Despite nationally mandated support for new
    teachers there existed considerable variability
    in the implemented and received induction
    programme both within and between schools
  • In each school the enacted induction programme
    operated as a complex system - access, focus,
    quality

4
Satisfaction with their induction programme
At 6 months At 12 months At 18 months
Very dissatisfied 4 9 10
Dissatisfied 18 21 24
Neutral 11 7 7
Satisfied 46 37 40
Very Satisfied 20 22 16
Missing 1 4 3
5
When induction works very well
  • Structural, contextual and personal factors
    contributed to successful induction experiences
    with considerable evidence of teacher learning
  • PRTs who reported successful experiences
  • Were in a school with other PRTs, who supported
    them
  • Saw themselves as being part of an active
    community of learners, as pro-active, aware of
    registration requirements
  • Reported strong leadership from principals and
    other administrative leaders, were actively
    observed
  • Had realistic expectations of teaching and its
    workload, student differentiation and management
  • Actively sought professional development
    activities

6
When induction works very well II
  • PRTs who report successful induction experiences
  • Viewed their induction as multi-faceted and
    positive
  • Were committed to ongoing learning
  • Were confident that their teaching had improved
  • Reported that they had progressed in their
    understanding of how students learn
  • Felt able to monitor their own performance
  • Felt confident of resolving emerging problems
  • Felt able to ask for support from a number of
    directions
  • Reported facing assessment challenges, but were
    ready to tackle them

7
When induction doesnt work
  • Structural, contextual and personal factors
    contributed to unsuccessful induction experiences
    with little evidence of teacher learning
  • PRTs who reported unsuccessful induction
    experiences
  • Felt isolated, alone and unsupported
  • Perceived that mentoring added to their problems
    instead of alleviating them
  • Felt guilty about asking for help
  • Reported a lack of structure to the program
  • Rarely observed others teach
  • Displayed a lack of knowledge about registration
  • Appeared unaware of external opportunities for
    professional development

8
When induction doesnt work II
  • PRTs who reported unsuccessful induction
    experiences
  • Believed that the reasons students do poorly is
    that they dont try hard enough
  • Struggled to negotiate assessments standards
    inadequate or non-existent exemplars
  • Reported lack of appropriate resources spent
    much of their non-contact time making these
  • Lacked strategies for responding to diversity in
    their classrooms struggled with ways of
    assessing their students prior knowledge
  • Reported that their students were disinterested
    and lacked motivation

9
Being part of community of learners
  • The learning opportunities afforded the beginning
    teachers are dependent on the established
    learning community within the school and the
    agency and (preparedness) of the beginning
    teachers themselves.

10
Where does the mentor fit into the induction
process?
  • What are the expectations of beginning
    teachers, of senior management, of colleagues, of
    the tutors/mentors? How are the following
    negotiated?
  • Relationship
  • Time commitment
  • Support
  • Guidance
  • Roles
  • Outcomes/goals

11
At 6 months beginning teacher sought help on
  • Classroom management
  • Subject and curriculum focus
  • Administration strategies / report writing
  • Reality of teachers life role of senior
    teachers
  • School organisation / systems
  • Working with diversity
  • Working with Maori / Pasifika students
  • Planning and resource development
  • Assessment
  • Relevance and application of theory
  • Practical ICT

12
What did beginning teachers expect?
  • I expected there to be more support. In terms of
    behaviour particularly I think I expected that if
    something went wrong you could call on someone to
    help you. And if someone was to do something
    stupid it wouldnt be so hard to find someone in
    the moment of need, when thats actually quite a
    hard thing to do. And sometimes it can be 2 or 3
    days before you can find somebody who has got the
    time to deal with something. (T101)

13
What did teachers expect? II
  • In my first year, the associate that I got was
    very helpful in pointing mewas basically this
    is how I operate, I dont want to be patted on
    the back continually that is no good to me. I
    need you guys telling me what I am doing wrong so
    I can fix it, so he was quite good in suggesting
    and he would give me concrete things and pointing
    me in other directions that I could do the same
    thing as I observed which I found very useful.
    (T7063)

