Tuesday, 27 September 2022

Bitesize Research: Impact Of Coaching

By Jaya Carrier

I hope you’re all having a good week so far. A few years ago at WA, we decided to offer opportunities for middle leaders to train in using coaching skills. Ahead of our next coaching course in November, I was interested to read this research about the use of coaching in schools. Objectives: To understand the existing research available about the impact of teacher coaching in schools and consider the effectiveness of specific coaching models in school improvement Summary:

  • This article recognises that there are many different coaching models used in schools - including, but not limited to, instructional coaching.
  • The authors examined specifically the impact of ‘contextual coaching’ whereby coaching practices are connected to specific school contexts and features.
  • The research conducted by the authors suggests that there is a link between coaching and school improvement, and that this link is particularly strong where there was an alignment between coaching and other forms of collaborative professionalism (a term coined by Hargreaves and O’Connor, 2018). This idea is about how colleagues work together in solidarity by developing deeper relationships with each other.
  • The article argues that, in particular, good leadership development was strongly linked to effective contextual coaching.
How does this impact me and my practice?:

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

  • What do I already know about coaching? How might it help develop me as a teacher, or as a leader?
  • How might I use coaching skills with students? What benefits might it have?
  • What would I like to find about coaching?
If you are interested in coaching, or have any questions, please do get in touch! Remember, also, we have a MLT drop in every Friday in G06 from 8am - coffee and pastries provided!


Tuesday, 20 September 2022

CPD Reflections: Pastoral Support To Empower Female Students

By Izzy Hilliard

I began my professional career as a teacher through Teach First, a graduate programme training teachers and placing them in schools which serve impoverished communities. I remember the headline data of the programme that “poorer kids are eighteen months behind when they take their GCSEs” and “the school achievement gap between rich and poor has not narrowed in a century” (Teach First). After being placed in my school where the majority of students were placed on free school meal; the difference between those children who had affluent backgrounds, and those who did not, often transpired in results. Therefore, since the beginning of my time as an educator I have always had an interest in closing the disadvantage gap.


When I joined my school in 2018 there was a clear group to target. The school had always been successful at targeting pupil premium and SEND students- it was one of its main strengths. The focus was shifting onto boys. Boys were doing worse in results and this trend has continued. It is a bias which is mirrored in headlines that we read today, The Irish Times writing, “Boys don’t try? Why so many boys are falling behind at school” (2019) and The Financial Times, “Why are boys falling behind at school?” (2018). In my first year as an English teacher, I also had a “male only” nurture group and therefore my primary concern in terms of achievement (and behaviour) was with boys. In addition, the English department ran a lunch time intervention for boys who were underperforming based on their SATs. 


Over the course of my teaching career, I have continuously reflected on my practice. Yet it was only as my third year began to end that I noticed my bias towards boys. The amount of one to one help within the lesson and the differentiation I offered, often went towards boys. My own preconceptions that boys were more boisterous; more challenging and more easily distracted were manifesting into my practice as asking boys more questions; checking male student work more regularly and punishing the boys more quickly. Whilst the girls were receiving less sanctions, they were also omitted from having any impact on my teaching. I conducted my research to see if this was a school wide problem. Whilst all teachers agreed many girls were eloquent in their answers it is much less likely to see them offer responses in class. Furthermore, in the 16 lessons I visited (2021) it was five times more likely that a boy would be asked to answer, than a girl. 


Therefore, I decided to begin focusing on the young women in my classroom and reading about the experience of young girls at school today, and I realised that the headlines of boys underperforming hid a plethora of problems facing girls. One third of British girls feel unhappy about their appearance by the age of fourteen (The Times); girl’s happiness plummets much further than boys during adolescence (The Times); 37% of British female students at mixed-sex schools have personally experienced some form of sexual harrassement at school (UK Feminista and NEU, 2017).   These facts conveyed the desperate need for female students, especially those in mixed schools, to have safe spaces within the school building where they could feel empowered and cared for. Subsequently, my focus moved away from within the classroom to outside of the classroom. 


