Thursday, 3 November 2016

PGCE PROCESS WORK Module 1 Unit

    “Listen with Your Eyes” - looking at and listening to the world- 
   Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon ‘em.


Shakespeare’s words in the above quotation fromTwelfth Night,  pose the question: what is greatness? Before I could begin to establish the characteristics that I believe differentiate between Global-Mindedness (GM) and International-Mindedness (IM) I had to decide what I considered to be a ‘great’ teacher. I looked beyond the list provided to see how other people, including pupils, defined this.

I ended up with a long list of attributes that could constitute what it takes to be a ‘great’ teacher. The one that most struck a chord was:

“Ye great teachers: listen to what you say!” ~ Goethe

I think it is vital for a teacher to listen him/herself in order to try to avoid giving out information which could be misconstrued. It is also crucial to listen to his/her pupils and to listen to the many different voices that make up the multicultural world we live in - if we don’t listen, we don’t learn.

I realised I could use this idea of ‘listening’ to create an analogy to illustrate what I believe is one of the main differences between a teacher who is Internationally Minded and one who is Globally-Minded. 

Think of a piece of music in which the different sounds represent the different nations.The IM voice represents the vocalist working in collaboration with various instrumentalists to produce a multi-layered track. The GM voice is more of a mixing artist taking bits and pieces from the sounds around him to merge the tracks and produce a rich world sound scape.

I use this analogy because I think it shows how both concepts of IM and GM are closely linked and have shared components but also shows the difference resonance between the two outlooks. The IM teacher looks to co-operate with the world but the GM teacher seeks greater unity and a more immersive experience. Whether either can be deemed to be ‘great’ is, in my opinion, not just a measure  of how well they lesson to others but is also determined by how well others listen to them.


PGCE PROCESS WORK MODULE 1 UNIT 3 TASK 8- hand in A CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF MY MULTIMODAL SEMIOTIC ANALYSIS


PGCE PROCESS WORK MODULE 1 UNIT 3 TASK 8- A CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF MY MULTIMODAL SEMIOTIC ANALYSIS





Prior to commencing the PGCEI Process Work I was unfamiliar with the term “multimodal semiotic analysis” (l’ll use my own acronym: ‘MSA’). I obtained various definitions, including watching a Youtube video that illustrated ‘MSA’, in order to gain a thorough understanding of it in the classroom as:

“a means of seeing meaning in visual displays, in classroom layout, in the voice-quality of the teacher, in diagrams and wall displays, in students’ posture, just as much as in what is said, written and read” (Kress et al., 2005, p.21).

I now interpret ‘MSA’ as a way of making sense of the various meanings that can be placed upon signs which are created through, and impact upon, different societies and cultures.(Kress et al, 2005).

I realised that, although the terminology was new to me, the process of ‘MSA’ was familiar. As a dance teacher and examiner I conduct many classroom observations. Some of these are open-ended and others use ‘MSA’ to select criteria or ‘modes’ to carry out a specific investigation. I liken this process to viewing things through different lenses.

 The ‘lens’, or ‘mode’, I used for David’s classroom (University of Nottingham, 2011) ‘MSA’ was ‘movement’. I employed Kress et al.’s criteria to study the following: 

‘’ the teacher’s movement itself, the meaning of the space in which the teacher moves (at the front, in between the desks), and whether, how and where the students may move. ‘‘(Ibid. p.26)

I used a mapping technique to track David’s spatial pathways on a plan of his classroom layout and a written narrative to make a qualitative analysis of how he moved in relation to the pupils. 

The mapping technique was useful in depicting how frequently David positioned himself at the same side of the classroom and stood behind several pupils whilst giving instructions. The written text, whilst very time consuming, was more helpful in determining the effect his movements had upon the pupils and for describing the pupils’ movements.

I discovered that, although David had attempted to create a classroom layout that enabled discussion groups to take place, his own lack of spatial awareness, and the inappropriate positioning of himself and the students within the layout, greatly hindered the task. This resulted in the students being confused and disengaged.

This method of analysis was limited in the following ways:
the video angles did not portray the entire classroom so restricted my view of all the pupils.
it was only a sample of the entire class so may not have given a fair assessment of David because I couldn't see what ensued.

‘MSA’ presents one person’s opinion so this is an impressionistic method because “semiotic resources are contextual, fluid and flexible” (Jewitt, 2009. p26). As a result it has attracted criticism:

“…. 'semiotic analysis' is ….based merely on subjective interpretation and grand assertions.” (Chandler (2014, online).

Despite it’s limitations, I find ‘MSA’ is insightful and useful in certain contexts, such as analysing the Arts, which are difficult to quantify.


