Wednesday 11 December 2013

Manageable and Effective Marking


Manageable and Effective Marking



As a school we are trying to move forwards with a few aspects of our marking, assessment and feedback. Moving towards a culture where pupils really engage with their teachers efforts is a challenge and it can often be a dispiriting one. You've spent hours trying to construct valuable guidance and "next step" comments and in the pupil reflection time / space; they write, "Yeah, I will do that," or draw a smiley, or as one colleague showed me yesterday, they tell you where to go in no uncertain terms. 

So, we want staff to mark more, we want pupils to do more with it and we want to see all this evidence very clearly for Ofsted too. No small wonder then that at the end of the longest school term I can remember, we are all shattered. 

It was this that got me thinking - 

"other people must have at some point encountered the struggle of managing their marking load, whilst wanting their quality not to slip! I think I will search the web and see if I can steal other peoples' ideas." 

And so I did.................(massive thanks to all whom contributed unwittingly to this post!) 

The following are relatively simple suggestions of how to make marking more manageable and more effective at the same time. I’ve included a brief overview and a link to a blog, website or resource that you can use for a little more in-depth contemplation of each suggestion. I hope you find at least one of these suggestions useful in terms of helping you to manage your workload whilst not scrimping on the central purpose of what marking and feedback are there for; driving pupil progress.

Just in case any of you are thinking of slacking off as the term draws to a close.........


Why we mark in the first place: if you ever wonder why we as teachers mark, what this means and what its for...please read this little blog....I often refer back to it mentally on a Sun night when I can think of little else I would rather than read little Jimmy’s musing on the causes of the First World War.


A powerful read for the teacher who may need a nudge ....

Marking grids: (English teacher’s idea)

http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=l-UsthPEKaM&desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3Dl-UsthPEKaM

In essence the idea presented here is to reduce the endless rewriting of the same phrases, sentences, success criteria and guidance on all the books in a set of 30. If you’ve properly set up a task, the students know what they are being assessed on and you know what you’re looking for and what the likely pitfalls are. This means that students will have either achieved your set goals or not and will need to know to what extent they fall into either camp or what their next steps are for forthcoming work. Therefore why not use “Marking Grids” These can be shared with the class to help focus them before they start, stuck into their books after they have finished, to save you doing all 30 and then used to limit the amount of writing you have to put on their work. Simple. Effective and decreasing marking time!

For example - it might look a little like these.....



Success Criteria
Yes:
Partially:
No:
Write using PEEL paragraphs



Every paragraph has a golden nugget of historical fact



You’ve explained each cause fully using “because”



You’ve come to a reasoned conclusion that makes a decision



WWW:


EBI:


Follow up development question:


Student response to development question:



http://whenisitdueinsir.files.wordpress.com/2012/09/early-y9-targets.pptx


Lazy Marking: (Geography teacher’s ideas)


http://whenisitdueinsir.wordpress.com/2012/09/23/lazy-marking/

This is a very quick way of giving pupils leveled feedback on their work and getting them to engage with the level descriptors and therefore understanding the key success criteria without you having to write out reams of feedback. It also avoids the major time implications of writing the same targets, guidance out repeatedly. 

Step 1: Set them a task to complete that you want to assess

Step 2: Decide what you think the most likely areas to target improvement are likely to be as a result of this piece of work – 4-6 is most likely. Put them on a power point.

Step 3: Mark their work for literacy, grammar etc and make whatever comment you would normally do but don’t put their targets to improve.

Step 4: Write out their 2/3 targets to improve as numbers based on your original list. If someone needs to improve something outside of that list – add it to your original and put the correct number in their book.

Step 5: Next lesson – get the pupils to find their 2/3 numbers – put the list of targets on the board and get the pupils to copy their targets into their books in PPP!

Step6: If appropriate get them to then act on their targets…..marking, pupil response and first 15mins of the next lesson taken care of!

