October 2003
Accelerated Learning Newsletter, October 2003
This month's edition contains a piece by Ani Magill on
Distributed Leadership in a large Secondary School, some
transatlantic insights from Penny Clayton, an update on
Alistair's work with the Football Association and some
reasons why Buddhists have a smile on their face.
Learning the FA way
Alite director Alistair Smith is liasing with the English
Football association to develop the quality of all coaching
and training across the six divisions of the FA. Part of
his role is to input on the FA Professional Licence Course.
This course is by invitation only to professionals at the
top level of the national game. Alistair's audience at
the two week Warwick event included six Premiership managers,
three international managers and three national coaches.
He estimated there were over 200 international caps represented
in the room. The following day he suffered depression at
being dropped from the five a sides.
The other, and longer term aspect of the work, is to develop
a unique learning philosophy for the FA. This philosophy
will be expressed in core values and each of these will
have a set of related learning and coach-educator behaviours.
A programme of generic tutor training has been constructed
around the philosophy, values and behaviours and is now
being rolled out. After the summer over 100 national and
regional coaches and football development officers have
taken part in the training. The plan is to influence every
aspect of the national game. Now, has anyone seen Wayne
Rooney's homework?
Hackney EAZs double up in Park Lane
Unable at the last minute to use Westminster Town Hall
because part of the roof was caving in, conference organiser
Dawn Gill pulled a coup by negotiating a massive reduction
at the prestigious Hilton on Park Lane. The downside to
what was a great launch to the academic year was that lunch
was to be very, very expensive! With a limited budget delegates
were restricted to four sandwiches each! However, they
were able to eat them in opulence and splendour. Those
on Atkins diets exchanged their sausages for bread slices.
A large bowl of Chicken Soup for the Soul
Penny
Clayton goes transatlantic and learns from mistakes
As a facilitator and trainer, I have often used a piece
from "Chicken Soup for the Soul" by Jack Canfield
and Mark Victor Hansen entitled "All I Ever Really
Needed to Know I Learned in Kindergarten", written
by Robert Fulghum. It often brings a lump to the throat. "A
bit American!", I hear you retort. True but in the
kindergarten class I visited this summer, "a bit American" may
be no bad thing.
This passage is actually a poster on the classroom wall
and everywhere you look there are reminders of the "can
do" culture which enables so many Americans to believe
in themselves. On the day of my visit, the teacher of the
class, together with her full time assistant, had spent
five teacher work days preparing her classroom for the
new year and eagerly awaited her new charges who were to
have an open morning visit with their parents. The room
looked bright and inviting just as any reception or year
1 class might look at this time of year and just as in
England, those first few days were to be spent conducting
a range of assessments.
Our trans-Atlantic conversations about education were
wide reaching as we excitedly exchanged ideas. Her initial
response to my question about marking was to look slightly
puzzled as she carefully indicated to me that her primary
aim was for all children to be successful and that her
approach to all aspects of her work aligned with this aim.
Recognition of achievement is therefore crucial and the
children are often consulted on their preferred sticker
or stamp for the day. All children use pencil and are issued
with rubbers so they can change their work at will. The
teacher prefers to go through work with the child present
and when she finds a mistake puts a dot next to it. The
child can then address the mistake and the dot is easily
transformed into a tick or a smiley face. Crosses or lines
through work are never used. This teacher accepts there
are often two audiences for the completed work: the child
and the parent. To this end, she may write a comment such
as, "Jack needed some help with this" or "George
found these concepts hard". As the child's reading
skills progress then comments will be directed at the child
always ensuring the spirit of the message is a positive
encouragement to improve, to learn and to acknowledge success.
An experienced teacher whose results match her expectations
may feel she has marking sorted but is always on the lookout
for ways children can take even more responsibility for
their learning. This year she intends to enable the children
themselves to lead some of the consultation meetings with
their parents. They will be given a set of guidelines,
a chance to practise conducting the conference with a friend
and will be expected to set goals with their parents at
the end of the session. Children will be encouraged to
describe what they think makes their chosen pieces of their
best work good. Parents too are to be given guidelines
for this formal meeting with their child. They will have
an opportunity to talk to the teacher and have questions
answered as well as being encouraged to complete a survey
about the process. In this environment I was given a strong
impression of a group of very young children becoming ever
more confident and responsible for their learning and for
their assessments. It caused me to reflect on a decision
my husband and I had to take a few years ago when our sixteen
year old son urged us not to discuss him behind his back.
Although anxious to demonstrate our interest in our son's
education to the school, we felt unable to attend parents'
evenings as long as our son was denied access to the conversations
- and he was!
