Impact in iteracy: (inc. meeting the demands of Ofsted) Geoff Barton Friday, November 06, 2015 Download this presentation at www.geoffbarton.co.uk (Presentation number 97)

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Transcript Impact in iteracy: (inc. meeting the demands of Ofsted) Geoff Barton Friday, November 06, 2015 Download this presentation at www.geoffbarton.co.uk (Presentation number 97)

Impact in
iteracy:
(inc. meeting the demands of Ofsted)
Geoff Barton
Friday, November 06, 2015
Download this presentation at www.geoffbarton.co.uk
(Presentation number 97)
Today:
Session 1: The new Ofsted framework
and its implications
Session 2: What we know about
literacy impact: what works
& doesn’t
Session 3: From theory to practice
Approach:
Provocations:
•
•
•
•
•
We haven’t done literacy
It’s all about what teachers do in the
classroom
Knowledge and instruction may be more
important than we realised
Relentlessly focus on consistency
Remember the “Matthew Effect”
Miranda:
“O brave new world
that has such people in't!”
Prospero:
“'Tis new to thee”.
Yogi Berra:
“It’s like déjà vu all
over again”
Ice-Breaker:
Introductions &
3 uncomfortable questions
Q1:
How many students at your school will
be reading better today as a result
of the work of a literacy workingparty … ? or teacher?
Q2:
What will teaching assistants do today
that will help a student to read
better or write better?
Is it happening?
How do you know?
Q3:
If I walk into tutor time or look at a
random student’s planner, what will
I see to help the student’s learning?
In every room and every planner?
If not, why not?
Then & Now:
Progress Report
English & Literacy Review
2005
Think about YOUR school
Key principles of literacy across the curriculum
•
•
•
•
•
Literacy skills are taught consistently and
systematically across the curriculum
Expectation of standards of accuracy and presentation
are similar in all classrooms
Teachers are equipped to deal with literacy issues in their
subject both generically and specifically
The same strategies are used across the school: the
teaching sequence for writing; active reading strategies;
planning speaking and listening for learning
Teachers use the same terminology to describe language.
Consistency in literacy is achieved when …
• Good literacy skills are a key factor in raising
standards across all subjects
• Language is the main medium we use for
teaching, learning and developing thinking, so
it is at the heart of teaching and learning
• Literacy is best taught as part of the subject,
not as an add-on
• All teachers need to give explicit attention to
the literacy needed in their subject.
Literacy is most effective when …
• Senior managers are actively involved in the
planning and monitoring
• Audits and action planning are rigorous
• Monitoring focuses on a range of approaches,
e.g. classroom observation, work scrutiny as
well as formal tests
• Time is given to training, its dissemination
and embedding
• Schools work to identified priorities
Self-evaluation:
So where are you up to in your school?
NO PROGRESS
0
3
5
GOOD PROGRESS
Literacy strategy: The next phase
Key player
Head
You
SENCO
Teachers
Teaching
assistants
Governors
Librarian
Progress rating
Priority
Headteachers/Deputies
•have had direct personal involvement in the implementation of the
Literacy and Numeracy Strategies;
•worked in partnership with local schools to share good practice
•given strong support for the literacy and mathematics coordinators
including, where possible, providing non-contact time;
•worked with coordinators to establish curriculum targets;
•monitored directly (with colleagues in senior management teams in
larger schools) the teaching of literacy and mathematics to gain an
overview of strengths and weaknesses, to identify and address the
continuing professional development needs of colleagues and to
review the school’s success in achieving curriculum targets set.
NO PROGRESS
0
3
5
GOOD PROGRESS
Literacy Coordinators:
•supporting teachers in setting and focusing on a realistic
number of curriculum targets;
•leading school-based training on how to judge and support
progress through the effective use of plenaries in the literacy
hour and daily mathematics lesson;
•working with colleagues on a shared understanding of
progression in writing, in the application of reading skills, in
mental and written calculation strategies and in problem
solving;
•making clearer to parents school policies on writing and
calculation.
