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Learn how to create classroom impact through whole-school literacy, school improvement planning, behavior management, and assessment for learning. Discover strategies to reinforce the basics, enrich the learning experience, and make education inclusive and enjoyable for every child.
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KS3 IMPACT! GEOFF BARTON: CREATING CLASSROOM IMPACT Thursday, December 19, 2019
KS3 IMPACT! Making an impact through: Whole-school literacy School improvement planning Behaviour strand Workforce reform Assessment for Learning
KS3 IMPACT! An inclusive education system within a culture of high expectations The centrality of literacy and numeracy across the curriculum The infusion of learning skills across the curriculum The promotion of assessment for learning Expanding the teacher’s range of teaching strategies and techniques no child left behind reinforcing the basics enriching the learning experience making every child special making learning an enjoyable experience
Why do we need it? KS3 IMPACT! • Nearly 40% of pupils make a loss and no progress in the year following transfer, related to a decline in motivation • Pupils characterise work in Years 7 and 8 as ‘repetitive, unchallenging and lacking in purpose’ • “Year 7 adds so little value that actually missing the year would not disadvantage some children” (Prof John West-Burnham)
KS3 IMPACT! KS3 IMPACT! It’s an L&T thing ‘Standards are raised ONLY by changes which are put into direct effect by teachers and pupils in classrooms’ Black and Wiliam, ‘Inside the Black Box’ “Schools are places where the pupils go to watch the teachers working” (John West-Burnham) “For many years, attendance at school has been required (for children and for teachers) while learning at school has been optional.” (Stoll, Fink & East)
1 KS3 IMPACT! Making an impact through Whole-school literacy
LITERACY FOR LEARNING Language oddities
LITERACY FOR LEARNING DOGS MUST BE CARRIED ON THE ESCALATOR
LITERACY FOR LEARNING Please don't smoke and live a more healthy life PSE Poster
LITERACY FOR LEARNING Sign at Suffolk hospital: Criminals operate in this area
LITERACY FOR LEARNING ICI FIBRES
LITERACY FOR LEARNING • Churchdown parish magazine: • ‘would the congregation please note that the bowl at the back of the church labelled ‘for the sick” is for monetary donations only’
LITERACY FOR LEARNING Why cross-curricular literacy?
LITERACY FOR LEARNING The literacy context ... • A 1997 survey showed that of 12 European countries, only Poland and Ireland had lower levels of adult literacy • 1-in-16 adults cannot identify a concert venue on a poster that contains name of band, price, date, time and venue • 7 million UK adults cannot locate the page reference for plumbers in the Yellow Pages
BBC NEWS ONLINE: More than half of British motorists cannot interpret road signs properly, according to a survey by the Royal Automobile Club. The survey of 500 motorists - conducted to mark the 70th anniversary of the publication of the Highway Code - highlighted just how many people are still grappling with it.
According to the survey, three in five motorists thought a "be aware of cattle" warning sign indicated … an area infected with foot-and-mouth disease.
Common mistakes • No motor vehicles - Beware of fast motorbikes • Wild fowl - Puddles in the road • Riding school close by - "Marlborough country" advert
LITERACY FOR LEARNING 5 quick ways to maintain the momentum at your school …
5: Think big; start small LITERACY FOR LEARNING 1: Get literacy appearing everywhere 4: Get it in the school improvement plan 3: Build in evaluation 2: Call it learning, rather than literacy
2 KS3 IMPACT! Making an impact through school improvement planning
SIP KS3 IMPACT! 1: Central, working document 2: Attach who, when, costs, success criteria, and make them smart 3: Less is more - eg focus on 3 key areas for classroom impact (questions, explanation, starters) 4: Keep it in the public domain; part of PM; website 5: Have Dept-by-Dept targets 6: Evaluate progress publicly each half-term
Using feedback and questionnaires to drive school improvement “We should measure what we value, not value what we measure” John MacBeath
3 KS3 IMPACT! Making an impact through Behaviour & Attendance Strand
KS3 IMPACT! Why? Evidence suggests that where schools have successfully addressed issues of ethos and organisation, as well as strengths and weaknesses in teaching and learning, improved standards of behaviour and attendance are the inevitable consequence.
What we know from research into behaviour management … King Edward VI School Bury St Edmunds The action teachers take in response to a ‘discipline problem’ has no consistent relationship with their managerial success in the classroom. However, what teachers do before misbehaviour occurs is shown to be crucial. There are higher rates of difficulty and exclusion in schools with lower confidence in their ability to handle the problem. One of the most worrying assumptions is that if mild punishment does not prove effective, then we should try more severe punishment. In other words, one is led into a false escalation, rather like the postcard notice: “The beatings will continue until morale improves”. In well-disciplined schools, teachers handle all or most of the routine discipline problems themselves. Indeed, the over-use of hierarchical referrals is a characteristic of high excluding schools. Proactive schools have better behaviour – early intervention and preventative measures. Chris Watkins, Institute of Education
Towards a House Style … KS3 IMPACT! • In general we aim to: • 1. Set out our expectations clearly • 2. Model the behaviour and language we expect from students • In responding to challenging behaviour, we • 3. Give students choices, rather than box them into a corner • 4. Avoid public confrontation where necessary by being prepared to defer issues to the end of a lesson
4 KS3 IMPACT!
5 KS3 IMPACT! Assessment for Learning
FORMATIVE V SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT
The limitation of questions • Dylan Wiliam (King’s College): • UK versus Japanese teachers • Marks can have a negative impact • Demotivation of UK students
Research from Israel: • 33% of students given marks only – made no progress • 33% given mark and comment – no progress • 33% given comment only … • … increased their performance by 30%
Summative assessment: How have I done? Formative assessment: “How am I doing?” Learning teacher - peer - parent - buddy - mentor verbal - tick-list - general comment - written feedback
Creating whole-school impact: KS3 IMPACT! See it as driving whole-school improvement, not just KS3 Plan, implement, evaluate … always focusing on IMPACT You’re in control Go for small-scale gains: “Less is more” Customise the strategy to your own school’s context
KS3 IMPACT! GEOFF BARTON: CREATING CLASSROOM IMPACT