Bibliography

Bezemer, J. & C. Jewitt (2010). Multimodal Analysis: Key issues. In: L. Litosseliti (ed), Research Methods in Linguistics. London: Continuum. pp. 180-197.

Chandler, D. (2014), Semiotics for Beginners: Criticisms of Semiotic Analysis, (online). Available at:http://visual-memory.co.uk/daniel/Documents/S4B/sem11.html (accessed 30th October 2016)

Dictionary.com Unabridged. (2016) Semiotics, Random House, Inc. Inc.http://www.dictionary.com/browse/semiotics
(accessed 30th October 2016)

Jewitt, C. (2009) The Routledge Handbook of Multimodal Analysis. London: Routledge.

Kress, G. R., Jewitt, C., Bourne, J., Franks, A., Hardcastle, J., Jones, K. and Reid, E. (2005) English in Urban Classrooms: A Multimodal Perspective on Teaching and Learning. Abingdon: Routledge Falmer.

Oxford Living Dictionaries (2016), Definition of mode,(online). Available at: https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/mode (accessed 30th October 2016).

University of Nottingham (2011) Semiotic analysis - David's lesson (video online).

Youtube (2012), The Lion and the Statue: What is Semiotic Analysis?, (online). Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkfJ4qGqX4w (accessed 30th October 2016).











PGCE PROCESS WORK MODULE 1 UNIT 3 TASK 7 - MULTIMODAL SEMIOTIC ANALYSIS- OR “IT AIN’T WHAT YOU DO IT’S THE WAY THAT YOU DO IT!”

PGCE PROCESS WORK MODULE 1 UNIT 3 TASK 7 - MULTIMODAL SEMIOTIC ANALYSIS- OR “IT AIN’T WHAT YOU DO IT’S THE WAY THAT YOU DO IT!”
MODES

Kress et al. define ‘modes’ as the means “that a culture has shaped” ( .p.21) in which to do something. Simply put, modes are ways of doing things.


SEMIOTICS

Kress et al. state that ‘semiotics’ is:

“…the discipline that concerns itself with meaning of all kinds, in all forms, everywhere. Sign is the central concept of semiotics; it is an entity in which meaning and form have been brought together in a single unit- of signified and signifier, to use the technical terms - seen, always, as reflecting the meanings of those who make the sign.” (ibid. p. 22)


MULTIMODAL

 According to Kress et al. a multimodal semiotic analysis within a classroom is a way of:

“… seeing meaning in visual displays, in classroom layout, in the voice-quality of the teacher, in diagrams and wall displays, in students’ posture, just as much as in what is said, written and read.” ( ibid. p.21)

Kress et. al. give some examples of the different signs and how they may be interpreted in a classroom setting.They maintain that even the classroom layout presents a visual sign as you enter it:

“The manner in which tables, chairs and desks are arranged distributes students and teacher into particular places, and into a frame of social relations with each other.” (ibid. p.23)

“This spatial relation is a sign made by the teacher to express his (in this case) sense of the social relation, of the pedagogic relationship with the students, as well as his sense of how the students might work with each other and with him.” (ibid. p. 24)

Kress et al. speak of the:

‘’Mode of spatial arrangement’’ (ibid. p.26)

They give an example of this below:

“Four students are seated at each table; the grouping at the tables is suggestive of a participatory pedagogy, a sign of a ‘constructivist’ approach. However, this sign of a ‘discourse of participation’ is set within an arrangement of the tables in two rows, which, starting close together at the teacher’s desk, are angled away from his desk to realize a perfect panopticon. That structure superimposes a different meaning: a sign of a ‘discourse of surveillance’ overlaid onto a sign of a ‘discourse of participation’ (ibid. p.25)


The teacher then paces in an arc as he teaches. He can not see all of the students at the same time, doesn't enter the space between them but ‘patrols’ guard like across the door. The students have to twist uncomfortably in their seats to see him. 

Kress et al. maintain that:

‘’Movement has meaning. In the space of the classroom the meaning is produced in the interaction of three factors: the teacher’s movement itself, the meaning of the space in which the teacher moves (at the front, in between the desks), and whether, how and where the students may move. ‘‘(Ibid. p.26)

In other words; how the teacher moves in the class, his body language, the furniture and pupil positioning will all impact upon the class. They also stress that visual material, such as wall displays, written handouts and text written on a black/white board can both say something about the teacher’s attitude to the pupils and also give out confusing messages to the class. 