A colleague and I had been training throughout 2020 to set up a female empowerment group within our school. This has been led by a charity called Be Her Lead. The programme trains teachers to be female role models in their schools and champions for girls throughout the school building. The programme focuses on ensuring that girls in low income areas, and especially those from BAME backgrounds have safe spaces within their schools to speak about issues that are important to them. However, the school year of 2020-21 was heavily disrupted by the COVID 19 pandemic and restrictions were placed on school clubs due to the disturbance of bubble systems. This stopped us from carrying out an intervention as we envisioned and we had to delay a year. Despite this, the creation of this group straight after the pandemic seemed like a  perfect opportunity. Undoubtedly, the pandemic has affected and continues to affect the lives of the teenagers within our care, with academics noting that, “compared to adults [the] pandemic may continue to have increased long term adverse consequences on children’s and adolescents’ mental health.” This will be discussed in greater depth later. Therefore in September of 2021, I set up a Be Her Lead group. 


How the intervention was run


For a group like this to feel safe, both the colleague and I agreed that a limited number of students was crucial. The Head of Year 10 and I discussed around twenty girls to invite to the first intervention. We wanted these students to be for girls who would really benefit from a safe space to discuss the issues they felt as they moved around the school and as they got older. I had not taught this year group before, so I was shocked by the students the Head of Year 10 had recommended. On first meeting, they are all bright and articulate, even if slightly shy. However, as the intervention group reaches it’s last few meetings of the academic year the amount I have learnt about the daily struggles they face in a modern day secondary school has shocked me. 


I teach in an average sized inner city London school, with each year group averaging about two hundred students. Therefore, many of the girls had never met before and thus our initial meetings could be tinged with awkwardness. However, what was important to my colleague and I was that this space belonged to the girls so we would respond to what they wanted to talk about. In our first meeting, this was exactly what we asked. Girls were supposed to write what they found difficult about being a teenage girl and what they wish they could discuss at school. We found a lot of recurring issues: insecurity; identity; social media; boys; body image; goals and ambitions; family struggles. 


From here, the creation of the agenda and the intervention was easy. It was run at lunch time so the girls would arrive at the same classroom every week, we would briefly, or not so briefly, discuss our weeks and then we would complete a creative activity which often led to these issues being discussed. From here I will discuss some of these interventions in detail. 


Intervention 1 (Appendix 1)

The first intervention we ran, it was important for us to not only understand what the girls wanted to be discussed but also how we could ensure that the group was a space that would feel safe and comfortable for the girls. The group made three core promises within their Be Her Head Code which were, “Empathy”; “Respect” and “Bravery.” They then made promises of how they would act within the group to abide by these key rules and goals. Each Be He Lead code should be individual to the group. It identifies the student’s promises to one another for the group to run smoothly and allow students to be vulnerable in a space where they know they are safe. It was important to my colleague and I that the group is inclusive to all and also to attempt to remove a sense of hierarchy between us and the students. This has definitely been a learning experience for both of us. Taking away the hierarchy is something that simply is not discussed at teacher training. Yet, how else could a space be safe if the students felt like they were constantly being watched by two people who had all the answers when it comes to adolescence? All the answers to the questions they were asking? Neither my colleague nor I know what it is like to be a young girl of colour, growing up in a city and therefore we wanted to be two people that the girls could trust to support them, rather than two women who were the oracles of knowledge. 

(Appendix 1) 

Intervention 2 (Appendix 2)

A problem faced by many of our students is that they simply do not know how to support themselves in moments of weakness and stress. The girls we were supporting had a worrying lack of resilience. This seems to have been exacerbated by COVID-19, where academic and personal problems were able to be ignored and hidden whilst simultaneously the unrelenting fear and worry surrounding the news cycle and outside world increased anxiety within many of our students. So in our workshop we thought about self care. This is a phrase that seems to have become a platitude in the twenty-first century, yet as a teenager the need to rest and reset is hugely important. So we had the girls write some of the issues they faced, many of them writing “looking good” and “PE”. We had students draw themselves, and think about what inner reserves they had to help themselves when faced by these problems. Then we also had them draw “survivor boats,” with their emergency supplies on board such as, “music; reading and binge watching.” Each island was supposed to represent the physical and mental struggles each student experiences. When you have fifteen students in a room, it is an experience for them to trust you with information that can often be private. Yet the group also allowed students to realise that they are not alone. Many of the problems faced by one girl were faced by another two in the group. 



