April
2004
'April is the cruellest
month'. In this newsletter we start with some harsh words
about television and attention disorders, then mix memory
and desire with a piece on Learning to Learn. We provide links
through to Alistair Smith's Campaign for Learning keynote
speech and a description of what it means for a Portchester
Primary. For the aspiring Polar explorers in your school we
offer an opportunity to make a virtual journey. Details of
what could be the best software investment you or your school
might ever make are also included in our PlanEasy2 promotion.
Brat
Camp
Parenting
is in the news again. It is an expensive option to send your
tantrum fixated, pierced, dreadlock wearing, Bacardi Breezer
drinking, cigarette smoking bully of a fifteen year old to
Utah for a month in the hope that she will come back reformed.
Most parents just have to stick it out. In Dr Robert Shaw's
soon to be published book The Epidemic (Harper Collins) he
fuels the debate between the post-Freudians, some of whom
find it difficult to say no to their child's requests and
the neo-nay-sayers who want to put a clear line in the parenting
sand - by suggesting that "showering your young with
love, gifts and tokens of our esteem creates monsters."
He sees all around him "sullen, selfish children raised
by absentee and over-indulgent parents in a society made toxic
by consumerism, TV and lack of family stability." Watch
out for this book, it's going to get lots of attention.
In the
same week that we hear of The Epidemic, research is published
in the US Journal Pediatrics on the effects of television
on the young mind. Dimitri Christakis of the Children's Hospital
and Regional Medical Centre, Seattle said that no child under
two should be allowed to watch television because of the risk
of developing attention deficit disorders. Now is this yet
more reactionary and alarmist ranting or should we pay attention?
David Bell, Chief Inspector of Schools reported that communication
skills and behaviour related to learning amongst five year
olds were the lowest they had ever been. One in four UK children
aged between six-months and two years has a television in
their bedroom. Amongst three-year olds in the Seattle survey
about 10% watched seven or more hours of television each day.
That is frightening but maybe not as frightening as the massive
44% who watched two hours each day. The study found that for
every hour of television watched daily toddlers faced a 10%
increase in the likelihood of having attention deficit problems
by the age of seven. In what is increasingly recognized as
a link between lifestyle choices and viewing habits, the BBC
are to reduce the contract with the company which licenses
Tweenies and Fimbles. This is in part because BBC preschool
characters appear on almost 100 products aimed at under-fives:
marshmallows, jelly babies and chocolate bars. BBC's CBeebies
- one of 21 Preschool channels available in the UK - had 6.7
million viewers last month. Teletubbies has a global audience
close to one billion. Maybe stage one in keeping your child
out of Brat Camp is to put a line in the sand over viewing?
What
sort of learners do we want?
We return
to the question: what sort of learners do we want? Yesterdays
answers don't solve today's problems, so fresh thinking about
learning offers the possibility of a fresh set of solutions.
A number of newsletter correspondents have asked for an update
on the Alite 5R's Programme. We have completed a set of well
defined outcomes for learners. We are now in the midst of
creating an electronic tracking system so that learners and
their teachers can engage in purposeful dialogue around these
outcomes. The system will track and record student progress
against each. Our 5 R's have a development history and we
define them as:
The resilient
learner
- persists
- remains
positive throughout
- stays
involved with their learning
- sets
targets and practises
The resourceful
learner
- shows
initiative
- is
capable of learning in different ways
- asks
good questions
- is
prepared to take risks
The responsible
learner
- makes
moral choices
- is
self-managing
- delays
gratification
- participates
constructively
The reasoning
learner
- identifies
distinctions
- considers
all the evidence
- chooses
the right problem solving tool
- reaches
measured judgements
The reflective
learner
- shows
curiosity
- is
objective
- can
see things from different perspectives
- learns
from, and acts upon, experience
In order
to encourage the development of the 5 R's we need the following
conditions in a school:
A
"coaching" culture with an emphasis on solutions
Learning is itself a focus of learning throughout the
school
A means of tracking, recording and reflecting on progress
Emphasis in assessment on improving rather than proving
Visionary leadership
Space to take risks
L2L
Conference
Alistair
Smith appeared with Professor David Hargreaves and David Miliband
MP at the Campaign for Learning's National Learning to Learn
Conference. Alistair's keynote, entitled Making it Real, set
out to define learning to learn and to describe its condition
in UK schools. You can see all the slides in the news section
of the Alite website www.alite.co.uk/news .
The Campaign
for Learning argue that "learning is learnable"
and describe Learning to Learn (L2L) as: "a process of
discovery about learning. It involves a set of principles
and skills which, if understood and used, help learners learn
more effectively and so become learners for life." Alistair's
speech claims that L2L in the UK remains locked within a "study
skills" mentality which limits its value. He describes
the three levels and five layers of learning necessary for
a school to be transformed by L2L. In describing current and
future practice, he argues that school leaders also need to
understand the entire learning map before investing in any
journey. For a detailed copy of the text of the speech go
to www.alite.co.uk
Enthusiasts
and Advocates
Sue Anders,
Deputy Head, of Wicor Primary School, Portchester, Hampshire
wrote to tell us of their Accelerated Learning journey.