NO PROGRESS
0
3
5
GOOD PROGRESS
SENCOs:
•supporting teachers build clear curriculum targets into any
additional support provided to individuals and groups;
•ensuring targets in individual and group plans link closely to
the objectives in the literacy and mathematics Frameworks
for teaching;
•tracking the progress of children with SEN in reading,
writing, mental and written calculation and problem solving;
•showing parents key aspects of what their children are being
taught and associated resources that support children in their
learning, such as writing on a computer screen and the use
of empty number lines.
NO PROGRESS
0
3
5
GOOD PROGRESS
Teachers:
•talking with children about both the teacher’s and child’s
assessment of how well curriculum targets are being met;
•including in their planning key questions that will be included
in lessons;
•explaining to children the objectives for individual lessons
and the expectations of their progress over each half-term;
•ensuring that homework provided is self-explanatory to
parents.
NO PROGRESS
0
3
5
GOOD PROGRESS
Teaching assistants:
•attending training on supporting children with particular
potential barriers to achievement and providing this support
in school, including running ‘catch-up’ programmes;
•providing feedback to teachers on specific
misunderstandings or strengths children demonstrate;
•joining discussions with teachers about expectations of
children in different age groups;
•targeting for additional support children who have difficulties
completing homework.
NO PROGRESS
0
3
5
GOOD PROGRESS
Teaching assistants:
•attending training on supporting children with particular
potential barriers to achievement and providing this support
in school, including running ‘catch-up’ programmes;
•providing feedback to teachers on specific
misunderstandings or strengths children demonstrate;
•joining discussions with teachers about expectations of
children in different age groups;
•targeting for additional support children who have difficulties
completing homework.
NO PROGRESS
0
3
5
GOOD PROGRESS
Governors:
•working with the headteacher to set challenging
performance targets;
•sampling the progress of a few particular pupils and
comparing it with the progress expected nationally;
•monitoring and reviewing the impact of policies to ensure
progression in writing, the application of reading skills, mental
and written calculation strategies and problem solving;
•supporting staff by taking opportunities to talk with parents
about the importance of homework and how they can help
their own children.
NO PROGRESS
0
3
5
GOOD PROGRESS
Librarian:
•Part of the team
•Knows about literacy, not just books
•Promotes reading for pleasure actively, endlessly
•Also helps drive other literacy skills – eg quoting rather than
quacking
•Library is a hub for learning, reading, research, not computer
games
•Vibrant and welcoming – including ‘wet lunchtime’ support
•Subjects teach how to research: have a ‘library agreement’
NO PROGRESS
0
3
5
GOOD PROGRESS
 Talking Point 
•
So what have been the successes in your
own school?
•
What do you need to do next?
Brave New World:
The 2012 Schedule
It’s all about the classroom
BIG PICTURE
•
•
•
•
•
•
Satisfactory is unsatisfactory
Outstanding wasn’t always outstanding and will
be subject to inspection
No-notice from September
(SEF? lesson plans? data?)
It’s about teaching and marking
It’s about literacy aka ‘communication’ (‘DCIL’)
It’s about progress?
COMMUNICATION
8 Key Expectations
COMMUNICATION
1. Are key terms and vocabulary clear and explored with pupils to ensure that
they recognise and understand them? Are they related to similar words or
the root from which they are derived?
1. Do teachers identify any particular features of key terms and help pupils with
strategies for remembering how to spell them or why they might be
capitalised (e.g. ‘Parliament’ in history or citizenship)?
1. Do teachers remind pupils of important core skills – for example how to
skim a text to extract the main elements of its content quickly or to scan a
text for information about a key word or topic?
1. Do teachers make expectations clear before pupils begin a task – for
example on the conventions of layout in a formal letter or on the main
features of writing persuasively?
COMMUNICATION
5. Do teachers reinforce the importance of accuracy in spoken or written
language – for example, emphasising the need for correct sentence
punctuation in one-sentence answers or correcting ‘we was...’ in pupils’
speech?
