Author: Editor Ed News

Bac Students Enjoy French Poetry Night

Les étudiants du programme du Bac (DLNG 315) ont organisé et participé à une Soirée de Poésie le 7 décembre, 2016 à La Cite Universitaire Francophone. Chaque étudiant ou étudiante a lu un poème ou un texte en français devant les spectateurs. La salle était remplie d’émotion et de joie lorsqu’on a pris le temps de partager et d’apprécier la beauté des mots et la richesse de la poésie.

Third year students in the French Bac Programme (DLNG 315) organised and participated in a Soirée de Poésie (poetry night) as a part of their language and literacy course in elementary teaching. The event took place on December 7th, 2016 at La Cité Universitaire Francophone. Each student selected or composed a poem to read and perform during the event. The room filled with emotion and joy as we listened and shared the beauty and richness of words and poetry en français.

To see gallery, slide cursor over the first photo and click on the arrow to go to the next photo.

Bac Students (DLNG 315)

Submitted by Heather Phipps

Voices From the Engraver: A Travelling Exhibition

Voices from the Engraver: A Travelling Exhibition
Hosted by La Cité universitaire francophone and produced by the Canadian Museum of History and the Bank of Canada Museum

La Cité universitaire francophone with the contribution of Faculty of Education is hosting a travelling exhibition from the Bank of Canada Museum: Voices from the Engraver. The exhibition will be open to the public from Monday, December 12, 2016 until Wednesday, January 25, 2017 in the Rotunda of the Language Institute Building at the University of Regina.

Did you know that Bank of Canada banknotes were bilingual (English-French) long before the introduction of the Official Languages Act? Did you know that you’re paying for your meal with true works of art?

Come discover this exhibition to learn more about these fascinating subjects. You’ll discover the creative process, technical expertise and artistic genius behind each series of Canadian postage stamps and banknotes, from design to issue. You’ll also discover how the illustrations on banknotes can lead to a better understanding of linguistic minority situations and celebrate Canada’s Francophone, Anglophone and First Nations cultures.

This exhibit is aimed at children, students, and adults. The works of art will surely be of interest to scholars across all disciplines. Numerous interactive activities and game contests will make your visit even more enjoyable! Please note that I will be presenting my way of using bank notes iconography at 3:00 pm, on Monday December 12, 2016 at the Rotunda. Everyone is welcome.

Exposition itinérante La gravure : un art à découvrir
présentée par La Cité universitaire francophone,
produite par le Musée canadien de l’histoire et le Musée de la banque du Canada.

La Cité universitaire francophone en partenariat avec Faculty of Education accueille une exposition itinérante du Musée de la Banque du Canada : La gravure : un art à découvrir. L’exposition sera ouverte au public du lundi 12 décembre 2016 au mercredi 25 janvier 2017*, à la Rotonde du Language Institute Building de l’Université de Regina.

Savez-vous que les billets de la Banque du Canada étaient bilingues (anglais-français) bien avant la mise en place de la Loi sur les langues officielles ? Savez-vous que vous payez votre repas avec de véritables œuvres d’art?

Venez découvrir cette exposition pour en apprendre davantage sur ces sujets fascinants. Vous découvrirez le processus créatif, le savoir-faire technique et le génie artistique à l’origine de chaque série de timbres et de billets de banque canadiens, depuis la conception jusqu’à l’émission. Vous découvrirez également comment les illustrations des billets de banque peuvent aider à mieux comprendre la situation linguistique minoritaire et célébrer les cultures francophones, anglophones et autochtones du Canada.

Cette exposition s’adresse aux enfants, étudiants et adultes. Ces pièces d’art peuvent intéresser les professeurs quelque soit le domaine d’expertise. De nombreuses activités interactives ainsi que des jeux-concours rendront votre visite des plus enrichissantes !

Prière de noter que je vais présenter ma façon d’utiliser l’iconographie des billets de la banque du Canada lundi 12 décembre 2016, à 3 :00 pm, à la Rotonde. Vous êtes tous et toutes les bienvenus d’y assister.

Former Dean Retirement Celebration

On December 7, the Faculty celebrated the career of former Dean Dr. James McNinch who retires at the end of December.

