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Quality Teaching – The Need for a Common Framework. Prof. John Stannard CBE FRSA Principal Consultant CfBT Education Trust. National Strategic Plan. Ministry of Education committed to providing:
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Quality Teaching – The Need for a Common Framework Prof. John Stannard CBE FRSA Principal Consultant CfBT Education Trust
National Strategic Plan Ministry of Education committed to providing: ‘Quality education... of international standard, which fosters valuable and marketable skills and encourages a life-long learning orientation that will contribute to a harmonious and politically stable society...in which our students’ learning attainments are comparable with international standards.’ Strategic Plan 2007-11 (p5)
Factors affecting standards Non-school factors • parents • opportunity, experience, attitudes • peer group • belonging, conforming, roles and relationships • system factors: • national curricula • testing and assessment policies • too much pressure with too little support • professional culture resistant to change
Factors affecting standards School Factors: • Some schools have major impact despite socio-economic factors • Individual school performance can vary widely • Weaker schools can improve rapidly and significantly • Challenge of moving up from adequate to good • Homogeneous school performance is more often a sign of system-wide weakness than strength
Sustained school improvement mainly due to: • School culture and climate – behaviour, expectations, relationships, ground rules • Quality of leadership: • promoting the vision for staff, pupils and parents • monitoring and tracking at every level to identify and respond to weaknesses • clear and supportive performance management to assure quality • Persistent focus on improving teaching quality with common policy for all.
Sustaining improvement • Last year’s improvement mainly due to: • effects of sharper focus • external support for students. • May be a further year’s improvement from these effects • Improvements in teaching quality are the key • Some system improvements may also be needed • Value of agreed principles and practices – a Common Framework for teaching and learning
A Common Framework for learning and teaching • A practical policy with clear, observable criteria to underpin quality and improvement • Can be applied to all subjects, not just English • Commitment from teaching community e.g. at national. subject, school, department levels • Foundation for professional development • Criteria for assessing quality of learning and teaching • Aligned with aims and principles in MoE Strategic Plan.
SUCCESSFUL LEARNING?? successful teaching grounded in successful learning SUCCESSFUL TEACHING??
What successful learners do They: • achieve • learn actively • progress towards increasing independence • work collaboratively • have positive learning attitudes.
SUCCESSFUL LEARNING ACTIVE STRATEGIC REFLECTIVE COLLABORATIVE LEARNING INCREASING AUTONOMY POSITIVE ATTITUDES A COMMON FRAMEWORK SUCCESS AND ACHIEVEMENT SUCCESSFUL TEACHING??
IMPLICATIONS FOR TEACHING Two prerequisites: • Expert subject and curricular knowledge • Detailed knowledge of individual students – achievement, progress and learning needs
Five characteristics of effective teaching • Assessment for learning • Interactive teaching strategies • Teaching active learning strategies • Class management: practical ground rules for behaviour and learning • Effective planning and lesson structure.
1. Assessment for learning • objectives/targets for every student • diagnostic teaching - assessment integrated in the teaching process • systematic and frequent individual pupil tracking • rapid response to needs and problems, at the point of learning • involving students in assessment of their own progress • promoting confidence and success for every pupil.
2. Interactive teaching • differentiation to include all students • building on students’ contributions • promoting language production – speaking and writing: • moving students from informal (context-bound) to more formal (context-free) uses of language • ‘scaffolding’ new learning • responding constructively to misconceptions • making time to think and to work in depth.
3. Teaching active learning strategies: • planning, monitoring, checking and self correcting • information retrieval, • investigation and problem-solving, • uses of imagination, play and exploration • hypothesising and testing • inference
4. Classroom management Common ground rules and established routines for: • behaviour • class and group discussion • what to do if stuck or when finished • routines – getting attention, noise levels, transitions • resources – organisation and access • management of time in lessons.
5. Planning and lesson structure Lessons with: • realistic, observable learning objectives • managed progression from directed to independent work • focussed group work for collaboration and teaching • plenaries for reflection and self-evaluation • well planned organisation and resources.
SUCCESSFUL LEARNING ACTIVE LEARNING COLLABORATIVE LEARNING INCREASING AUTONOMY POSITIVE ATTITUDES A COMMON FRAMEWORK SUCCESS AND ACHIEVEMENT ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING PLANNING & LESSON STRUCTURE INTERACTIVE TEACHING CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT TEACHING ACTIVE LEARNING STRATEGIES SUCCESSFUL TEACHING
Evidence from teacher observation main strengths to build on: • lesson planning • classroom management • use of resources • subject knowledge • teachers’ general rapport with class.
Evidence from teacher observation areas for improvement • differentiation and inclusion • student involvement • students’ progress in lessons • promoting students’ use of English • fostering independence.
CfBT Commitments • Work with teachers to develop a common framework for learning and teaching • Focus on effectiveness i.e. quality of learning • Increase emphasis on school-based, on-the-job, support: • sharing and demonstration • mentoring • problem-solving • resource development • action research in the classroom • Strengthen partnership with local teachers to sustain improvement.