5. Do teachers identify when it is important to use standard English and when
other registers or dialects may be used – for example, in a formal
examination answer and when recreating dialogue as part of narrative
writing?
5. Do teachers help pupils with key elements of literacy as they support them in
lessons? Do they point out spelling, grammar or punctuation issues as
they look at work around the class?
5. Does teachers’ marking support key literacy points? For example, are key
subject terms always checked for correct spelling? Is sentence punctuation
always corrected?
COMMUNICATION
Explore the documents
COMMUNICATION
For
performance
management?
For teachers
and TAs?
Implications?
For training,
recruiting and –
crucially –
monitoring?
For leadership,
esp from
September
onwards?
COMMUNICATION
So what – as a school – do you
need to be doing more of and
less of?
COMMUNICATION
GB’s Thoughts ….
1: Beware of more ‘input’
2: Look at more books; talk to more students
3: Make fewer excuses
Thought for the Day …
… and remember …
Thought for the Day …
‘Standards are raised ONLY by
changes which are put into direct effect
by teachers and pupils in classrooms’
Black and Wiliam,
‘Inside the Black Box’
Impact in
iteracy:
(inc. meeting the demands of Ofsted)
Geoff Barton
Friday, November 06, 2015
Download this presentation at www.geoffbarton.co.uk
(Presentation number 97)
The Matthew Effect
(Robert K Merton)
The rich shall get richer and
the poor shall get poorer
Matthew 13:12
“The word-rich get richer while
the word-poor get poorer” in
their reading skills
(CASL)
“While good readers gain new skills very
rapidly, and quickly move from learning
to read to reading to learn, poor
readers become increasingly frustrated
with the act of reading, and try to avoid
reading where possible”
The Matthew Effect
Daniel Rigney
“Students who begin with high verbal
aptitudes find themselves in verbally
enriched social environments and have
a double advantage.”
The Matthew Effect
Daniel Rigney
“Good readers may choose friends who also
read avidly while poor readers seek friends
with whom they share other enjoyments”
The Matthew Effect
Daniel Rigney
Stricht’s Law: “reading ability in children
cannot exceed their listening ability …”
E.D. Hirsch
The Schools We Need
“Spoken language forms a constraint, a
ceiling not only on the ability to comprehend
but also on the ability to write, beyond which
literacy cannot progress”
Myhill and Fisher
“The children who possess intellectual capital
when they first arrive at school have the
mental scaffolding and Velcro to catch hold of
what is going on, and they can turn the new
knowledge into still more Velcro to gain still
more knowledge”.
E.D. Hirsch
The Schools We Need
Aged 7:
Children in the top quartile have 7100
words; children in the lowest have around
3000.
The main influence is parents.
DfE Research Unit
The Matthew Effect:
The rich will get richer &
the poor will get poorer
Every teacher in English
is a teacher of English
George Sampson, 1922
Guess the
Text Type
1 - Where would
you find this text?
2 - How do you
know?
1
Proud mum in a million
Natalie Brown hugged her
beautiful baby daughter
Casey yesterday and said:
“She’s my double miracle.”
2
The blood vessels of the
circulatory system,
branching into multitudes
of very fine tubes
(capillaries), supply all
parts of the muscles and
organs with blood, which
carries oxygen and food
necessary for life.
3
Ensure that the electrical
supply is turned off.
Ensure the existing circuit
to which the fitting is to
be connected has been
installed and fused in
accordance with current
L.L.L wiring regulations
•
A 1997 survey showed that of 12
European countries, only Poland and
Ireland had lower levels of adult literacy
•
1-in-16 adults cannot identify a concert
venue on a poster that contains name of
band, price, date, time and venue
•
7 million UK adults cannot locate the page
reference for plumbers in the Yellow
Pages
BBC NEWS ONLINE:
More than half of British
motorists cannot interpret
road signs properly, according
to a survey by the Royal
Automobile Club.
The survey of 500 motorists
highlighted just how many
people are still grappling with
it.
According to the
survey, three in
five motorists
thought a "be
aware of cattle"
warning sign
indicated …
an area
infected
with footand-mouth
disease.