They talk about visual displayand state that:


“is again a mixture of ‘participation’ - realized through materials that (might) link to the cultural world of the students - and of authority through the simultaneous presence of materials from an elite culture.” (ibid. p26)


Kress et al. also stress the importance of the use of speech - what is said and how it is delivered. Interestingly, they don’t group their headings of ‘speech’ and ‘vocal quality’ together. I believe they should, as I think that one impacts upon the other.
Tone of voice, what you say and the way in which you say it, can convey different meanings.  There are “indirect”, “implicit” and “explicit” (ibid. p28) meanings conveyed by a teacher which can be confusing for pupils.

They state that:

“In and through voice quality (van Leeuwen 1999), the teacher performs and realizes sensibility and sensitivity. This, too, has pedagogic significance: the meaning of a social relation in which explicitness is inappropriate, in which directness would be too ‘heavy’ for the gossamer lightness of what has to be communicated, where to be explicit would be gross and mundane.” (ibid.p30)

Kress et al. also talk about the importance of body language. They give it the heading Gaze, gesture and embodiment”. They state:

“it is in gaze that we see the development, unfolding and communicating of the curriculum of sensibility….
“ All this provides the effect of embodiment: that is, the meanings made in the mode of gesture are, as it were, meanings in the body of the teacher, just as the effects of his positioning, movement and use of gaze have the same force.” (ibid.p.29-30)

They summarise by saying that:

“the appearance and form of a single sign does not tell the whole story….The meaning of any event or of any structure does not lie in the meaning of one sign, but has to be seen in the complex meanings of a set of signs all read together.” (ibid. p35)

Signs then, as I understand it, are, according to Kress et al., not just objects, but signals to be read in the way we communicate both verbally and non-verbally, intentionally or unintentionally with those around us and with the space we occupy.

Kress et al. believe that Semiotic Modal Analysis can help us be aware of what signals we are sending to others. This is particularly important for students in the classroom. They conclude by saying:

For the students it is of course absolutely crucial what signs are made, what signs are there to be read, transformed, and remade by them, and, above all, how they are positioned in relation to these complex signs, given their own specific and, as a group, diverse backgrounds.” (ibid. p.36)


MULTIMODAL SEMIOTIC ANALYSIS

I understand “multimodal semiotic analysis” as a way of trying to make sense of different interpretations that can be placed upon  the same sign by different people in the same setting at the same time. Cultural and social contexts and beliefs affect the meaning. It is important in asking the questions:
 What was the intention of the sign makers?
 Is the intended message the one we actually got? 
What does the same thing mean to different people?





I found a video on Youtube useful in visually and verbally illustrating the meaning of Semiotic Analysis. In it the person talks about:

‘Peering through a lens into a culture’. I think that is a nice way to look at it. The link to the video is below:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkfJ4qGqX4w (accessed October 30th 2016)


Ways in which multimodal semiotic analysis might help me in my teaching

I think it would be useful to observe another’s teaching methods focusing on different modes, as defined by Kress et al. above. For example, I might look, during one lesson, at the teacher’s body language in relation to that displayed by the pupils in the class as a way of interpreting how the students are engaging with the teacher and the subject material. I might compare one teacher’s body language with another’s to note any differences or similarities and then see how effective their approaches were. In so doing, I might discover something that I could use that would help me in the way I use my own body language in my classes.

Semiotic Modal Analysis (SMA) can help me be more aware of the messages I am trying to convey to my students and help clarify the intention and attempt to avoid misinterpretation. It can also help me to reflect upon whether I am giving equal attention to all my pupils by making me more aware of the classroom layout I use and the way in which I move within it and interact with my students. In short, SMA can help me to a greater realisation of the consequence of my teaching methods ; simply put:

‘’it ain’t what you do, it’s the way that you do it.”







Bibliography

Bezemer, J. & C. Jewitt (2010). Multimodal Analysis: Key issues. In: L. Litosseliti (ed), Research Methods in Linguistics. London: Continuum. pp. 180-197.

Chandler, D. (2014), Semiotics for Beginners: Criticisms of Semiotic Analysis, (online). Available at:http://visual-memory.co.uk/daniel/Documents/S4B/sem11.html (accessed 30th October 2016)

Dictionary.com Unabridged. (2016) Semiotics, Random House, Inc. Inc.http://www.dictionary.com/browse/semiotics
(accessed 30th October 2016)

Jewitt, C. (2009) The Routledge Handbook of Multimodal Analysis. London: Routledge. 

Kress, G. R., Jewitt, C., Bourne, J., Franks, A., Hardcastle, J., Jones, K. and Reid, E. (2005) English in Urban Classrooms: A Multimodal Perspective on Teaching and Learning. Abingdon: Routledge Falmer.

Oxford Living Dictionaries (2016), Definition of mode,(online). Available at: https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/mode (accessed 30th October 2016).

