TS 6 – Make accurate and productive use of assessment

TS 6: Make accurate and productive use of assessment
– Use relevant data to monitor progress, set targets, and plan subsequent lessons

As a Schools direct trainee, in my block placement school I was seen very much as a part of the team and treated as such. I took responsibility for my students, their progress and in order to improve their progress, I was required to learn how to measure this very soon into my PGCE. Every term we complete a Data Drop, which requires both grades to be given and a written analysis of students who are working to their end of year target grade, those who are above and those who are working considerably lower.

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Having this experience during my training year not only gave me the knowledge and understanding of analysing data, but also the experience and understanding in how to use data to inform my planning. The data analysis took into consideration students SEN which then allowed me to differentiate more suitably, in line with their needs and current progress.

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TS 4 – Plan and teach well structured lessons

TS 4: Plan and teach well structured lessons
– Impart knowledge and develop understanding through effective use of lesson time

I took 4 Year 10 classes through the Religion and Life topic for GCSE – the AQA specification. We spent at least 5 lessons covering the topic of Abortion and students did engage with the material, and had lots of opinions which we discussed openly in class. I was aware of a very educational pro life charity known as SPUC – Society for the protection of unborn children. I contacted their press and education team and spoke to Dr Tom Rogers, the Education Outreach Manager at SPUC. We discussed the possibility of him coming into my bloxck placemetn school to deliver one perspective of abortion. This was a good way to motivate studetns, engage them as they were presented with an opinion that may be similar or different to their own.

Information – SPUC Talk-2duhwbt

The talk lasted 40minutes with 10minutes for questions. Students listened intently, and while the talk could have been a little more dynamic, I was so surprised and impressed by the level or maturity shown by most students. The talk enabled them to listen to someone’s point of view, reflect on their own ideas and gain knowledge to be able to write a balanced argument in their exam.

[embeddoc url=”https://eportfolios.roehampton.ac.uk/papanase1/files/2018/06/SPUC-Talk-St-Andrews-CE-School-Croydon.msg-2j389xz.docx” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

TS 8 – Fulfil wider professional responsibilities

TS 8: Fulfil wider professional responsibilities
– Communicate effectively with parents with regard to pupils’ achievements and well-being.

I have ensured, during my time at my block placement school, that I establish and maintain good relationships with students and their parents. I have called home for students, to feedback both positive behaviour and issues that have arisen pertaining to poor conduct in my classroom. Having found working with and motivating 3 of the 4 Year 9 classes I teach, calling home has enabled me to encourage parents to reward/sanction their child’s behaviour at home, and I can do this in school.

The end of year assessments for Year 9 proved challenging this week; partly due to their lack of consideration for each other and also the subject, and partly due to their lack of focus in lessons throughout this academic year. One class in particular, found it so challenging to be quiet and complete their test for 40minutes. Despite the disruption at the beginning of this lesson, students were able to have the full 40minutes during the lesson. However, there was ongoing behaviour issues during the test, which I noticed distracted students who I know are keen to succeed. At the end of the 40minutes, I offered certain students additional time; those who had been affected by the behaviour issues during the test. They took the time and worked so hard to answer every question on the test paper. I was so proud of these 6 students as they can be chatty at times, but when it comes down to it, they want to do well. I told them as they handed me their test papers, that I would email their parents for them, that same day. I did, and received responses from some almost immediately.

Emails home-291mfel

TS 4 – Plan and teach well structured lessons

TS 4: Plan and teach well structured lessons
– Contribute to the design and provision of an engaging curriculum within the relevant subject area(s).

As part of my TS 4 and also the RE department, my mentor advised me to plan a scheme of work, which would greatly help my subject knowledge and also my understanding of long term planning. At first, I was a little overwhelmed, as the idea of planning one lesson still leaves me wondering what I could have done better. However, as I started to brainstorm ideas, I realised that, without deliberate implementation, I was planning according to the backwards model of planning. I was thinking about where I would like students to be, what I would like them to have achieved by the end of the term, and how this new knowledge acquisition will be visible in their end of topic test.

She gave me some options and I decided to go with Eastern Religions, as I have covered both Sikhism and Hinduism so am familiar with elements that are similar across these religions and also, challenges students might face in terms of their learning. Before I had planned the lessons, I did a huge amount of brainstorming, trying to link ideas together, as well as building on students skills through the term. This required the use of Blooms taxonomy and examples of previous schemes of work using the template given to me by my school mentor.

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I created folders on the shared area with examples of other lessons, resources, worksheets and differentiated activities. Planning a scheme of work is time consuming, and it needs to be taken into consideration that it is usually and often the Head of Departments role to organise schemes of work. However through this process I was able to see how lessons add layers of knowledge to students understanding while developing the higher order thinking skills (Blooms).

