April 2003
Accelerated Learning newsletter, April 2003
This month we take the theme of Making it Happen! This
is our title for Alite 2003, our annual national conference
taking place once again at the Café Royal, London
on June 20th. Chris Tomlinson describes how Chafford Hundred
Campus is striving to transform education beyond the technology
that modernises the way we teach. Pam Scott tells us about
her experiences of school transformation and Nicky Anastasiou
asks the question: which teacher influenced you? There’s
a short update on the Football Association Project. We
conclude with the next in our muddled metaphors and 20/20
Vision Series.
A School of Today Creating Education for
Tomorrow
Chafford Hundred Campus - a Case Study
When you think about a school of the future it probably
includes the most modern technology with interactive whiteboards,
wireless and broadband technology, electronic registration
and laptops for all. It is true that the Chafford Hundred
Campus has all this plus many more technological facilities
for a brand new school ready to transform education. It
is also true that the Campus is a state-of-the-art building.
But for me a school of the future is about trying to do
things differently to overcome the possible and probable
hurdles anyone could encounter in our education system.
This is what I believe is at its very heart and is the
prime objective and motive of the Campus.
The Campus is quite a unique school, with the primary
and secondary sectors all under one roof. It provides an
excellent start to easing the transition for students between
Key Stages, a wonderful opportunity for staff development
and for primary liaison to be at its most innovative. The
basis of the KS3 curriculum is the Royal Society of Arts’ 21st
Century Curriculum, founded on five competences:
Learning
Citizenship
Relating to people
Managing situations
Managing information
Each unit of work focuses on one or more of these competences
in the context of the National Curriculum subjects. The
Campus will soon offer a unique KS4 curriculum to suit
the needs, abilities and career pathway of individual pupils.
It will be innovative through developing fast track options
and vocational placements, and by offering a vast number
of GCSE courses to cover and develop all intelligences.
However, it is the individual who is important and the
1:1 day each student receives emphasises this. In this
weekly session a student can sit down and spend quality
time with his/her tutor and review the learning that has
taken place. The aim is to maximise everyone’s potential
and develop a unique education for all. It takes place
before school, something not unusual at the Campus, as
it is in operation much earlier than this with the ‘Grub
Club’ in the cyber café opening at 8:15am.
The Campus is keen to assist students of all ages in taking
responsibility for their education and developing their
knowledge of how they learn. One way of doing this is through
awarding PRAISE points for Progress, Responsibility, Achievement,
Initiative, Showcase and Effort when these are demonstrated.
The core of every initiative places the individual at the
centre and looks at how their education can be developed
to maximise their skills and intelligences.
The Campus is building education in the community as well,
seeing the whole population as lifelong learners. It is
already developing a programme to meet the needs of all
learners in the area particularly through opening its multi-facility
public library for everyone to use. It is also trying to
create a regional centre of excellence in Business Education,
empowering through learning to learn, creativity and competences.
It takes a special collection of people to achieve such
positive transformation in education and Chafford Hundred
has that spirit and creativeness in their team. They are
crossing so many lines of traditional educational norms
together, trying to set new standards in making the education
system better for the individual, that I am excited by
the prospect of soon joining this team. I hope to play
a significant role in encouraging further innovation and
creativity in building a framework that other Schools and
City Academies can adopt. The opportunity is there to transform
education beyond merely the technology that modernises
the way we teach. It is one that focuses on the art of
delivery to every individual and helps to develop the education
possibilities for the whole community.
Chris Tomlinson will soon be the new Deputy Headteacher
of Chafford Hundred Campus. The Campus will be presenting
a Case Study at Alite 2003, Making it Happen, on 20th
June at the Café Royal, London.
Coppenhall become mindful of learning
Pam Scott is Headteacher at Coppenhall High School in
Crewe. The newly formed Inclusion Team at the school is
the latest manifestation of her belief that education should
be for everyone.
