- Pupils should be encouraged to ask focused questions
- Planning and setting goals are imperative, pupils need to use their initiative to break larger tasks into sub-tasks
- Pupils need to select, classify, compare and evaluate information
- Rather than being told the exact steps to take in completing a task, pupils should be able to select the most appropriate method for a task and think it all through for themselves
- Pupils should be able to use appropriate information to commuincate with a sense of audience and purpose
Tuesday, 16 April 2013
Managing Information - Using Initiative
Monday, 8 April 2013
Take Time Out to Relax, Refuel, Renew, Reflect & Plan!
Hiya! It has been one extremely busy yet exciting term, hence my lack of blog posts - aiming to add a few more though this week!
So, I am currently sitting in Manchester Airport, waiting on a flight to Belfast after a wonderful week in Morocco - doing nothing. Absolutely zilch. It was...bliss. And just what I needed to recharge my batteries!
Even though I have another full week off, I am feeling revitalised and full of energy to plan, prepare and experiment setting up a new VLE for implementation with our Using ICT staff - feeling very excited about getting organised!
When reading an article about how to develop as a professional, Theresa Cooper makes valid points regarding the need to Relax, Refuel, Renew, Reflect and Plan. She comments:
“You are in a profession that recognizes more than most the need for “time out.” Yet many teachers don’t take advantage of the breaks to them. As a result, they lose their enthusiasm and energy for what they are doing. When opportunities arise, make a point of using them. Take time to plan ahead, and revitalize your teaching and your life. “
http://teachersnetwork.org/ntny/nychelp/Professional_Development/relax.htm
That's what I have been doing for the past week and I feel very ready to be creative, innovative, inspiring to my pupils and highly organised - beginning right now as I await my flight :)
Remember, to develop as a professional and be the best you can be, dont run the risk of burning out, instead take time out to Relax, Refuel, Renew, Reflect and Plan!
A :) x
Saturday, 16 February 2013
Encouraging Effective Group Work
- use and manipulate knowledge in practical situations;
- develop language and social skills needed for cooperation;
- use exploratory language to try out ideas;
- stretch their language as they talk critically and constructively;
- support and build on each other’s contributions;
- take turns in discussion;
- develop other important life skills including:
- organisation;
- negotiation;
- delegation;
- team work;
- co-operation;
- leadership
- Develop and increase their thinking skills by explaining and negotiating their contributions to a group. In other words, they are able to use this "low risk" situation to begin to establish what they know and to find out what they have yet to learn;
- Acknowledge and utilise the strengths and talents of individual pupils;
- Explore a topic in a limited time frame;
- Develop a sense of responsibility through group accountability and assessment
Sunday, 10 February 2013
Essential Teaching Skills: Being an Effective Teacher
Action, comprising the overt behaviour by teachers undertaken to foster pupil learning.
- High expectations
- Planning
- Methods and strategies
- Pupil management/discipline
- Time and resource management
- Assessment
- Homework (p5)
- Establishing an orderly and attractive learning environment
- Concentrating on teaching and learning by maximising learning time and maintaining an academic emphasis
- Purposeful teaching through the use of well-organised and well-structured lessons coupled with clarity of purpose
- Conveying high expectations and providing intellectual challenge
- Monitoring progress and providing quick corrective feedback
- Establishing clear and fair discipline.' (p6)
- The lesson plan has clear and suitable aims and objectives.
- The content, methods and structure of the lesson selected are appropriate for the pupil learning intended.
- The lesson is planned to link up appropriately with past and future lessons.
- Materials, resources and aids are well prepared and checked in good time.
- All planning decisions take account of the pupils and the context.
- The lesson is designed to elicit and sustain pupils’ attention, interest and involvement.
- The teacher’s manner is confident, relaxed, self-assured and purposeful, and generates interest in the lesson.
- The teacher’s instructions and explanations are clear and matched to pupils’ needs.
- The teacher’s questions include a variety of types and range and are distributed widely.
- A variety of appropriate learning activities are used to foster pupil learning.
- Pupils are actively involved in the lesson and are given opportunities to organise their own work.
- The teacher shows respect and encouragement for pupils’ ideas and contributions, and fosters their development.
- The work undertaken by pupils is well matched to their needs.
- Materials, resources and aids are used to good effect.
- The beginning of the lesson is smooth and prompt, and sets up a positive mental set for what is to follow.