University of Nottingham (2011) Semiotic analysis - David's lesson (video online).

Youtube (2012), The Lion and the Statue: What is Semiotic Analysis?, (online). Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkfJ4qGqX4w (accessed 30th October 2016).



















PGCE PROCESS WORK MODULE 1 UNIT 3 TASK 6 - POSITIVE EDUCATION IN MY IDEAL CLASSROOM. - teacher hand in

PGCE PROCESS WORK MODULE 1 UNIT 3 TASK 6 - POSITIVE EDUCATION IN MY IDEAL CLASSROOM.
Norrish et al. summarise the aim of Positive Education as:

“bringing together the science of Positive Psychology with best-practice teaching to encourage and support schools and individuals within their communities to flourish” (2013, p.184)

The Geelong Grammar School (GGS) was aligned to this ideology and their Applied Framework for Positive Education used a three-tiered approach: “live it, teach it, and embed it” (ibid. p150) to apply positive psychology in it’s school to try to counteract student depression. 

Others have also developed programmes in pursuit of this same ideal; the Social and Emotional Aspects of Learning (SEAL) programme was, until this year, government backed and funded. SEAL claims to: 

“develop the personal and social skills of:
self-awareness
managing their feelings
motivation
empathy
social skills.” (SEAL, online)

Opponents of SEAL, such as Craig (2007), think differently. He states:

‘In short, we fear SEAL is encouraging a large-scale psychological experiment on young people, which will not just waste time and resources but could actually back-fire and unwittingly undermine people’s well-being in the longer-term’. (2007 p.3, cited in Stuart, 2010)

Both GGS and SEAL claim that their programmes can result in improved levels of academic achievement and emotional well-being. I am sceptical.

 White (2016) shares my scepticism and the belief that, in order for Positive Education to succeed, everyone must share a common understanding of the psychology behind it, policy makers must endorse it, and everyone must be committed to it.

I think the quest for pupil’s happiness is admirable, but ask the question: how can we promote “well-being in an “un-well world” ? (Brasher and Wiseman 2007, cited in White, 2016, online). 

I don’t think well-being can be taught.There is, however, evidence that endorphins released after exercising can induce a state of happiness. (WebMD, online). Exercise has been show to:

“improve mental health by reducing anxiety, depression, and negative mood and by improving self-esteem and cognitive function.” (Sharma et al.2006, online) 

My ideal school would integrate movement into the lessons. I have been a dance teacher for many years and seen the positive effects dance can have upon a person. I have also done some research into how movement can help people with autism: based on this, rather than trying to teach and embed positive psychology, I would advocate training the body as a way of “waking up the brain” (Lara, 2009). I say: use the funding that has been withdrawn from SEAL and put it into training the body, rather than focusing mainly on the brain, for, as Ross Enamait (2005, online) says:

If you train the body the mind will follow.”


Bibliography

Enamait , R.  (2005) Train The Body – The Mind Will Follow, (online). Available at:

Lara, J; Bowers, K (2015), Autism Movement Therapy Method Waking Up The Brain, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, London

Norrish, J. M., Williams, P., O'Connor, M., & Robinson, J. (2013) An applied framework for positive education. International Journal of Wellbeing 3(2): 147-161. Available at: http://www.internationaljournalofwellbeing.org
/index.php/ijow/article/view/250/358 (accessed 25th October 2016].

SEAL Community (online). Available at. http://www.sealcommunity.org/node/356 (accessed 26th October)

Sharma,A. Madaan, V and Petty, F. D. (2006) Exercise for Mental Health,Primary Care Companion to The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, (online). Available at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1470658/ (accessed online 24th September 2015)

Stuart, K. (2010) Walking the talk: authentic teaching for social and emotional aspects of learning (SEAL) Tean Journal 1 (2) December [Online]. Available at: http://bit.ly/tyfJ5M (accessed 26th October 2016).

WebMD (2005-216), (online). Available at: http://www.webmd.com/depression/guide/exercise-depression#1 (accessed 27th October 2016)


White, M. A. (2014) Why won’t it Stick? Positive Psychology and Positive Education : Springer Pyschology of Well- Being, 2016; 6: 2. Published 2016 Feb 9. (online) Available at : http://psywb.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s13612-016-0039-1#Sec10 (accessed 25th October 2016)







PGCE PROCESS WORK MODULE 1 UNIT 3 TASK 6 B ‘FLOW’

PGCE PROCESS WORK MODULE 1 UNIT 3 TASK 6 B ‘FLOW’


FLOW
'The idea of flow seems to harmonise well with teachers' visions of ideal classroom practice' (Kristjansson, 2012: 98)

Cziksentmihalyi defines flow as:

 “a state in which people are so involved in an activity that nothing else seems to matter; the experience is so enjoyable that people will continue to do it even at great cost, for the sheer sake of doing it.” (Cskikszentmihalyi, 1990, p.4 cited in Pursuit of happiness.org )

I remember a case when I was at school where a particularly young, enthusiastic teacher was so charismatic in his delivery that half the girls in the class developed a crush on the teacher. They were fully engrossed in the lessons, but for the wrong reasons! 