PART TWO: Personal and Professional conduct

Having spent this training year in my block placement school, I feel somewhat sad to leave the students with whom I have formed good relationships with; students whom I have got to know, through teaching, joking, my enrichment club and conversations around school. This has, however, introduced me to the difficulties teachers face when considering leaving a school and moving on; do they stay for these relationships or do they do what is needed to improve their career and/or work life balance?

Being ‘liked’ was very important to me at the beginning of my time at St Andrews. I realised in just a few days that I would need to do something in order to build and develop relationships with these students, as I have to admit, I was shocked by the extent of challenging behaviour; the kind of behaviour I would expect to see in a PRU, not in a Church of England state school. But then, this just highlighted how much I had to learn about school and the education system in the UK. I went from wanting to be ‘liked’ to wanting to be ‘respected’. I have come to realise that students really do need to know the importance of respect, not that I expect students to bow down to me, but more because I would like students to move into the world of work with values that show respect and kindness towards others. Moreover, given the nature of my subject, Religious studies, students feel they do not need to know the things I teach them. I have explained the importance of trying your hardest in everything you do, no matter where or when you will need the knowledge; it is the act of trying hard in school which will set you up for life after school.

In the workplace, trying hard means working hard and earning the money, valuing that money because you have worked hard for it. All too often in my block placement school I have had discussions with students about what they will do after school. I hear rapper, footballer, model, singer and astrophysicist! I admire the aspirations of these students, and I want to nourish that. For me, it is important they have a realistic approach to their studies and achieving their dreams. I motivate them to aim higher, but I also give them the tools to pave their journey to the top. It is important they know Christian values, as my block placement is a faith school. It is also important they recognise diversity through understanding the reasons behind the diversity, because they are well educated and have open minds in school where we facilitate debates and discussions.

This led me to also realise how much I had to learn about my own subject. Having completed a subject enhancement course prior to beginning my PGCE, I thought I knew far more than I do! This made me feel nervous but also inspired me to push my own learning further as I did not want to be unprepared for a classroom situation! I had been told, ‘don’t worry Lizzy, all you need to do is be 1 lesson ahead of the kids!’ Not helpful! In order to be able to teach, you need to know what you are teaching AND the surrounding context, including where this topic fits into the schools schemes of work or if GCSE, how it fits in to the learning required for the exams.

In the wider context, I feel that I now have a good foundation of the bare bones needed in order to work within an environment that can harbour safeguarding issues, issues with vulnerable children and those with SEN. I have completed online safeguarding training that covered issues with abuse, bullying and neglect. We have had in school ‘twilight’ training which has covered safeguarding, OFSTED and raising achievement of students in school. I have attended all after school training, including meetings with SIAMS and departmental meetings. I have sat in as a class teacher during interviews and been a part of 2 geography field trips. I have worked closely with students of other faiths and from various countries around the world to assist in art and prayer space projects at my block placement school.

I have now, at this stage, achieved far more than I imagined. However, I also appreciate, at this stage, that there is still a lot I need to do in order to be where I want to be. I can produce lessons, resources and Schemes of work. I can differentiate, communicate with parents and teachers, and teach difficult subjects. I can analyse data, through data drops and mark thoroughly and constructively. I understand how to follow schools behaviour management policies, and take the right steps to issue sanctions accordingly. I can build relationships, promote a love of learning in my teaching environment, and recognise signs that may be safeguarding issues. Across my training, I have learnt pedagogical approaches, creativity and now have a wealth of educational planning knowledge that I hope I can put into practice during my NQT year.

I have taken considerable knocks during the year, to my confidence and at times, my pride. When being watched and your actions observed in detail, then being recalled to you, it can at times bring on the cringe! I have said some very strange things during lessons, being shell shocked by weird behaviour and been tongue tied at some of the questions I have been asked. Above all, I have these challenges, knock backs and turned them into constructive criticism which I can work on, improve on and grow from. I feel I have come so far to achieve these things; 2 schools, 2 mentors, 2 full terms teaching and a whole lot of marking! I now know that true meaning of reflection; it filters through into my personal life and actually, has seen me grow in my character and ability to tackle difficult situations. People always tell me that you never stop learning when you are a teacher; that you constantly feel challenged and inspired simultaneously, and no two days are the same. Now that I am so so close to the end of my teacher training, I can honestly and wholeheartedly say that I am excited for my NQT, ready for a challenge, and BRING IT ON!

