Tuesday, 19 October 2021

The Power Of Objects: How Might We Teach Our Children Through The Lens Of Stuff?

 By Charlotte Nicholas


Consider the object in the image and ponder your answers to the following questions: What is it? Why might it have been created? What is it for? Where is it from? What might it be able to tell us about society? It may just look like a skull with numbers on but in fact it is so much more. This is a phrenological skull created by James Deville in the 1820s. Phrenology is a ‘science’ where the size of the head was measured and this was used to make revelations about individuals’ intelligence and character. The skull's deep lines show the 27 areas of the head responsible for certain characteristics and personality traits. This pseudoscience helped support attitudes towards criminals, racist ideology and stereotypes towards genders and can tell us a multitude of things about Victorian attitudes and beliefs. It helps us to understand the journey that psychology has undertaken to reach where it is today. You might be wondering about the relevance of a fake Victorian head….


What got me thinking?

When most people think of history as a subject they often think of endless and boring source activities. In fact, history teachers seek to avoid this ‘death by sources’ (G. Howells). Since my PGCE year, I was always motivated to find ways to make learning history as captivating as possible and completed my first assignment on learning about WWI not by studying the boring battles but by learning through objects and what they could tell us about the war. Ever since then I have been itching to bring objects into the history classroom. In the 1970s and 1980s historians and social scientists alike were grappling with the ‘linguistic turn’, a phrase that represents the shift to cultural and written sources instead of touchable and tangible sources. Now historians are faced with the ‘ material turn’ where they focus on historical objects and consider what they can tell us about people and their lives in the past. What did the reading say? `Touching, feeling, smelling, and sensing history through objects: new opportunities from the ‘material turn’ by Bird, Wilson, Egan-Simon, Jackson and Kirkup, 2020 influence me to think about objects in the classroom again. This Teaching History article discusses a project completed by history teachers where they were inspired by the ‘material turn’ to focus on teaching history to students through everyday objects. The objects chosen represented economic transformations from 1000 to 1700 and broadly demonstrated the rise in manufactured products, and illustrating significant changes in society. Whilst this project was generally focused towards primary school students, the group found that students used their imagination to create their own impressions of the past. They were able to have a deeper conceptual understanding without knowing too much about the specific time period. Students were able to have freedom in their thoughts and could offer multiple ideas towards open-ended questions. Learning through objects helped students to consider the world as dynamic and changing, through the eyes of ordinary people not the elite and it added a little mystery to their lessons, mysteries they were inspired to solve. Students started to consider ‘What do things do to people?’ rather than ‘What do people do with them?’ (Labanyi et al). How might we consider this in our own teaching?: I am under no illusion that the most obvious place to teach about historical objects is in history lessons, however, there is a place for learning about objects across the curriculum, since the object itself is only half the story, it is really about the questions that are asked. In addition to this, an aspect of the Theory of Knowledge (TOK) internal assessment in the IBDP forces students to think about objects when they consider a question about knowledge and have to choose three objects which help illuminate this. If students were introduced to thinking about objects in a meaningful way across the curriculum and lower down the school, they might be better equipped to talk about objects when they reach the sixth form. Getting students to think about objects will help inspire ‘awe and wonder’ in our lessons, it is an inclusive method of teaching, all students can engage with an object in some way. It encourages our students to think with fewer limitations and encourages them to think for themselves, giving more meaning to the content they are learning about. Finally, it gives our students an opportunity to increase their cultural capital, giving them a chance to engage with items they may never have the chance to otherwise. I encourage you to take a risk and think about how you might make some room for objects in your classroom. I have included two examples of how we have included objects in the history and TOK classroom. I’d love to hear ideas from the WA community about how we might ingrain objects into our lessons and hear how you have made a place for them in your lessons.




Bitesize Research: Extremist Views Amongst School-Age Students

By Jaya Carrier

I hope everyone has had a great week so far. On our T2 INSET day, we’re having an external speaker join us to talk about PREVENT and how it fits within a wider culture of safeguarding. To this end, I was interested to see the reporting on a piece of research done by the UCL Institute of Education to mark the 20th anniversary of 9/11 around the theme of extremism and radicalisation in schools.


Objectives:

To understand the current state of play with respect to extremist views amongst school-age students.


Summary

  • Extreme views such as racism, misogyny and homophobia are described as being ‘widespread’ and ‘rising’ across the UK
  • Teachers are not regularly given time, training or resources to combat these views effectively
  • Where anti-extremist work does take place, it is often done performatively rather than meaningfully 
  • Teachers can be concerned about ‘getting it wrong', particularly with respect to conversations about race
  • Community engagement is very important in order to tackle the rise of extremist views effectively

 

How does this impact me and my practice?:

Some reflection questions arising from this that might be helpful to consider are: 

  • What am I hoping to gain from the PREVENT and facilitating conversations with students about race training in INSET T2?
  • What do I need in order to support me to tackle extremist views?
  • How have I effectively done this before? What does this look like in a classroom or pastoral setting?