“Flow” however, is not just about getting carried away with a pleasurable experience. Cziksentmihalyi identifies a number of different elements involved in the process:

There are clear goals every step of the way.
There is immediate feedback to one’s actions.
There is a balance between challenges and skills.
Action and awareness are merged.
Distractions are excluded from consciousness.
There is no worry of failure.
Self-consciousness disappears.
The sense of time becomes distorted.
The activity becomes an end in itself. (Desan et al, online)

Looking at the above criteria, there are a lot of things that need to synergise in order to create ‘flow’. Is it realistic to expect all of these elements to occur in a lesson?

 Schweinle and Bjornestad (2009, online) state that:

“Teachers encourage flow and intrinsic motivation by creating an environment that fosters enjoyable learning experiences. Ideally, to encourage optimal experiences, teachers must provide optimal challenge and support for competence (or skill).”

I think that all teachers, except those who are being forced to teach subject matter that they disagree with, would want their students to be motivated to learn and show some degree of interest in the lesson they are giving. I would also say that they would hope to challenge them in order for their students to progress. Whether you can, or should ever have an expectation of trying to make ‘flow’ a feature of your classroom is, I feel, open to debate.

I believe it poses many questions:

 How would the teacher attempt to do this? 
Would the teacher explain this aim and the theory of ‘flow’ to the class or would it be a private goal for the teacher alone?
 Whose perspective are we considering- the pupil’s, the teacher’s, both, or the class as a unit? 
How would the teacher actually know that the aim was being achieved?

Cziksentmihalyi did devise a method for trying to measure ‘flow’ called the Experience Sampling Method (ESM) (Schweinle and Bjornestad, 2009). It involved interrupting people during various stages of an activity and asking them questions about how they felt at specific times. I would argue that, if people are truly engrossed in the activity, they are probably oblivious to how they are feeling at the time; consequently, I believe that any answers given would not be an accurate measure of the state of ‘flow’ they had achieved prior to that ‘flow’ being interrupted. 

Looking at the above criteria for the creation of ‘flow’, I think that, if a teacher were to try to make ‘flow’ a feature of the classroom then, if this were not achieved, it could result in the teacher, or the pupils who do not reach this state,  feeling a sense of failure. It may be possible for an individual to experience flow during a lesson, but it is unrealistic to expect the entire class to have the same response.

According to Cziksentmihalyi, for ‘flow’ to occur there needs to be a balance between the degree of difficulty present in a task and the skill level needed to overcome it- in other words there should be sufficient scope to challenge but not to make that challenge seem unsurmountable. I agree that teaching constantly challenges the students but the degree with which it challenges can’t be predetermined. Even in a class that is equally matched in ability and has a shared love of a subject, such as those in a ballet class at a vocational ballet school for example, there will be different strengths and weaknesses and the students will all have individual responses to the same lesson. In a class of mixed abilities, with multicultural beliefs, to aim for anyone in the class to experience ‘flow’ is, in my opinion, placing too great a challenge on the teacher. 

My aim for my ideal classroom would be for my pupils to find something, at some point during the lesson, that was interesting to them and that might inspire them to want to learn more about it. I would hope that, during a lesson, a pupil might experience some of the elements listed as criteria for ‘flow’, but I would not expect them to experience them all. If that did occur, and a person did achieve ‘flow’ during one of my lessons then that would not be because I had deliberately set out to promote it as an aim within the class. 




Bibliography

Csikszentmihalyi, M. (2010) Flow [video online]. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/embed/JjliwSJGDiU (accessed 24th October 2016).

Desan, P. , Goldfinch, S. , Park, D. and Tomasulo D. The Pursuit of Happiness, Mihaly Csiksgentmihalyi, (online). Available at: http://www.pursuit-of-happiness.org/history-of-happiness/mihaly-csikszentmihalyi/\


Kristjansson, K. (2012) Positive Psychology and Positive education: Old Wine in New Bottles? Educational Psychologist 47(2): 86-105.


 Schweinle, A. and  Bjornestad, A. (updated 2009) Flow Theory, (online). Available at: http://www.education.com/reference/article/flow-theory/