- Pupils’ attention, interest and involvement in the lesson are maintained.
- Pupils’ progress during the lesson is carefully monitored.
- Constructive and helpful feedback is given to pupils to encourage further progress.
- Transitions between activities are smooth.
- The time spent on different activities is well managed.
- The pace and flow of the lesson is adjusted and maintained at an appropriate level throughout the lesson.
- Adjustments to the lesson plan are made whenever appropriate.
- The ending of the lesson is used to good effect.
- The climate is purposeful, task-oriented, relaxed, and with an established sense of order.
- Pupils are supported and encouraged to learn, with high expectations conveyed by the teacher.
- Teacher–pupil relationships are largely based on mutual respect and rapport.
- Feedback from the teacher contributes to fostering pupil self-confidence and self-esteem.
- The appearance and layout of the class are conducive to positive pupil attitudes towards the lesson and facilitate the activities taking place.
- Good order is largely based on the positive classroom climate established and on good lesson presentation and management.
- The teacher’s authority is established and accepted by pupils.
- Clear rules and expectations regarding pupil behaviour are conveyed by the teacher at appropriate times.
- Pupil behaviour is carefully monitored and appropriate actions by the teacher are taken to pre-empt misbehaviour.
- Pupil misbehaviour is dealt with by an appropriate use of investigation, counselling, academic help, reprimands and punishments.
- Confrontations are avoided, and skilfully defused.
- The marking of pupils’ work during and after lessons is thorough and constructive, and work is returned in good time.
- Feedback on assessments aims not only to be diagnostic and corrective, but also to encourage further effort and maintain self-confidence, which involves follow-up comments, help or work with particular pupils as appropriate.
- A variety of assessment tasks are used, covering both formative and summative purposes.
- A variety of records of progress are kept.
- Some opportunities are given to foster pupils’ own assessments of their work and progress.
- Assessment of pupils’ work is used to identify areas of common difficulties, the effectiveness of the teaching, and whether a firm basis for further progress has been established.
- Assessment is made of the study skills and learning strategies employed by pupils in order to foster their further development.
- Lessons are evaluated to inform future planning and practice.
- Current practice is regularly considered with a view to identifying aspects for useful development.
- Use is made of a variety of ways to reflect upon and evaluate current practice.
- The teacher regularly reviews whether his or her time and effort can be organised to better effect.
- The teacher regularly reviews the strategies and techniques he or she uses to deal with sources of stress. (pp12-13)
Saturday, 2 February 2013
Bridging the Gap: Transition from KS2-KS3
- schools having a named person, or a small team, to take responsibility and a strategic overview of the process;
- schools providing pre-entry visits for children and their parents that involve parents and children learning about learning at school as well as familiarisation with the environment and people;
- schools having systems that allow for high quality communication and close interaction between family, pre-transfer settings and school, where information is both given and received about children’s experiences;
- schools being sensitive to the needs of individuals and particular groups and having strategies in place to support them;
- flexible admission procedures that give children and their parents the opportunity to have a positive start to their first day;
- children starting school with a friend and schools having systems in place to help children make friends; (repeating a year can cause friendship problems at the next transition);
- schools having strategies to help children develop resilience to cope with change and to be active in making the transition work for them;
- curriculum continuity across phases of education, that comes about from establishing the prior learning that has taken place and where children are helped to learn with and from each other; ‘looping’ where pre-school and school staff plan together and work alternate years in each phase;
- schools evaluating induction and the management of transitions and transfers from the perspective of all participants, and that help to question the assumptions of the setting and see life from the child’s perspective; and
- special training for staff working with those children who are starting school.
Tuesday, 29 January 2013
Creativity in the Classroom!
- A belief that creative potential is inside everyone and can be found everywhere
- A belief that creativity can change things and improve things
- A belief that mistakes are to be celebrated, learned from and used
- A belief that creativity can be a natural response to pain, suffering and boredom
- An attitude of positivity towards surprising and unexpected events
- An attitude of openness to new ideas and experiences when they appear
- An attitude of ‘smart risk-taking’
- An attitude of non-judgement
- An ability to actively seek out new ideas and experiences
- An ability to see familiar things in new and different ways
- An ability to use both analytic and holistic thinking
- An ability to make, think or do things that haven’t been made, thought or done be
Monday, 28 January 2013
Sometimes it's the small things that matter!
Sunday, 27 January 2013
Music and Me!
My two favourites |