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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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Ofsted Will Keep Grading Schools!
Reading Time: 6 minutes Do those who wish to keep Ofsted’s four-point grading system, actually know the damage they are creating? This was a
The post Ofsted Will Keep Grading Schools! appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
Ofsted Will Keep Grading Schools! published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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#1MinCPD: Coaching Questions
Reading Time: 1 minute Have you ever coached another colleague? Coaches ask great questions. Coaching helps people to find a route towards their own
The post #1MinCPD: Coaching Questions appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
#1MinCPD: Coaching Questions published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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What Are Parents’ Perceptions of OfSTED?
Reading Time: 3 minutes What do parents think about our English state schools and how they are inspected? The Annual Parents Survey 2018 was
The post What Are Parents’ Perceptions of OfSTED? appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
What Are Parents’ Perceptions of OfSTED? published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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10 Reasons Why Spelling Is A Step Too Far!
Reading Time: 4 minutes Children don’t need to know how to spell, do they? I am not averse to the teaching of spelling. I
The post 10 Reasons Why Spelling Is A Step Too Far! appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
10 Reasons Why Spelling Is A Step Too Far! published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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How Can You Bring Engineering To Life In Your Classroom?
Reading Time: 2 minutes How can we encourage young people to think like scientists and engineers? The Smallpiece Trust aims to inspire young people
The post How Can You Bring Engineering To Life In Your Classroom? appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
How Can You Bring Engineering To Life In Your Classroom? published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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Does Personality Make You A Better Teacher?
Reading Time: 2 minutes Does your personality make you are a more effective teacher? Published in Educational Psychology Review, March 2019, the results showed
The post Does Personality Make You A Better Teacher? appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
Does Personality Make You A Better Teacher? published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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National Professional Qualification for School Leadership
Reading Time: 3 minutes How do you know what you are doing, if you are not supported or know what to do? It is
The post National Professional Qualification for School Leadership appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
National Professional Qualification for School Leadership published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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Podcast 45: What Impact Can Charity Work Have On Education?
Reading Time: 1 minute What is it like to work for a worldwide charity, promoting, advocacy, communication and fundraising? Our 26th interview in the
The post Podcast 45: What Impact Can Charity Work Have On Education? appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
Podcast 45: What Impact Can Charity Work Have On Education? published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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10 Apps To Aid Pupil Revision
Reading Time: 3 minutes How can we help students prepare for their exams? Teaching and support staff in our schools will be working very
The post 10 Apps To Aid Pupil Revision appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
10 Apps To Aid Pupil Revision published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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#1MinCPD: Coaching Questions
Reading Time: 1 minute Have you ever coached another colleague? Coaches ask great questions. Coaching helps people to find a route towards their own
The post #1MinCPD: Coaching Questions appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
#1MinCPD: Coaching Questions published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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Do detentions work?
When I was a student I was given a lot of detentions. After some particularly appalling behaviour on a French exchange trip I was given two months of 1 hour after school detentions. This was a big deal as I lived about 15 miles away from my school and needed to get two buses home. [...] Do detentions work? published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
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Don’t need this pressure on: Towards intelligent, sustainable accountability.
I wonder how much longer we will go down the accountability road we’re on before politicians, DFE, Ofsted and some of the beneficiaries of the current system realise just how bad things are; before they realise that they themselves are making things worse; before they change tack.
You only have to read the powerful recent blog by Vic Goddard  and the retirement comments by Stephen Tierney to  realise that we’re in a terrible place.  It shouldn’t be the case that really good people feel this way about the system they’ve given their whole professional lives to.   Even putting aside my own experience of ‘head-on-a-spike, thrown under the bus’ humiliation,  I know far too many good people who no longer work in schools because the system spat them out, crushed and demoralised. These are not isolated cases.  It’s endemic.
The signs of increasing desperation in the recruitment of teachers and leaders can be seen everywhere.  I know schools with whole departments run by temporary non-specialist staff where a whole curriculum is delivered via a damage limitation diet, held together by a few over-stretched leaders in a permanent state of holding the fort, hoping for the cavalry that never arrives.
When I go abroad to work in international schools I often want to say “ah… so here’s where all the teachers are”.  Why are they there and not here?  Because they have a healthy work-life balance; they work in a culture of healthy, responsible professionalism – not one of excessive ‘gun-to-the-head’ target-chasing and hoop-jumping; they have a good level of professional autonomy and teach students who are not pushing them to their emotional limits every day. Sounds good right?
So, how do we shift the system to get to a position where teaching or leading schools in the UK is widely regarded just the BEST JOB? I think we need to tear up the accountability regime we have now and build something new.   Here’s a few elements of that:
Ofsted Grading has to go:
For as long as our system promotes the idea that different groups of strangers can walk into different schools for a couple of days and arrive at a consistent, reliable set of graded judgements, we don’t have intelligent accountability.   All the Ofsted people you ever meet are nice people who mean well but it seems impossible within Ofsted culture to contemplate the idea that, just possibly, the system they operate is making things worse, not better.   The new framework, with grades firmly in place, won’t change anything.  As the inspection teams emerge from their ‘bringing the human element into inspection’ training, we’re set for a raft of perverse behaviours as schools try to second-guess the particular biases and foibles of their teams.  We’ll have school X judged RI by team A that is no worse than school Y judged Good by team B.  Ofsted can’t even really be bothered to test this out.. it’s more or less a shoulder-shrug: inspection will always be imperfect.  Oh, we know.  WE KNOW.
Of course we need some accountability but here’s my suggestion:  Just get every school doing the equivalent of Challenge Partners, with grade-free reports published to parents and let Ofsted verify that CP processes have been followed and do safeguarding checks.  That’s it.  You can’t ever be sure all Good schools are better than all RI schools do don’t lie about it and pretend you can.  Just keep schools checking each other, learning from each other, focusing on strengths and areas for improvement…. . and drop the whole gun-to-head machinery that drives so much toxic, stress-inducing big cojones behaviour around the system.