Common mistakes:
•No motor vehicles Beware of fast motorbikes
•
Wild fowl - Puddles in
the road
•
Riding school close by
- "Marlborough
country" advert
1. Understand the significance of
exploratory talk
2. Model good talk – eg connectives
3. Re-think questioning – ‘why & how’
– and hands-up
4. Vary groupings
5. Get conversations into the school
culture
1: What type of talk
characterises your classroom?
How do you help students to
talk like a scientist / historian
/ geographer ..?
2: How do you ask questions?
How do you receive answers?
Do ‘why’ and ‘how’ questions
happen other than by
accident? Do the same
students always answer?
3: How do groupings work in
your classroom? Are they
planned? Do the word-rich
get richer? Is spoken
vocabulary modelled?
Team Implications …
READING
1. Teach reading – scanning,
skimming, analysis
2. Read aloud and display
3. Teach key vocabulary
4. Demystify spelling
5. Teach research, not FOFO
SKIMMING
The climate of the Earth is always
changing. In the past it has altered as
a result of natural causes. Nowadays,
however, the term climate change is
generally used when referring to
changes in our climate which have been
identified since the early part of the
1900's . The changes we've seen over
recent years and those which are
predicted over the next 80 years are
thought to be mainly as a result of
human behaviour rather than due to
natural changes in the atmosphere.
The best treatment for
mouth ulcers. Gargle with salt
water. You should find that it
works a treat. Salt is cheap
and easy to get hold of and we
all have it at home, so no need
to splash out and spend lots of
money on expensive mouth
ulcer creams.
Urquhart castle is probably one of
the most picturesquely situated
castles in the Scottish Highlands.
Located 16 miles south-west of
Inverness, the castle, one of the
largest in Scotland, overlooks much
of Loch Ness. Visitors come to stroll
through the ruins of the 13thcentury castle because Urquhart has
earned the reputation of being one
of the best spots for sighting Loch
Ness’s most famous inhabitant.
SCANNING
1. Where did the first cell
phones begin?
2. Name 2 other features that
started to be included in
phones
3. Why are cell phones especially
useful in some countries?
Cellular telephones
Where begin?
Two features?
Some countries?
The first cellular telephone system began operation in
Tokyo in 1979, and the first U.S. system began operation in
1983 in Chicago. A camera phone is a cellular phone that
also has picture taking capabilities. Some camera phones
have the capability to send these photos to another cellular
phone or computer. Advances in digital technology and
microelectronics has led to the inclusion of unrelated
applications in cellular telephones, such as alarm clocks,
calculators, Internet browsers, and voice memos for
recording short verbal reminders, while at the same time
making such telephones vulnerable to certain software
viruses. In many countries with inadequate wire-based
telephone networks, cellular telephone systems have
provided a means of more quickly establishing a national
telecommunications network.
Close Reading
RESEARCH SKILLS
Research the life of
Martin Luther King
So how would you, a fully paid-up
member of the literacy club,
approach the task?