TS 8 – Fulfil wider professional responsibilities

Autumn and Spring Term poster advertising my ‘Get fit with Miss’ club

TS 8: Fulfilling wider responsibilities
– Make a positive contribution to the wider life and ethos of the school

Having established myself as a teacher at my block placement school, and as I am a Schools Direct student, I was required to develop and implement an enrichment activity. Seeing these student with endless energy as well as a keenness for taking pride in their appearance, I decided to utilise my fitness background and introduce a girls only fitness club.

Having started to form good relationships with some of the year 10 girls, I thought I may at least have a few attendees and the rest would follow! That was my aim!

I had quite a pleasant surprise during the last of my Get Fit with Miss sessions before my short departure. There was an atmosphere of sadness, and students were adamant they would come as soon as I returned.

Embedding an enrichment activity strengthened the relationships I built with students throughout the school year, through understanding them as individuals outside of the classroom and recognising their strengths which I could hone in on during lessons too. I used my club as a means of demonstrating a change in student engagement as I completed an essay for professional studies addressing disengagement. I asked students to complete a questionnaire about the club and how it made them feel.

Get fit with Miss Feedback-12j90jp

My club raised some great questions around health and fitness. More importantly, it gave students a safe place to come and learn more about their body and their own capabilities. Students would often talk about ‘Body Image’ and how they felt uncomfortable in their own skin. By using this time and space as a way to vent these anxieties, I found that students responded well in lessons as they grew in confidence, recognising that they should not ‘give up’ so easily. I realise the value of a wider range of enrichment clubs as I spoke with other members of staff who took students swimming, for CCF and in debate clubs.

‘Get fit with Miss’ really was a great way to establish myself in school and I am really looking forward to an opportunity to implement an enrichment activity during my NQT year.

New place, new faces

TS 1 – Set high expectations which inspire, motivate and challenge pupils

As the half term holidays end and the new half term is upon us, I am anxious about my second placement. I didn’t quite realise the challenge that a teacher will face when going in to a new school, standing in front of 30 new faces. Not only this, but all the work you, as a teacher, have done to establish yourself, your routines and expectations, will not count with these new students. You can certainly establish routines and expectations with these news students but the difference here is you are starting from scratch.

That being said, I have heard amazing things about my six week placement school. I keep telling myself that it is only six weeks, it will go fast and I will be back at my block placement school quicker than I can say plenary! Only now do I also realise, the importance of half term breaks for teachers. The expectations of a teacher are far higher than I ever imagined, and not that I am complaining, but I just did not realise quite how much work a teacher invests in every student.

I hope that I have some classroom presence at my new school. I know that the school is an OFSTED Outstanding Academy and it would be strange if I weren’t nervous about my subject knowledge, as the academic ability of studies is far higher, therefore I will need to stretch up as opposed to the usual down. In all honesty, the change is good and I am sure they call it a ‘contrasting school experience for a reason!’. We will soon find out; watch this space!

TS 4 – Plan and teach well structured lessons

TS 4: Plan and teach well structured lessons
– Promote a love of learning and children’s intellectual curiosity

Year 11
Topic – Christianity
Role of the Church in the local and wider community
Persecution

I have been feeling quietly confident about the improvement in my creativity and production of my lessons, and this has lead to sometimes seamless delivery. NOT perfect delivery, not by any stretch of the imagination. BUT there has been progress in the way I approach planning and it feels amazing. As a teacher, particularly a trainee, I have been regularly advised to take these small wins!

Today’s lesson was a great example. I was confident in my subject knowledge but, as always, I had overplanned. However, I am now becoming more aware of the importance of overplanning but with activities that are linked but not connected. Activities which can be picked up and instructed according to the progress of lesson, in terms of the time frame.

Persecution was the title of today’s lesson and I had researched the Open Doors project and the work they do. I found a moving video which I had hoped would engage the class, as they can usually find sitting still difficult, and actually the students were quiet and attentive during the video. This felt like another small win! Students are familiar with me now and my teaching style. They know the feeling of being in my classroom, they are still cheeky, they still talk and chit chatter. But, once engaged, they are interactive, interested and grateful for the time I give to them and the knowledge they gain. I have established routines with them, and this has informed my planning as well as my behaviour management strategies.

I organised an activity which enabled them to be responsible for their own note taking, responsible for their own learning and for the knowledge they absorb which they need to know for the assessment next week. This independent learning gave them the opportunity to speak with those next to them, without me having to tell them to work in silence; they were genuinely talking about the work. They stuck in the maps, drew lines and labelled persecution of Christians and the way it is executed in countries around the world. They were curious and engaged. By asking students to label the map, I was facilitating cross-curricular learning with Geography, and this really got their minds focusing on the task at hand.

