Equity - for us is about
closing the gap and doing what we can to ensure that ALL our students
succeed. In order to close the gap though, we have to pay attention
to “What the gap is and why it exists?”, “Who
is most affected?” “How are we supporting those affected?” In doing so,
we rely on the work of George Dei from OISE, University of Toronto. In
his book, Reconstructing Dropout, he talked about students remembering
incidents of being marginalized from as early
as their primary years. This is often a difficult issue to explore and
can be quite an emotional one. Still, just because it’s
difficult doesn’t mean we shouldn’t explore. If we are committed to ALL
our students, it’s up to us to find ways to ensure that ALL
our students can succeed. Structures can sometimes support some more
than others. Our role as educators is to keep our eyes open and to keep
finding ways to see how we can serve all to achieve their highest
potential. This means that we cannot adopt a “cookie
cutter” approach where “one size fits all”. Instead we will have to
tailor our approach to support our students the way they need it. This
has to be a collaborative process, one in which we depend on each other-
students, staff and families to help us learn
and understand the best ways to support each other and our students so
they can be successful. In order to do this, as a staff, we have one of
our lead teachers – Mrs. Wendy Wright responsible for Equity and
Inclusivity. If ever you have any questions you
can approach any of us. This quest to “close the gap” is an ongoing one
to which we are all committed!
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Saturday, 31 January 2015
Thursday, 29 January 2015
Innovation- Environment as 3rd Teacher

Tuesday, 27 January 2015
Modern Learning and Innovation.
We come to education to make a difference in the lives of children and make a difference in the world. Where 4 year olds can understand how gender impacts their relationships and Gr 5 students can talk about how their social locations influence the way they experience the world.
As a school we have worked on connecting our personal philosophies and sense of moral purpose to the type of education we provide to do just that. We knew that our students were doing well with their literal comprehension and we want them to go deeper. Through a collaborative process of identifying what we needed to focus on we began to look at Inquiry as a framework to support that journey, still we grappled with how do we make the learning relevant and authentic. How do we stay true to our purpose of making a difference in the world. Then as one of our teachers- Bic Fernandes - read an article by Bruce Picower, 6 Elements of Social Justice and suggested it as a potential way to help with that.
We were a bit uncertain as this was new terrain but collectively as a staff we all jumped in and started thinking it through and using it. We wanted to ensure that our students were ready to engage the world into which they would be graduating. A world in which knowing information and filling out worksheets would not be enough.
This is modern learning in action. As we continued our dive, teachers continued to explore how we could be precise in the ways we were deconstructing the learning within that Inquiry/Social Justice frame. It was here that we borrowed from Allan Luke’s Four Resource Model to help us. In essence, we were using some of the best educational research to innovatively create an approach throughout our entire school. By using an Inquiry based framework, adding 6 Social Justice Frames, 7 Values and a framework for critical deconstruction of text we have engaged our school (KG–Gr8) in social justice learning and action. This type of learning will allow students to be ready for the world into which they will graduate.

Monday, 12 January 2015
Philosophies of Education
“We teach who we are.” - Parker Palmer
In June 2013 as a staff we began to work to identify “why we were doing what we were doing” – really, we were speaking about what brought us to our profession as educators and to our school. That led to us individually articulating our Philosophies of Education and putting it up outside our classrooms and offices. We had the opportunity to articulate this in anyway that we wanted. It was our hope that by making this both explicit and transparent, we could build stronger relationships and accountability with our students, community and with each other. As we walked through the building and had conversations with each other, what was very apparent was that we were all very different individuals who shared many facets of a common vision. The philosophies were as diverse as they were insightful into the many reasons and beliefs held by all our staff.
As we moved to our second year, we looked again at how we could try to articulate this in 6 word essays. We could only use six words that made a statement. This again, was another challenge to which the staff arose. As you walk through our school, take a look as we make plain something that people don’t always see or know – what brought us to our profession.
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