1. Teach reading – scanning,
skimming, analysis
2. Read aloud and display
3. Teach key vocabulary
4. Demystify spelling
5. Teach research, not FOFO
DEMYSTIFYING
SPELLING
3
Mr B’s New Year Spelling Frolics
-our words
-re endings
colour
humour
rumour
armour
flavour
centi metre
centre
theatre
humorous
-able / -ible
endings
Available
li keable
sociable
considerable
laughable
sensible
incredible
terrible
possible
responsible
-ous endi ngs
tremendous
enormous
poisonous
mysterious
continuous
precious
ferocious
delici ous
cautious
ambitious
1 - SOUNDS
Single/double
consonants
beginning
upsetting
forgotten
committee
permitted
occurred
visited
regretful
developing
Mr B’s New Year Spelling Frolics
-our words
-re endings
colour
humour
rumour
armour
flavour
centi metre
centre
theatre
humorous
-able / -ible
endings
Available
li keable
sociable
considerable
laughable
sensible
incredible
terrible
possible
responsible
-ous endi ngs
tremendous
enormous
poisonous
mysterious
continuous
precious
ferocious
delici ous
cautious
ambitious
Government
Single/double
consonants
beginning
upsetting
forgotten
committee
permitted
occurred
visited
regretful
developing
Mr B’s New Year Spelling Frolics
-our words
-re endings
colour
humour
rumour
armour
flavour
centi metre
centre
theatre
humorous
-able / -ible
endings
Available
li keable
sociable
considerable
laughable
sensible
incredible
terrible
possible
responsible
-ous endi ngs
tremendous
enormous
poisonous
mysterious
continuous
precious
ferocious
delici ous
cautious
ambitious
Happened
Single/double
consonants
beginning
upsetting
forgotten
committee
permitted
occurred
visited
regretful
developing
Mr B’s New Year Spelling Frolics
-our words
-re endings
colour
humour
rumour
armour
flavour
centi metre
centre
theatre
humorous
-able / -ible
endings
Available
li keable
sociable
considerable
laughable
sensible
incredible
terrible
possible
responsible
-ous endi ngs
tremendous
enormous
poisonous
mysterious
continuous
precious
ferocious
delici ous
cautious
ambitious
February
Single/double
consonants
beginning
upsetting
forgotten
committee
permitted
occurred
visited
regretful
developing
Mr B’s New Year Spelling Frolics
-our words
-re endings
colour
humour
rumour
armour
flavour
centi metre
centre
theatre
humorous
-able / -ible
endings
Available
li keable
sociable
considerable
laughable
sensible
incredible
terrible
possible
responsible
-ous endi ngs
tremendous
enormous
poisonous
mysterious
continuous
precious
ferocious
delici ous
cautious
ambitious
2 -VISUALS
Single/double
consonants
beginning
upsetting
forgotten
committee
permitted
occurred
visited
regretful
developing
Mr B’s New Year Spelling Frolics
-our words
-re endings
colour
humour
rumour
armour
flavour
centi metre
centre
theatre
humorous
-able / -ible
endings
Available
li keable
sociable
considerable
laughable
sensible
incredible
terrible
possible
responsible
-ous endi ngs
tremendous
enormous
poisonous
mysterious
continuous
precious
ferocious
delici ous
cautious
ambitious
Se-para-te
Be-lie-ve
Single/double
consonants
beginning
upsetting
forgotten
committee
permitted
occurred
visited
regretful
developing
Mr B’s New Year Spelling Frolics
-our words
-re endings
colour
humour
rumour
armour
flavour
centi metre
centre
theatre
humorous
-able / -ible
endings
Available
li keable
sociable
considerable
laughable
sensible
incredible
terrible
possible
responsible
-ous endi ngs
tremendous
enormous
poisonous
mysterious
continuous
precious
ferocious
delici ous
cautious
ambitious
Single/double
consonants
beginning
upsetting
forgotten
committee
permitted
occurred
visited
regretful
developing
3 - MNEMONICS
Mr B’s New Year Spelling Frolics
-our words
-re endings
colour
humour
rumour
armour
flavour
centi metre
centre
theatre
humorous
-able / -ible
endings
Available
li keable
sociable
considerable
laughable
sensible
incredible
terrible
possible
responsible
-ous endi ngs
tremendous
enormous
poisonous
mysterious
continuous
precious
ferocious
delici ous
cautious
ambitious
necessary
Single/double
consonants
beginning
upsetting
forgotten
committee
permitted
occurred
visited
regretful
developing
Mr B’s New Year Spelling Frolics
-our words
-re endings
colour
humour
rumour
armour
flavour
centi metre
centre
theatre
humorous
-able / -ible
endings
Available
li keable
sociable
considerable
laughable
sensible
incredible
terrible
possible
responsible
-ous endi ngs
tremendous
enormous
poisonous
mysterious
continuous
precious
ferocious
delici ous
cautious
ambitious
Single/double
consonants
beginning
upsetting
forgotten
committee
permitted
occurred
visited
regretful
developing
accommodation
1. Teach reading – scanning,
skimming, analysis
2. Read aloud and display
3. Teach key vocabulary
4. Demystify spelling
5. Teach research, not FOFO
1: What kinds of texts do
students in your subject need
to read? What are the
barriers to understanding?
