I thought I would try something new with my class this year. Well, there are lots of new things: new room, new year, new class, new assessment... the list goes on.
Specifically, I am trying out a 'reporters' book' . The plan is that in each science lesson, one group is responsible for recording the learning that is happening. The group has a camera and the children are not expected to double up on their work, but to record what's been learnt.
Next step maybe to try in other subjects, maths would be my next move.
The point? A record, a revision tool, a discussion point, a way for me to assess understanding .
Will it be useful? Raise standards? Improve understanding? I hope so. Watch this space...
A journey of discovery and learning about Mindfulness along with musings around teaching and reading.
Showing posts with label class. Show all posts
Showing posts with label class. Show all posts
Thursday, 1 October 2015
Monday, 5 August 2013
Job sharing in Primary- Making it work.
I have been working as part of a job share now for two and a
half years. I’m still finding my feet with it but am writing this in the hope
to help others who are thinking about it or starting. At the end of my first
full year job sharing I blogged about how it had gone http://mrshalford.blogspot.co.uk/2012/07/challenges-of-job.html
I have really enjoyed this year- no irony in that statement
at all. Even with a large class (35 at times) with the huge pile of marking,
extra parent sessions, reports… There is so much in the press about teachers
leaving the profession http://www.theguardian.com/teacher-network/2013/aug/01/why-are-teachers-leaving-education Working part time for me has been the most
positive step I have taken in my teaching career for some time.
So, what works well in our class? Key has to be the
communication. I have read about some teachers who are lucky to have some time
each week when they are both in the class. Budgetary constraints don’t allow
that at my school, but we do talk.
And talk.
And some more!
We keep a book
(filled two this year) in which we leave copious notes for each other. We talk
on the phone at least twice a week. Oh yes, emails too! And the odd text. Without that level of communication I can’t
see how it could work effectively. All
the children and their parents know how regularly we talk about the class and
this has helped us to build strong and positive relationships. In an ideal world we would have one TA in the
class who could be a consistent presence, but there are two of them as well!
One works Monday and Friday, the other the middle part of the week.
We are very different in our personalities, in our teaching
styles, in our interests. But what we share is our passion for teaching, for
helping children to achieve their potential, to build their confidence and self
esteem, to enable them to believe in themselves and to be proud of themselves,
our class, our school. We work in a
school with a really well put together behaviour policy, that helps too.
When it comes to how we plan and deliver the curriculum that
has been a constantly evolving process. Some subjects are split between us
which works well. Maths and English (I know the terms are Literacy and Numeracy
but I have a pet hate for those and insist on calling them maths and English !)
Anyway, for the English this year I taught the majority of the genre work while
my partner concentrated on the SPaG. This was commented on favourably by the
subject leader during the course of the year through lesson observations and
book moderation. We made good use of AFL so that areas that came up in my
teaching needing reinforcement could be covered discretely and I would have a
“zero tolerance” approach for the focus area each week. With the increased
emphasis on SPaG we will definitely be carrying on with this next year. Of
course there are also lots of opportunities for writing across the curriculum
and we follow the Pie Corbett approach to non fiction writing and include all 6
areas each year so these are split between us.
http://www.talk4writing.com/index.html
Maths has been much more of a challenge. In the first year
of job sharing we started by splitting the curriculum so that I did all the
number work and my partner did all the shape,space, measure, data. This worked
fairly well but my partner felt that she didn’t have enough knowledge of their
ability in number. We then tried to work
as one teacher with one of us leaving plans for the other. It was a nice idea
but planning for each other was very time consuming. This year we used the unit
plans from the strategy and split the five units between us each term so that
over the course of the yer we had both taught everything. This worked fairly
well but is not the most consistent way for the children who would be doing one
area Mon/Tues and another on Weds-Fri.
How are we going to organise it for this year? Not totally
sure at the moment. Progress in maths was less than it was for reading and
writing which would indicate that we need to look at how we are planning and
teaching the subject. There have been some interesting ideas on twitter about
planning the maths (http://www.broadbentmaths.com/)
Having asked the twittersphere’s opinions it
seems that the number/everything else split is the most popular…
Why am I blogging about this? Partly to share what has
worked well, partly to find out how others are making their job shares work
well. It’s a constantly evolving process. Being able to communicate well, trust
each other, share similar values are all key points. Most classes have at least
one teacher with PPA cover so job sharing is more common than one might initially
think. Having someone who knows the children as well as you is a real bonus.
