Showing posts with label professional development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label professional development. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 June 2019

Guru Cemerlang Application - Documentation

Hi peeps! To those who are applying for Guru Cemerlang post, here are some guidelines for your documentation. I shared this in a few sessions with GCs a few years back. Might be useful 😊


















Happy teaching!

Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH





Sunday, 29 July 2018

Classroom Observation: 1 Ibnu Sina (2.30-3.30)


Was in Farid's 1 Ibnu Sina today despite the headache and neck pain. Happy with the lesson today 😊 Definitely an improvement from the previous observation. Teacher was well-prepared and the lesson was clearly structured. However, the pace of the lesson could have been a little bit faster for Activity 2 (rather draggy) and therefore more time could have been given to Activity 3. Overall, a well-planned lesson and I could see that the teacher had taken a lot of effort for this lesson. Well-done! Such a joy to see a teacher improving!












Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH




Wednesday, 22 November 2017

ASEAN-ELT CONFERENCE 2018

Hi peeps! You can bookmark this conference in case you're planning for professional development. I'm not sure if the conference chair, Professor Jayakaran Mukundan (UPM) is doing a rebranding of MICELT, but previous conferences have never been disappointing. You'll be spoilt for choices as to which paper/workshop to attend. And if you're thinking of spreading your wings and adding a colourful facet to your teaching repertoire, why not present something? Go for it teachers! I hope to see you there too. For more details click on the image.





 The first ASEAN-ELT CONFERENCE 2018 in Melaka






Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH


Thursday, 27 April 2017

Professional Learning Community 2/2017 - Awesome session with Sallina Hussain!

Date: 20 April 2017 (Thursday)
Time: 2.30 - 4.30 p.m.
Venue: Meeting Room 1
Speaker: Pn Sallina Hussain, Ketua Sektor Pengurusan Akademik, JPNJ
Topic: Guru Berkualiti + PdP Berkualiti = Kemenjadian Murid dalam PAK 21



Thanks Sal for making time for all of us in SASEM despite your busy schedule. And what a shame I had to miss your session because I had to be in SEHEBAT for Nadi Kasih Programme on the same day. And the feedback is good Sal. I randomly asked teachers around and they were all in awe of your sharing. The principal texted me while I was in SEHEBAT- "Tahniah...PLC banyak input". And btw...today during LET session, Radhi, our Head of Panel too reminded us of the pointers from your talk. Thanks a zillion. We need that ummphh and you gave us that and more.

But poor me had to miss that and read your slides instead!!! huhuhu....

Next on the list is.....surprise surprise :)















Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH



Wednesday, 9 November 2016

Teachers! Do you read?

Dear teachers, do you read? If you read, what do you read? 

I've always believed that what we execute in the classroom should be informed by what research says or what experts in ELT says. It is easy to fall into the trap of our whims and fancy. I choose to call this a trap because I'm guilty of it too! You know what I'm referring to....those days when you decided to dish out something interesting in the classroom because it got the students moving around and there was much fun and laughter but then when you sat down to reflect on it, you realised that it didn't have much of an impact as far as your lesson objectives were concerned! 

Lets' be honest; some lessons were jumpy and disconnected. Some lessons were conducted not based on the skills our students really need to master. They were sometimes one-off or done 'for a change' and only suited the day and the mood of the teacher. Hence we need to read more of the right kinds of materials that not only strengthen our skills but help us make good teaching and learning decisions.

It is advisable that English teachers also become a member of some teacher development groups to enhance their knowledge and skills- the kind of groups that let you grow and become thinking teachers. A thinking classroom cannot start without thinking teachers, if I may be so bold as to suggest. Through such groups, teachers can get the latest information on their trade, that's for sure. I know some of your reactions might be.."Owh! That's too high for me!" or "I'm not teaching the tertiary levels." but you'll be surprised how much you can gain from reading practical researches on teaching and learning. Even action research for that matter, although action research is not given the respect it should in the research circle and ELT books. If you're a coach, it is even more relevant because you are coaching teachers all the time and need to keep up with ELT developments. From research to training materials, you will get access to them by joining the right group and reading the right kind of materials online.