Verbal Marking: (Primary idea)
 http://www.sjeducation.co.uk/2012/09/verbally-marking.html

This has got legs but needs to be thought through about how and when we use it. The central idea here is it that it is more powerful to discuss work than simply pass comment on it. It is more powerful to discuss the work with the author and to get them to engage in what they have done well, what could be improved and maybe how someone else would improve their work. Imagine how complex it might be to explain in written words about how to improve and then how easy it would be to show and talk through examples orally. This would require classes to be set quiet and independent work to be getting on with whilst you talk to individual students or 1-2-1 marking clinics out of lessons. The latter would be easier – but wouldn’t exactly save time unless you were very careful – lots of possibilities for small sixth form classes with long essays here……
http://www.theguardian.com/teacher-network/teacher-blog/2012/dec/03/five-ways-reduce-stress-marking-teaching-tips

Also mentioned in this article in a secondary context as “individual marking meetings,” that are set up on a half termly basis with a yr 11 GCSE English class. 

Label Marking: (RS teacher’s ideas)

I’ve used this – for much the same reasons as the teacher who posted this – no one can read my handwriting and this cuts into DIRT time (DIRT is an abbreviation for Dedicated Improvement and Reflection Time.) It also has the massive bonus of saving you lots of time as long as you are happy to set up labels in word, have a supply of sticky labels and can type quickly. I have found this very useful and would recommend it!


A-Z marking: (RS teacher’s ideas)

Same link as above – bit of a development on the “lazy marking” model above. The key advantage of this model is that you have decided all the possible feedback at the start of the year, it can be sutuck into books, referred to at the start of tasks, be used for self-assessment, peer assessment  etc etc etc. The major downside is that I think it lacks personalization to pupils and to tasks. Not a great shame at KS4 and 5 – but might need some careful use at KS3. (big plus to this link – is that he has uploaded his A-Z list – so you can steal it and adapt to your classes very easily.)


Traffic Lighting (Yorkshire Primary groups advice paper)




Old fashioned but very effective time saver – if done correctly and as this “copied and pasted” section from the document above states – the key is success criteria that the pupils understand and can use.
For older children, it has been found that ‘Traffic Lights’ can help with communication between teacher and child. 
·         Children are asked to ‘traffic light’ by putting a small coloured circle or dot at the end of the piece of work.  They choose the colour according to their degree of understanding.  It involves the pupil (and possibly response partner) in self or paired assessment. 
·         The teacher looks at the work, and if there is a lot of red, it means that the pupil has a limited understanding and there is a need to re-teach.  Future teaching is therefore planned according to need.
·         Traffic lighting against success criteria needs to be made specific, so pupils know why and what they are supposed to be achieving.”

It might look like this…

Success Criteria
Traffic light where you think you are (G, A, R )
Teacher’s Traffic Light
1) Can you give at least one reason why William won the Battle of Hastings?
2) Do you think you have included this in your written answer?
3) Do you understand why this was a reason?
4) Do you think you have explained this reason?
5) Do you think you have explained it fully?


Teacher’s overall comment on the work:


 

Verbal Feedback Stamper: (English teacher’s idea)

This is an idea that we should be familiar with by now. The key problem to it is making it evident that we have actually given feedback and more importantly that the pupils have captured the feedback we gave them. This link here has a few other useful ideas too – but does talk about capturing verbal feedback in bullet point form in books.


“Another favourite tool is my verbal feedback stamper. I carry this around with me to all my lessons. I generally use it as I walk around when pupils are working in groups or individually, I discuss an element of whatever they are doing in depth, stamp their books and ask them to note bullet points down.”

Me and a colleague were discussing this a few weeks ago with regard to her BTECH Sci classes. She came up with the idea of a verbal feedback book specific to each pupil. She gives feedback, gets them to bullet point down what she has said and then she will come back and stamp it, initial and date it. If she needs to add to it – its much quicker than writing it all out and she has got the pupils to record exactly what she has aid to guide them forward. 