We have
been using the Accelerated Learning approach as the basis
of our learning at Wicor for two years now. Our decision to
refocus on learning rather than teaching and to build a learning
community preceded the adoption of Accelerated Learning. Headteacher,
Mark Wildman and I undertook extensive reading of theorists
such as Michael Fullan, Dean Fink and Barbara MacGilchrist
and their theories of school culture and the needs of 21st
Century learners made us realise that developing our school
as a community of learners was paramount if we were to help
the children in the school reach their full potential in life.
We then found that the whole Accelerated Learning approach
and the principles underlying it would provide the best vehicle
for achieving our vision.
Since
adopting Accelerated Learning and the associated strategies
of developing emotional literacy and teaching explicit thinking
skills our school culture has changed completely. We have
observed some outstanding learning experiences in classrooms,
children are talking about learning and about themselves as
learners and there is much more evidence of true autonomy
in learning and independence of thought amongst staff and
children. Teachers are feeling more free to experiment and
take risks and the level of professional reading has risen
tremendously. One major achievement has been the award of
Investors in People status. Our assessor concluded that we
were genuinely a Community of Learners because in the assessment
interviews staff referred to themselves as learners and spoke
about how they felt able to take risks and innovate.
We have
placed a large emphasis on developing our classroom environments
as environments for learning. Initially when this idea was
suggested staff were very sceptical as they did not think
they would have enough material to display - we now don't
display children's work in classrooms unless it is to be used
for learning! Now staff complain that they do not have enough
wall, ceiling or window space because they have so many learning
posters, information, motivational statements, belonging and
aspiration statements to display! All our classroom environments
are good and many are exceptional. Also, the benefits of this
display approach on learning has sold the policy to teaching
staff who are now enthusiastic advocates. In November Mark
and I were asked to speak about our developments at Wicor
to the Hampshire Assessment co-ordinators conference and it
was the issue of classroom display which proved to be most
controversial!
Although
we have travelled a tremendous way over the last two years,
we realise that this is merely the tip of the ice berg. We
know that the developments are only just beginning to embed
into the school culture and we are now investigating how these
changes can be sustained over time so that they continue to
grow and develop further. However, we are lucky that the majority
of staff are committed to our vision and to our school so
we have a good base upon which to build.
I have
just finished writing our school's Learning Handbook, a 65
page document which sums up learning at Wicor to date and
now my next task is to lead the reorganisation of our curriculum
for September so that it fits more neatly with the learning
agenda; we are going to focus more on developing competencies
and learning skills in the main. Also, we are now considering
how we can sell our ideas and new philosophy much more clearly
to parents. We have begun by holding evening workshops so
that parents can learn about areas such as the Brain, Motivation
and Self Esteem and Thinking Skills. These are well received
by those who attend but they are not well attended yet. We
are also going to provide information for parents at our mid
year progress review day (a day for parent/ teacher meetings
which is replacing the traditional parents evening!). Finally,
I am currently trialling a series of learning to learn lessons
that I have written with my year 3 class. We are investigating
the 5 R's and how developing these can make us better learners.
The Year
3 lessons in learning to learn have been going very well.
The first two lessons were examining what it means to be a
resourceful learner and writing resourcefulness targets and
devising resourcefulness strategies. We then did two weeks
revisiting VAK learning strategies and devised lists of strategies
as a class, re VAKed ourselves and practised various strategies
with the spelling lists for the week. We are now learning
about Multiple Intelligence - the children know what it means
to be word smart, body smart etc and they have tried to identify
their balance of smarts. We are now going to produce MI prompt
posters full of strategies and link the Smarts to famous people
the children know. We will also try out some of the more unusual
strategies to solve problems based on the children's own assessment
of their strengths and weaknesses and evaluate whether this
helps them with their learning.
We are
now planning a whole school project on thinking, learning
and relationship building which will last for the first half
of the Autumn term. The outcome of the project will be a 2
day exhibition/event organised by the children. The children
will be told that they are going to use the exhibition to
tell their families about what learning is like at Wicor!
Leading
Learning database
The Alite
Leading Learning database continues to grow. We are accumulating
details of good and interesting practice around the leadership
of learning. This can be within classrooms or across colleges
and schools, lesson planning and delivery or strategic visioning.
Having visited hundreds of schools and worked with 000's of
educators over a ten year period, we are, as you can imagine,
sitting on a lot of contacts and data which we are continuing
to assemble and make sense of. There are two ultimate aims.
