Archive for the ‘General Teaching’ Category

Good Teaching and Learning in Geography

Saturday, April 6th, 2013

The public face of Ofsted, Sir. Micheal Wilshaw; has been widely quoted in the press, and not always speaking positively about the teaching profession. For example BBC Article and another BBC Article. The workshop led by a HMI was totally different.

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This workshop was led by Leszek Iwaskow, the HMI National Advisor for Geography. Leszek gave high quality and realistic advice about what Ofsted are looking for. The comments he made were sensible and extremely realistic. A real breathe of fresh air. These are my notes from the session.

He began by pointing out the advice that is available on the Ofsted website:

An Example from English

Leszek began by giving an example of an English lesson. This initially appeared as a bizarre example but was actually really useful and applies to Geography.

This was taken from the 2012 English Subject report, Moving English Forward. http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/moving-english-forward .

We were asked to evaluate the following lesson:

The lesson involved a Year 9 class working on techniques of persuasive writing. The lesson was planned in detail. The first phase involved an explanation of the learning objectives and a starter activity where students worked in groups to complete a card-sort activity. In the next phase of the lesson, students used a grid to identify persuasive devices on mini whiteboards. The teacher then took them quickly through the criteria for assessment at Levels 5–7 and gave students examples of extracts from two essays on capital punishment. Students were asked to choose the more effective piece, linking it to the assessment criteria. They were then asked to produce at least one paragraph of writing on the topic of capital punishment. In the final part of the lesson, students were asked to peer-mark two other students’ work, then to look at and review their own work and check the comments. One further activity was introduced before students were asked to say what they had learnt in the lesson. The lesson closed with a final activity where students revised persuasive techniques on the board.

Although the example was English we were able to discuss the relative strengths and weaknesses of the lesson.

The English subject report then gives some of the failings of the lesson.

Pace. There seems to be a belief that the faster the lesson, the better the learning. While pace is important – a slow lesson is likely to lose pupils’ concentration – teachers too often concentrate on the pace of their planned activities rather than the pace of learning. For example, a teacher told an inspector that they had been advised that a starter activity should never last longer than 10 minutes. While this may be a sensible starting point for discussion, the inspector’s view was that a starter activity, like any other activity, needs to last only as long as is needed to ensure effective learning.

The number of activities. As implied above, some teachers appear to believe that the more activities they can cram into the lesson, the more effective it will be. This is often counterproductive, as activities are changed so often that pupils do not complete tasks and learning is not consolidated or extended.

Over-detailed and bureaucratic lesson plans. Teachers are encouraged to plan individual lessons in considerable detail. Inspectors sometimes note that excessive detail within these plans causes teachers to lose sight of the central focus on pupils’ learning. 

An inflexible approach to planning lessons. School policies sometimes insist that all lesson plans should always follow the same structure, no matter what is being taught. In addition, evidence from the survey suggests that teachers often feel that they should not alter their plans during the lesson. The notion of a three- or four-part structure to lessons with certain key elements, such as a lively starter activity and an opportunity to review learning at the end, is helpful to teachers. However, teachers need to have the confidence to depart from their plans if early indications are, for example, that the pupils know more or less than the teacher had anticipated. The key consideration should be the development of pupils’ learning rather than sticking rigidly to a plan.

Limited time for students to work independently. A constant criticism from inspectors was that pupils rarely had extended periods to read, write or discuss issues in class. Indeed, inspectors observed lessons where pupils were asked to self- or peer-assess work before they had been able to complete more than a sentence or two. No doubt, teachers feel that they need to be actively engaged when they are being observed. However, this shows a degree of misunderstanding as inspectors’ priority is above all to evaluate the quality of pupils’ learning in lessons.

Constant review of learning. As noted above, in lessons observed, significant periods of time were spent by teachers on getting pupils to articulate their learning, even where this limited their time to complete activities and thereby interrupted their learning! Pupils need time to complete something before they can valuably discuss and evaluate it. To invite self- or peer-evaluation before pupils have had time to engage fully with learning is counter-productive although the principle of self- or peer-assessment remains important.

Geography Lessons

Throughout the session Leszek gave some sound advice for Geography Teachers.