If you've got any comment on these - or even better some other great ways of reducing work load and stress - whilst still not dropping off on quality then please post below.........
happy marking! 
T

Tuesday 1 October 2013

"Wiki Learning" - Sci department trial with WIkispaces


 
 
The Science Department is using a new wikispaces website this year. The wikispaces platform makes it easy to design the web page, upload files and pictures, and also features discussion boards that students can log on to and ask questions.
Our website has a page for each GCSE and A level science course offered in our department. On these pages, students find links to the specification and past papers. Teachers are also able to upload power points, word documents, work sheets and excel spread sheets for students to download.  These documents can be accessed from home, and homework can be set. Some students do not have internet access at home, so if homework is to be set from here, you need to negotiate with them to access the page while at school.
 

 
I have used wikispaces for five years now, and have found it really useful for day to day teaching, as well as for revision time. My pages usually feature Youtube links, extension work, and class notes. I upload my A level Chemistry power points before lessons allowing students acess to the full notes at any time. The OCR website can be hard to navigate at first, so by linking to the specifications and past papers through the wikispaces site, students can’t accidently look at the wrong course.
Last year I used my website for Btec students when we were completing research assignments in the school's resource centre. As I could access my website from home, I could upload the resources they needed when I was planning out of school, so I didn’t have to then copy it on to the student drive before class the next morning. My students got used to logging in and going straight to my website at the start of the lesson. It cuts down on printing, as you don’t need to print instructions out, and it also means that students who typically take five minutes copying a URL from a printed paper could click on a link and instantly end up where I wanted them to be.

Our wikispaces site is a work in progress this year. At this stage its main purpose is to allow students easy access to the specifications, past papers and other various revision materials. So far this is proving to be successful with GCSE and A level students. If other departments in the school would like any help with setting up their own wikipages - then I am more than happy to help.
The link below should take you to our pages so that you can have a look at what sort of materials we have put up and how you might like to set up your own pages.

Friday 13 September 2013

22 Shades of Questioning - Trying to find more variety in Q&A feedback from PE students

22 Shades of Questioning





http://www.tes.co.uk/teaching-resource/Discussion-Toolkit-6337096/


This was a resource I was passed by a friend. It can be found on the TES resources website and is the work of Mike Gershon. I felt that I needed to change up some of my questioning strategies and try and find some new angles into AFL whilst outside in the cold of winter. PE is a tricky mix of needing to stop kids working - in order to discuss what they are doing and how they can improve and everyone freezing to death as the wind whips in and our body temperature drops. Therefore, I need to have a wide variety of questioning strategies and skills up my sleeve. This is a blog therefore, about trying to add to my armoury of strategies to keep the class moving forward and focused, without turning any of them into frozen statues in the process.

I will update my reflections on a different strategy a week. This week - I am going to try Gershon's "Listening Triads".

C.Wood PE teacher

The Listening Triad







The listening triad is essentially getting pupils into groups of 3's –

v  1 person is the question master

v  1 person is the talker (answerer)

v  the last person is a recorder. 

The aim is that the questioner asks their own questions, the talker answers and the recorder feeds back to the teacher or the rest of the class.

I’ve trailed this strategy throughout all my KS3 and 4 classes this week, both in outdoor lessons and because of the weather this week, the gym. I think it has some merit as a way of getting the quieter pupils to take part in discussions and it forces pupils to think, in order to invent their own questions, answer them and then be able to relay and explain to another audience what they have heard. Therefore, there’s a lot more thinking going on in a lot more pupils than when I just ask the same few pupils questions that I want to ask. It seems much more effective if the students invent the questions themselves.