How do you help them – eg
with vocabulary?
3: What’s your contribution
to reading for pleasure? Do
students see you reading and
hear you talk about reading?
Do you teach them research
skills?
2: What are the ‘power
words’ in your subject?
Where do students encounter
them? Which are the
troublesome spellings? How
do you demystify them?
Team Implications …
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Demonstrate writing
Teach composition & planning
Allow oral rehearsal
Short & long sentences
Connectives
Know your connectives
Adding: and, also, as well as, moreover, too
Cause & effect: because, so, therefore, thus, consequently
Sequencing: next, then, first, finally, meanwhile, before, after
Qualifying: however, although, unless, except, if, as long as, apart from, yet
Emphasising: above all, in particular, especially, significantly, indeed, notably
Illustrating: for example, such as, for instance, as revealed by, in the case of
Comparing: equally, in the same way, similarly, likewise, as with, like
Contrasting: whereas, instead of, alternatively, otherwise, unlike, on the
other hand
DEMO
Evaluate the product you
have made
1: What kinds of writing do students need
to do in your subject? Where do they see
the process as well as the product? When
do they see you writing and reflecting
aloud on your writing?
2: What are the 4 essential ingredients in
a text required in your subject:
a) personal/impersonal?
b) formal/informal?
c) layout features?
d) key vocabulary?
Team Implications …
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Demonstrate writing
Teach composition & planning
Allow oral rehearsal
Short & long sentences
Connectives
SUMMARY
1: It’s not literacy
2: It’s making the
implicit explicit – and
modelling it
3: Without us, the rich
will get richer & the
poor will get poorer
Impact in
iteracy:
(inc. meeting the demands of Ofsted)
Geoff Barton
Friday, November 06, 2015
Download this presentation at www.geoffbarton.co.uk
(Presentation number 97)
Literacy in Practice
Watch this Year 11 RE lesson:
•
•
•
Watch for student progress
Watch for what the teacher does to help them
read/write/speak better
Decide what feedback you would give
Discuss!
Review:
Session 1: The new Ofsted framework
and its implications
Session 2: What we know about
literacy impact: what works
& doesn’t
Session 3: From theory to practice
Key Messages:
1
The new Ofsted framework
changes everything – possibly for
the better
Key Messages:
2
‘Every teacher in English is a
teacher of English’ is now placed
centre-stage – with carrot and
stick to help make it happen
Key Messages:
3
Things need rethinking:
Performance management
Training
Use of TAs
Role of the Librarian
Key Messages:
4
Teachers need to see how good
and outstanding teachers make
implicit skills explicit … and then
practise … and then get feedback
Key Messages:
5
Every school needs an astringent
culture of evaluation that leads to
action
Key Messages:
6
Involve students more
TUTO R GRO UP:
Do all st udent s have
coats off?
Are st udent s wearing
proper school
sweat shirt /polo
shirt ?
Are all st udent s
wearing shoes (ie no
t rainers except wit h
doctors’ not es)?
Is jewellery
accept able (ie no
facial piercings, no
bracelet s, only t hin
met al necklaces)?
Is th e tu to
r…
T alking ot st udent s?
Signing planners?
T aking t heregist er?
Doing admin?
Ot her?
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
 Yes
 No
ame
Book sampling…
Year /
Set
Teacher
Cover
clean
YN
Hom ework
evident
YN
Hom ework
m arked
YN
Presentation
GFP
Types of writing
Elsom
TORY
9
WD
Y
Y
Y
G



Robotham
TORY
9
WD
Y
Y
Y
G



Thinking
Notes
Extended
9
YE
Y
Y
Y
G


Notes
Exercises



Notes
Exercises
Some extended
work
ey Ward?