Dr. James McNinch began his 20-year career at the University of Regina in 1995, when he was hired to kick-start the Teaching Development Centre (TDC). In 1996, he was appointed Director of the TDC, with a cross-appointment in the Department of English and the Faculty of Education. In 2005, McNinch became a full-time faculty member with the Faculty of Education, where he taught core studies and adult education. He was the Director of the Field Placement Office, then Associate Dean, and then Dean for six years, stepping down in 2014 while remaining Director of the Saskatchewan Instructional Development and Research Unity (SIDRU) until his retirement in December 2016.

What was the highlight/memorable moment of your career here at the U of R?

There have been many memorable moments. As a teacher, I have many memories of students working hard and being grateful for the feed-back I gave them. This is particularly true of the first 10 years when I regularly taught English 100. Helping students improve their reading, writing, and comprehension, and to expand their world view was extremely rewarding. As a writer and editor, I found great satisfaction in working closely with 3 colleagues, Mary Cronin, Carol Schick, and Marc Spooner as the co-editor of 3 collections of articles and in seeing the impact these books had on subsequent teaching and scholarship. As a university administrator, I was told many times over the years that people admired me for being straight-forward, standing up for what I believed, and supporting faculty, staff, and students as best I could.

What significance does the work we do at the U of R, Faculty of Education have, in your estimation?

Teacher education, including preservice, in-service, and graduate work is critical pedagogical work because we are critiquing, influencing, and shaping the kind of society we live in. It means encouraging teachers to help students to become engaged citizens able to advocate for themselves and for others and to strive for a civil, just society where everyone is treated with the respect and dignity we all deserve. I know it sounds like a cliché, but trying to make the world a better place is a big job that never ends. I have seen tremendous advances in Indigenous education in this province and I know this Faculty will continue to be a leader in that regard.

What are your retirement plans?

Now that I am retired, I feel as if I am as engaged as ever but on my own terms. No more alarm clocks sounding angry at 6:00 in the morning during the dark days of January! I am currently writing a chapter about social justice and gender and sexual minorities for a text-book used in Human Justice courses. I am still directing Camp fYrefly and fYrefly in Schools as community-based projects that make a difference in people’s lives. We just hired a new co-ordinator to be based in Saskatoon so we have increased capacity to meet demand. This week I was working with a school division and the STF to make plans for a teacher who is transitioning from female to male and sorting out the implications this will have for students, staff and the community. If someone had told me at the beginning of my career 40 years ago that I would be involved in such work I would not have believed them. I have a new three week old grand-daughter. It takes my breath away to see how helpless and vulnerable she is and how much she is loved and cared for. And it is spring, so time to transplant the tomato seedlings that I germinated.

Do you have any words of advice/wisdom to offer the faculty/staff or field of education?

My Dad, with whom I had a conflicted relationship, did always say “Don’t be afraid to ask or propose something if you believe in it. The worst someone can say is NO and you can try again.”

I am not very good with my hands but “righty tighty and left is loosey” has been helpful over the years. Trans performance artist and writer, Ivan Coyote, quotes Dolly Parton saying “Find out who you are and do it on purpose.” In hindsight I think I have lived like that.

To see the photos, slide your cursor over the photo and click on the arrow.
James McNinch Retirement Celebration 2016

New Report on the State of Educators’ Professional Learning in Canada

pages-from-canadastudyexecsumm2016Book Launch: The Faculty of Education’s Dr. Pamela Osmond-Johnson is second author for this report: The State of Educators’ Professional Learning in Canada. Read this executive summary, which showcases the research questions addressed in the study, summarizes findings and conditions for professional learning in Canada, and concludes with implications for next steps. Examples of professional learning practices from various provinces highlight learning in action across the nation.
https://learningforward.org/…/p…/CanadaStudyExecSumm2016.pdf
_________________________

Press Release (Learning Forward)For Learning Forward: Tracy Crow, 972-421-0900, tracy.crow@learningforward.org

Study spurs call for culture of collaborative professionalism for educators

Vancouver, BC – December 5, 2016 — Coinciding with Learning Forward’s 2016 Annual Conference in Vancouver, British Columbia, Learning Forward today releases the findings from a new study, The State of Educators’ Professional Learning in Canada. Accompanying the study is a call to action by Michael Fullan and Andy Hargreaves.

