1 / 20

Subject Leader Meeting 5 th April 2011 Joanna Conn County Science Adviser

Subject Leader Meeting 5 th April 2011 Joanna Conn County Science Adviser. Successful science teaching. Objectives To review the ‘Successful Science’ document and consider it’s implications To explore the criteria for ‘good’ science lessons

jacoba
Download Presentation

Subject Leader Meeting 5 th April 2011 Joanna Conn County Science Adviser

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Subject Leader Meeting5th April 2011Joanna ConnCounty Science Adviser

  2. Successful science teaching Objectives • To review the ‘Successful Science’ document and consider it’s implications • To explore the criteria for ‘good’ science lessons • To begin to plan for the implementation of the new GCSEs and identify the actions for the department

  3. Successful Science key messages: • Key factors in promoting students’ engagement, learning and progress were more practical lessons and the development of scientific enquiry skills • Progress of students in science was good or outstanding in two thirds of schools • Removing testing has encouraged engaging KS3 SOW • More higher-attaining students are studying separate sciences, increased recruitment to post-16 • Vocational courses had a positive impact on the motivation and achievement of students • More rigorous monitoring and tracking have improved planning

  4. Case studies • Examples of ‘good’ lessons • Examples of ‘satisfactory’ lessons If you observed the ‘satisfactory’ lesson in your department. What feedback would you give to develop the teacher?

  5. Feedback • Linking starter to rest of lesson • Development of literacy skills – reading for information • Development of key vocabulary • Clear roles during group work • More structure in group work • Assessing progress of students - plenary

  6. New GCSEs Things to note / think about: • Programme of Study stays the same • All exam boards have comprehensive documents outlining the change process to make it easy if you are staying with the same board. • How can we best prepare students for the new Controlled Assessments? • How can we best prepare students for new-style exams and the 6 mark open-ended questions? • Do you need new books/resources? • How do we ensure we are meeting all students needs?

  7. Teaching and learning in the new GCSEs Avoiding the pitfalls: • Subject content changes • Lack of practical work • Not addressing the skills • Death by worksheet • Lack of interim assessments

  8. Teaching and learning in the new GCSEs Outcomes of Triple science Network project pupil voice: • Hands on practical • Discussion in pairs • Discussion in groups • Teacher explanations • Slower pace

  9. Teaching and learning in the new GCSEs Implications of assessment changes: • Long answer questions (4-6 marks) • Controlled assessment: development of investigative skills

  10. Developing literacy in science • Word level – scientific terminology and definitions • Text level – reading, talking and writing • Command words – describe, explain, suggest

  11. 2010 GCSE Grade Criteria (Words) Grade F Pupils use limitedscientific and technical knowledge, terminologyand conventions Grade C Pupilsusescientific and technical knowledge and terminologyappropriately Grade A Pupils use scientific and technical knowledge, terminology and conventions appropriately and consistently

  12. 2010 GCSE Criteria (Writing) Grade F Pupils can explainstraightforward models of phenomena, events and processes Grade C Pupils use models to explain phenomena, events and processes. Pupils understand the limitations of evidence and develop arguments with supporting explanations Grade A Pupils make effective use of models to explainphenomena, events and processes. Pupils evaluate information systematically to develop arguments and explanationstaking account of the limitations of the available evidence.

  13. Specimen 2011 Exam Questions • Handout:- OCR Foundation Paper B1C1P1 • How would you go about answering these questions? What are the ‘steps to success’? • Choose one question and model the process

  14. Literacy activities • Card sort – to develop a sequence for long answers • Explanation grids - for definitions and modelling the construction of sentences • Different text types: explanation, comparative, argumentation

  15. Point Evidence Explanation e.g. • As can be seen in the graph… • This is because… e.g. • Climate change is affecting the ice at the poles • This has been shown by satellite images • This is evidence that the temperature of the water is increasing due to increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere

  16. Controlled Assessments Skills • Planning: devise methods, choice of equipment, accuracy of measurements, dealing with risks • Observation and processing data: collect data, calculate averages, correctly drawn graphs, range bars • Conclusion and evaluation: correlation between variables, evaluate methods and quality of data

  17. Missions! • Mission 1: Development of literacy skills through a topic in particular different types of writing (e.g. explanation and argument) • Mission 2: Development of investigative skills (e.g. what is the question? What are the variables?) • Mission 3: Curriculum pathways • Mission 4: Changes to resources

  18. Final mission! Leading transition What are the…. • Short term issues (Summer term) • Mid-term issues (Autumn term) • Longer term issues (2012-) for the department with regard to KS4 courses?

More Related