Leading Learning
Where
Lifelong Learners R
Theresa Rogerson
from Walkington Primary School positively crackles with energy
and enthusiasm. When she asked her children in circle time
one day, ñWhat makes a good teacher?î it wouldn't have been
surprising if they had been thinking of her. But they were
encouraged to think wider than just the classroom, to the
home, the swimming baths, the sports centre and so on. The
answers gushed back: a good teacher ñis kind,î ñhelps me do
hard things,î ñalways does good lessons,î ñnever gives up,î
ñnever stops caring,î ñworks hard to make us learn.î Theresa
was working hard. She had set herself the task of improving
the children's attitudes to learning and wanted to develop
their awareness of the characteristics for Lifelong Learning.
Certain dispositions
are needed for Lifelong Learning: resilience, resourcefulness,
reasoning, responsibility and reflectivity-reflexivity ¿ the
5Rs. Beginning with her Year 2 class she hoped to make the
words, and what they meant, common parlance throughout the
school.
Her second question
turned the spotlight on the children: what makes an effective
learner?
Someone whoƒ
- Co-operates with other people
- Keeps trying until it is right
- Always tries their best
- Sticks at it all the time
- Is not downhearted when their work is wrong
- Has fun
- Learns everywhere and at all times
The insights were impressive
and, together with the previous ones, are now displayed on
the classroom wall. Theresa used these to make the link with
the 5Rs, explaining each one and asking the children to help
her allocate the responses to a suitable disposition. A tick
sheet on the wall now shows the frequency with which each
child demonstrates his/her use of every one.
Disseminating the ideas,
Theresa introduced the 5Rs to the teachers and assistants
at a staff meeting using a specially designed questionnaire,
followed by a discussion. Sheets were then placed around the
room, one for each disposition, and the staff moved between
them adding ideas for how to develop each R.
In the classrooms the
enthusiasm has caught. The ideas are now being used. Many
lessons finish with a plenary where pupils are asked to reflect
on whether they did their best, in what way and what might
make their learning more effective next time. Teachers ask
which Rs are being used in particular tasks and children are
now using the language comfortably.
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