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Ethos, discipline and all that - what the research says. Pamela Munn The University of Edinburgh. What does the research say?. Schools make a difference. Describes practices which make a difference - classroom - school - local authority.
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Ethos, discipline and all that- what the research says. Pamela Munn The University of Edinburgh
What does the research say? • Schools make a difference. • Describes practices which make a difference - classroom - school - local authority. • Provides a perspective on national policy. • Helps clarify concepts. ____________________________________ Professor Pamela Munn, University of Edinburgh
Causes of Indiscipline • Medical • Psychological • Schools Professor Pamela Munn, University of Edinburgh
Encouraged Exclusion Discouraged Exclusion Beliefs about school, teaching and pupils ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ narrow definition of teacher’s job, focused wide remit, including personal and social on subject knowledge, exam results development of pupils, as well as exam results academic goals prominent social and academic goals acceptable pupils were those who arrived acceptance of a wide range of pupils, willing to learn, and came from supportive including those with learning and other homes difficulties Encouraged Exclusion Discouraged Exclusion The Curriculum ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ academic curriculum, pressure on pupils, curriculum flexible and differentiated lack of differentiation personal and social development personal and social development curriculum lacks status curriculum highly valued potential of informal curriculum for informal curriculum, lively and covering motivating less academic pupils not a wide range of activities, such as sport, realized drama, art, working in the local community Professor Pamela Munn, University of Edinburgh
Relations with the outside world ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ parents expected unquestioningly to time and effort spent involving parents support the school in decision-making about their children educational psychologists and others seen educational psychologists and others as there to cure problems seen as partners in working out solutions to problems Decision-making about exclusion ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Hierarchical decision-making separating Decisions informed by a network of pastoral support staff from those with staff with a range of perspectives on responsibility for maintaining discipline the pupil Tariff systems leading to automatic Flexible system, behaviour evaluated exclusion in context Pastoral support staff expected to meet Pastoral support staff – an information needs of all pupils source on decisions Learning/behaviour support expected to Learning/behaviour support a source of remove troublesome pupils and solve support and ideas for mainstream staff problems Fig.2: School ethos and exclusion ____________________________________ Professor Pamela Munn, University of Edinburgh
WHAT IS ETHOS? ‘THE GUIDING BELIEFS, STANDARDS OR IDEALS THAT CHARACTERISE OR NOT OF PERVADE A GROUP, A COMMUNITY, A PEOPLE … THE SPIRIT THAT MOTIVATES THE IDEAS, CUSTOMS OR PRACTICES OF A PEOPLE’ (Websters 1986) 3 KEY IDEAS • PERVASIVENESS touches on all aspects of a school’s life can be hard to pin down • PRACTICE ethos underpins what we do and how we do it – not an abstract idea helps explain differences among schools • COLLECTIVE UNDERSTANDING the taken for granted about how we operate ____________________________________ Professor Pamela Munn, University of Edinburgh
No technical training in educational methods can ever be (sufficient), however unexceptionable the methods may be in themselves. Education is not and cannot ever be a technical activity. The attempt to turn would be teachers into technicians by teaching them classroom tricks is as stupid as it is ineffective . . . Here, I believe, is the greatest threat to education in our own society. We are becoming more and more technically minded: gradually we are falling victim to the illusion that all problems can be solved by proper organisation: that when we fail it is because we are doing the job in the wrong way, and that all that is needed is the ‘know-how’. To think thus in education is to pervert education. It is not an engineering job. It is personal and human. (Macmurray, 1958) ____________________________________ Professor Pamela Munn, University of Edinburgh