 

If you would like to discuss this further with me - please let me know! I’d be delighted to open up these discussions and conversations.


Thanks, Jaya


Tuesday, 12 October 2021

Bitesize Research: Strategies for Student-Centred Learning

By Jaya Carrier

I hope everyone has had a great week so far. As you will know, one of our T&L goals for 2021-22 is being more student-centred. This has lots of different facets, and so I was interested in the way it was presented by John McCarthy (a US based education consultant) as an Edutopia article written in 2015. In particular, his suggestions for strategies focus on student-voice. Objectives: To suggest strategies for one model of student-centred learning Summary:

McCarthy suggests some key strategies for enhancing student-centred learning:

  • Allowing students to share in the decision making processes of the classroom (including showing the relevance of their learning to students, what topics or curricula to cover and what kinds of tasks or activities to complete)
  • Give students leadership opportunities
  • Make learning connect meaningfully to the real world
How does this impact me and my practice?:

Some reflection questions arising from this that might be helpful to consider are:

  • How often do I plan for opportunities or strategies like those listed above?
  • What does ‘student-centred’ mean in my classroom? What will it look like if I have a fully student-centred classroom?
  • What student-centred strategies is McCarthy missing?
If you would like to discuss this further with me - please let me know! I’d be delighted to open up these discussions and conversations. Thanks, Jaya


Maximising Your Questioning

By Michael Paulus

As part of Humanities, staff members give short and snappy weekly CPD sessions to the rest of the departments. I wanted to showcase what I felt was a really simple way to structure effective questioning in lessons that aids differentiation, provides retrieval practice to aid memory, supports classroom engagement and increases learners’ self-management through reflection.  In this blog post, I have summarised my CPD on Questioning. Enjoy! 



Scenario: I have just taught costs & profit calculation topic to my year 11 Business students last week. Here is a list of what I covered with them:




As you can see some of the content is more manageable (e.g how to define and give examples of start-up costs), and some content requires a variety of skills, such as calculation of profit based on figures given. Based on this prior learning, I wanted to start my next lesson with a series of questions that serve as retrieval practice and AfL, So I devised this structure to serve as my ‘DO NOW’:

10-Retrieval Questions

  1. LPA Q1:  

  2. LPA Q2: 

  3. MPA Q1: 

  4. MPA Q2: 

  5. Context-based (linked to a situation, scenario etc)

  6. HPA Q1: 

  7. HPA Q2: 

  8. CHALLENGE (high skill/knowledge question)

  9. DEEP (a deep thinking-type question)

  10. META/SOC (questioning that requires reflection, metacognition on the content and the wider syllabus)

(NB: I wouldn’t include “LPA Q1” etc on the board!!!!!)



So if I apply the ‘10-Retrieval Questions’ structure to the Costs & Profit topic above, it may look like this in my next lesson!




Other subject areas were also able to apply my 10-Retrieval Questions structure really quickly and successfully for a recent topic they taught:

I’ll end this post with an assortment of ways you might want to try in your lessons to enhance your questioning, which can and should be one of the most interactive and fun aspects of your lesson if you get it right:

  • Pre-plan who you might choose before posing the question (but don't say the name first!)
  • Rank order (either written or orally) the questions to increase in difficulty
  • Give plenty of thinking time before selection (Don’t be afraid of silence!)
  • “What is the counterargument for…?” or Can/did anyone see this another way?”
  • Relate questions to a situation/scenario/context
  • Questioning that asks students to consider deeper connections across topics/subjects
  • Consider how you might sequence 2-3 questions that build on each other as they are answered
  • Questioning on their self-efficacy towards a topic; “Which key term do you find the most confusing and why?”
  • Using your lesson’s (obscure) Key Question to pose as your final question of the lesson
  • ‘If this is the Answer... What is the Question?’
  • ‘What if...?’, ‘Suppose we knew...?’ and ‘What would change if...?’
  • Why do you think this is right….?
  • Students devise questioning for peers/other groups
  • Question the question: “Why do you think I asked that question?” or “Why was that question important?”




Wednesday, 6 October 2021

CPD Reflections: Teaching An Adaptive Curriculum

By Izzy Hilliard

Back in the heady days of early 2019, the English department received training from the English and Media Centre, a developmental centre that encourages best pedagogical practices and innovative approaches to teaching English. At the EMC, they value raising attainment but also want to offer approaches that allow students to become confident, articulate and critical thinkers and learners. On their website they recognise that some of their CPD may be viewed as “radical,” but they want English teachers to begin “taking risks that challenge both themselves and students.” Fast forward two and a half years and we have gone through two school closures, red tape, Chromebook use, no sharing of books, no sharing of paper- and we have done so resiliently whilst still putting the students and their education first. However, as we re-enter the school climate we once again have to be considering how we can push our curriculum forward, even if that entails “praiseworthy failure.” Whilst students at Key Stage 4 are constricted by government-dictated text choices and exams, Key Stage 3 is an opportunity to have freedom with the texts we choose and the pedagogy we use to educate. This aligns with the idea of an “adaptive curriculum,” which the EMC defines as “ a single curriculum which all students in a given class can access if it is suitably adapted.”


