About Roset

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No words can explain how deeply people want to connect with each other. How much pain they will suffer trying to be accepted, to be valued and to be loved. The yearning to be wanted is probably the most trauma that some individuals will ever inflict up on themselves. No matter race, colour, creed, sexual orientation, religion, culture, gender, age or any other factor, what everyone wants is to belong, to connect, to be loved. It is so easy to reach out to someone yet, for some it is the most difficult thing to find someone to connect to. Reach out to those you meet in your daily march. You just never know whose life you might touch, what spark, even unknowingly, you may make.

Tuesday 23 April 2013

Why the happiest people take on the most difficult jobs.


Check this out: why the happiest people take in the most difficult jobs......
http://blogs.hbr.org/kanter/2013/04/to-find-happiness-at-work-tap.html

Monday 22 April 2013

Looking forward

Today was a sleep day! 

I've had a think and a thought or two between naps! 

My first thought was this - In general, no matter where one works there is always going to be someone who doesn't like you or takes exception for some mundane, unjustified reason. I guess its about weighing everything up, not that one should have to, but working out whether the happiness outweighs all else, when this happens and deciding if to walk or if to battle through it.

The fact that on my very first day at a new job as a brand new teacher someone wanted to off-load their worries and concerns on to me could be taken as flattery rather than offense, even though those worries were personally focused towards me. Now, I am going to call the things said to me 'worries', because I am at a loss of what else to call them and I think, that in reality, the person who said them has genuine concerns around what he said. On a professional level, possibly not appropriate to dump them on a new staff member on their very first day and during subsequent weeks, but moving on lets have a look . . .

Lets work through a bit of logic then - 

Worry number 1: that management have an agenda to hire only people "like me" and people like me., ie with a PhD, "do not make good teachers". I guess this is actually two worries but lets look at them together.

Alright, lets look at this. Not only has this so called 'fact' been de-bunked because contrary to what he told many of the existing staff, thus inciting fear and anxiety unnecessarily, not everyone hired this year has a PhD. In fact, yes, that would be actual fact, I was the only one. So, if management do have an agenda to hire people only with higher degrees they didn't do a very good job of it with a total of 1 out of 8 new staff members having one and the one hired not even thinking to mention it! 

Lets look at the PhD factor next - That having one doesn't result in a good teacher. Well, having a PhD does not necessarily result in a good teacher - I agree - but nor does having a Diploma in Teaching and Learning as we see often in the news. How many teachers have been struck off for inappropriate conduct... I think I make my point so we'll leave this one here.

Worry number 2: a fear of being overlooked for a promotion in favour of someone with a higher qualification.

This all stems from this having actually happened and although very sad, I cannot believe that these frustrations are appropriately off-loaded onto a new member of staff during the first few days of starting employment. I would have appreciated a chance to show I could actually be a threat before being deemed as one . . . (joking, kinda...but honestly)!!!

Worry number 3: Actually, this made me feel a bit sad. He stated that he had been treated badly by management, but surely if that is someones experience one would not want that for someone else - right? 

I feel a bit bad because obviously this person has been hurt in the past and the historical pains have not had time to heal or been acknoweldged by management. Whether this is true or not is not the point. The point for me is this . . .

I had no idea or intention to be the focus of someones pain and just by being me and having achieved what I have achieved, for me, not for anyone else. I had no idea that just being me would cause anxiety due to representing everything that has previously resulted in resentment, disappointment and hurt. It was rather a surprise that before I could even say a sentence or introduce myself someone had already stereotyped, boxed, judged and juried me!!!!

Other issues came to light over the passing weeks but again, even though directed at me, at the foundation of it all are an individuals insecurities and past resentments that it seems he was unable to off-load on to someone more appropriate. So, after getting a little frustrated and anxious myself and being the butt of  several more remarks and incorrect statements I thought of resigning.

On reflection - I feel like a bit of an idiot now! I have a perfectly good job where I can do good and serve. Even with all this going on, isn't the very thing that we should be concentrating on being overlooked . . . YES . . . it is . . . and that is the worst thing about all this debarkle - that the students who we are all supposedly here for, and are the ones who deserve and should have our attention have been hi-jacked by this ongoing saga.

So, not quite convinced yet, that I shouldn't resign - I cannot see the situation getting any better any time soon, but if I don't leave I think a strategic move might be to hide away and emerge only when I really need to - at least in this way my attention will not be taken away from the job at hand - taking care of our students,. Also, doing this will remove me from the firing line and any future unnecessary drama.

I'm not sure what to do yet. What I do know, is I love teaching. That's it. I don't really know what to do to be honest. I don't want to be the reason someone else is so angry and upset. Thats not my purpose in life. Hmmmmm.....


Sunday 21 April 2013

Sometimes, it worth just stopping to smell the roses . . .


Yes, there is beauty everywhere - you just have to remember to stop., just for a moment, and look . . .


Saturday 20 April 2013

Books recommended for Brand New Teachers!