14
Changing expectations/reflections
  • I did have one on one mentor right at the start
    so in the first three or four weeks and I found
    that very helpful but I think it has a limit
    because you are moving on and youre progressing
    and they have got other things to do as well and
    I think one on one becomesit was good to start
    with but I like the in-the-group situation
    more.(T1811)
  • Probably I think I would have liked a more active
    mentor Because I find that everyone is very
    restricted by the amount of free time that they
    have. So everyone is under pressure, that is just
    what its like and so every second is precious.
    So you do feel that when you do track somebody
    down you are taking them away from something
    else. (T8283)

15
Living up to expectations
  • Im enjoying it and it certainly is challenging.
    At N School, like behaviour management is a big
    thing to get your head around and its always
    changing but theres been lots of support for me
    which has been really good and Ive found that
    really helpful.
  • Yeah definitely and I wouldnt have survived last
    year year 1if I didnt have some people to have
    a moan to or work some thing out with.(T833)

16
What activities did beginning teacher report that
mentors were involved in
  • Meetings, classroom observations, shared
    workplace interactions.
  • What was the focus of meetings
  • Marking, assessment, what Im going to do next,
    what trips are coming up and what I need to do
    for them. Sometimes we skip it if nothing is
    happening. Any general problems Im having we
    will talk through it. (T2961)

17
Formal vs Informal
  • The meetings helped quite a lot really because
    they are not particularly structured. If there
    is nothing else going on well go through each of
    my classes and talk about how they are going. But
    that is an opportunity to bring up any issues
    that I have been having during the week or ask
    questions. Some of them are quite a practical
    nature, do you have any good resources for this
    topic? (T1911)
  • One could be a good mentor and a good student
    without endless paper work I think just making
    you write more and more things out all the time
    doesnt seem to be as effective as demonstrating,
    showing talking and just reflecting afterwards
    about things in a friendly sort of way. So they
    are going a bit over structured too many boxes to
    fill in and you are not learning from the boxes
    you are learning from the advice and support.
    (T8273)

18
Scheduled versus needs basis?
  • I think were meant to meet like every Friday but
    then only every second Friday its been
    happening. She just says have we got any
    problems? And I say not really. We dont have
    any formal meetings or anything like that and no
    agenda or anything. (T1901)
  • Yes they have been. With one of them, with the
    HOD of English it was at my instigation that we
    have regular meetings. So I had to push for that
    and they werent always stuck to. (T2911)

19
What did the mentors report doing in Y1?
  • classroom observations
  • sharing of units of work, resources, curriculum
    planning documents
  • support with assessment procedures
  • classroom/student management concerns
  • parent/teacher interviews and report writing
  • offering of professional readings
  • issuing invitations to team teach
  • encouragement to participate in extra-curricula
    activities
  • tips for managing systems and paperwork.

20
Mentoring Arrangements in Year 1
  • Regular one-on-one meetings in Year 1
  • Usually its looking at what is coming up.
    Sometimes it might be looking at marking some
    assessments or going through a bit more detail on
    the assessments. But usually I usually make a
    list of things that I want to discuss and its
    usually talking about just clarifying for me what
    Im teaching up ahead. (T2911)
  • Not so regular meetings
  • More of a needs basis, we did have a regular time
    set up then my netball started and so that took
    over that particular one and she couldnt meet
    any other day. I will just find her or put a note
    in her pigeon hole saying can we catch up, and
    then get together. (T2961)
  • Informal chats
  • On-call assistance (email system)
  • Appraisals related to portfolios and observations
    schedule requirements

21
What did the mentors report doing in Y2?
  • Collegial supportin areas of planning,
    curriculum sharing, and general trouble-shooting.
  • Teaching/lesson observations (video?)
  • Increased evidence of sharing of practices such
    as planning, accessing/developing resources, and
    assessment.

22
Mentoring Arrangements in Year 2
  • Reported that Year 2 teachers developed a greater
    network of support within the school rather than
    reliance on them to solve their problems.
  • Experiences within a range of classrooms provided
    a more solid base to reflect and engage in
    discussions.
  • As a second year teacher, X brings a lot more to
    the table than she did as a first year teacher.
    She is surer of her own opinions than previously,
    without having become arrogant or obstinate. This
    means that there is much more of an exchange
    going on than previously. Last year I felt more
    like a giver, but now both giver and receiver.
    (M24 S2)
  • For some mentors this meant less formal contact
    in the second year and a move to more informal
    discussions.
  • Focus changed from management to different
    teaching strategies.

