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Workshop Content. What is the place of P4C in the new curriculum?What are the problems of introducing P4C into Secondary Schools?How can these problems be overcome?. Oldham secondary pupils involved in an enquiry - DVD. What is the place of P4C in the new curriculum?. . . . . . . Personal, learning and thinking skills (PLTS).
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1. Developing P4C in Oldham Secondary Schools Kenny Beer – Kaskenmoor School
Kay Freeman – Hathershaw School
2. Workshop Content What is the place of P4C in the new curriculum?
What are the problems of introducing P4C into Secondary Schools?
How can these problems be overcome?
3. Oldham secondary pupils involved in an enquiry - DVD
4. What is the place of P4C in the new curriculum?
8. Personal, learning and thinking skills (PLTS)
9. Benefits of P4C Gains in cognitive ability scores
Develops listening and speaking skills across the curriculum
Develops the skills of thinking, reasoning and enquiring
Raises achievement particularly in English and Maths
Develops generic personal learning and thinking skills (PELTS)
Relates directly to the Every Child Matters Outcomes, in particular:
Enjoying and achieving
Making a positive contribution
Provides for focused reflection on learning and the development of effective learners (“learning to learn”)
Develops self esteem and positive regard for difference
Provides for improvements in pupil behaviour and motivation
Provides for improvements in pupils’ social and emotional well being
It is an approach that can be applied and has benefits across the curriculum
It provides for active participation in learning
It provides for the “pupil voice” and enables pupils to “make a positive contribution”
It “does democracy” rather than teaching about democracy: active citizenship
It is holistic in approach in that it relates to the spiritual, moral, social and cultural dimensions as well as the intellectual and aesthetic.
It promotes individual thinking and a collaborative approach to learning
10. Benefits of P4C Gains in cognitive ability scores
Develops listening and speaking skills across the curriculum
Develops the skills of thinking, reasoning and enquiring
Raises achievement particularly in English and Maths
Develops generic personal learning and thinking skills (PELTS)
Relates directly to the Every Child Matters Outcomes, in particular:
Enjoying and achieving
Making a positive contribution
Provides for focused reflection on learning and the development of effective learners (“learning to learn”)
Develops self esteem and positive regard for difference
Provides for improvements in pupil behaviour and motivation
Provides for improvements in pupils’ social and emotional well being
It is an approach that can be applied and has benefits across the curriculum
It provides for active participation in learning
It provides for the “pupil voice” and enables pupils to “make a positive contribution”
It “does democracy” rather than teaching about democracy: active citizenship
It is holistic in approach in that it relates to the spiritual, moral, social and cultural dimensions as well as the intellectual and aesthetic.
It promotes individual thinking and a collaborative approach to learning
11. So what's the problem?
12. The Secondary Curriculum is crammed!
13. The Secondary Curriculum is crammed!
15. How can we integrate P4C into Secondary Schools in a way that will:1) Provide pupils with regular enquiry opportunities?2) Be ‘doable’ with the realities of timetabling and staff hours? The challenge . . .
16. Task feedback
17. What did we do?
18. What did we do? PSHE? Form time?
19. Two opportunities were identified
20. Two opportunities were identified
21. Two opportunities were identified
22. Two opportunities were identified
23. P4C out of mainstream cohort Small groups, such as anger management and social skills
Can be lead by HLTAs
Benefits of P4C invaluable to these groups of pupils
Confidence
Speaking and listening
Motivation to improve behaviour
24. P4C integrated into the new KS3 New KS3 curriculum
Less focus on ‘knowledge’
More focus on ‘skills’
25. Personal, learning and thinking skills (PLTS)
28. Examining the ethical and moral implications of using science.
Sharing common understanding across disciplines and boundaries.
Discussing and developing arguments
Consider how knowledge and understanding affects personal decisions
Make links between science and other areas
30. Planning for P4C Pupils decide the questions
Learning objectives are not knowledge based, but skills based. (4C’s)
Dialogic scaffolds can focus pupils
Eg Objective to develop creative thinking
I’d like to put forward a new idea because . . .
I’d like to lead the discussion in a different direction because . . .
31. Stimulus Stimuli linked to topics
Picture
Story
News article
Music
Video
34. Evolution / Genetics / Cloning
35. Metals
36. Radiation
37. Reproduction
38. Science Department P4C Schedule All year 7 classes
Once per topic
Once per half term (6 weeks)
PELTS ?
Curriculum Opportunities ?
39. The future?
40. The future . . . Train more staff – HLTA/Subject staff
Consult with departments
Integrate into non-mainstream cohort provision
Links with SEAL
41. The future . . . Year 7 tutors
P4C and parents
P4C and the community
P4C collaborative enquiries
42. Questions This PowerPoint will be available to download from the Oldham P4C Website
www.P4C.org.uk