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Ki te Aotūroa - Improving Inservice Teacher Educator Learning and Practice. Ministry of Education.

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Case 1 diagram

How this reflects the ISTE inquiry and knowledge-building cycle

The following steps form a continuous cycle. Students’ learning needs are what drive the cycle.

· Students’ learning needs:
Students’ achievement in writing was below national norms.

· Learning needs of teachers/ school leaders:
Kathy and Geraldine wanted to improve their pedagogical content knowledge in relation to writing.

· ISTE learning needs, inquiry question, beliefs and assumptions:
Delwynne believed that for professional learning to be sustainable, it should promote self-efficacy in students and teachers. However, her work wasn’t achieving this. So her inquiry question addressed her need to critically reflect on the impact of her daily practice.

· Learning experiences:
Delwynne engaged in collaborative reflection with her colleagues; with them, she read professional literature and viewed videos of practice.

· ISTE practice changes:
Delwynne is now more critically reflective herself and is better at using evidence and dissonance to enable critical reflection in others.

· Impact for teachers/ school leaders:
Kathy and Geraldine identify as learners along with their students. They are better at using evidence to respond promptly to student needs.

· Impact for students:
Students’ achievement data has improved and there are “smiles all round” from them.

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