The main three ideas that the EMC promotes are:

  • Choice- the EMC believes that students should have a stake in what they are learning and to do this they have to have some say in the texts that they study and the form they write responses in.
  • Connectivity- Texts that students study should connect with students’ own lives and experiences including prior reading and viewing.
  • Cognition- Students should want to engage in deep thinking that relies primarily on self-generated ideas rather than ideas they have absorbed from the teacher.

In regards to these three ideas, the EMC promotes what they call, “Low Threshold, High Ceiling,” which is particularly pertinent in Westminster Academy due to having mixed-ability classroom settings. They referenced the study called Closing the Reading Gap which says that it is wasteful of learning time to have a novel, poetry anthology or play that students cannot access. The training established that differentiation is vital at the point of access for all students. Subsequently, to ensure that the high ceiling is met, endpoints could also be adapted and changed for different students. Whilst no endpoints should establish low expectations all students need to be appropriately challenged depending on their ability. What does the English Department do already? Already the English department uses regular discussion, self and peer assessment. Furthermore, post our training in 2019 we have now started creating a novel “agenda.” This is when students are able to see snippets from the novel they will be reading and create an agenda about the aspects they find interesting eg The theme of violence across the snippets; the narrative voice is engaging because …. Etc. We then refer to this agenda for the rest of the term. It allows students to take ownership over what we have read and what we will be reading as well as anchoring their study of the novel. They have directed the teaching rather than just been told what is and is not significant. Why does an EMC approach matter at Westminster Academy? As Westminster Academy attempts to promote the IB in younger years, I believe that the EMC approach speaks to many of the IB Learner Profile characteristics. By increasing their independence from a young age with self-directed learning and choice we are asking our students to be inquirers and risk-taking. Subsequently, the pedagogical approaches, promoting Pie Corbett’s “Talk” allows students to practise and perfect their open-mindedness and the way they communicate. How does this impact me and my practice? After the three sessions from the EMC I reflected on the changes I wanted to make in my own pedagogy.
  • How can I adapt endpoints of a unit for different students without changing my expectations of the quality of work?
  • How can I encourage my students to take accountability for their own learning and curriculum?
  • How can I ensure that my students use “self-assessment time” to make meaningful progress?
  • How can I embed the IB Learner profile into an EMC approach within the English department?
  • What texts should I be teaching to ensure that I have a “Low Threshold, High Ceiling” curriculum
  • How can I establish high-quality differentiation throughout the curriculum so that no student cannot access any of the low threshold texts?



Bitesize Research: Role Of Perfectionism In Progress Of More Able Learners

By Jaya Carrier

I hope everyone has had a great week so far. I’ve been looking this week into research about more able students (or HPAs). I came across a really interesting NACE (National Association for Able Children in Education) blog post about some forthcoming meta-analysis that will be published later this year in Educational Psychology Review that they’ve conducted in conjunction with academics from York St. John University. They also presented some of their findings in this YouTube video. Objectives:

To understand the role of perfectionism in the progress and attainment of more able learners. Summary:

  • This study categorises perfectionism into two categories; perfectionist strivings (extent to which students strive for unrealistic personal standards) and perfectionist concerns (extent to which students fear making mistakes or receiving negative feedback).
  • This meta-analysis looked at data on 10,000 able learners who were part of 36 studies. These suggest that perfectionist concerns have the biggest impact on learning, and have a strong correlation to depression, alienation from parents, lower motivation and self-esteem.
  • On the other hand, perfectionist strivings appeared to be correlated with more variable outcomes that were both positive and negative; for example, there was a correlation with strong academic performance, but also with lower happiness and lower creativity.
  • The blog suggests that those working with more able learners need to be mindful of the consequences of perfectionism. They should look to reduce both types of perfectionism, but particularly perfectionist strivings.
  • It proposes that teachers can and should play a role in creating environments that are less perfectionistic and focus on creativity, problem-solving and appropriate levels of challenge.
  • Likewise, teachers can help more able students ‘reframe setbacks’ as an integral part of the learning process whilst being mindful that more able learners often find setbacks more stressful.
How does this impact me and my practice?:
Some reflection questions arising from this that might be helpful to consider are:
  • Do any of my HPA students demonstrate the ‘perfectionist strivings’ or ‘perfectionist concerns’?
  • How do these manifest in their attitude towards learning in your classroom?
  • How can I help my students by focusing on creativity and problem-solving?
  • What does ‘appropriate challenge’ look like in my subject?
If you would like to discuss this further with me - please let me know! I’d be delighted to open up these discussions and conversations. Thanks, Jaya