Put Progress 8 in its place.
Progress 8 has some value.  It’s useful information for school leaders and governors to have a metric that includes all the grades of all students and gives some indication of progress between the KS2 and KS4 bell-curves in a broad averaged way.  But that’s the end.
In addition to the horrendous demoralising zero sum element, where half of schools must be negative by definition, it’s simply far too noisy, too crude an average, too sensitive relative to an unstable baseline and too context dependent to serve as a way of comparing individual schools across a system.  I know a school ABC with P8 = 0.35 led by a solid Head, solid staff and regular students doing simple things well but nothing spectacular and not busting a gut.  Meanwhile elsewhere I know a school XYZ with P8 = -0.25 with a hugely talented head and staff working tirelessly week in, week out against the odds, doing everything anyone could imagine that could be done.   The numbers don’t reflect the inputs.  The comparison doesn’t stack up.  Context is everything.  I won’t detail the differences.. but essentially in each case contextual factors account for the scores more than anything the schools are doing or not doing.
So, let’s apply that ‘intelligent accountability’ frame to P8.  Use it as an internal measure amongst others; use it as a lever for improvement if it helps identify areas of weakness within the P8 framework.. but let’s ditch the data-garbage illusion that beyond a very broad brush with a huge error margin, it serves as a reliable and meaningful way to rank and compare schools; let’s ditch the assumption that a higher P8 means “a better school”.   If we do that, then a whole host of bad behaviours will stop: the incentive to off-roll students in Year 10 and 11, the incentive to narrow the curriculum down to the bare bones, the incentive to ditch arts because they don’t count enough… all of that will stop.
Break open the bell-curve cage
This refers to the graveyard that Nicky Morgan created when insisting on a pass/fail threshold for the new 1-9 grading system.  We have a system that deliberately labels 30% of students as failures in any exam.  Yes – scandalous I know.  THIRTY PERCENT of all students are in the bottom 30%.  A national disgrace.  We need to think very hard about this.  We are just so conflicted on ideas of success.  If we pull the league table infrastructure down, we open the door to a wider, Bacc-style curriculum that gives value to all kinds of successes; we can start to give value to foundation level qualifications again, allowing students to bank successes instead of leaving with so little.  There are risks here too but let’s face it – what we do now isn’t fair for way too many students.  Let’s re-imagine examinations so we have students passing Grade One instead of failing Grade Five.   At least, let’s get that policy ball rolling instead of banging the GCSE drum ever  more defensively.   Grade 9 is a great invention… if you’ve got half a chance of earning one.
Easy policy win: remove the pass/fail line from GCSE grades.  At least make each grade have value for what it is: a bell-curve place marker.
Protect Headteachers
Last of all – I think Headteachers need more protection.  Even the worst possible outcome of an industrial tribunal is no real threat to a MAT or LA with the budgets they have. Heads can be ditched in a puff of wind.  It’s wrong; it’s destabilising to the whole system. I think that Heads should have decent minimum contract terms and cases for dismissal would need an evidence base that is supported by independent evaluations.  The current hire and fire power-games in some MATS and LA governing bodies are outrageous.  With Heads as vulnerable as they are, the pressures on them are extreme and they knock-on to everyone in the system.  So they leave.. that’s how it goes.  If Heads were more secure, they could do a better job of absorbing normal level pressures and everyone would benefit.   Again – a policy win right there.
I could go on.  I haven’t even mentioned funding….
Not I said Ofsted. Not I said DFE. Not I said the ministers..   We’re the good guys.
Come on… take a GOOD HARD LOOK.
A better system is there for the taking. We need to dial down the whole gun-to-head intensity of the whole system and get accountability into some kind of perspective. Then decent Heads and great teachers might stick around a bit longer.  The first task is to recognise the true source of the problems with the current one make policy accordingly.
    Don’t need this pressure on: Towards intelligent, sustainable accountability. published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
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careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
Text
What Are Parents’ Perceptions of OfSTED?
Reading Time: 3 minutes What do parents think about our English state schools and how they are inspected? The Annual Parents Survey 2018 was
The post What Are Parents’ Perceptions of OfSTED? appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
What Are Parents’ Perceptions of OfSTED? published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
0 notes
careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
Text
10 Reasons Why Spelling Is A Step Too Far!
Reading Time: 4 minutes Children don’t need to know how to spell, do they? I am not averse to the teaching of spelling. I
The post 10 Reasons Why Spelling Is A Step Too Far! appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
10 Reasons Why Spelling Is A Step Too Far! published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
0 notes
careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
Text
Do detentions work?
When I was a student I was given a lot of detentions. After some particularly appalling behaviour on a French exchange trip I was given two months of 1 hour after school detentions. This was a big deal as I lived about 15 miles away from my school and needed to get two buses home. [...] Do detentions work? published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
0 notes
careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
Text
How Can You Bring Engineering To Life In Your Classroom?
Reading Time: 2 minutes How can we encourage young people to think like scientists and engineers? The Smallpiece Trust aims to inspire young people
The post How Can You Bring Engineering To Life In Your Classroom? appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
How Can You Bring Engineering To Life In Your Classroom? published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
0 notes
careergrowthblog ¡ 5 years
Text
Does Personality Make You A Better Teacher?
Reading Time: 2 minutes Does your personality make you are a more effective teacher? Published in Educational Psychology Review, March 2019, the results showed
The post Does Personality Make You A Better Teacher? appeared first on TeacherToolkit.
Does Personality Make You A Better Teacher? published first on https://medium.com/@KDUUniversityCollege
0 notes