ISY Elementary School Faculty Blog
A year of two halves
Mike Simpson
December 18, 2020
We go to the break not quite having finished the first semester. At the end of January we will have got to the halfway mark of the 2020-2021 academic year.
As a New Zealander who watches a lot of rugby, I am very familiar with ‘a game of two halves’ as a cliché to describe a game in which fortunes turn after halftime.
For a rugby fan, there is nothing more thrilling than when your team has struggled through to halftime and, having fought hard enough to stay in the game, finishes strongly and wins in the end. These are the games that you remember and people talk about for years to come.
All of us – students, families, faculty, and staff – have had to struggle through a lot of change and uncertainty up to this point in the year. I am very proud of the way that we have all supported each other. We have focused on what we knew we could control and worked together to deal with circumstances that we were not sure we could deal with until we did.
It would be foolish to assume that the second half of the year will be easier than the first. But on June 16 I think we will look back on the 2020-2021 school year as a year of two halves. And as difficult as it was, it will be what we did in the first half that we will remember with the greatest pride.
PUTTING YOUR IDEAS ON THE TABLE
While you are in the middle of reimagining teaching and learning, I was wondering if you would like to share your thoughts or experiences. No pressure but if you have any videos or articles that have caught your attention, I’d love to include them in this faculty blog. And if any of you like to write or want to give it a go, I’d love to help you get your ideas out to people who would appreciate them. Just let me know if you would like to share anything.
PRIDE OF THE PRINCIPAL
If you have any student (or students) that you would like me to recognise for living the ISY Attributes send me an email with a sentence about why they are to be recognised and a time that I could come on Zoom and say hi. Any time or day is OK – If I have a meeting I’ll suggest another time until we get one that works. I will jump on your Zoom and then I’ll get you to put the student or student(s) into a break out room with me. I’ll have a chat with them and take a screenshot that I will send to their parents.
ES MORNING FITNESS WITH ISY’s MR. MYANMAR!
Zar Li has kindly offered to run 15 minute work outs for our students that will start at 8:10am every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. These work outs will start next Monday. The Zoom link for the workouts will be on the Friday Family Report each week.
Please encourage students to join and also post the Zoom link on your Google Classroom (if your class has one)
The workouts will finish at 8:25am to give students time to get a drink and get organized before joining their classes at 8:30am.
CAN CREATIVITY BE TAUGHT?
I agree with Sir Ken Robinson in that I believe creativity can be taught. Creativity is one of our ISY Learner Attributes that we are developing in our students so they can apply their learning to an uncertain future and live fulfilled lives. I think we can teach all of our ISY Attributes and the first step in doing this is to define what they actually mean.
Below are the working definitions of our ISY Learner Attributes. We used the thinking of students to develop these during faculty orientation at the beginning of this year. I’m putting them in front of you again now just to think about how we are teaching them at the moment and how we might work together to teach them as we move forward.
Creativity: The process of using the imagination and experiences to create something original. Making connections between what is known to create something new. Using a wide range of ideas and techniques to develop expression of imagination.
Compassion: The will and understanding to respect and value the identity, culture, perspective, and experience of others in acting to make a positive difference to their lives.
Collaboration: Working together as a team, drawing from each other’s diversity and strengths, having the flexibility to change based on discussion and circumstances, accommodating for others’ opinions and thoughts, with the goal of producing something that is greater than what one could produce alone.
Communication: Communication is an effective, mindful exchange of ideas, emotions and information through multiple languages, methods and media, with an awareness of Intercultural aspects.
Courage: The will to take risks and express your beliefs in the face of fear.
Critical Thinking: To be able to approach information with curiosity from multiple perspectives and creatively persevere to put this newly learned information into new and complex environments to achieve solutions.
Reflection: To thoughtfully consider the world and our own ideas and experience. To evaluate and understand our strengths and weaknesses (and their causes) in order to support our learning and personal development.
Previous Elementary School Posts
Elementary School Faculty Blog – June 11, 2021
With next Wednesday firmly in mind, this week’s metaphor for the year that we have had comes via Shrek 2 via Franco.
Elementary School Faculty Blog – June 4, 2021
My daughter, Milly, has been introducing me to Friends which has been a lot of fun. I think Ross, Rachel, and Chandler trying to carry a sofa up some stairs is a pretty good metaphor for this year…..
Elementary School Faculty Blog – May 28, 2021
Here is another article that is worth reading as we think about how schools might come out of this year stronger… For Keeps.
Elementary School Faculty Blog – May 21, 2021
ISY Elementary School Faculty Blog Something else to think about for next year… Mike Simpson May 21, 2021 We still might not know what next year will look like yet but I found this blog post useful in helping me think about what it could look like…"No More Easy...
Elementary School Faculty Blog – May 7, 2021
We will have no classes this Thursday and Friday, May 13 and 14. Happy Eid-al-Fitr to our Muslim students and families
Elementary School Faculty Blog – April 30, 2021
We might not know what next year will look like yet but we can begin to think about what we will need to focus on.