The first is to make the database accessible to as wide a
group of Alite customers as possible and the second, to draw
on the database to generate case study material for a general
audience. If you have a story to tell, or know of one, or,
if you feel your school or college can offer some valuable
insights on any aspects of leading learning then please do
get in touch. We are interested in as broad a view of learning
as possible.
Alite
operates according to the requirements of the Data Protection
Act, and would never release contact details without prior
permission.
PlanEasy2
If you
could count the number of separate files you use which are
called on at different times in planning and delivering lessons
you may have to lie down before you get finished. Educators
have hundreds of resources - Word documents, PowerPoint presentations,
video excerpts, music files, lesson plans, observation sheets
and Schemes of Work - in electronic format scattered all over
their PCs. Now, if you can face the thought, multiply this
up by the number of teachers in your school or college and
thousands of resources are being lost, replicated, misused
or forgotten altogether. Don't get too stressed - we have
a solution we call PlanEasy2.
PlanEasy2
is the low-cost tool for electronic lesson planning. PlanEasy2
will guide you through planning lessons against the 4 stage
Accelerated Learning Cycle prompting as you go. You can hold
up to 30 lesson plans in any scheme of learning and gather
all the electronic resources you need for the lessons into
one place.
PlanEasy2
will upload selected resources onto a student website for
24 hour access. We think the best feature is that it will
also track simultaneously for thinking skills, formative assessment,
VAK and the 5 R's. Available in a CD format from Alite, PlanEasy2
is customisable and also comes with sample lessons, a discussion
forum where purchasers can exchange resources for use with
the planner and full instructions.
Spotted!
Hurrah
for networking! In the programme for a National School Improvement
Network Conference on 23rd March led by Chris Watkins of the
Institute of Education, Brain-Based Learning and Accelerated
Learning share a slot under the slightly demeaning title:
"Sneaky Space Invaders! Approaches which claim to be
about Learning but aren't."
Also noted
in the March edition of the Institute of Education's National
School Improvement Network Newsletter, which arrived the same
day, is a feature stating that their Brain-Based Learning
zone is the most popular spot on the NSIN website. Also an
advertisement for the Institute's second Public Research Seminar
of "Brain-Based Learning approaches - a day devoted to
learners and learning" on Tuesday 25th May: watch that
space!
Family
Learning
Parents
are the first teachers and the family the first classroom.
Every school in the land seeks the support of parents and
wants to get them more involved in their child's learning.
What does it look like when it's done really well?
Dudley
LEA have gained national prominence in their ground-breaking
work with family learning. Janice Graham of the LEA will be
presenting one of the 16 case studies featured at this year's
conference, Alite 2004 Meeting the Challenge, at the Café
Royal, London on 25th June. In addition to the inspiring case
studies, the keynote speakers include Alistair Smith and Lady
Marie Stubbs.
To register
for the conference, please email events@alite.co.uk or visit
the website at www.alite.co.uk
AL:
A User's guide
The book
co-written by Alistair Smith, Derek Wise and Mark Lovatt won
the Education Show Resource of the year. Congratulations to
all concerned.
Aspire,
achieve, advance - and wrap up warm!
All of
us at Alite are delighted to be supporting West Notts College
in their bid to be the first organisation to take a team of
students to the South Pole. The expedition will provide educational
information from the bottom of the world, via the universal
accessibility of Alite's website, to schools and colleges
across the world.
"The
philosophy of the Polar Challenge is to 'Re-invent the future
of learning'" said Steve Bull of West Notts College.
"Our motto is 'aspire, achieve, advance' and we see this
as being entirely in line with the philosophy of Alite"
The team
aim to gather information throughout their expedition and
in line with key skills projects. This will include data for
Numeracy, Geography, IT and Communication. The information
will be made accessible to schools across the country by means
of the Internet. Alite will provide a portal on the web site
for schools to access the data, which will be updated continually
throughout the expedition.
"The
information and opportunities that we present can be used
across schools in a real and tangible way." said Steve
Bull. "Pupils will be able to watch live action of our
expedition and the information we send back will be real and
relevant."
Members
of the Polar Challenge team will be at Alite 2004 displaying
some of the equipment and information material that they will
be using during the expedition.
To find
out more about the conference, please email events@alite.co.uk
or visit the website at www.alite.co.uk
Pocketbook
series
Congratulations
to Alite colleagues Will Thomas and Bruce Potts who both have
new books in the Teacher's Pocketbook series
Free
Prize Draw
Andrew
Pink, a student teacher at the University of Warwick, was
the lucky winner of the first prize in our draw at the Education
Show in March. Andrew wins a free pass to our conference Alite
2004 Meeting the Challenge at the Café Royal on 25th
June, as well as his travel expenses and hotel accommodation.
Congratulations, Andrew, and we all look forward to meeting
you.
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