Acknowledgment to Gail Robinson for this list

How to teach

Phil Beadle

Areas covered: management of students; knowledge and understanding; methods and organisation; lesson planning and assessment
Phil Beadle knows what he’s talking about. He’s an English teacher who has won the secondary teacher of the year gong at the National Teaching Awards and most importantly he’s learned what works in the classroom the hard way, at the chalkface.
You won’t find any dry educational theories in this book, nor any of the edu-jargon so beloved of the DfE. Instead this is a practical guide to how to manage learning and behaviour in today’s classrooms. There’s no rose-tinted idealistic view of pupils desperate to learn, it’s realistic and it tackles the behaviour issues you will come across (including dealing with chewing gum!).
As TES columnist and experienced headteacher Geoff Barton describes it, How to teach is “the book that tells you everything traditional teacher training courses don’t”. This book really is invaluable for an NQT about to take control of their own classroom for the first time and for trainees about to embark on teaching practice.

Here are a few of our favourite bits from Phil’s book...

Not Quite a Teacher: target practice for beginning teachers

Tom Bennett

Tom Bennett, the author of this book, is a well-known face in the TES offices; he’s the behaviour expert on our behaviour forum and he also writes a regular behaviour hints and tips column for the TES website. Somehow he also finds the time to fit in his role as a department head at an inner-city secondary school in London.
Not Quite a Teacher is a guide for both NQTs and trainee teachers. The book takes an interesting approach mixing Tom’s advice with his own teacher training experiences. Tom didn’t have an easy time through his training and his tales of woe should offer reassurance to any new teacher who feels like they’re going under.
The book starts off with guidance on routes into teaching, runs through teaching placements and then onto getting your first job and the induction process. As you go through the various stages Tom offers reassurance that things really do get easier.
Here are a few of our favourite bits from Tom’s book...

The Ultimate Teaching manual: a route to success

Gererd Dixie

Educational consultant and advanced skills teacher in initial teacher training Gererd Dixie is a regular visitor to TES towers. Gererd has hosted several popular online advice clinics for us, including one on setting up your first classroom.
This book is the 'Highway Code of teaching' and as a result is easy to dip in and out of to get advice.
The book is particularly strong on lesson planning with detailed guidance on how to structure your lessons effectively. Gererd also goes into detail on the different types of learning styles and how to incorporate them into your lessons.
Here are a few of our favourite bits from Gererd’s book…


A guerilla guide to teaching: the definitive resource for new teachers

Sue Cowley

Areas covered: Becoming a teacher; being a teacher; anatomy of a school; you and your career; life at the chalkface; ICT
Sue Cowley was a regular on Teachers TV where she specialised in programmes about classroom management, check them out on TES Resources
So you’d expect the classroom practice sections of this book to be strong, and they are with handy guides to setting up your first classroom, lesson planning and behaviour management.
For trainee teachers there’s some useful advice on preparing for the scariest bit of the training process – teaching practice. The sample lesson planning documents will also come in very handy.
Here are a few of our favourite bits from Sue’s book…

PGCE Survival Guide

Tim Handley

Find out what being a trainee teacher is really like straight from the horse's mouth. This book is compiled from content contributed by recent PGCE graduates and more experienced teachers. The book takes you step by step through the process from your first day at university through to, hopefully, finding a job.
The book is edited by one of our bloggers Tim Handley, a recent PGCE graduate from the University of East Anglia, and is full of practical advice. Highly recommended.
Here are a few of our favourite bits from the PGCE Survival Guide...

Differentiation: Making the most of mixed ability by Darren Evans



‘Differentiation’ is often misunderstood, but used effectively it can be a cooperative strategy that raises everyone’s level
It is regarded as one of the most important parts of teachers’ work and has been referred to in a variety of ways, from mixed-ability teaching to personalised learning. But the teaching approach now most widely referred to as “differentiation” can still be a difficult one for teachers to grasp.
In his bestselling teacher-training manual, Teaching Today: a practical guideGeoff Petty describes it as “the process by which differences between learners are accommodated so that all students in a group have the best possible chance of learning”.
Peter Anstee, an English teacher and author of the Differentiation Pocketbook, says that it is about adapting teaching and learning styles to suit the whole class, groups or individuals.

Differentiation is misunderstood

Both agree that the lack of a consistent and clearly-defined description of differentiation has led to confusion among teachers, which has caused the idea to be widely misunderstood and misinterpreted.
Mr Petty says that the traditional term “mixed-ability teaching” was unsuitable because teachers realised it was not just ability that could be mixed and that they had to cope with a range of differences among their pupils - such as age, gender, learning style, motivation, prior learning and experience - as well as specific learning difficulties such as dyslexia.
But the accepted replacement term, “differentiation”, is less vivid and less readily understood. “Some believe that it is something added on to normal teaching and that it just requires a few discrete extra activities in the lesson,” Mr Petty says. “In fact, differentiation permeates everything a good teacher does, and it is often impossible to point to a discrete event that achieves it.”
The confusion and lack of clear information on the subject inspired Mr Anstee, an English teacher at Brentwood County High School in Essex, to write his first book, which has become one of Teachers’ Pocketbooks’ biggest sellers since it was first published last year.
“I’m particularly interested in teaching and learning, but when I have been running training courses and Inset days, I’ve noticed there’s not a lot of advice and guidance available on differentiation,” he says. “I’ve gathered a lot of information on it myself and I’ve been experimenting with different methods in the classroom.”