One such teacher initiative I'm proud to be a member of is Teacher Voices (TV), led by Ibu Flora Debora, Petra Christian University, Surabaya, Indonesia and the reputable Dr Willy Renandya of Nanyang Technological University, Singapore among others. The following description conveys the the groups' objectives.



'Teacher Voices: English Language Teacher Professional Development Group' is NOT a group for students and people who try to learn English as the group's main purpose is to improve teaching skills not English.

This is a professional development group for classroom TEACHERS, textbook WRITERS, curriculum SPECIALISTS, RESEARCHERS of ENGLISH Language Teaching or Applied Linguistics.

'Teacher Voices' aims to provide a platform for English language professionals from around the world to share and exchange teaching and research information and ideas.

Members discuss a wide range of topics such as curriculum and materials development, language teaching methodology, language learning theories, classroom management, teacher research and teacher professional development.

Members of this group are expected to engage in the discussions using FORMAL ENGLISH and avoiding the use of slang and colloquial language.

Please do not use this group for business promotion and self promotion. Please do not circulate any material which are copy right protected in this forum cause it is against the law.

If you would like to administer survey questionnaires, please assure our members of the following:
1. that the research has been cleared by relevant authorities in your universities / institutions (ethics clearance)
2. that you as the researcher will keep members' responses confidential
3. that you will share the results of the research with interested members

Irrelevant posts will be deleted and the users will be removed from the group.




It's time teachers read serious stuff, not just face book postings or the usual story books. Besides, you will get up-to-date information on conferences of your choice to hone your skills as a teacher. And we have friendly experts in TV to respond to your questions although I know some of (my) questions, being a school teacher, may seem a bit trivial :) But the choice is yours. I just feel we are not reading enough serious materials related to our profession. We spend hours on social media but very little time reading resource books and classroom research or at least read from educational websites. 

Here's sharing Dr Willy's upcoming book with (his permission of course). This book is very useful for SISC coaches too because you're in the business of coaching and mentoring teachers. 



(credit Dr Willy Renandya, Nanyang Technical University, Singapore)








THINK BIG TEACHERS!
Keep the passion burning!



Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH



Friday, 29 July 2016

The Science of Learning

I've always believed that teachers must be guided by what research says about teaching and learning. This is one wonderful article highlighted in a group I've joined. Thanks to Learning Innovation Circle (https://www.facebook.com/groups/LearningInnovationCircle/?pnref=story) and in particular Zaid Ali Alsagoff (https://www.facebook.com/zaid.alsagoff?fref=nf), whose expertise is mind blowing!. FYI Zaid I've been very quiet because I just feel overwhelmed by the experts in your group. A small teacher like me who belongs to the baby boomers generation is still learning how to embrace technology in her classroom in small strides. Thanks also to Fazleen (http://fadzleen.com/?page_id=22) for accepting me into the group. 

Sometimes teachers make day-to-day teaching and learning decisions in the classroom based on their whims and fancy. Small wonder then the results achieved. It's time to change this by doing some reading on what research actually says before planning to teach. Enjoy the article below!





(credit: http://deansforimpact.org/the_science_of_learning.html)








Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH


Friday, 13 May 2016

JOHOR SBP Professional Learning Community

Date: 11 May 2016 (Wednesday)
Venue: SM Sains Sembrong, Kluang


Thoroughly enjoyed myself doing this PLC. I could feel that adrenaline rush after years of not training teachers and gave it my all. This was a PLC for English teachers for the eight residential schools in Johor namely, Sekolah Tun Fatimah, SM Sains Muar, SM Kota Tinggi, SM Sains Johor, SM Sains Batu Pahat, SM Sultan Mahmud Iskandar Mersing and SM Sains Sembrong, Kluang (hope I didn't miss anyone!) Glad to be able to share for our professional development. My principal whispered that this will be an annual affair in sha Allah....SBP Johor should collaborate more and share materials and expertise. In this session we relooked assessment for Continuous Writing, dabbled in a bit of item-building, shared our programmes in school and looked at HOTs items in the SPM past years papers. 

Some of the programmes run by the schools were English in Camp, Public-Speaking, DEAR, Lesson Study, and performance-based extra classes. I was pleased when STF attributed its success in the 2015 SPM (GPS 0.93) to the setting system and journal-writing :) especially so with journal writing as I've been promoting this to my panel for years. Some times, it takes others to convince us of the benefits of something :)

Congrats to all teachers who were present! 