Coppenhall is an 11-16 school with 700 pupils on roll,
of whom 135 are on the Code of Practice. The Ofsted report
in 1999 noted that the school had very good teaching in
the top ability band and of the pupils with moderate learning
difficulties (the school has a 60 place unit for pupils
with MLD statements), but that it was not as good for the
middle group of pupils. The school’s intake at that
time was skewed towards the middle and bottom end of the
range, so this observation represented the learning of
a large percentage of the children. Over the last three
years, however, results have improved across the school,
with attainment rising at all levels, by all indicators.
The trend of improvement is also more than the national
trend. Pupil numbers have also risen and Coppenhall is
now a fully subscribed and popular first choice for parents
in the local and wider community.
Many teachers were caught in a vicious circle, believing
that ‘good learning follows good behaviour’ and
so inhibiting them from teaching in a more interesting
way because the behaviour of the pupils would not allow
it. The SMT wanted to encourage a change of mindset amongst
staff to encourage them to think more creatively about
how they could promote ‘good learning’ for
their pupils. We were convinced that this adjustment of
focus would impact positively on ‘good behaviour’.
It was at this time that the LEA was beginning its work
on mind friendly learning. The core belief of this approach,
based on the accelerated learning cycle, is that all children
can learn. The SMT could see the potential for such an
approach in the school. Two INSET sessions were held with
the whole staff, then followed up by a pilot project in
2000-2001 where one member from each department looked
at mind friendly learning, and undertook some action research.
Each focused on one class throughout the year. This meant
that a shared language about the concept of ‘mind
friendly learning’ was being developed across the
school.
The following year the work was developed further and
the elements of mind friendly learning were incorporated
into a revised schedule for classroom observation. The
schedule was used with every teacher, who was observed
twice. An hour was spent with each of them afterwards,
giving feedback purely on the ‘learning’ in
the classroom. At the end of each feedback session ideas
for colleagues to develop around the framework were identified
and agreed. Sometimes these would be common ones across
a whole department, e.g. ‘effective reviewing at
the end of lessons’. Another whole staff INSET day
then followed, where each member of staff was given a menu
of workshops on different strategies from the framework.
Everyone was asked to attend one on an area that they wanted
to develop. Most of the workshops were led by school staff.
One of the key principles underpinning this framework
is the need for teachers to be self-conscious in their
planning for different learning styles, which should then
lead to more engagement from more pupils in lessons, with
an associated positive impact on behaviour. A significant
development as a result of this work has occurred in the
action taken with pupils who present persistent discipline
issues. For these individuals, the Year Team Leader routinely
undertakes a ‘pupil pursuit’ and observes their
behaviour in lessons. The process enables the Year Team
Leader to see the range of teaching and mind friendly learning
the particular pupil receives across all of his or her
subjects, which then informs a conversation with the teacher
who is having the difficulties. An individual learning
plan, which contains detailed guidance about what strategies
to use (because they are known to be effective with the
individual concerned) and which to avoid, is then drawn
up for all staff teaching the pupil. If the difficulties
continue then one of the areas that is next investigated
is the extent to which the teachers concerned have implemented
the strategies in the individual learning plan.
We have now added an Inclusion team to assist our work,
led by a Year Team Leader. Her role is to develop further
the inclusion agenda in school by co-ordinating the in-house
training of teachers, so that they work together to develop
mind friendly strategies. In particular, they are trying
to intervene much earlier with those who might be at risk,
which includes working with the parents of these pupils.
In this way, Coppenhall continues to address issues that
may stand between a child and his or her learning, whatever
their perceived ability, so that everyone has the opportunity
to learn.
Find out more about Coppenhall High School at The
Best on Motivation and Learning – Manchester, 11th
April. For full details visit the Alite website at www.alite.co.uk.
More Learning the FA Way
The second phase of Alite’s involvement with the
world’s best known football association is about
to begin. In phase one Alite helped the FA develop a philosophy
of learning. This was expressed through a statement of
vision with accompanying values and behaviours. In phase
two Alite helps the FA re-design the way it delivers coaching
and training programmes. With 40,000 students each year
this is no mean feat. Alite have designed a generic tutor
training programme which will be piloted with some of the
FA’s national coaches and trainers this April. The
tutor training programme will help FA staff re-design current
programmes. All divisions of the FA are involved – referees,
the national game, sports medicine and fitness, psychology
and child protection. Find out more at www.thefa.com
Who Influenced You?
