Monday, 14 January 2019

Every Day Challenge

Everyday challenge



A great blog peace from Class Teaching on every day challenge. Do read the full piece if you can on the link above, but the key strategies it goes on to discuss are:

1. Prioritise learning over performance
The reason plenaries at the end of lessons to prove to an observer that the students in the class have made progress was always a flawed measure, is that all they prove is surface learning, or performance, rather than deep learning.  Learning is mysterious, liminal and invisible. An individual lesson is the wrong unit of time over which to judge learning.  Therefore a challenging curriculum is key to challenging lessons.  It has to be Curriculum first.
2. Space it out and keep coming back
This principle also fits with one of the strategies for learning to come from cognitive science with the strongest research-evidence behind it, distributed or spaced practice.  This is the idea that if you space out your study of a principle over time you will learn it more effectively than if you learn it intensively in a short space of time.
3. Set single challenging objectives
If we are to exemplify high expectations, any objective we share with our students should set the expectation for all.  We certainly shouldn’t limit some in our class to only being about able to cope with certain aspects of the subject matter. 
4. Get them thinking hard
As Professor Coe’s first question suggests, we should plan to challenge our students as much through thought as through action.  We should plan for what we expect students to be thinking about throughout the lesson as much as what we want them to do.  As Daniel Willingham put it in his book Why Don’t Students Like School? memory is the residue of thought, therefore we need to get them thinking about the topic we are trying to communicate.  
5. Know thy subject
If we are to truly challenge our students then we need to have absolute confidence in our own base of knowledge.  Research demonstrates that a deficit in teacher subject knowledge can be a barrier to students achievement
6. Challenging vocabulary
A central tenet of teaching should be that we use the rich language of the subjects we teach.  We should avoid at all costs the temptation to dumb down our language for fear that using the proper terms will terrify our students.  However, if we are to successfully create a classroom rich in historical language, we need to explicitly teach this words.  
7. Set the benchmark early
Use those first few lessons with a class to set the bar of expectation high and handsome.  Show them what you believe students in your class are capable of and get them to produce something similar.  This is useful in a number of ways.  It is something you can return to throughout the year (perhaps the dark days of early January) to demonstrate what they can do when they really put their minds to it.  It also establishes where the bar is in your classroom nice and early.  We know students tend to meet the expectations we have of them so start as you mean to go on.   
8. Share excellence
Once excellence has been achieved and created, make sure it kept and shared.  It is important students understand the level you expect and that the level is achievable within the context of your classroom or department.  The aim should be to immerse them in this excellence through displays and teaching strategies. 
Reflective Questions 
  • Do you plan for students to regularly get stuck and struggle in your classroom? 
  • Do you have high expectations of all the students you teach?
  • Is your subject knowledge strong enough to stretch your students with confidence?
  • How do you ensure students retain what you teach in their long-term memories and retrieve this regularly?
Posted by Chris Runeckles
Extra reading
John Sweller, Cognitive load theory, learning difficulty, and instructional design, Learning and Instruction Volume 4, Issue 4, 1994
Soderstrom and Bjork, Learning Versus Performance, An Integrative Review, Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2015, Vol 10, P176-199
John Dunlosky, Strengthening the Student Toolbox: Study Strategies to Boost Learning, American Educator 2013
Willingham, Why Don’t Students Like School
Coe et al., What Makes Great Teaching?
Bringing Words to Life, Beck, McKeown and Kucan
Chip Heath and Dan Heath, Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Take Hold and Others Come Unstuck

Wednesday, 5 December 2018

Mini TeachMeet 13

1. a. Key word chop (VT)

  • To help pupils learn keywords and spelling
  • 10-15 keywords broken down into 2 or 3 pieces and you then have to piece them together
  • Opportunity to then discuss definitions etc




b. Confidence-based marking

  • Pupils answer a multiple choice quiz but also give their confidence in the particular answers on a scale 1-3. If they are right then they get that many marks but they lose this many if they get it wrong
  • Helps students to stop guessing during multiple choice and really think about all the answers
  • Promotes competition


2. One Pen, one Dice (MHP)


  • MHP shared this game where pupils take turns to work on an activity/worksheet
  • One pupil uses the pen to complete the activity while the other rolls the die until they get a 6, at which point they swap
  • Again this promotes competition and means there is much more effort going into the completion of an activity then if the pupils had just been asked to work through it on their own.