Challenge for next year is to get on top of the maths and be
as effective as we possibly can. Anyone
who has any tips to share please do so.
Sunday, 4 August 2013
Grouping children in class.
Last year I wrote
about my experience of my first full year job sharing http://mrshalford.blogspot.co.uk/2012/07/challenges-of-job.html
Here we are a year on.
So, how did it go?
Teaching children for two consecutive years certainly has
its advantages. I knew those children very well- knew exactly what they needed
to work on to make good progress and make good progress they certainly did.
Whilst analysing the data it soon became clear that the year
five children had made excellent progress, but the year four children slightly
less so. Interestingly some of the more able children had made less than
expected progress. Why should this be?
One reason could be that I focussed a lot of my guided
teaching time on my most able children (as laid out in our SDP). Sure, they got
good results but this has made me think carefully about how much time I devote
with each group. With another large class next year (33 year 4/5 ) it will be a
challenge! Ideally I would spend the same amount of time with each group but as
any teacher knows that is easier said than done. Yes of course my weekly
overview would structure who I would work with and when, but when using AFL and
changing plans to best meet the needs of the children the groups themselves are
changing .
Could the fact that the younger children in a mixed age
class can feel eclipsed by the older ones and does this inhibit their progress?
Certainly the majority of year five children
I taught this year made a lot more progress than they had the previous
year when I had taught them as year fours.
Was this all down to the fact that I knew their skills so well? That
they were so confident in the class set up that they were able to flourish?
That being the older ones in the class gave them a heightened sense of
responsibility which in turn improved their capacity for learning?
This September I will again have a y4/5 class and be carrying on with 14 children from the
12/13 academic year. It will be a
challenging year with a large class, a lot of children on school action and
school action plus (just like any other class) along with the fact that my job
share partner has moved on and a new appointment will be made.
So, what are my priorities?
First of all consistency is key so should my temporary job
share partner not continue, it will be all about making a new partnership work
effectively. Although new to job sharing I feel that it has been a very
successful partnership ; I will blog about it over the summer.
Secondly grouping the children in mixed ability groups most
of the time. I use working partners (thanks to all the brilliant AFL resources
by the wonderful Shirley Clarke http://shirleyclarke-education.org/)
and have groups of children needing interventions as appropriate. I am thinking
of having discrete groups of more able in maths/english (still focus on the
SDP) but the rest of the groups to be mixed.
I have always used a variety of grouping methods but gone back to
traditional ability groups for the majority of maths and english lessons. Will it work? That’s the challenge.
So I would really like to research a bit more about grouping
the children. All my colleagues favour ability grouping. I’ve always played it
safe with grouping in abilities for the majority of maths and english lessons.
I make good use of scaffolds, TAs, top tips, success
criteria and various other methods to enable children to access their learning.
But when the children do work in mixed ability groups (always for science and
practical subjects) there is so much more of a buzz going on.
Have you moved away from ability groups? How did you find
it? What worked well and what didn’t?
I will blog about how it goes once the term is underway.
Wednesday, 14 September 2011
100 words for grown ups week 10
I thought this week’s prompt from Julia was a tricky one and have been racking my brains; so far have tried and dumped a news report, an attempt at an interview and a short story about competitive neighbours (was quite pleased with that but managed to delete and save a blank doc- duh ) Have read a very interesting (as always) variety of pieces so far.
In the end I decided to carry on with the ever faithful Kit, here goes...
Kit pulled open the door to the garden. As with the house, it was a mere shadow of its former self. Pushing the trailing creepers from the wisteria and honeysuckle to one side, her feet found a familiar path. Scents evocative of summers long past filled her head. Each step she took seemed to transport her back in time. Her pace slowed as memories flooded back.
A buzz from her pocket snapped her back to the present. Whilst reaching for the phone she saw it, faded now, but still recognisable. She smiled as she remembered her Grandmothers love of topiaries.
Hmmm, really felt like a learner doing this one! Good way to unwind after a busy day at work though. Loving my new class; all bright eyed and bushy tailed, full of enthusiasm. Great. But, after the break finding it hard to get things done! If I have said "Get a wiggle on!" once, I said it a thousand times today. Have learnt from experience that it is vital to NOT try to do too much with a new class in the first couple of weeks, as it is so important to build relationships and ease children into their new class. Being new to job sharing also, am very aware that the class have two new teachers to get their heads round (and a trainee starting next week too!)
Early days yet, I have every confidence that in a couple of weeks they'll be raring to go... Oh yes they will :)
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