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Ministry of Education.
Kaua e rangiruatia te hāpai o te hoe; e kore tō tātou waka e ū ki uta

Captivating contexts: Kiwi break

Image courtesy of Sura Nualpradid at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Teaching inquiry

How do I find contexts that will captivate my class?

An effective context

Bee keeper working at bee hives

Kirsten Le Bon is a textiles teacher at Nayland College. She recently introduced “Kiwi break” as a context for a year 12, level 2 textiles class that needed to identify an issue within a context.

The context "Kiwi break" proved to be successful with Kirsten's class and highlighted what she would say are some features of effective contexts: 

  • broad enough to allow for diverse issues
  • relevant and interesting to the students
  • connected to prior teaching and learning
  • closely connected to curriculum understandings
  • scaffolded to allow senior students to develop and demonstrate their own interests and depth and breadth of understanding.

Broad enough to allow for diverse issues 

Kirsten believes that an essential factor in the success of this context was that it gave students a broad framework in which to explore their ideas. She asked the students to consider the following question:

What do Kiwis do in their summer break and what does New Zealand offer in terms of the tourism industry in the summer break?

Kirsten Le Bon

Relevant and interesting

All of the students had ideas that they could contribute within the context of "Kiwi break". They discussed their family breaks in the summer, who they would like to have summer breaks with, and how they would like to spend their summer.

Kirsten talked about an aunt who loved gardening in her summer break but had skin cancer and needed clothing to protect her skin. This  into broad discussions on summer breaks for different ages and requirements.

Connected to prior teaching and learning

The students' learning within the project before “Kiwi break” made a difference too. This project, “Good fit”, developed the students’ skills in pattern making so that they came to the next project with understandings and skills – having made something for themselves and ready to think about others.

Closely connected to curriculum understandings

Kirsten’s students were assessed against AS 91354 Undertake brief development to address an issue and also used their work within “Kiwi break” to contribute evidence for AS 91358 Demonstrate understanding of how technological modelling supports risk management and AS 91357 Undertake effective development to make and trial a prototype.

Select the image to view at full size.

Scaffolded

Kirsten believes that at level 7 students need to be encouraged to bring their own relevant research and knowledge to the table. She sees scaffolding with questioning as an effective approach to help students make connections. For example, when focusing on modelling she asked questions such as:

  • What have you considered?
  • Why have you considered this?
  • What will you do to model or test this?
  • Why did it perform the way it did?
  • How did you make a decision?
  • What did you decide on as your final outcome?

Outcomes

The outcomes students produced for “Kiwi break" include a bush shirt for a boyfriend, a beekeeper's suit, an outfit for a mother to wear to a summer wedding, and a shirt for a father to wear when working on cars at a stock-car meeting.

Kiwi break outcome: Bee keeping suit

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Horror movies provided the context for a filmmaking project that engaged photography and design students.

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