Wednesday, 24 October 2018

Mini TeachMeet 12


1. Critical thinking (VW)


  • VW talked through the material that is being covered on the Y7 critical thinking days
  • All departments should have an overview of what is happening so they know what they can expect of the pupils and be able to draw on the experiences learned
  • Topics include
    • Memory recall
    • Time management
    • Revision techniques


2. The Teenage Brain (JLi)


  • JLi provided useful resources and links regarding the teenage brain. 
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1myoHOwju2g6n6njp8GvH4kqb1xR7OuDMgV6F2YVoXqc/edit
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1AgH65UGLa2F0KNijInVpH5_deBFOcHv8d7nLZaJDZOY/edit

Wednesday, 5 September 2018

Memory Clock and Revision

A simple way of structuring revision that is appropriate to years 10-13. It involves how pupils structure their time in revision lessons and study periods. The session will include evidence on spacing revision sessions and retrieval practice (exercises that can be built into lessons to aid memory).

Find the presentations from the session here:
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1p-exTfLewe1yPc8gNGpZJrHnUX74Sm4v1ExaCs2Iu9I/edit#slide=id.g13cfef6f2f_0_5
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1sQgaqMyuhpC_z_xJCxiG6SVAI0HbodsRjCHu7-qb1wc/edit?usp=sharing

Tuesday, 1 May 2018

Mini TeachMeet 11

1. Synopticity (JE)

  • JE explained how synopticity is a key part of the geography curriculum. This is the quality of connecting apparently separate threads of the subject and showing an awareness of how they relate, link and connect with each other to give a comprehensive understanding of the whole.
  • JE detailed how students can find this difficult and how he tries to make this more natural by using resources and artefacts in his teaching from his own hobbies and interests to model how these relate to geographical ideas/themes.
  • JE shared poems, videos, images, music videos which showed how this can be achieved in lessons.


2. Memory Clock (DNL)


  • DNL explained the Memory Clock for the benefit of those who had not been able to attend his session on the April training day. A 1 hour revision session should be broken down into 15 mins ‘Review’, 30 mins ‘Practice’ and 15 mins ‘Check’. 
  • This is to be rolled out to all staff in September and so a discussion was held as to the best way to go about this. The consensus was for an introduction by DNL and DO followed by time around department grouped tables discussing and planning subject specific examples.

Tuesday, 17 April 2018

April 2018 INSET - Mark. Plan. Teach.

In this session, DO attempted to summarise some of the strategies described in Ross Morrison McGill’s book. There are three things that every teacher must do: mark work, plan lessons and teach students well. This book is packed with practical ideas that will help teachers refine these key elements of their profession.

Access the resources from this session here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1U01ryPZL1qsi60Cjs1NZ9E5ViFJeLvm4

April 2018 INSET - Cognitive Load Theory




We’ve all been there. Carefully thought through a brilliant activity designed to push pupils, only to observe the resulting car crash in despair. Either pupils lack the resilience to engage with independent thought without constant teacher intervention or what little they actually end up learning requires you to spend the next lesson (time you don’t have!) re-teaching the material. In this session I’ll run through some of the most widely accepted theories of “cognitive overload” and how, if certain practices are incorporated into your teaching repertoire and SOWs at KS3 a really challenging curriculum can help pupils learn, increase pupil motivation, and also be a real joy to teach. There will also be some time to discuss ideas with colleagues and think through what it might all mean in your own subject.

Access the session resources here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=11AmimsedSvuVnqXOZt-W-qYCE267-8Cj