Differentiation can be daunting 

Differentiation can be a “daunting” prospect for a teacher because it can involve planning several different lessons, he says - the key is to give students choice.
“If students are given choice, they challenge themselves more than teachers do,” he explains. “A lot of teachers shy away from it, or give too much choice and it goes wrong. I have developed a staged approach in which I start small and build up from there.”
He believes some differentiation strategies have done more harm than good, and that teachers must get away from the idea of defining the ability of individual students and grouping them as such, as it soon becomes a “self- fulfilling prophecy”.
“It needs a more subtle view,” he says. “You need to understand why you are differentiating - to create routes through learning that allow all students to achieve and progress. It’s not just about setting up a series of different activities, but planning learning that is generated from students’ needs.
“In my class, we use assessment-led learning, where assessment informs the next piece of learning.”

The Kagan approach

One differentiation strategy that is growing in popularity is the Kagan method of teaching. Developed in the US, Kagan is a cooperative learning strategy that claims to improve pupil achievement and social skills.
Michelle Rathor, an English teacher at Our Lady’s RC High School in Blackley, Manchester, came across the concept while training to be an advanced skills teacher four years ago.
She was looking for an effective differentiation technique to improve results in her mixed-ability classes and had heard about a nearby school, Fallibroome High (now Academy) in Macclesfield, which had turned its results around using Kagan methods. So she attended a training course. “Kagan promotes whole-class engagement and enjoyment,” she says. “Pupils rely on each other and every child has a part to play in every task.”
In Kagan terminology, children are described as either “hogs” or “logs”. “Hogs” are the pupils who will always answer questions and take part in learning activities, while “logs” sit silently and hope the teacher overlooks them.

Increase participation

Using one of the programme’s 225 structures can dramatically increase classroom participation, it is claimed. Ms Rathor often uses a structure known as “rally robin”.
“Say, for example, we were reading a text and I asked a question to test what they could remember, usually, only half of the class would put their hands up to answer and maybe 10 of those would actually interact. With ‘rally robin’, pupils partner up and rely on each other for the answers,” she explains. “It reinforces the learning and everyone has had a go.”
During activities, Ms Rathor often splits her classes into mixed-ability groups of four and assigns each pupil an individual role, which is rotated after each turn.
She says that it is important not only to know each pupil’s ability, but to let them know it too, so they are aware what their targets are.
“We have never had a situation where we have had pupils looked down on by others,” she says. “It doesn’t matter what level they are working at, as long as they are pushing themselves. As far as I’m concerned, if you are making progress, you are doing a good job.”
Ms Rathor is now a certified Kagan trainer and has embedded the methodology in all English classes.
“The difference has been unbelievable,” she says. “When I started in 2007- 08, the overall pass rate for English GCSE was 33 per cent. Last year, it was 70 per cent. I can’t put that solely down to Kagan, but it has had a huge impact.”

When differentiation goes wrong

Mr Petty believes that, although differentiation strategies like Kagan that use whole-class interactive teaching and cooperative learning techniques can have a positive impact, the focus on differentiation has more often been unhelpful.
He says that it has been interpreted in ways that have actually set back attempts to narrow the achievement gap between the weakest and most able students.
“It is a floundering concept that would be better dropped,” he says. “One of the problems is that it has been interpreted to mean you treat students differently in the classroom, that you have low expectations of the weakest students and set them very simple tasks. The idea that every student should be taught in an individual way is a disaster; it doesn’t work.”
This is differentiation by task, which Mr Petty argues is only rarely effective. Instead, he says an easier and more effective strategy is differentiation by outcome, where students are set the same tasks, which they can all attempt and will stretch the most able.

Catering for differences

There are three generally accepted categories of differentiation:
  • By task, which involves setting different activities for pupils of different abilities;
  • By support, which means giving more help to certain pupils within the group;
  • By outcome, which involves setting open-ended tasks and allowing pupil response at different levels.

Tips from Peter Anstee’s Differentiation Pocketbook

  • Student choice - start with small levels, then build up.
  • Questioning - target specific questions at specific students.
  • Group work  - ensure students have specific roles they are accountable for. Vary them for different students and rotate responsibilities.

Kagan strategies

Showdown
One pupil in a group of four is named the captain, and he or she reads a question card aloud. The others write the answer on slips of paper or boards and keep them secret. When the teacher gives the showdown signal, all pupils reveal their answers. If all are correct, the team gets full points. If not, they coach each other. Roles rotate after each turn.
Fan-N-Pick
In a group of four pupils, one fans a pack of question cards. The second picks a card and reads the question. The third answers. The fourth checks whether the answer is right and either praises the respondent or coaches them in the right answer. Roles rotate after each turn. This approach promotes teamwork, thinking skills and communication.