I think the message I've taken from my visit to this school
in North Carolina is to continue to seek out ways to trust
the learners. Trust that they can rectify and learn from
their mistakes, that they can be true partners in the assessment
process and that if we trust them to take charge of reporting
their learning to others then that learning can be so much
greater. And all of this I learned in Kindergarten!
Coaching reaches down under
The delegate with the most airmiles on any Alite course
in 2003 is Roderick Hutchinson. Roderick is an Advisor
with the Department of Education in New South Wales, Australia.
We hope he found the journey worthwhile and the course
'fair dinkum.' Roderick was on Will Thomas's Coaching
For Performance.
Padiham School, Burnley
Headteacher Julie Bradley tells us, 'our use of physical
activity in the first 10 minutes of every day has had stunning
results.'
'We carry out a 10 minute aerobics session with every
class in school before lessons begin. The results have
been amazing! The children are more alert, results in mental
arithmetic tests have risen sharply (data recorded), and
behaviour and concentration have improved tremendously.'
She goes on to say, 'Our work on balance and coordination
using a variety of exercises (wobble boards, large balls,
bean bags etc) over the last 18 months has brought its
reward. We start a project in the Autumn term with a large
primary school in Coventry on extending this work from
dyslexic and dyspraxic children to a whole school approach.'
Beormund EBD School in Southwark
Alite trainer Cliff
Hopwood has been working with Beormund School in
Southwark. He describes it as 'an outstanding example
of the use of AL techniques which the head has used to
transform the place.' Cliff was very impressed by the
staff and the all round feel of the school. Headteacher
Sharon Gray is a TTT graduate and keen to liaise with
others trialling AL methodology in EBD Schools.
Distributed Leadership
Ani Magill is Headteacher of St
Saint John the Baptist Secondary School, Woking.
She has been a teacher for twenty one years and a Headteacher
for eight. Ani facilitates on the NCSL New Visions
Programme for serving Headteachers.
Is it possible to raise test scores and sustain the deeper
and more enduring aspects of teaching and learning at the
same time? How do improvements that are made become embedded
so that they are retained? How do you develop a school
so that the Headteacher no longer has to be landlord, sheriff,
accountant and all purpose hero? At SJB we do not have
the answers, nor do we consider ourselves exceptional but
a combination of luck, judgement and determination has
seen us steadily improve as a team of professionals focussed
on learning.
It is crucial for a Headteacher to do as you say and say
as you do. There have to be no cracks between advocacy
and delivery. The days of the hero head is no longer appropriate
in today's society - the job is simply not do-able by one
person. This is important to admit when talking about notions
of sustainability and about locating authority at the most
appropriate point. The Headteacher in a large secondary
is not close enough, for long enough, to the action.
Who should decide on capital project spending in, for
example, the Design Technology Department? The Headteacher?
The school leadership team? An ad hoc committee? Or the
staff in the department concerned? We decided to get rid
of the 1960's management model and locate the responsibility
as close to the user as possible. If we were not comfortable
doing this it would tell us that we lacked confidence in
the persons filling that role. If we were not confident
in the abilities of the Head of Department and his or her
team why did we appoint and why are we not acting on our
lack of confidence?
Distributed leadership is putting leadership at the most
appropriate place. When staff are new we make it clear
from the outset that they will not be checked on. We tell
them the job they have been appointed to do and trust them
to do it: the culture is one of trust. On the basis of
our experience we would say give the head of maths the
autonomy to run the maths dept against clearly defined
boundaries. The whole school agrees the boundaries. The
agreed boundaries or 'guidelines' are really important.
It is these which allow us to maintain a very positive
culture characterised by respect and dignity. In this climate
people will take risks. If they do not or are not able,
and this has become rare, invariably they either get swept
along or alienated and need to leave.
We are a Catholic School but a large number of our staff
have no declared religion. The mission of the school has
evolved from an original statement which was written and
agreed by a cross section of the school: caretakers, support
staff, admin staff, teachers, governors and pupils. The
mission which has become more of a mantra. Because we use
our staff meetings for development we have been able to
develop and subsequently embed the mantra. Caretakers,
support and admin staff are all involved in staff meetings.
As Kevin Costner would say, 'if we build it they will come'
- meaning if you make it important enough you accrue more
involvement. Charter Mark and IIP status helped with this
focus but again, we thought long and hard about how these
two 'badges' would benefit the students before we committed
to doing them.
We also create a mantra for our staff well-being of high
challenge but low stress. If your staff are unhappy your
students suffer. My job is to ensure that this is more
than words. I am the 'stress buster in chief'. We have
25 minutes weekly on cover as a maximum. There have been
no supply teachers for the last six years. There is a 25%
annual staff turnover mostly for promotion: last year 3
of our staff left at the end of the year to become Deputy
Headteachers and 2 to Assistant Headteachers. This year
5 are on NPQH. Of the staff who left us last year 16 went
to promoted posts. Throughout this we have had 99% staff
attendance.
