Making the PYP happen: Module 3
Learning Engagement 1: DEVELOPING LEARNER AGENCY THROUGH SELF-EFFICACY AND MUSIC INTEGRATION
Self-efficacy plays a big role in students' motivation to learn and achieve goals, and I believe that it's the foundation of all attributes -- the key to holistic growth.
Here are some ways that can help in promoting self-efficacy in the classroom:
1. Effective Communication
teaching students how to identify their goals, acknowledge their abilities, and training them to focus only on their strengths; be self-aware, and know their intentions.
giving praise when a student puts in a real effort by using affirmations like “You can do it,” “You are smart enough,” and “I trust you,” we can help the kids to believe in their potencies.
praise only when there's hard work or achievement
interactive lesson, a high-energy and non-judgmental assessment, or an engaging group activity
setting short-term goals and helping students to achieve them one by one
allowing them to talk about their problems and how they plan to deal with them
not comparing a student with other students and letting them follow their own pace
setting goals according to individual abilities
to instill self-efficacy in children, it is thus vital that the teachers and facilitators are efficient too; "practice what you preach"
Music, other than it makes a catchy and creative lesson, helps develop the language and reasoning of students. Being a music teacher is an advantage for you in using music as an effective teaching tool.
Here are some easy ways that you can incorporate music into your classes:
History is a subject that benefits greatly from having music as a lens to teach about cultural traditions and historical events. For example, the Dust Bowl can be taught through songs by Woody Guthrie and/or Benny Goodman, with students analyzing the conditions people lived in at the time.
Mathematics can be challenging for students to understand because the concepts are abstract, which is the main reason it’s important to provide visuals and manipulatives to students when first teaching a concept. Musical notes can help teach fractions, changing instruments but playing the same song can help teach patterns, and using pitch can help with frequency and ratios.
Science can benefit from songs that teach about the skeletal system or incorporate mnemonics to help students remember the food chain. Music can be the content for teaching about sound waves and having children experience frequency in relation to pitch.
Literacy improves when a student is able to pick up on the patterns in the structure of language and is able to differentiate between pitches in words that sound similar but have different meanings. Music can be utilized as a metaphor to explain elements of a story such as character, setting, conflict, and resolution, using the melodies, instruments, tempos, and dynamics as the teaching lens.
Learning Engagement 2: INQUIRY-BASED LEARNING
Inquiry-based learning is an educational approach that focuses on investigation and problem-solving. It is different from traditional approaches because it reverses the order of learning.
In a true inquiry lesson, there is a back and forth flow of knowledge between the teacher and students. It begins when the teacher poses an idea or concept and then asks targeted questions. This leads to students sharing their ideas and asking additional questions.
For instance, a teacher might ensure that students can access strong research materials to answer their questions, as well as activities like dramatizations, presentations, and role-plays that help them unearth new materials.
When applied thoughtfully, the use of an inquiry approach is all about agency. Inquiry teachers intentionally help learners build transferable skills and dispositions as they investigate questions of significance to them. When the approach is applied to authentic problems or challenges in local and global contexts the agentive dimension of learner identity can be further amplified. Empowering young learners to own their learning requires a sophisticated repertoire of strategies and a commitment to the co-construction of knowledge, skills, routines, and learning spaces.
Learning Engagement 3: THE PYP PLANNER
A SHIFT IN APPROACHING INQUIRY
The PYP Planner ensures that teaching and learning are planned under transdisciplinary themes that focus on central ideas instead of compartmentalized knowledge and skills. It is the IBO’s answer to meeting its mission statement earlier on in a student’s education.
Understanding inquiry is key to understanding the PYP planning document. This is because the PYP requires teachers to plan collaborative units of inquiry. The IB’s focus on inquiry is based on the work of constructivist theorists. Student agency is crucial to the IB’s mission. The PYP seeks to distinguish the student as an object with education acted upon them from the student as an agent who is responsible for their own education. This idea is constructivist in theory, meaning that students need to active constructors of their own learning. The PYP planner has specific sections dedicated to preserving the identity of each student, even going so far as to incorporate it into planning.
Finally, transdisciplinarity underpins the foundation of the International Baccalaureate. The learner profile is a large part of the IB’s transdisciplinary. The IB also requires teachers across disciplines to plan together and identify possible connections within units of inquiry.
This planner, in particular, is an attractive and extensive way to address the core values of inquiry, student agency, and transdisciplinarity in the International Baccalaureate. It has many dedicated sections to invite students to play an active role in their own learning and make connections between disciplines. It incorporates aspects of constructivism, including social constructivism. It also includes several planning guide pages with prompts to help teachers navigate and complete each section.
Planning strengthens the transdisciplinary nature of the curriculum and ensures the pedagogy of the PYP is pervasive across the program. The ongoing process of collaborative planning incorporates students' prior experiences and interests and differentiates to support their inquiries. It is more than just teachers working together on a document. It allows all teachers to construct a meaningful inquiry process through the integration of different subject areas.
Whole-school involvement in developing the program of inquiry is professional development for all. The participation of learners in the planning process fosters awareness of self and others and reveals vulnerabilities.
In the past (before the PYP enhancement), there were three parts of the assessment component – assessing, recording, and reporting. Now, based on the latest PYP: from Principles into Practice document, assessment in the PYP is divided into 4 dimensions – monitoring, documenting, measuring, and reporting.
It provides feedback to students on their learning and keeps parents informed about the progress of their children's learning. It is a means to measure student performance against the criteria and expectations of the IB schools. It is not just the simple act of measuring what students have learned, rather it is a 'state of mind' which permeates every aspect of teaching and learning.
Sustainable teaching is introduced below in approaching engaging learning experiences, student involvement in planning, and differentiated instruction. It is the process of fostering self-compassion and renewal in educators who support the growth and development of students in turn. It is an integrated approach to education and enables all participants to thrive. It is based on social constructivist, contextual, self-regulated, and collaborative learning. We believe that this approach will help teachers and students to act and collaborate effectively towards inquiry.
LEARNING ENGAGEMENT SAMPLE
(please proceed to Module 4)