A research team led by Carol Campbell, Associate Professor of Leadership and Educational Change at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), University of Toronto, examined the professional learning that educators experience in the provinces and territories of Canada. Recognized internationally as a high-performing education system, there was interest in identifying and understanding the approaches to professional learning within Canada. Previously, however, there was limited Pan-Canadian research available on this important topic. The study sought to address this gap in existing research and has identified key components and features of effective professional learning based on findings from educators’ experiences in Canada. The purpose of the study is to advance a priority focus on the elements of and conditions for effective professional learning in Canada and across the world.

“Our intent in doing the study was not to argue for a uniform approach to professional learning across Canada; rather it is the opposite,” said Campbell. “The purpose was to understand, value, appreciate, and respect the rich mosaic of educational experiences and diversity of approaches and outcomes from professional learning within and across Canada’s provinces and territories,” she noted. “It is our collective responsibility to ensure that educators and students have the highest quality learning opportunities and experiences. I’m hopeful that the study will stimulate further dialogue about professional learning across Canada and beyond.”

“Learning Forward is thrilled to support this important research study and to share it as we learn in Vancouver alongside colleagues from across Canada and around the world,” said Learning Forward Executive Director Stephanie Hirsh. “The enlightening work from Carol Campbell and her team deepens our collective understanding of professional learning and the complementary essay from Fullan and Hargreaves provokes new possibilities for how we strengthen the profession,” she said.

Several key findings emerged from the study, which included a review of research literature and existing data, case studies, surveys, focus groups, and collaboration with a national advisory group. The study outlined features of effective professional learning based on a review of the research literature and found that practices in Canada were broadly consistent with those features. At the same time, the study identified variations in the conception and implementation of those practices, offering opportunities for further exploration into local application of professional learning to advance next actions.

Findings include:

  • Evidence, inquiry, and professional judgment are informing professional learning policies and practices.
  • The priority area identified by teachers for developing their knowledge and practices is how to support diverse learners’ needs.
  • A focus on a broad range of students’ and professionals’ learning outcomes is important.
    The appropriate balance of system-directed and self-directed professional development for teachers is complex and contested.
  • There is no “one-size-fits-all” approach to professional learning; teachers are engaging in multiple opportunities for professional learning and inquiry with differentiation for their professional needs.
  • Collaborative learning experiences are highly valued and prevalent within and across schools and wider professional networks.
  • Teachers value professional learning that is relevant and practical for their work; “’job-embedded” should not mean school-based exclusively as opportunities to engage with external colleagues and learning opportunities matter also.
  • Time for sustained, cumulative professional learning integrated within educators’ work lives requires attention.
  • Inequitable variations in access to funding for teachers’ self-selected professional development are problematic.
  • System and school leaders have important roles in supporting professional learning for teachers and for themselves.

Offering a call to the action in response to the report are study advisors Michael Fullan, OC, former OISE Dean, and Andy Hargreaves, Thomas More Brennan Chair in the Lynch School of Education at Boston College, who both consult widely with government policymakers and educational leaders around the world. Their essay, Bringing the Profession Back In, leverages the study as a stimulus for offering a new approach to developing and deepening the teaching profession in Canada and elsewhere.

At the heart of their argument is that professional learning and development (PLD), carefully defined, is at the heart of an effective and continuously growing teaching profession, and, in turn, the best visions and versions of it are rooted firmly in a system culture of collaborative professionalism that cultivates individual and collective efficacy.

Hargreaves said, “The Canadian study points to the importance of both professional learning and professional development as ways to improve the quality of teaching and learning. Professional learning is about deliberate efforts to learn something new or better, while professional development concerns how teachers become more confident and mature in their work with students and adults through experience, reflection and coaching, The most important thing of all though is that all this professional learning and development (PLD) is most effective when it takes place within a culture of collaborative professionalism where teachers work and plan together, take shared responsibility for all students’ learning in each other’s classes and schools, and undertake inquiry in teams to solve problems in their schools such as low achievement or cyber-bullying.”

Access The State of Educators’ Professional Learning in Canada: Executive Summary and Bringing the Profession Back In along with an executive summary to the case study of professional learning in British Columbia at www.learningforward.org/Canadastudy. Additional reports will be released in the coming weeks, including the full research summary.