We feel we have worked hard at a virtuous cycle. It is
a positive ethos which gives authority to people to make
decisions which affect them. Teachers do less and less
meaningless admin and mundane tasks and this makes them
feel valued and professionally engaged. Professional engagement
leads to less sickness, less cover, fewer tantrums and
a positive ethos.
Throughout all of this the Headteacher's role is to develop
others, to be clear about what you stand for and to articulate
this at every level. We never use the term emotionally
intelligent but I think that's what we aspire to.
In order to be able to locate 'authority at its most appropriate
point' we had to agree a framework of values that everyone
was aware of and was talked about constantly. We needed
to be clear about what we stand for. For us it was about
students. What's best for students is the basis for every
single decision made from toilet paper to the curriculum.
The consequence of asking - does it benefit the students?
- is that when we get a negative answer we give ourselves
authority for change. As a consequence of asking this question,
and in no particular order. we
- Put a stop to student study leave - it is not as useful
to them as learning with us
- Students learn on all school days - there is no winding
down
- Meaningless homeworks and homeworks as ritual are
banned
- We have researched and agreed our 10 features of an
effective learning experience -.the SJB 10 these appear
in the staff handbook and just about everywhere you look
around the school. They form the basis for our internal
observation
- Agreed that Head of Department meetings will no longer
be about admin but about their leadership development
- Any role that doesn't have to be performed by a teacher
isn't
- Established our own internal inspection system
- Use support staff as form tutors and numerous other
roles traditionally done by teachers
- Run a peer observation system based on our criteria
for effective learning with observation of student response
and not teacher input
- Changed the focus of all meetings towards learning
As part of our commitment to locating leadership where
it is needed we use an internal inspection system which
is overseen by Line Managers. We classify departments against
five points on a scale.
1. Outstanding
2. Light touch
3. special circumstances
4. some cause for concern
5. special measures
In category One - outstanding - we monitor only at the
request of the Head of Department. Light touch is self
explanatory. Special circumstances might include a newly
arrived Head of Department or an entirely new team. Some
cause for concern means that some agreed targets have not
been met. In which case we suggest all teachers use the
Hay McBer Transforming Learning software [programme to
get some feedback on the learning in their classrooms.
The department would be monitored closely within their
area of concern. We have no failing departments so there
are no cases of Special measures
We aspire to the school becoming paperless so maximum
time is spent developing outstanding lessons. I spend a
lot of time putting things in the bin. In our staff room
there is a large envelope. The school rule is that if you
get a piece of paper and it doesn't improve the quality
of children's learning it is dumped in the envelope. We
do not evaluate inset by 100 pieces of paper flying around
from pigeon hole to pigeon hole on a Monday morning? Instead
we have a flip chart in the staff room on the following
morning. When staff go on external courses we sometimes
send in pairs so they are developing together on the way
there and back. There is no requirement for agendas or
minutes. Any minutes are recorded during and not to be
written up afterwards. We use e-mail for lots of internal
communication and all reports are done on line, checked
collected and collated by support staff and never by form
tutors.
We want to give students an authentic voice. They are
involved in all recruitment and give feedback on observation
lessons. At the recent Head of English interviews there
were two panels with a student from the student council
on each. We regularly get feedback from students about
the quality of teaching they receive. By posing the question
we encourage them to be more reflective and thus better
learners. We make learning a focus of learning. Our Student
council has its own budget of 1k and we try to give responsibilities
which have an authenticity.
We use support staff as form tutors. Support staff can
apply for any position which is non-teaching. We appointed
an Assistant head of middle school from our support staff
after both teachers and support staff interviewed. For
the Charter Mark work and IIP both sub committees comprised
half teachers and half support staff
Our peer observation has become an important lever for
learning improvements. We have shifted our focus in this
last year from observing teachers to observing learners.
The question posed is what is the learner experience? Peer
observation is done within and across departments with
names going into a hat. We have used our own agreed 10
features of an effective learning experience checklist
and this year the observer faces the students and observes
them and not teacher performance. We interview students
as part of the observation process.
Can it go too far? We have now slumped to new depths in
our recruitment approach: kidnapping! One of our staff
drove to and fetched a student teacher who was on teaching
practice at another school but who didn't have a vacancy
to show them around and later offer them a job. Our most
productive route with such a young staff is to recruit
from their own contacts, alumni and friends. Our group
leaders on INSET are typically drawn from our NQTs.