 Strengths


1.       The pupils do all the work not me for a change

2.       Gets all pupils involved in thinking and reflecting

3.       Flexible  method - they can choose their role based on their strengths or you can be more directive of roles if you wanted to

There are though some weaknesses that mean I think it needs some forethought to make it an effective strategy. The quality of the questions may not be high as a start point, which then means the other two pupils are not being challenged. If the pupil in the middle cannot answer – the process stalls and lacks pace. If the pupil who is listening doesn’t feedback well – it then means I have to step in and add to what they say unless – again – I lose more pace in the lesson. There are obvious ways of countering these – but they take up time and effort – e.g. give them a bank of suitable questions or add in features like phone a friend or audience participation. Getting these types of strategies to work will in the end need to be individually worked out in terms of how they suit you or how far you want to focus on pace or independence in the lesson.

 Weaknesses


1.       Pupils questioning is not always that good

2.       Unless checked the recorder can get away with not doing much -  in classroom based lessons they can literally record on paper what is said and repeat it back – you need to add in certain extras – like they have to change what they report back into just three key pieces of advice or coaching tips.

 Summary:

I really like the idea of this, it is easy to set up, as a dept we have created questioning prompt sheets to ensure they ask good questions, hoping that if we keep using this they can then come up with their own worthwhile questions.  I have also told the recorder that if the talker doesn't know the answer it is up to them and also their responsibility to say if the answer is correct.  It is really important to emphasise to the question master to ask why or how, not just to accept one word answers.




This week’s questioning style…….

“Philosophy for Children”
 
 

 To begin with I didn't really understand what this was and it took a while to get my head around it. In the end I interpreted it this way: 
Pupils are in a circle and you put an object or stimuli in the middle of them to get pupils thinking/talking. They then need time to think of questions or ideas, and you can throw ideas or questions into the mix to start them off. For example, “What do you think this would be used for?” Or “Explain how this relates to…..” Then they have a short time to think in silence or whisper to the person next to them. In feedback and discussion you need to establish that only one pupil is meant to be talking at a time to encourage critical thinking, creative and collaboration.
 How I used it:

Practical lessons - I put pupils in groups and gave them some equipment and they had to create a game or drill or warm up with it.  Sometimes I gave them more instructions and focus and other times I just told them to be creative and make it fun.

 Theory lessons: I got pupils in 3's.  1 pupil had to draw or mould something from the lesson, the other 2 had to guess what it was and then whoever got it right had to ask a question about that aspect.  They got a point for getting the answers correct.




Potential  Strengths:

Easy to set up – very little equipment needed and not too much space either

Gets all pupils involved in thinking and knowing that they might have to make suggestions or lead tasks

Allows the pupils to be in charge of their own learning

Creates an atmosphere of discover and questioning – especially good for Activating learning
 
 

 Weakness':

It is up to the pupils to think and be creative – in the short term this can take longer than you want and some pupils find this challenging.

Depending on how you group them and the roles you give out – individuals can potentially overpower the activity.

Overall:
This has been a successful experiment – I wasn’t convinced at all at the start of the week but now I feel that this strategy will become part of lots of my lessons.  I think I will use this as a starter or plenary in theory lessonsIn practical lessons it has been successful for KS4 for them to come up with fun games so I will use it again, especially for warm ups and final consolidation tasks.



This week I tried “Radio Phone-In”

This was a useful technique for both plenaries during lessons for coaching points and development and also final plenaries for really being able to assess understanding and progress

 

Possible set up:

The teacher is meant to be the host with 4 guests and the rest of the class the audience.The Teacher leads the discussion; the four guests receive role play cards and are asked to take on that character.  The audience ring in with questions.

I think this set up allows for the most “control” by the teacher….but it does limit the numbers participating in the activities.

I have tended to try and avoid playing a role and leave this to members of the class. I have also tended to get the class to work in smaller groups and to try and give the audience more of a role rather than simply listening – I wanted them more engaged and active than that!

 This week I used it in my science lesson (reproduction lesson).  The pupils were in 6's, the radio host, a doctor, a nurse (to help the doctor answer questions) and a few pupils to do some phone in questions.

