British Council, India has been a part of my life since my college days. My friends used to tease me about my magnetic draw towards British Council Library, Chennai- ‘BCL’ - as we used to call it. I drank in Daphne du Maurier and Nevil Shute from the BCL and got teased for that too.
After a gap of
many years, British Council, Delhi came into my life in the form of
International School Award (ISA) when DAV Public School, sreshtha Vihar, Delhi,
applied for it and I was in the ISA core
team. Since then it has been a very fortuitous and fruitful association for me.
After twice accredited with the ISA, 5 teachers from the school were selected
by Principal Mrs Prem Lata Garg to work with mentors Mrs Suman Chawla and mrs
Chandeep Marwah for the Aptis Action Research Mentor Scheme (AARMS).
To quote Wikipedia, “Action research is
either research initiated to solve an immediate problem or a reflective
process of progressive problem solving led
by individuals working with others in teams or as part of a "community
of practice" to improve the way they address issues and solve
problems.”
The first
meeting was an exciting one as our mentors Mrs Chawla and Mrs Marwah are
dynamic personalities. They introduced us to Action Research, what it is and
how to go about it. It was intimidating to all five of us from the school, Ms
Preeti Bhatnagar, Ms Shweta Handa, Mrs Ranjana Varma, Ms Nupur Gupta and
myself. We wondered if we will be able
to take up the challenge of classroom research with all other duties as senior
teachers. With the reassurance and positive vibes of Ms Chawla and Ms Marwah,
we promised that we will take it up. As passionate teachers, we indeed wanted
to be change makers by bringing in small yet fantastic changes in our
classrooms.
In this exciting
journey we were joined by 5 teachers from Ramjas School, Karol Bagh. It was an
interesting mix of teachers of Chemistry, Computer Science and English from
primary to the senior classes. We were told to think of questions on which we
could base our action research. It could be “something which has been challenging
us in the class room or something which is a success but needed further
exploration”. The webinar led by our mentors’ guides Mr Amol and Mr Richard was
an eye opener as all of us were impressed and intrigues us the teacher from
Mexico and her action research. Through action research, she was able to find
out “how to end her lessons interestingly”. As teachers, we plan extensively
about how to introduce each lesson and ways to begin every class. We do not
give much thinking about how to end our classes. We just summarise and probably
exit the class. The webinar in detail spoke about this teacher’s research and
how she started practicing different interesting means to end her classes. Wow!
Just great!! we thought. Can we also practice such simple, interesting and
exciting things in our classroom?
We started discussing things then. And then...
We started discussing things then. And then...
Bravo Akhila ma'am
ReplyDeleteBeautifully worded and though my association with British Council is not as long as yours but having introduced to ISA and spending wonderful 6 years of amazing learning with you and Shweta and now with Preeti ma'am, Nupur and our versatile mentors in this Action Packed Research Journey, I am sure we all are going to rock.