Intervention 3 (Appendix 3)

To continue in the vein of problems experienced by them all, my colleague and I also ran a workshop focused on the theme of identity: shared and individual. Each student decorated a puzzle piece to represent different aspects of their personality- origins; dislikes and dreams- and then placed the puzzle pieces together which represented their shared identity as students of the Academy and members of Be Her Lead group. This illustrated to the girls that whilst they often speak about feeling alone and different, actually there are always commonalities between them and the other girls in our group. 



Impact

It was difficult to find definitive numerical data that supported how Be Her Lead had made an impact on our students. Many of them were not failing academically when they entered the group and whilst many suffered from SEMH issues, they were generally a group of girls that were present to school. They did not enjoy school, they found many aspects of the environment challenging, yet they attended. However I think the student voice that my colleague and I conducted with them, goes to show that they did find it made an impact. 


Case Study A- When I first came to Be Her Lead I was facing some tricky times at school. Whilst our school is diverse, I do not follow a Muslim religion and my background is Korean. So for a very diverse school, it was difficult to find students who were like me and I was being teased with racist comments regularly. When I finally told a teacher, the boys were told off and I got the apology I wanted but I still felt like I was not being heard. Be Her Lead is a space and time that I can talk about things and I know I am always being listened to. It doesn’t take courage to speak at Be Her Lead because all of us always feel happy and comfortable.


Case Study B- I found the beginning of Year 10 a really stressful time. Every lesson was a reminder that our GCSEs were not far away and the academic pressure really became a lot for me to handle, yet everyone else seemed happy and confident so I tried to act like I was too. Once I came to Be Her Lead and became friends with people I had never spoken to before, I realised we were all acting. Everyone was finding Year 10 stressful and this shared experience made everything seem so much easier. 



Next Steps


This group is supposed to be a springboard into long-lasting change at my school. Whilst it may not reach a huge percentage of a year group, or a large demographic at the school, the personal testimonies of Be Her Lead “alumni” show me that this is a group that needs to continue. Whilst my colleague and I plan to continue to support our group of students through Year 11, something that they have requested, we also with the train other female teachers to become leaders of similar female empowerment groups. Specifically, we both agree it would be good to have a more diverse group of teachers leading the groups. I feel uncomfortable thinking that my colleague and I, two white; cisgender;heterosexual females are the best teachers to continuously lead an intersectional female empowerment group. I feel putting diversity to the forefront of our future training is of critical importance. Both my colleague and I have tried very hard to limit hierarchical structures within this female empowerment group and thus, it is crucial that a system of privilege based on race does not manifest. 


The lack of focus on females within the community and the institutions we have is systematic. There has to be groups within schools that encourage girls to feel empowered and emboldened to not hide their feelings. As the girls said in one of our workshops, when the girls feel safe to speak, they “are free”. (Appendix 4).



Bitesize Research: Effective Peer Assessment

By Jaya Carrier

I hope you’re all having a great week so far. As part of our work around assessment, I was interested to come across a recent Edutopia article about effective peer assessment.


Objectives: To consider the barriers and strategies for effective peer assessment 


Summary: 

  • The author argues that effective peer assessment has a large number of benefits including enabling more time for low stakes assessments and independent practice, as well as ensuring greater degrees of accountability from students.

  • The author argues that one of the barriers to effective peer assessment is that sometimes adolescents can be sensitive to criticism and that they can worry about critiquing the work of their friends. To combat this, she argues that scaffolding the process of peer assessment and ensuring a safe and secure classroom is essential. 

  • The author goes on to make six recommendations for effective peer assessment practice:

  1. Focus on reflection on correction - in particular, encourage students to give their peers very clear next steps about how to improve

  2. Create feedback partners - which ensures that adolescent social dynamics do not impede impactful feedback

  3. Offer choice - this could include different prompts or sentence starters based around common mistakes or areas for development

  4. Specificity is important - emphasise the idea that feedback needs to be constructive and precise

  5. Model effective feedback - verbally or using sentence starters

  6. Harness deeper engagement - consider how you can use starters such as ‘I wish, I like, I wonder’ rather than getting students to focus on spelling, punctuation or grammar errors. 