23
Roles of Mentors
  • Problem Solver
  • The mentor is the best form of support I think
    because I can just sit down and go through my
    problems with him. (T3451)

24
Changing Roles of Mentors?
  • This is the first unit where I am doing it alone
    where Im trying to make it my own because Ive
    gone with what my mentor has done previously,
    which has worked well but now I am quite
    confident so I want to do my own unit. But am I
    doing it right. (T2961)
  • Last year I met with my mentor teacher once a
    week and went over a few things and most of the
    time it was how are you going, yeah Im
    alright. And this year we dont need it often but
    if I wanted to have a talk he would and he does
    just pop in and say how are you going, are you
    alright ,and all that kind of thing, which is
    good. (T943)

25
When mentoring goes wrong!
  • Formal versus informal
  • Schedule versus needs basis
  • Unclear expectations
  • It would have been good to have things in place
    like go and see three teachers this term and then
    you can tick it off but I felt like I needed like
    my mentor to say this is our induction process
    you needed to be doing this each term. (T943)
  • Difficulty forming positive relationships
  • Curse of competence

26
When mentoring goes wrong
  • Difficulty forming positive relationships
  • I have one teacher who is supposedly my
    supervising teacher, She tells me what Im doing
    wrong and I feel really bad. Were meant to meet
    once a week, it doesnt always happen. The
    difficult thing because shes in charge of one of
    the courses that I teach we spend most of our
    time on that course, and thats the course where
    I feel the least supported, funnily enough
    because theres no one else that I can ask for
    help. I feel that she resents the fact that she
    has to give me such specific things. (T3031)

27
When mentoring goes wrong II
  • Mentors working in areas they are not expert in.
  • So we started doing classroom observations and I
    ended up teaching her how to do classroom
    observations, and that was great for a while then
    it petered off, as she said things like thats
    great which wasnt useful. I think probably
    another aspect is that a lot of other people
    dont have a clue what I am doing in my area -
    computing and dont entirely understand the
    environment. (T8482)
  • Mentor under pressure/stress.
  • Uncertainty about who is the mentor!
  • But S is the one who is allocated as such, but I
    dont know if shes actually my mentor or not.
    (T1511)
  • I think its still X but X was unaware that he was
    my mentor last year so.(T8493)

28
Mismatch in styles??
  • I think the best people to learn from are people
    who have a similar teaching style because you can
    go and see what they do and it transfers
    instantly. It is no good for me to go and see,
    for example our SCT- hes fantastic but he is so
    vain and out there - he jumps around, action
    hands on head clapping, singing a song kind of
    stuff and that is not me at all I am a control
    freak and it has to be neat and tidy, it has got
    to be structured. But my mentor last year was
    exactly like me and she said to me lots of times
    that she came and observed me and she was like
    oh my god you are like me thats exactly what I
    would have said to that kid when they talked.
    (T7903)
  • What I have been finding with this associate -
    which is of no use to me - is that for me to have
    a good observation by him is to take on his
    style so I have been finding assessment by him
    to be just a complete waste of time. (T7063)

29
Reported challenges for mentors
  • Lack of time
  • How much and how best to provide on-going support
  • How to provide support that is responsive to
    individual needs
  • Working to a programme but able to adapt
    according to teachers needs, sometimes at the
    drop of a hat. (M184S1)
  • Frustrations when teachers appeared unwilling to
    accept advice
  • have come into teaching with a specific personal
    agenda. think that they know it all.
  • Unrealistic expectations of Management with
    regards to support and clarity of induction
    programme.

30
Mentors want professional development
  • Half of the mentors acknowledged that they would
    benefit from professional development on
    mentoring.
  • They would like time to discuss strategies with
    other mentor teachers to determine the most
    effective strategies and identify the areas of
    greatest need of the beginning teacher
    (M182S1).
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