Nicky Anastasiou recounts an amazing coincidence at
Lead Learner training in Wakefield.
Coincidences are strange things that often just carry
that “Really?” value when chatting to friends.
Recently, though, I was working with Wakefield EAZ when
a coincidence arose that was worth something more.
The teachers were engaged in an exercise sharing memorable
learning moments, events in their lives that had influenced
them as learners and that continue to affect them. This
part of the programme encourages participants to explore
what esteems learners and to consider the influence of
the power of thought in shaping expectations and beliefs.
I begin this session by talking about the self esteem
purse, a metaphor I use to illustrate that we each need
to keep topped up with the pennies of self esteem in order
for us to enter the learning experience. When our self
esteem purse is full we can afford to spend some to take
risks in the learning that sometimes may take us to the
edge of our comfort zone. We do this with confidence because
we know that if we lose some of these pennies then our
purse will be topped up again from the affirmation, beliefs
and trust significant people in our lives give us. The
story ends with questions including:
“When did you last give pennies and
to whom?”
“When did you last receive pennies and from whom?”
“How do you keep your own purse topped up?”
“How can teachers keep going in classrooms and give esteeming opportunities
to their pupils if the teachers don’t keep their own self esteem purses
full?”
“What happens in your school to esteem teachers and pupils?”
As the participants were working in pairs recalling their
stories and experiences an amazing coincidence emerged:
one of the pairs discovered that they had both been to
the same high school, though at different times, and been
taught by two memorable teachers in particular. Both teachers
had significantly influenced their belief in themselves
as learners, but in quite different ways. The first had
lowered their self esteem with the same strategies and
with the same negative effects; the second had believed
in them, inspired them to love the subject and, consequently,
had put many pennies in their self esteem purse. Both of
these teachers before me, now in animated discussion, had
been so influenced by this second teacher that they had
gone on to study the subject at university and then both
decided to become teachers. Until that moment they had
not thought about the significance of what this teacher
had done in shaping their lives.
Neither had met before the training days. They may have
even chosen to work with another partner and perhaps never
discovered this amazing story. But they did and, as a result,
they wanted to put a few pennies back in their teacher’s
self esteem purse. They wrote a joint letter to him during
their lunch break to tell him of his importance in helping
to shape their lives. Imagine his face when he opens the
letter all these years later!
A remarkable story – yes – but the influence
those teachers had on two different individuals is something
that is repeated on a daily basis in classrooms across
the world. How are you filling those purses of self-esteem?
And who filled yours?
We would like to hear your own stories of who influenced
you. Please send any submissions to newsletter@alite.co.uk.
We hope to print a selection over the coming months, and
reserve the right to edit what is received.
New books this month
Congratulations to Alite colleague and emotional intelligence
trainer Cath Corrie. Cath’s first book, Becoming
Emotionally Intelligent, is now out. It contains
activities which take the theory of emotional intelligence
into the classroom. The book suggests that not only can
you change the lives of children but you can change your
own.
Nicola Call, co-author with Alistair Smith of the ALPS
Approach books has written a book called The Thinking
Child: Brain-Based learning for the Foundation Stage.
Alongside the theory, the book ‘gives clear and practical
guidance for busy practitioners who want suggestions of
ways to implement brain-based techniques’.
Terry Mahoney’s Words Work: how to change
your language to improve behaviour in the classroom is
amongst the first NLP books to relate language patterns
directly to classroom teaching. A carefully thought through
and well structured book which will extend your skills
as a classroom practitioner.
Details of all three books can be found on www.alite.co.uk
Research Reminder
If you are busy working on educational research and want
to communicate with a wider audience you can do so via
the Alite newsletter. Where we can, we are happy to promote
your work to our network and extend your contact base.
Please email us at newsletter@alite.co.uk.
Muddled Metaphors of the Month
With thanks to Frank Burke and Alan Flinton. The following
are taken from English language exam papers.
He was as lame as a duck. Not the metaphorical lame duck either, but a
real duck that was actually lame. Maybe from stepping on a
land mine or something.
It came down the stairs looking very much like something no one had
ever seen before.