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Research team. (Photo by OISE)

The research team for the study includes: Dr. Pamela Osmond-Johnson, Assistant Professor, University of Regina, Saskatchewan; Dr. Brenton Faubert, Assistant Professor, Western University, Ontario; and Dr. Kenneth Zeichner, Boeing Professor of Teacher Education, University of Washington, Seattle. Audrey Hobbs Johnson, Learning Forward senior consultant and former staff member with the provincial government of British Columbia serves as project coordinator. In addition, an Advisory Group consisting of experts in professional learning evidence, trends, and practices from across Canada was established to provide in-depth advice on promising practices and local contexts within provinces and territories
About Learning Forward

Learning Forward is a nonprofit, international membership association of learning educators committed to one vision in K–12 education: Excellent teaching and learning every day. To realize that vision Learning Forward pursues its mission to build the capacity of leaders to establish and sustain highly effective professional learning. Information about membership, services, and products is available from www.learningforward.org.

Math Education Students Craft Indigenous Games

Dr. Gale Russell’s EMTH 300 students crafted some Indigenous games of chance, which they also had fun playing once they had created them. Beyond learning math content, preservice teachers, who will work with children in their future math classrooms, must learn how to make learning accessible, fun, engaging, and culturally responsive. Students accessed these games at http://mathcentral.uregina.ca/rr/database/rr.09.00/treptau1/

Photo Gallery (Slide cursor over the photo below and click on the arrow to see the next photos)
Math Education (300) Students Craft Indigenous Games

Successful Defence

heather-phipps-proof-images-202Congratulations to Dr. Heather Phipps on successfully defending her PhD at McGill University in Montreal on Wednesday, November 23 under the supervision of Dr. Teresa Strong-Wilson and Dr. Claudia Mitchell. Committee members included Dr. Anne Burke (Memorial University), Dr. Mary Maguire (McGill), and Dr. Mela Sarkar (McGill). The external examiner was Dr. Rahat Naqvi (University of Calgary).

Phipp’s dissertation, Children Speaking with Children: Visualizing Engagement Through Contemporary Canadian Picture Books in French Classrooms, is an ethnographic study situated in a public primary school in urban Montreal. It documents young children’s responses to Canadian children’s literature in Grades 1 & 2 French classrooms. Her study highlights the ways in which children engage and respond to both the words and images in diverse Canadian literature, and how they reflect on their own lived experiences in relation to the picture books. Her future research interests include inquiry related to issues of belonging, identity, and community for children and teachers in the context of minority language education in francophone and French immersion schools in the Saskatchewan context and in diverse multilingual contexts across Canada.

New Issue of in education, 22(2)

 

ineducation-cover-22-2in education has just published its latest issue “[Power and Identity] in education” at https://ineducation.ca. This is a special pilot issue featuring the work of U of R Faculty of Education graduate students who engaged in an open peer review process. We invite you to review the Table of Contents here and then visit our web site to review articles and items of interest.

Thanks for the continuing interest in our work,

Patrick Lewis, Editor-in-Chief
Shuana Niessen, Managing Editor, in education

in education
Vol 22, No 2 (2016): Autumn 2016 [Power and Identity] in education
Table of Contents
https://ineducation.ca/ineducation/issue/view/27

Editorial
——–

Editorial (1-2)
Andrea Sterzuk

Articles
——–

“I’m Still Angry!” A Korean Student’s Self-Negotiation in her
Canadian Classroom (3-19)
Jennifer Burton
Becoming Unsettled Again and Again: Thinking With/in and Against
Autobiographical Writing (20-38)
Audrey Aamodt
My Junglee Story Matters: Autoethnography and Language Planning and Policy
(39-54)
Rubina Khanam
Empowering Students in the Trauma-Informed Classroom Through Expressive Arts
Therapy (55-71)
Miranda Field
Standpoint Theory in Professional Development: Examining Former Refugee
Education in Canada (72-86)
Vanessa Braun
Power, Identity, and the Construction of Knowledge in Education (87-97)
Lana J. Vindevoghel

Book Reviews
——–

A Review of Settler Identity and Colonialism in 21st Century Canada , by
Emma Battell Lowman and Adam J. Barker (98-100)
Shana Graham
A Review of Critical Mathematics Education: Theory, Praxis, and Reality
(101-103)
Jeremy Sundeen