 In practical PE lessons I have trialled it more like a talk sport thing where the host gives a summary of the performance and the others in the group ask them questions based on the summary and what they saw themselves.

This then allowed me to allocate roles in the “audience” such as technical coaches. This worked well as the pupils who asked questions, were then able to demonstrate and teach the skills that they had asked about to the those who were answering the questions. This created a kind of circle of feedback where those asking for help were getting help from other students who were then extended by having tho teach their skills to others.
 

 

 


Like with the other question things I've tried the strengths are:

·         All the focus is on the pupils; they have to think and are therefore working hard to problem solve for themselves

·         Also – more importantly for me…. it runs itself once the pupils are familiar with the processes


Possible Weakness

·         The quality of the questioning is only as good as the pupils

·         If done in big groups hard to keep them all interested

·         If done in small groups harder to get round to all groups

Conclusions:

 I will definitely use this in GCSE practical lessons in the future as it was a really effective way of pulling all the learners into a discussion about how to make progress and how to improve. As they were telling each other what to do and how to do it – they all seemed more engaged and able to understand assessment criteria.
This would also be a fantistic way of developing and introducing a sport leaders programme in schools - it get pupils used to critiquing performance and then being able to coach each other to improve - a nice exercise before letting them lose on younger kids or peers.
 



Monday 15 July 2013

Accelerated Learning - bringing Alistair Smith's model for learning to Hylands School

If anyone is unsure about who Alistair Smith is then follow this link to a video clip that should give you a pretty good introduction of the things he believes schools should be doing in order to provide the best chances for those in their care.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2t0D2J67xCk


Friday 12 July 2013

Introducing the Hylands Pedagogy Blog

Paul Ginnis Training
Outstanding Teaching for Outstanding Learning: planning principles & practical strategies



This is the blog page for the Hylands School Pedagogical Project Group. As a school we are committed to developing outstanding practice across all of our faculties and staff. As part of this journey, we have set up a teaching and learning group; composed of 15 members of the teaching staff. Our job is to research new ideas, trial them in our classrooms and with our pupils, feedback to colleagues and think about how they can be added to our teaching in order to improve the experiences and outcomes for all our learners. This blog is a record of what we will be up to in the next few years. You can also follow us on https://twitter.com/ with the contact of @hylandspedagogy.  


Our first post on our teaching and learning project blog is an introduction to a number that will follow in the new school year.
Our teaching and learning group attended a training session with Mr Paul Ginnis at Kemnal Technology College on Monday 1st July. We were so excited by the content of the sessions that a number of us came back to our school at the end of the day and began re-planning our lessons for the next day in light of what we saw. Paul gave us some great ideas to go away and use and we thought that our pupils would benefit from them straight away.
We also decided that it was vital that the remainder of the staff who had not been in the sessions got the chance to hear about some of these ideas as soon as possible. Therefore, the following week we organised a show and tell session where each member of the group delivered a nano presentation to the whole staff of what had excited them most, why it had excited them and what they were going to do with it in the coming Autumn Term.
The first few blogs on this site will aim to bring out the action research and ideas of our teaching and learning group. This will hopefully serve as a record of our ideas and experiments for the group itself, but also as a place where the wider staff body can come and visit to find resources and ideas for their own teaching. Equally, if anyone picks up on our work and uses it in their classroom, then we've achieved our wider aim of simply making teaching in schools better.
The presentations that we gave are listed below and there will be a blog post on each of these in the near future once we've all had a good chance to trial them and embed them in our classes in the new academic year. I've attached a couple of links as starting points in case you can't wait. We hope all those who read them can take something away for their own classes and pupils.
Independent Learners
The organised but lazy Teacher
Wall Paper your room
Developing a "Flipped" Classroom http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHVi9OIh-Bc
Students planning their own learning
Reverse Engineering your teaching