Faculty of Education - Research Publications

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 14
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    A Day in the Life of a Student: Facilitator Guide
    Mahat, M ; Imms, W (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, 2020-12-21)
    A Day in the Life of a Student workshop is a design thinking workshop developed by DLR Group (an integrated design firm) and adapted by the Innovative Learning Environment and Teacher Change project at the University of Melbourne, Australia. The activities involve educators mapping out how one student spends his/her day in school and building a model of the learning environment based on this one student. With an emphasis on the visual learning that comes from modelling experiences, this workshop helps participants develop student-improvement focused practices in innovative learning environments.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Archipelago of Possibilities: Facilitator Guide
    Mahat, M ; Imms, W (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, 2020-12-21)
    Archipelago of Possibilities is a strategy and professional development workshop created specifically to help teachers and educators uncover what they hold dear in their teaching practice and discover what they consider most important for a successful practice. This workshop uses travel as a metaphor to guide participants in reflecting on their practice, identifying successful factors for success, examining what is holding them back from achieving their ideal practice, and developing steps to create a future ideal teaching and learning space.
  • Item
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Innovative Learning Environments and Teacher Change Project Phase One Report 2016-2017
    Imms, W ; Mahat, M (ILETC Project, 2017)
    The ILETC project presents a unique opportunity for a team of experts in education and architecture from across governments, schools, business and academia to co-design new solutions to the challenges of delivering 21st century learning to students in Australia and New Zealand. The Innovative Learning Environments and Teacher Change project (ILETC) commenced officially in June 2016. The aim of this 4 year project is to build understanding of how physical classroom space impacts on learning and how best to support teachers in making the most of the spaces in their schools. It will develop resources and strategies to support educators, school leaders, policy makers and architects in developing and inhabiting new learning spaces. In its busy first 18 months the project has not only accomplished all planned milestones, but has achieved extensive engagement with partners, teachers, architects and researchers both within Australasia and internationally. This highly efficient and collaborative, cross-disciplinary group has maximised the expertise of the project team and partners in building a comprehensive base of evidence about teaching in innovative learning spaces in Australasia. The group has made it a priority to not only conduct their research in an open and transparent way, with regular newsletter updates, blog posts and articles, but to publish findings as soon as data is analysed and share these with an ever growing following of educators, designers and other researchers. This report provides a summary of the project’s activities, findings and engagement in the first 18 months of research. It draws together the many outputs, events, media and activities to highlight some of the key discoveries and how these inform the next stage of investigations.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Teacher Mind Frames and Belief Systems: Facilitator Guide
    Mahat, M ; Imms, W (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, 2020-10-13)
    The Teacher Mind Frames and Belief Systems workshop invites participants to explore how their beliefs shape the physical and experiential elements of the learning space they practice in. The workshop is based on the premise that teachers who exhibit the teacher mind frames as conceptualised by John Hattie1 are “more likely to have major impacts on student learning” (p.182). This workshop uses design thinking activities, specifically in the form of a persona tool, to help participants reflect on their mind frames and belief systems and then identify how this shapes their professional and teaching practices in innovative learning environments.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Managing Change in Innovative Learning Environments: Facilitator Guide
    Mahat, M ; Imms, W (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, 2020)
    The Managing Change in ILEs workshop focuses on examining what types of supports are required to enable teachers to undertake change in their practices. The design thinking activities help participants visualise metaphors to help them describe the conditions in which changes in practice take place. These activities also describe the ideal system that would support teachers adapting and transitioning into innovative learning environments.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Innovative Learning Environments and Teacher Practices: Facilitator Guide
    Mahat, M ; Imms, W (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, 2020)
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Innovative Learning Environments and Student Learning: Facilitator Guide
    Mahat, M ; Imms, W (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, 2020)
    The Innovative Learning Environments and Teacher Change (ILETC) project is an Australian Research Council (ARC) Linkage Project funded for 4 years from 2016-2019. It brings together the expertise of leading researchers in education and learning environments and partner organisations in education and learning environment design and technology. The project is led by Associate Professor Wesley Imms, who heads a cross disciplinary team of researchers from the Melbourne Graduate School of Education and the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning at The University of Melbourne. The project is affiliated with the Learning Environments and Applied Research Network (LEaRN).
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Journey Map: Facilitator Guide
    Mahat, M ; Imms, W (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, 2020)
    The Journey Map workshop focuses on helping teachers better understand the journey they go on when they transition into an innovative learning environment. Participants complete a ‘journey-map’ activity, which encourages peer discussion around their formative teaching experiences. This is followed by individual reflections on what was done, felt and thought when transitioning into new learning spaces. With an emphasis on the social learning that comes from sharing concrete experiences, this workshop helps participants be explicit about their journey and learn from the experiences of their peers. Due to the nature and focus of the workshop, participants who have prior experience transitioning from a traditional space to one more innovative will gain the most benefit.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    A Systematic Review of the Effects of Innovative Learning Environments on Teacher Mind Frames - Technical Report 5
    Bradbeer, C ; Mahat, M ; Byers, T ; Imms, W (University of Melbourne, LEaRN, 2019)
    The overall objective of the systematic review was to identify studies which provide evidence that innovative learning environments have an effect on teacher mind frames. For this review, an innovative learning environment is defined as the product of innovative design of space and innovative teaching and learning practices (Mahat, Bradbeer, Byers & Imms, 2018). Innovative learning spaces are physical educational facilities designed and built to facilitate the widest array of flexibility in teaching, learning, and social educational activity, while innovative teaching and learning practices are the sum of teaching and learning activities that, in combination, assist in the best possible learning outcomes and learning skills of students required in the 21st century. An innovative learning environment is produced when these two phenomena are successfully merged. Teacher mind frames can be defined as the ways that teachers consciously think about their teaching roles, the content and pedagogical knowledge, which in turn has an impact on their attitudes, actions and decisions that are likely to have significant impacts on student learning (Mahat et al., 2018). Within these parameters, the review identified, collected and synthesised available literature that examined and evaluated the way primary and secondary school teachers considered their role, work, and practice in relation to learning environments.