  • Ofsted has no prescribed teaching requriment; there is no need for three or five part lessons; there is no need to introduce learning objectives at the beginning of hte lesson.
  • A good barometer of the Geography department of a school is the number of students choosing to study Geography at GCSE. If it is greater than 25% geographers are doing quality geography. If it is less than 10% there is a serious concern.
  • Most students have poorly developed map work skills – map skills is frequently limited to specific examination requirements.
  • There is often a lack of opportunity for writing at length; this limits opportunity for students to show their understanding. 
  • Students have poorly developed core knowledge; students do not have a coherent picture of the world.
  • Teaching is better at KS4 than KS3, this is frequently because KS3 is taught by non-specialists.
  • It should not be the teacher that is doing more work than the students.
  • Frequently book scrutiny is more valuable than lesson observation – is the work that students are doing now showing progression since September?
  • His key message was that Geography lessons should focus on Geography; lessons should not focus on literacy – good Geography will naturally bring in literacy.
  • Focus should be on pace of learning not pace of activities.
  • Teachers at KS4 should not be ‘teaching to the test’; Ofsted don’t want to see every lesson linked to a GCSE Question.
  • In addition learning objectives should be geographical!
  • Pupils should develop locational knowledge – they should know where places that are being studied are located.

He also pointed out the Good Practice materials on the Ofsted Website, something I had not been aware of before. http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/goodpractice?keywords=geography&remit=all&type=all

He also expressed concern about early entry and two year Key Stage 3 programmes.

This is a series of posts about the Geographical Association Annual Conference 2013; the index to my GA Conference posts can be found here. -this link will work when I have finished all articles – probably tommorrow!

The Jobs of a Teacher

Sunday, November 11th, 2012

I picked this up a while ago (may have even been January at BETT) and think it is worth sharing if you have not already seen the cartoon.

 

Questioning Using Bloom’s Taxonomy

Saturday, March 24th, 2012

I have blogged before about Blooms Taxonomy. Below is a list of questions for the classroom based on each level of the taxonomy. Word Document Version

Remembering

  • Can you identify ….?
  • Can you remember who, what, when, why, how …?
  • Can you picture ….?
  • Who or what were the main …?
  • Can you select ….?
  • Can you find the word for …?
  • Can you recall…?
  • How would you explain …/describe…/show…?
  • When/why/how did….?

Understanding

  • Which statements/words/support/justify…?
  • How would you compare/contrast…?
  • How would you summarise…?
  • What facts or ideas or words show …?
  • How could you say this in your own words?
  • Which is the best answer? And why?
  • Can you explain what is happening? (and why?)
  • Can you explain what it means by …?
  • What do you predict will happen when/if…?
Applying
  • How would you show your understanding of …?
  • How would you solve/find/develop … using what you have learnt?
  • Can you explain what is happening?
  • How would you apply what you’ve learned, to develop …?
  • What would happen if…?
  • How would you use…?
  • What facts would you select to show…?
  • What examples can you find to…?
  • How is …. an example of…..?
Analysing
  • Can you work out what the structure of … is/would be?
  • What evidence can you find to …?
  • Can you sort out the important information from the irrelevant?
  • What is the function of …?
  • What patterns can you see in …?
  • What is the relationship between …?
  • What are the parts/features of …?
  • What is the theme of ….?
  • How could you show the differences/similarities?
  • How would you group/sort/classify/categorise…?
  • What conclusions can you make?

Evaluating

  • How would you prioritise…?
  • Based on what you know, how would you explain..?
  • Would it be better if …?
  • What is your opinion of …?
  • What would you say is the importance of …?
  • How would you rate/evaluate the….?
  • How would you improve…?
  • What information would you use to support the view…?
  • Give arguments for and against …?
  • What would you recommend?

Creating
  • How would you improve …?
  • Suppose you could …. what would you do?
  • Can you say more about the reason…?
  • Can you formulate (come up with) a theory for …?
  • How would you adapt … to create a different…?
  • Can you predict the outcome if …?
  • What is the relationship between…?
  • How would you justify / test …?
  • Could you design/invent a new way to …?
  • Can you suggest an alternative/better way to….?