GRAP HY
Simpson
GRAP HY
9
HS
Y
Y
Not
consistently
G
Thinking
Notes
Extended
General com m ents
Clearly sequenced,
challenging, high-level;
exemplary feedback Ğ
positive, precise, personal
V diffe rent ability of
student Ğbut same strong
expectations; tangible
progress instudentÕs
work; supportiv
e, positive
marking
Good positive feedback;
evidence of regular
marking; good range of
writing
Clear and well-used
overall; good to note some
extend worrk;marking
appears to end inlate Sept
1 What grade did you get in English?

English Literature?

2 Think of all the subjects you studied last year. Circle one of the numbers below to show
where you would place English in a rank order of the subjects you studied
1 (high) 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
9 10 (low)
3 Without naming teachers, please name ONE thing you liked most about English lessons
4 Without naming teachers, please name ONE thing you liked least about them
5 Looking back, how did you feel about your usual group for English for É
(a) getting on with other people?
(liked it a lot) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 (liked it a little)
(b) learning effectively?
(liked it a lot) 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
9 10 (liked it a little)
Of allthe ways the teacher gets you to learn about things which do you enjoy the most?







Activities Ğ not writing, nothing intimidating. More discussion, needs to be variety (maths now =
all from books)
Biology =copy from board Ğ donÕt eve
n read it
VAKi in French to analyse own learning
If teachers drone on = some of us donÕthave the attention span
Unfairness about time given to complete coursework ie some = meet deadlines. Others = 3 months
late so have extra 3 monthsto work on it
T oo many tests in short space of time
W ould help if different subject teachers could talk to each other so we do not get all coursework
assignments at thesame time.
Of allthe ways the teacher gets you to learn about things, which do you enjoy least?



Vague questions that you donÕtknow what it means
I think we should be setted for English because it could be more challenging too long on one piece
of work would be helpful , disruptive people were in difficult group
Humanities Ğ go round and round in circles because donÕthave specialist teachers. Spend time
trying to manage behaviour
S tu de nt perce pti on i n tervie ws
Ye ar 9
4 girls
4 boys
Sets: 1 4 2 3 1 3 2
Rank order: 8 7 3 3 9 3 10 3
W h at do you like abou t MFL le sson s?W h atacti vi ti e sdo you e n joy? W h y?
 Fun, like ICT interactive whiteboard, playing games, practical and group work
W h at





actiivti e sdo you not enjoy? W h y? W h at do you fi nd di ffi cult? W h at would h elp?
T ests Ğ some are useful and some are not
P ractical lessons are good
DonÕt like teachers constantly talking in French. I get behind and de-motivated
DonÕt like having to speak in front of the class Ğ feel under pressure and worried
P anic when asked t o speak and donÕt know how
How



do you le arn be st?W h at h elps you le arn in oth er le sson s?
Objectives are sometimes set Ğ but doesnÕt make any difference
I like t o have some group work and some formal writing
Reinforcing the talking with writing rather than just talking and then moving on and talking
some more
 Group work
 Games
 When behaviour is good. Behaviour is good in languages
How
-
do you fe el duri ng MFL le sson s?W h atmake s you fe el th i sway?
Bored Ğ 1 student
Interested Ğ 1 student
Enjoy Ğ 1 student
Tired Ğ 1 student
DonÕt know Ğ 4 students
Consensus from interviews - languages is ÒokÓ but not a subject which student s would wish t o
choose t o take further. Group consensus that about 30% of the lessons are enjoyable. Most students
preferred languages in the Middle School Ğ more practical, games, etc
Key Messages:
7
Turn fewer blind eyes
Key Messages:
8
Look at more books and planners
– at random
Key Messages:
9
It’s a job, not a club
Key Messages:
10
Remember the Matthew Effect:
The ‘word poor’ need us
Impact in
iteracy:
(inc. meeting the demands of Ofsted)
Geoff Barton
Friday, November 06, 2015
Download this presentation at www.geoffbarton.co.uk
(Presentation number 97)