Clip 9: Student voice
Delwynne:
After the lesson, I would, we would be asking students, âWhat were you learning today? Were you successful? How do you know you were successful? What do you need to learn next?â And the responses of the students were often nothing to do with what the teacher had said that they intended to teach.
And again, itâs not about me saying, âWell, this is what the kids said.â The teachers were there, and they know when they hear what the kids are saying. And they know what they told me that they intended to teach, and when thereâs a mismatch â again a dissonance.
But itâs not of my making, itâs their own creation. And theyâre the ones that need to work their way through it, and they do: âWell how come? How come you didnât get that this lesson was about writing the correct sentence? How come you didnât get that the lesson was aboutâŚ?â and so on and so forth. But by listening to the kids, and listening to the evidence, they start opening their eyes for the next lesson ⌠and again and again.
Itâs a self-perpetuating cycle. And again, itâs something they can do without me there.