Happy teaching!





A teacher from SM Sains Sultan Mahnud Iskandar, Mersing sharing best practices in his school



Good to see many young ones eager to learn!







Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH



Thursday, 12 May 2016

Listening and Speaking: Form 1 Qayyim and 1 Kathir

This is a must activity that I will carry out if am teaching lower secondary. The students obviously have a lot to improve on when it comes to speaking English but I'm proud of them all the same. It was all their work with minimal help from me. I only provided them with some guidelines:

  • imagine your Fantasy Island and draw it
  • what would you like to have on the island and why
  • why is your island special compared to others
  • present it in class
And my cute little kiddos came up with....



Our island has a chocolate river where you can have chocolate every day!



Group 4....the winner! Love those food..these kids are hungy all the time!


hmmm...two dimensional

However difficult it is..let them speak!



1 Kathir boys in action



Creative!



Happy teaching peeps!







Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH

Saturday, 9 April 2016

Professional Learning Community (PLC)

Congrats to the 10 panels that successfully carried out Lesson Study and Teacher Sharings in Cycle 1! In Cycle 1 (Jan- March) the teachers really scored big because a total of 10 panels completed their Lesson Study. Besides LS, some panels also managed to do Video Critique and Teacher Sharings. Although there is still some fine-tuning that needs to be done with LS, the fact that the teachers had managed to carry it out is an achievement in itself.

Well-done teachers! Look out for PLC 4 where we have a mass session in which panels can share their experience in carrying out LS.  Sasem awesome!


I've been busy peeps...in school and I'm happy to do what I'm supposed to be doing for my students and teachers :)

Happy teaching!



Additional Maths



KHB



English



Science



Sejarah



Geografi



Teacher sharing: using the SMARTBOARD by elective subjects



Pendidikan Agama Islam




Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH



Saturday, 27 February 2016

11-week English Language Programme in Brunei and Hawaii

Here's a professional development programme just for you! Do apply peeps. Closing date is in April.

Happy teaching!










Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH




PLC and Lesson Study

Radhika took the students for a tour
for the set induction..a novel idea!
Alhamdulillah, we had two observations and lesson studies last thursday. The first was conducted by Radhika in 1 Majah and the second was Nash's class in 3 Sina. Both of them did a wonderful job and everyone in the panel gave their support. My utmost thanks to Nash for agreeing at the last minute to have observation and lesson study at the same time. He must have been under a lot of pressure but in all honesty, he was God-sent!

This young teacher has a lot of potential and is serious about his work. I've been waiting for a long, long time for such a teacher. It was just heart-warming. English is not dead after all!!! Granted, many prepare extra hard for an observation class but that's absolutely fine. Do what you have to do to get a good mark and Nash did just that. He executed the lesson so well especially his set induction and a creative way of making students come forward to participate. The only part that could have been improved was by not having too many activities after the paragraphs were written and displayed. The error-correction part could be another single period I felt, but all in all it was a well-thought out lesson. During our post-visit discussion, everyone had something positive to say about both lessons. Focusing on the plus points was a good way to start.





The picture on 'gotong-royong'
 that Nash used in his lesson :)


As a senior teacher, the lesson reminded me of myself preparing for an observation (I'm still observed twice a year) It also reminded me of the many classes I had to observe in my teaching career and there are indeed many stories to tell...one that I remember vividly was that of a not-so-young teacher who coolly sat down while observation was taking place in her class. I blamed myself for the lack of respect she showed to me. Perhaps she had wanted an administrator to do the observation not an excellent teacher.

I  wish this young teacher the very best in his career. More often than not I encounter those who fizzle out after being posted to school- young grads who are roaring to go so to speak but somehow end up 'stunted' or 'lost' by external factors? I pray that he keeps his focus in teaching and not be swayed by co curricular responsibilities (seen too many) and other non-teaching responsibilities for the simple fact that we need good teachers in school for our children. We owe it to them!


Enjoy the picts.
Kudos to the both teachers and the English panel!


Happy teaching!




