It is too easy to think that our subjects don't really contribute to teaching Spiritual, Moral, Social and Cultural education. But in good teaching and learning it is happeneing all the time. This clip shows how the spiritual can come into science teaching. In many ways, meeting the requirements of putting the spiritual into lessons is as simple as giving the students a sense of awe and wonder.
Friday, 28 June 2013
Poetry by Stealth!!
I turned up to work the other day and what did I see; a range of strange messages designed to intrigue me!
Well it soon became clear that something was afoot - something mischievous - dangerous even, was happenening. It was clear that somehting special was going on. Below Paul Waite explains all ... Poetry by stealth!
“Ok class, today we’re going to write some poetry…”
Such an announcement may well elicit groans from some of the students in a standard mixed ability English class. Yes, some students enjoy poetry, but unfortunately many others are at best ambivalent, and at worst claim that they detest poetry - or that the mere thought of poetry bores them rigid! The irony of the latter is that most students, given the opportunity to explore a variety of interesting poetry, and particularly if invited to express themselves by writing their own poems, will enjoy the experience.
A poem begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness.
Robert Frost
Poetry is all about emotion – and students, being human (!), will want to express their emotions. Quite simply, once students realise that they can use poetry to do this, most enjoy writing it.
“Poetry is a scream whispered onto paper “
© Y9 Creative Writing Enrichment Class, 2012-2013
Do the above words seem familiar? Not only is this a fantastic line of poetry, but it recently appeared, quite suddenly, along the top windows of W block. In the same week, Jolie arrived to find poetic lines brimming with teenage angst pinned to her door. Unsuspecting teachers chanced upon a washing line of stanzas fluttering near B block, and some discovered fragments of poetic lines written on cloth hung from benches: words were escaping from students’ imaginations and popping up all over the school…
Poetry by Stealth!
Think a little bit Banksy, a little bit Guerilla Gardeners (google them)…we are intrigued by mystery and also by the thought of doing something that appears slightly risky, slightly against the rules. So, if you can set students a task that generates that feeling then you are on to a sure-fire winner. Running it by Jolie first, I set my Y9 Creative Writing Enrichment class a Poetry by Stealth homework. The task was as follows:
· Surreptitiously ‘plant’, somewhere in the school, a poem that you have written.
· You might, for example, pin a poem on a notice board in a corridor, blue tac a poem to a classroom door, tape a poem to the side of a litter bin, etc.
· You can write a new poem, or use a poem that you’ve already written. You may work alone or in groups.
· There will be small prize for the most audacious and successfully completed mission – you might, for example, write your poem on a flag/banner and drape it somewhere noticeable.
· The only restrictions are that you must be safe when you put your poem up, and poem content must not be offensive.
· To win the prize, you must take a photo of you/your group next to you poem, in its location, as evidence.
Hey presto: a class of motivated and engaged students, all wanting to write and share poetry!
Paul Waite.
Friday, 14 June 2013
Teachmeet @ Cheney School Wednesday 12 June 2013
Below are my notes. They are far from perfect and a little more really than a list of presenters. My apologies if anyone is misrepresented. If this is the case; please let me know, advise me of what should be there and I will update the post.
Hannah Tyreman who presented also shares her experiences on her blog:
Welcome
Jolie Kirby Headteacher of Cheney School Opening
Rob Bown Languages AST Chair
Presentations
Sir Tim Brighouse
Features of excellent schools
· Teachers talk about teaching
· Teachers observe each other’s progress
· Teachers teach each other
· Teachers plan together- these are the success criteria for a high functioning department.
Helene Galdin-O'Shea
Walk through my last Ofsted Lesson – the magic happened in the lesson when the students got stuck into a silent debate .
Claire Hamnett Science AST
Speed dating for learning
Sophie Burrows film
Film Club presentation
Tom Boulter
I can't take my eyes off YouTube; how using teacher videos accelerates learning because students can revisit explanations and work at their own pace.
Carina Byles
Using mobile technology be encouraging students to use texting so we can poll classes, www.polleverywhere.com
Amjad Ali
The power of Poundland Pedagogy - using raffle tickets, share and replace board, post-it note corrections for spellings, director of learning - make trailers for learning using iMovie. Think tax and knowledge bank. Balloons and so much more…. check out his blog at bulmershetoolkit.blogspot.co.uk and twitter - @ASTsupportaali
Macro Pontecorvi
The UFGWPA
Andy Wright
Literacy and thinking skills are intertwined.
Maximise marking by:
They check/ friend checks/ teacher checks- 3 way check with all work to reinforce the importance of editing and making corrections.
Rob Bown AST languages
Michel Thomas learning
Simon Davis
Thinking hats and self evaluation
Hannah Tyreman
Ict resources - Padlet. Today's meet. Thoughtboxes. info.gram. S'more. Check Follow her on Twitter @hannahtyreman
James Gurung
Celebrate making mistakes, because it is an essential part of learning.
Keven Bartle
@kevbartle Pedagogy leaders
Matt Gray
Mr Gray's Blog - http://cherwellenglish.typepad.com/ Thinking Squares an alternative to mind maps. Backward engineering. Works well with Bloom's taxonomy.
Alexia Uhia
Using mobile phones in the class. Ipadio.com
Rebecca Bartlett
Killer questions - students questioning each other. Ideal for homework - research a question that students think no-one else can answer; this has to be related to the topic being studied and students have to know the answer. Use the killer question as a plenary, when using this for the first time lead as a group activity to get the concept of killer questions. Ask the question, pick three people to answer, and get a reward if no one can. Keep a tally to reward the people who collect the most unanswered questions.
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