The ballerina rose gracefully en pointe and extended one slender leg
behind her, like a dog at a lamppost.
The revelation that his marriage of 30 years had disintegrated
because of his wife's infidelity came as a rude shock, like a
surcharge at a formerly surcharge-free cash-point.
The dandelion swayed in the gentle breeze like an oscillating
electric fan set on medium.
It was a working class tradition, like fathers chasing kids around
with their power tools.
20/20 Vision: 20 ideas for transforming motivation, teaching
and learning ( Part IV )
The 20/20 Vision is where we offer some radical
and not so radical ideas to transform your school. Don’t
take them all too seriously!
-
Obtain broadband internet access
-
Set up e-links with schools across all continents
-
Put students on the same professional development
courses for ICT as teachers and then ask them to mentor
their classmates
-
Celebrate World Laughter Day. It is on May 4th. Details
on www.laughteryoga.co.uk
-
Have a digital record of achievement which can be
burned onto a CD for each student
-
Have a ‘You Can be Heroes’ Day. In classroom
lessons staff choose a hero or heroine who embodies
the spirit of the subject they teach. Teachers deliver
the lesson in role and pose the sorts of questions
their hero or heroine would have asked.
-
Put your school brochure onto an interactive CD
-
Have a virtual open evening! Save staff time and
energy.
-
Use MiniDisk for individuals and groups to record
work outcomes and then choose digital pictures to accompany
the soundtrack
-
Teach touch typing
-
Lend laptops, electronic whiteboards and digital
video to feeder primaries
-
Have students work without discs in school so they
have to send their work home via the internet. Students
without computers at home get extra access at lunch
or at the end of the day.
-
Install water fountains and brand your own sponsored
school water bottles
-
Create VLE’s for each curriculum area. In the
Virtual Learning Environment there is an opportunity
to e-mail the tutor, submit essays, complete multiple
choice tests, discuss in a chat room, input into a
search engine, look up archive material and download
notes
-
Appoint a full-time web-designer to turn teacher’s
ideas into on-line opportunities
-
Start an animation club
-
Have a rolling year long programme of artists in
residence. Include stand-up comedians, sculptors in
card and paper, mime artists, circus skills trainers,
poets, percussionists and others who are less than
conventional
-
Use tablet pc’s with wireless links to record
formative assessment of students
-
Widen the definition of what technology includes
for your school. Use scanners, barcode readers, webcam,
personal organisers, metal detectors, digital microscopes,
mobile phones, digital cameras and programmable toys
-
Keep a video diary of a week in school, edit and
show in assembly to a positive musical theme
For all 20/20 Vision ideas for transforming motivation, teaching
and learning see the scrolling list at www.alite.co.uk
It’s back! Alite 2003, London, Friday June 20th.
Our annual Conference is once again at the excellent Café Royal,
London. Our theme this year is Making it Happen. Amongst
our keynoters we include Simon Weston who heads his own
charity for young people, ‘Weston Spirit’,
Dame Pat Collarbone who is Director of Leadership Programmes
at the National College for School Leadership and Dame
Sheila Wallis who has been honoured for her work in transforming
schools. Alistair Smith will host and describe Alite’s
recent Making it Happen personal development programme.
Again we will have case studies from LEA’s, Primary
and Secondary Schools. Amongst the topics covered are collaborative
transformation, the schools of the future, Accelerated
Learning with very young children, innovatory approaches
to supporting learning and how one school achieved a 40%
improvement in GCSE without becoming a ‘crammer!’.
More than a dozen Case Studies representing the best who
are ‘Making it Happen’. Watch out for our national
advertisements; find
out more from our website.
More Bright Sparks
More Bright Sparks, the follow up to the successful poster
book, Bright Sparks is in press and will be available at
the end of April. Watch out for details on the Alite website.
Masterclass sell out
The first in the Alite Masterclass Series with Paul Ginnis
and Alistair Smith has sold out in Leeds and London. Some
places remain in Exeter on 16th May.
For more details, visit
the website.
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If you have any comments or questions about the newsletter,
of if you would like to contribute to it, please email melanie@alite.co.uk
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