Nash' class - writing a speech


Radhika in action- the simple present tense





Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH



Monday, 8 February 2016

MELTA 25th International Conference 2016

Get new ideas and network in the upcoming MELTA international conference. Click link to their facebook for more information.




https://www.facebook.com/meltamalaysia/




 
Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH

Thursday, 4 February 2016

2 stars and a wish!

What we did in 5 Khawarizmi last week- a lesson in paragraph-writing.


Topic: Paragraph-writing
Time: double-period
Materials : mah jongs, marker pens, lots of post-it notes in different colours, masking tape
Procedure:
1. Get SS to recall 6-7 words studied from previous lessons. (a mix of verbs and nouns)
2. Put SS in groups of four and give them mah jong papers, marker pens. ( I had 6 groups therefore 6 stations)
3. In groups, they create a story in one paragraph (Yes, one. The aim is quality)
4. Groups must underline the words chosen to show they have used them correctly.
5. Gallery Walk- SS rotate clockwise and evaluate other group's work. They use 2 stars (positive comments) and a wish (what/how the group can do better). I learned this in the Differentiated Learning Course by ELTECs. The idea is assessment for learning can be done in the classroom while activities are taking place. Assessment need not be done by the teacher all the time but can also be done by peers.What did I do? I underlined the errors made on the mah jong papers and highlight them to the group :)


Give it a try peeps!
Happy teaching!


Today SS learn how to assess their friend's work by awarding them 2 stars and a wish ")






Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH

Tuesday, 12 January 2016

Students' File

5 Syafie and their English file. It's easy when you've trained them to follow what you want :) I'm so lucky (Alhamdulillah) to have only 20 ss in this class. They are offering Lukisan Kejuruteraan. Bliss eh? Told them we are so fortunate this year and must make the most of the small number. 

Happy teaching peeps!



 




Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH

Sunday, 27 December 2015

Strategic Planning and Professional Learning Community

Apologies to those who sent messages. I've not been able to fix broken links or respond to your questions due to other work that needs to be done urgently. Today I hope to complete all the necessary docs for our first meeting tomorrow. The ppt. for my briefing tomorrow is also still not done. Spent the whole holidays editing Strategic Planning (2016-2018) and  a lot of time waiting for those who went for holidays and not sticking to the deadline! I'd like my responsibilities to be completed and done well although nowadays nobody is interested in doing the right thing anymore. Heard of "asal buat" (as long as it's done)? Yes, for documentation purposes, for visits by the inspectorates and officers, to impress...sigh. It's sad what education is turning into. A lot of time is spent on planning but not monitoring.

We need school leaders who are visionary and who walk the talk. We also need school leaders who get their hands dirty coaching and mentoring teachers in school. It's not enough to say we will focus on the process next year and not the outcome. You mean, it took you a whole year to realise that? And I seriously think middle management needs to MOVE and LEAD. It's very stagnant and sluggish! And for as long as I can remember, none of the middle managers gave any professional input to teachers. Such a shame with the majority of teachers being young teachers.

Well, I'm hoping for the best in 2016. Am hoping 2016 will be a wonderful year for me and you my dear blog readers where we are blessed with good health and happiness!






Read teachers! Please read in order to understand. 

Professional Walk for the admin

PLC forms and schedule...





Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH

Thursday, 10 December 2015

Once Upon a Conference...ICELT 2015

After a three-year hiatus, I decided to present in TEFLIN Bali last September followed by ICELT in Equatorial Hotel, Melaka. The turnout was surprising really (full house) given my paper's title. But seriously, I really had to drag my feet to the conference this time around only deciding to pay the fees at the very last minute. I was self-sponsored as usual which wasn't really a problem. The problem was getting excited about it all...like I used to. Maybe it was the end of the year? Maybe it was because I've presented here before? Anyway I was there early on the first day of the conference.