Image at the top of this post taken from: http://langwitches.org/blog/2011/08/21/blooms-taxonomy-and-ipad-apps/

Outstanding Teaching, Learning, and Assessment

Sunday, April 3rd, 2011

Two weeks ago we had a whole school training day, and the focus was on Outstanding, Teaching, and Assessment. The day was run by Robert Powell; I was pleasantly surprised as it was engaging and informative throughout. Although there were no earth shattering ideas I think it is essential that teachers occasionally reflect on the basics.

Robert began by stating that Outstanding Teaching, Learning and Assessment are all interrelated.

Outstanding Teaching

Robert said that outstanding lessons had the following characteristics:

  1. Excellent behaviour/management.
  2. Focuses on learning outcomes.
  3. Passion, pace and participation.
  4. Variety of stimuli/activity.
  5. Deep understanding.
  6. Differentiated.
  7. Feedback (teachers and learners)

To achieve these he gave a range of pratical suggestions:

  • When the students are going into classroom make sure there is an activity that is easily accessible that gets students working. It is important to make sure there is an activity that establishes learning.
  • When students are working in groups make students more accountable. Assign a scribe (noting down not only contributions but who made it), also assign a chair lead the group. When carrying out extended projects via group work get students to produce a plan to be signed off before starting the project. This allows the teacher to make sure the plan contains the right level or challenge.
  • Use groups to check understanding; then if someone does not understand the chair can ask the question making it a question from the group rather than an individual.
  • Ensure the learning objective is displayed throughout the lesson; not just at the start and end of the lesson. Ensure lesson objectives present a quick summary for the student, but do not contain too much detail.
  • When working with sixth form students provide them with a lesson structure to help them structure their notes.
  • Use mind maps to structure knowledge and show links between learning.
  • Teachers that love subjects engage pupils; make lessons different, teaching by numbers kills off passion.
  • Alternatively start with a question mark and a stimulus (either photo or video), and get pupils to put together learning outcomes.
  • There are a number of strategies to engage pupils: Snowball (10 seconds along, 20 seconds in pairs, 40 seconds in groups, then whole class), Give us a Clue (using symbols to describe places), True or False, Question Time (panel of experts), or Pass the Question.
  • Display key words as they are the starting point to understanding in subjects.
  • Make sure questions contain the right level of challenge, many textbook questions are poor.
  • If using cloze activities don’t give a word bank.
  • When giving sixth form students handouts don’t give them complete sheets of notes; complete the left hand column with key points, have a empty right hand column for students to add ideas.
  • Differentiation for outcome is not differentiation. Differentiation by task is more appropriate.
  • Use mind mapping for essays; put a list of words on the wall before carrying out tasks.
  • At the end of the lesson ‘celebrate learning’, send pupils out the lesson feeling positive.

Outstanding Assessment

  • Data comes from better learning and teaching.
  • Learn from assessment; analyse assessment results to feed back into teaching.
  • Formative Assessment – identify what you need to do to adapt for the future.
  • Test before and after units to see evidence of progress – use multiple choice.
  • Need to share assessment criteria, make sure they use straight forward language.
  • Break down targets in pupil friendly language  using chunks.
  • Mark without using comments; using ticks, crosses and question marks. Get students to write in the feedback.
  • When students are doing group presentations get each student to evaluate a particular aspect of peer’s assessments.
  • Use a prompt sheet for self assessment: What have you done/made? What have you enjoyed? What have you found difficult? What have you learned? What would you improve or do differently next time?
  • At the end of an assessed piece of work get students to produce a target; this target then can be transferred to the start of the next piece of work.

Robert Powell who led the training has a website here; he has also written a couple of books which I will definitely be trying to get a hold of.

Bloom’s Taxonomy

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Bloom’s Taxonomy is a useful tool to use when thinking about questioning techniques used when teaching. This is often presented in the form of a ladder.

The image below takes this a step futher and considers the different elements of Bloom’s Taxonomy and links them to different teaching activities. This is a useful tool because not only does it instantly provide an easily accessible list of teaching activities to choose from when planning a lesson, but also classifies those activities. This would mean that  to ensure a balanced range of tasks in a unit of work tasks could be selected from different segments of the wheel.


(Thanks to Russle Tarr who orignally posted a link to the image on Twitter)