I always create my lesson power points with visual aids which are colourful and interesting for students to look at. I make sure the task instructions are on the board as well as explained verbally, to ensure students have a point of reference if they lose track of what they are doing. As per school policy and as part of my class routine, I always have a starter activity to engage students which does not necessarily need to link to the lesson, however, I like it to as it gives students a taster of what we are working on.

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The lesson finished within time and smoothly. I wondered to myself why today they were in such high spirits! At the end of the lesson my mentor requested this lesson to be put into the shared earlier so other teachers can use it. That for me is an amazing honour, as a student teacher and trainee.

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TS 2 & 6 – Promote good progress and Make productive use of assessment

The need for reflection in life can often be incredibly important. I realise now, as I am older (and a little wiser) that being able to reflect is a fantastic skill to carry with you at work, in your personal like and when interacting with others. It can enable you to understand where you need to channel you energy, your focus and helps you to improve. This skill needs to be taught to students as soon as they enter secondary school.

Here at my current school, we call it DIRT – Dedicated Improvement and Reflection Time. This gives students the opportunity to understand how they could improve and gives them confidence in the areas which they do well in. Often we use this after tests/assessments and also when completing the marking of their classwork, and of course, homework.

On Friday 3rd November my University observation was scheduled. This happened to fall on a day when it was fundamental I went through DIRT with the students; they had assessments which I had marked and needed to feedback to them. It just so happens that I would be reflecting with the students whilst reflecting on myself and my teaching progress. This made me incredibly nervous. However, I have found, in my short time teaching, that the process of reflection will be how I will go from a good teacher to hopefully one day an outstanding teacher.

I explained the importance of DIRT to the students. I told them how it is an important skill, to be able to reflect. They respond, complete the sheets and I am pleased. Who knows if they really do know how to understand their individual strengths and weaknesses. Only through implementing DIRT and ensuring it is an integral part of the feedback process will the students feel confident in using the skill. It would be even better if (EBI!!!!) we could be sure that students would then carry this skill with them through their lives. Into the workplace, and their personal life. We wont know, but as teachers, as we reflect on our own teaching, we can only hope that we have given them the ability to understand the complexities of recognising strength and weakness, and what to do as a follow up.

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As I then reflected on their reflections, I recognised my own areas needing improvement:
TS 7 – managing behaviour effectively and TS 5 – differentiating and ensuring students are stretched and challenged where appropriate.

I have come to love a reflection. I have grown to enjoy knowing what went wrong more than what went right! This way I can continually improve and evolve, getting stronger and stronger.

TS 1 – Set high expectations which inspire, motivate and challenge pupils

TS 1: Set high expectations which inspire, motivate and challenge pupils
– Establish a safe and stimulating environment for pupils, rooted in mutual respect

‘A pleasant surprise’
Blog post
Year 10 Religious Studies

The day has come. My nerves, I feel, may overtake me. I wear dark colours so the nervous sweat patches aren’t visible to students. I wouldn’t want to add fuel to the fire!

Students enter. I have meticulously planned this lesson, to their abilities as I have observed many lessons with this class, taught by my mentor. They are loud, noisy, boisterous. They push, shove and show unruly behaviour. The classroom is unsettled. Miss settles them slowly, as she was to take the beginning of the lesson today for some administrative tasks. Time passes and she tells me to just crack on.

The class fall silent I look around, they are all watching me. I raise my voice, take the register. They start talking again, and as I ask for quiet, they settle. I introduce the lesson topic, incarnation. They choose a picture from their desks which I placed there, I ask them to see which they feel best represents Jesus as they believe. They do as asked, they fall quiet again as I continue a positive but stern approach. I have seen this class so disruptive and unruly, I am pleasantly surprised and feel surprisingly confident. Not only are they listening, but they are interacting and it appears, through teach and testing, they are learning.

This class dislikes making notes, and I do not want to spend a lesson asking the to copy notes from the board. They will not learn from this and this will negate my aims as a teacher for both knowledge and behaviour management. I ask them to draw the outline of their own hand. I put 5 key points on the board. I ask them to write one point in their own words in each finger. They do it. THEY DO IT! With some gentle prompting and monitoring, they are compliant and generally (for this class) settled!

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The lesson comes to the end, and I do not start a new task as time will not allow for this. Before they leave, I thank them. Lots of research into positive behaviour management has shown me that I should appreciate when they are good, reward positivity. In return, they thank me back. Echoes of “thank you Miss” and “bye Miss” fill the room. I stand there for a moment, feeling pleasantly surprised.