How does this impact me and my practice?: Some reflections arising from this that might be helpful to consider are: 


  • What is important about peer assessment to me? For my subject? For my classes?

  • Which of the 6 recommendations am I currently doing well? Which would I like to learn more about and implement further? 

  • What opportunities are there for me to use these strategies with my students?


If you would like to discuss this further with me please get in touch! I’d be delighted to hear from you

Wednesday, 14 September 2022

Bitesize Research: Importance Of Vocabulary With Y7s

By Jaya Carrier

I hope you’re all having a great week. Following on from Donna’s INSET session on Communication, and on our keynote National Literacy Trust disciplinary literacy training from last year, I was interested to read this TES article, which is looking at strategies to support Year 7s with their vocabulary. 


Objectives: To consider the importance of the vocabulary with YR7 and how to support the ongoing development of vocabulary for YR7


Summary: 

  • The author argues that KS2 SATs for spelling, punctuation and grammar show a clear impact of the pandemic on the vocabulary of new YR7 students

  • The author also cites the 2018 Ofsted research into the ‘word gap’ that suggests a high correlation between child’s vocabulary and their academic success 

  • The author goes on to make 5 recommendations to ensure YR7 word gaps are closed as quickly as possible:

    • Ensuring all teachers understand their responsibility to build vocabulary for students. This includes developing knowledge of differences between the three tiers of vocabulary. 

    • Encouraging students to be ‘word conscious’. This could include mapping activities for words (such as the Frayer model), having ‘word of week’, embedding vocabulary recall into retrieval practice activities and celebrating moments when students use excellent vocabulary.

    • Use high quality texts. Where required, pre-teach vocabulary to enable access to these texts.

    • Develop oracy activities. Spoken opportunities to use new vocabulary improves retention and fluency. 

    • Give opportunities for students to play with words in low-stakes ways. This could include ideas like incorporating ‘Wordle’ or other word-based games. 


How does this impact me and my practice?: 

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


  • Which of the 5 recommendations am I currently doing well? Which would I like to learn more about and implement further? 

  • What opportunities are there for me to use these strategies with YR7s or with other year groups?


If you would like to discuss this further with me please get in touch! I’d be delighted to hear from you!


How Can We Link Curriculum With Careers?

By Adam Herbertson

As part of the statutory requirements in schools, all subject teachers should link curriculum with careers. Throughout their studies, every student should be informed about how each subject they are studying can help them gain entry to (and be more successful in) a wide range of occupations. Research shows that students feel more engaged in learning when they can see why it is relevant to people’s lives, which directly links to our school goal of lessons being student-centred. They also become more aspirational when they are more aware of the potential pathways available to them. Subject teachers are highly influential, students are 18 times more likely to be motivated to learn if teachers know their ambitions for the future.


One of the key ways to achieve this benchmark is to include links to careers in unit plans. This can be done by including how the subject, and individual topics, relate to specific careers and highlighting how content and themes link to essential skills, pathways and roles. Some other tips to link careers to your lessons include:


  • Highlighting essential skills development in your subject area

  • Highlighting pathways at 16/18 from your subject

  • Identifying jobs roles/sectors that link to your subject

  • Creating careers display boards

  • Creating career bios for teachers within the department

  • Giving school trips a careers focus e.g. asking an external person on the trip to speak about their career to the students

  • Involving family members or alumni in homework projects e.g. students speak to them about their jobs/careers and complete an assignment about it

  • Involving guest speakers in classes e.g. having external employees or alumni come in from careers linked to the subject come into lesson to speak about their careers


We are required to track all careers interactions for students and I will be using Unifrog to log these. If you do arrange any employer visits to lessons, school trips to workplaces or involving careers, workshops taken part in etc. please let me know! 