We are actively seeking opportunities to give everyone
leadership, but it can be unnerving. Whilst I was out of
school for a day our Deputy Headteacher appointed 2 teachers
for one vacancy because they were both excellent and we
want excellent teachers. I found this out on the way home!
In conclusion we approach everyday asking ourselves how
can we improve?. Each morning I am greeted with the large
sign in my office "If this is going to be the best
school in England what are you going to do about it today"-nothing
better to sharpen the mind and help set the agenda for
the day!!
5 R's
Several schools have asked about using the 5 R's planner
in the ALPS
Resource Book. We are delighted that you have found
it useful. Just a reminder - resilience, resourcefulness,
responsibility, reasoning, reflectivity - and its worth
pointing out that the Campaign for Learning have their
own variation of the 5 R's and are liasing with Alite on
a project to develop learning strategies around them. Nicky
Anastasiou is leading this work for Alite.
Portadown and Craigavon
There are four primary schools in Portadown, Northern
Ireland. They are spread on either side of the Garvachy
Road, an area which has become the focus of attention for
sectarian disputes. Portadown is, we hope, on its way to
becoming known for other things. It offers a model of what
is possible when schools from across a previously divided
community come together to focus on the future learning
of their pupils. On one of September's hottest days over
200 teachers, mentors and support assistants gathered in
Craigavon Town Hall to spend a day working with Alite on
pupil motivation, engagement and learning.
Help Your Child Succeed Toolkit
The toolkit - written by Bill Lucas and Alistair Smith
- has been completed. It is designed for schools and other
groups who work with parents and includes a range of activities
related to each of the nine sections of HYCS. HYCS has
now gone through the 40,000 sales mark and has sold 1500
in Nigeria as well as being translated into Portuguese
and Arabic.
Wipe that smile off your face
Scientists say they have evidence to show that Buddhists
really are happier and calmer than other people. Tests
carried out in the United States reveal that areas of their
brain associated with good mood and positive feelings are
more active. The findings come as another study suggests
that Buddhist meditation can help to calm people.
Researchers at University of California San Francisco
Medical Centre have found the practice can tame the amygdala,
an area of the brain which is the hub of fear memory. They
found that experienced Buddhists, who meditate regularly,
were less likely to be shocked, flustered, surprised or
as angry compared to other people.
Paul Ekman, who carried out the study, said: "The
most reasonable hypothesis is that there is something about
conscientious Buddhist practice that results in the kind
of happiness we all seek."
In a separate study, scientists at the University of
Wisconsin at Madison used new scanning techniques to examine
brain activity in a group of Buddhists. Their tests revealed
activity in the left prefrontal lobes of experienced Buddhist
practitioners. This area is linked to positive emotions,
self-control and temperament. Their tests showed this area
of the Buddhists' brains are constantly lit up and not
just when they are meditating. This, the scientists said,
suggests they are more likely to experience positive emotions
and be in good mood.
"We can now hypothesise with some confidence that
those apparently happy, calm Buddhist souls one regularly
comes across in places such as Dharamsala, India, really
are happy," said Professor Owen Flanagan, of Duke
University in North Carolina. Dharamsala is the home base
of exiled Tibetan leader the Dalai Lama.
Moving on with Accelerated Learning - sold out in London
The demand has been overwhelming for Alistair Smith's
programme, Moving
on with Accelerated Learning. MoAL introduces the four
stage accelerated learning cycle, and shows how the cycle
can be used to accommodate thinking strategies, formative
assessment and group problem solving. The November course
in London has now sold out, but we are pleased to announce
that there will be an additional course in London in the
Spring to meet the demand. To be notified of the date as
soon as it is announced, please email events@alite.co.uk
The Masterclass is back!
The 2003 Alite Masterclass Series
with Paul Ginnis and Alistair Smith was a sell-out success.
We are delighted to be able to announce new dates for 2004.
The Masterclass will take place in London on 27th February
2004, Leeds on 1st March 2004 and Manchester on 14th May
2004.
For more details, please email events@alite.co.uk or
visit the website at www.alite.co.uk and
click on Alite Masterclass Series.
'The Jamie Oliver of Maths'
Our favourite mathematics genius Chris
Tomlinson was recently described as 'The Jamie Oliver
of Maths'. Chris certainly brings his own special blend
of creativity to his work. An ex-professional footballer
and inspirational trainer, Chris has worked with Alite
to create an Accelerated Learning-based numeracy course.
Drawing on his extraordinary success using AL to teach
maths, Chris shares a wealth of innovative and effective
ways to develop and improve your numeracy strategy. He
will be running a course in Leeds on 27th October, and
further courses in Manchester, London and Dunblane later
in the year. The course may also be booked as an INSET.
For more details, please email events@alite.co.uk or
visit the website at www.alite.co.uk
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