At our workshop this week, we aimed to provide insight into how our Autahi programme comes together this term. If you didn't make it - or even if you did - here are the main ideas we shared.
When you come into Autahi in the morning, one of the first things you'll see is our Rātaka/Timetable.
We encourage our students to check the Rātaka as we go through the day so that they know what's happening next. You'll see that our day is varied - and jam-packed. We can imagine it as a delicious, fresh salad with many different ingredients.
In preparing our daily Autahi 'salad', we have to ensure we're using a range of ingredients. These fall into five basic categories: Literacy and Maths (we are mandated to teach five hours each of Reading, Writing and Maths each week), Health and Wellbeing (which includes our Positive Education programme), Sustainability and the Arts.
You'll see the word 'Inquiry' on the Rātaka. We use this word for exploratory, discovery-based learning, an approach we often apply in the Sustainability space but can work throughout the curriculum. We're beginning this term by inquiring into our feelings and strategies to self-regulate, but will be moving on to explore both compost and stories of our local places.
Not included in the Rātaka are the many times during the day that we stop for a brain and body break to jump around, dance, go for a run or game, do yoga, make music... There are so many benefits to this: our children learn through experience what helps them to self-regulate and be ready to learn, it helps to bond us as a whānau - and it's great fun! Last but by no means least, play and playful learning are also essential to our programme, with opportunities for free play sprinkled through the day.
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