Unifrog has several useful resources to link curriculum to careers. There will be Unifrog-related sessions in Personal Development each term for each year group to help students start to use Unifrog regularly. Additionally, there are many different resources you can use in lessons. By going on unifrog.org and scrolling down to ‘student side’, you can see how the website looks to students. From there, if you click on careers library, you can search for keywords or search by school subjects and you will see a wide range of careers. As an example, here is the profile for a nurse including: day-to-day duties, working hours and environment, career path and progression, skills required, entry requirements, labour market information (for Westminster, London and the UK) and much more. These job profiles can be included in lessons and linked to specific units. You, and students, can also access the subjects library to find degrees linked to different subjects and see various information on how students can get into that subject and how to prepare for it. There are also a wide range of subject-related videos, articles etc. in the read, watch, listen section.


If you have any questions or need any support, please come and speak to me!


Tuesday, 6 September 2022

"How Was Your Summer?": Supporting Students Returning To School

By Paul Mulvihill

“How was your Summer?” This is often a question we, as staff, ask each other on the first day back before we become completely absorbed in day-to-day activities and preparing for students' returns. Our answers would usually be in-depth and clear, which leaves us happy and confident that our colleagues are well-rested and ready to attack the new academic year. However, when we ask our students the same question we might get a very short response of ‘good’. This answer often worries me as I wonder what ‘good’ means to each individual. I like to probe students and follow up with ‘What does good mean?’, ‘What did you get up to?’ and ‘How is your family?’. This will hopefully encourage students to open up a bit more. Even if we probe and students open up about their summers we might not always get the true picture; often students will hide what they might feel is embarrassing, like not really leaving the house/flat; not having enough money to get away or not eating well for the entire 6 weeks. This is why our interactions with them on their first days back are so important. The return to WA for lots of our students may be a respite from harmful relationships, lack of comfort/food or even witnessing violence. You as teaching and support staff may be a student's only positive attachment they have in their lives; whilst this may sound sad it is also a testament to the amazing work we all complete day in day out. After a quick search online for some tips for students, staff, and parents on effective strategies in a successful return I have come up with some questions to think about in the first couple of weeks of the new academic year:

  • How can you ensure interacting with you is appealing, predictable and you create a clear routine?
  • How will you know what worries/thoughts students have about returning?
  • How can I use trauma-informed approaches and coaching techniques to develop positive relationships with students?
The key trauma-informed approaches below are also really useful strategies to use throughout the year but especially at the start of term. Good luck! Zones of regulation Mindfulness Trauma informed thinking/language


Bitesize Research: What Impacts Student Wellbeing?

By Jaya Carrier

Welcome back everyone! I hope you’re all having an excellent first week back. We’re back with bitesize research! For those new in the WA community, this is a weekly blog article which looks to bring you a short summary of some recent educational research and expertise, and hopefully pique your interest to delve further! To start us off this academic year, I was interested in this work commissioned by the IB on student wellbeing. Objectives: To collate the existing research on wellbeing and start to look at the views of students on wellbeing and what impacts it Summary:

  • The researchers in this report started with a literature review. The key conclusions from this were that:
    • There is value in school time, money and resources in improving student wellbeing
    • Family interactions are very impactful on the wellbeing of students
    • School climate is influential on student wellbeing
    • School interventions for wellbeing are impactful, and should have a sound theoretical basis
  • The report creates a conceptual framework for wellbeing which has four key sections; health, people, environment and skills.
  • The report concludes some recommendations for improving student wellbeing going forward:
    • Schools should determine their own definition of wellbeing and this should be influenced by the socio-demographic factors that influence the school more broadly
    • Subjective wellbeing should be the focus - namely, how students themselves self-report their wellbeing
    • Physical activity and wellbeing should be explored by schools, as there is lots to suggests that more active students have greater wellbeing
    • Teacher wellbeing is an important predictor of student wellbeing
How does this impact me and my practice?:


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

  • How might I know about the wellbeing of my students and tutees? What opportunities do I have to learn about this?
  • How have I supported student wellbeing in the past?
  • What new ideas would I like to learn about or try in terms of supporting student wellbeing?
  • How can I show students the value of participation in ECA as one medium of improving their wellbeing?
  • How might my lessons/actions/language impact the wellbeing of students?
  • What will I do to support my own wellbeing? What opportunities do I have to do this?
If you would like to discuss this further with me please get in touch! I’d be delighted to hear from you!

Thanks, Jaya