For first timers, their enthusiasm was expected, many of whom were sponsored by their institutions. It was a pleasure to see many young teachers in the conference. However, by the end of the first day, I was still feeling awkward and less than enthusiastic. The first parallel session I attended was Dr Abdullah Nawi's from UTM. We crossed path when he was an English teacher in Bandar Tenggara but he is a Dr. now, having completed his PHD in Drama in New Zealand and a senior lecturer  from the business card he gave me. It's good to know many teacher friends have moved up the academic ladder. His paper was on how to reenact the (boring) textbooks we have in school. I must say it was a novel idea getting students to role-play the characters/parts from reading texts in the textbook. Variety is the spice of life after all and variety is what doesn't kill our students in class haha! However, as much as I'd like to embrace drama techniques in my T n L, is there an easier way to do this? For people like me! Poor old me would be huffing and puffing more than Dr Abdulllah did in his role-play! He definitely had that acting ability which I think is a bonus. Another talented person who came to mind almost immediately as I was watching Dr Abdullah is Ahmad Adnan, an old friend who is now teaching in SMK Dato Hj Hassan Yunos, Renggam. He would love this idea of turning the textbook into drama! It will be his cup of tea!








I have no complaints about the professionals- the invited speakers. They were in their element. Alan Maley was as always in his best and I always like his plenary because he makes me think about what it is to be a teacher although he is somewhat too familiar a figure in ICELT and MICELT. He is always well-researched and profoundly knowledgeable. Jan Blake was her usual self and the others too (too many to name) but somehow I wasn't really there. Between sessions I cursorily glanced at the books (although I did purchase more than ten books because they were very cheap!) and thought the booths were not very exciting this time around. I thought past conferences had many booths and great resource books to choose from. I miss the earlier MICELT conferences where I learned not only new knowledge but also how to present a paper, a workshop or a poster. Whatever happened to those presenters? They had a lot of substance and research rigour.




Jan Blake I think....


I decided to go to a few sessions by the local presenters- Mara teachers to be precise to learn what creative teaching they wanted to share. One title attracted me but surprisingly the presenter did not present a paper. It was merely a sharing on how to use "Google Slides" in her class. She even used the slides from Youtube to sort of sum up what Google slides could do. No question time, no research methods whatsoever. It made me think what a paper was supposed to be by conference standards. It wasn't a paper but rather a sharing of a teaching tool readily available online. Granted there's nothing wrong in sharing something that is not yours but to be given a medal for that is something else. I didn't bother to go to the other sessions. Perhaps they could have been given 10 mins each to showcase teaching and learning tools/activities as they did in ICELT 2010 in Ipoh. For a seasoned conference goer, I felt the standard has somewhat dropped. Previous ICELTs were much better and meatier. In contrast, the TEFLIN Bali conference I attended had a strong research rigour although it did not have the band from Melaka's Hard Rock Cafe for entertainment! I don't know. I just felt something was amiss in that parallel session.


 

Met Cynthia and her friends from Sabah :)


Perhaps I need this much needed end-of-year break to rejuvenate and bring back my enthusiasm. I was honest to Jenny (SISC + Perak and my co-writer) when I said that I'd  lost my drive. Jenny reassured me that it will come back. I truly hope it will!



Happy holidays peeps! Be good!


Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH



Thursday, 15 October 2015

Kintamani and the 62nd Teflin Conference, Bali, Indonesia (14-16th September 2015)

Been postponing this post for a bit. Alhamdulillah I was in Bali for the 62nd TEFLIN conference to present my paper. My action research was on journaling in my classes. I must say though that ICELT or MELTA is more happening than this conference but the strength in TEFLIN was in the research rigour of the presenters. The presenters, although mostly Indonesians, showed a lot of rigour in research methodology. Missed Pak Willy Renandya's (National Institute of Education, Nan Yang Technological University, Singapore) plenary though due to a lack of ticket and so I settled for Dr Jayakaran's session. Dr Jaya was a witty as ever and had us in stitches and his students' videos were refreshing. As usual Dr Jaya will always touch on Malaysian textbooks :)

Of course I went sightseeing in Bali too. Would be silly not to take that opportunity. Went back to Kintamani- the food on the hilltop restaurant tasted the same but the crisp air and the view of Mount Batur was unforgettable. Never quite like the food to be honest but the view from the top was majestic. We prayed Zuhur in a nearby mosque and the cold water to perform the ablution reminded me of the winter days as a student in England.There's something about Kintamani that makes me want to come back again and again :)

Alhamdulillah for the opportunity to share in this conference.


Happy teaching!


Sanur Paradise Hotel, Bali


Registration
 








Barong Dance



Love Sunda food!




Those who can DO, Those who can do more TEACH