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Professor David Hopkins HSBC Chair of International Leadership

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Title: Professor David Hopkins HSBC Chair of International Leadership


1
Every School a Great SchoolA Contribution to
Classroom Research Presentation made atthe
Leading Edge Partnership Programme, Partnership
Researchers Launch Day London, Wednesday 28th
February 2007
Professor David HopkinsHSBC Chair of
International Leadership
2
Outcomes for the Workshop
  • The purpose of the day is to
  • re-examine the nature of classroom research
  • share practice
  • explore how innovative teaching and learning can
    be generated from the research activity
  • develop guidelines and plans for future research
    within the programme

3
Overview of the Workshop
  • 9.45 - 10.45
  • Sharing experiences of classroom research
  • 11 12.30
  • Current and Future Practice for School-based
    Research
  • 1.15 3.30
  • Teaching and Learning for extending innovative
    practice
  • Planning for the Partnership Researchers
    Programme

4
Session OneClassroom Research in Practice
sharing experiences
5
Case Studies
  • Robin Bevan
  • King Edward VI High School
  • Mary Martin
  • Comberton Village College
  • Thalia Hinkley
  • Sandbach High School and Sixth Form College

6
Discussion
7
PlenaryWhat conclusions can we draw from our
discussion?
8
  • COFFEE!

9
Session TwoCurrent and Future Research for
School - Based Research
10
Overview of Session Two
  • Research models
  • Developing a focus
  • Classroom observation
  • Data gathering
  • Data analysis
  • Reporting on research
  • School improvement processes

11
My enquiry questioning is disrupted by my need to
keep control in ways the class expects.
The Action Research spiral
My students think that science means recalling
facts rather than a process of enquiry. How can I
stimulate enquiry in my students? Change my
questioning? Settle on questioning strategies.
Plan
Shift questioning strategy to encourage students
to explore answers to their own questioning.
Record questions and responses on tap for a
couple of lessons to see what is happening. Keep
notes of my impressions in a diary.
Try questions which let students say what they
mean, what interests them.
Enquiry developing but students are more unruly.
How can I keep them on track? By listening to
each other, probing their questions? What lessons
help?
Continue general aim but reduce number of control
statements.
Use less control statements for a couple of
lessons.
Record on tape questioning and control
statements. Note in diary effects on student
behaviour
Based on Kemmis and McTaggart, 1988
12
Elliots Action Research Model (Elliot, 199171)
Reconnaissance (explain any failure to
Implement, and effects)
13
McKernans Action Research Model
14
Criteria for Classroom Research by Teachers
  • Teachers primary job is to teach, and any
    research method should not interfer with or
    disrupt the teaching commitment
  • The method of data collection must not be too
    demanding on the teachers time
  • The methodology employed must be reliable enough
    to allow teachers to formulate hypotheses
    confidently and develop strategies applicable to
    their classroom situation
  • The research focus undertaken by the teacher
    should be one to which s/he is committed
  • Teachers researchers should pay attention to the
    ethical procedures surrounding their work
  • Classroom research should adopt a classroom
    exceeding perspective

15
Developing a focus
  • 1. Start with a general idea about something that
    needs to be improved and centre your attention
    on
  • What is happening now?
  • In what sense is problematic?
  • What can I do about it?
  • General starting points will look like
  • I would like to improve the
  • Some people are unhappy about
  • I am perplexed by.
  • is a source of irritation. What can I do about
    it?

16
Developing a focus
  • 2. Produce a list of ideas. These may relate to
  • the schools Development Plan
  • the schools aims, targets and mission statement
  • Practical and immediate concerns
  • 3. Evaluate the usefulness, viability and or
    importance of the individual issue by selecting
    an initial focus that
  • is viable
  • is discrete
  • is intrinsically interesting
  • involves collaboration
  • is related in some way to teaching and learning
    and whole school concerns

17
Formulation evaluation questions
18
A Practical Evaluation Schedule
19
The Evaluation Process
20
Key Features of Classroom Observation
  • Joint planning
  • Focus
  • Establishing criteria
  • Observation skills
  • Feedback

21
The Three-Phase Observation Cycle
22
Training for Observation
  • Thinking about which areas to focus and suitable
    data collection methods
  • Each group should in turn select a focus and
    outline it to the group
  • Then the group should discuss
  • What information could be gathered through
    classroom observation?
  • How would the observer collect it?
  • How would the observer record it?
  • What are the criteria that could most helpfully
    be applied to their particular aspect of the
    teachers work?

23
Training for Observation
Build upon an aide-memoire as seen below
24
Examples of Methods
  • Observation
  • Open Observation
  • Focused observation
  • Structured observation
  • Systematic observation

25
Data Gathering
Field Notes
26
Data Gathering
Audiotape Recording
27
Data Gathering
Pupil diaries
28
Data Gathering
Interviews Teacher/pupil (individually or in
groups of 3 or 4)
29
Data Gathering
Interviews Observer/pupil (individually or in
groups of 3 or 4)
30
Data Gathering
Interviews Pupil/pupil
31
Data Gathering
Video recorder and digital camera
32
Data Gathering
Questionnaires
33
Data Gathering
Sociometry
Documentary evidence
34
Data Gathering
Case Study
35
Mapping the process of change in schools
  • Series 1 Individual (teacher) level
  • Technique 1 The time line of change. The aim of
    this technique is to record how individuals
    within a school perceive their experience of a
    particular change over a period of time.
  • Technique 2 The experience of change. The
    purpose of this technique is to gather
    information about the feelings of individuals
    towards changes in their school.
  • Technique 3 The initiation of change. This
    technique taps teachers commitment to change and
    their sense of control over it. It differs from
    the previous two techniques in that it is
    concerned with change in general rather than a
    specific change.
  • Series 2Institutional (school) level
  • Technique 4 The culture of the school. The
    purpose of this technique is to generate data on
    teachers perceptions of the culture of their
    school, the direction in which the culture is
    moving and their ideal culture (see Hargreaves
    1995).
  • Technique 5 The structures of the school. The
    purpose of this technique is to generate data on
    some of the basic social structures underlying
    school cultures.
  • Technique 6 The conditions of school. This
    technique consists of a scale for measuring a
    schools internal conditions and potential for
    innovation. The 24 items are grouped under six
    headings that represent the key conditions
    necessary for school improvement.

36
Components of data analysis Miles and Hubermans
flow model
Post

ANALYSIS
37
Components of data analysis Miles and Hubermans
interactive models
38
Fieldwork Methodology
39
A matrix for analysing data
40
Reporting Research
  • The research should be replicable
  • The evidence used to generate hypotheses and
    consequent action is clearly documented
  • Action taken as a result of the research is
    monitored
  • The reader finds the research accessible and that
    it resonates with his/her own experience

41
So What ... NEXT?
42
Joined up learning and teaching in Schools
  • Make space and time for deep learning and
    teacher enquiry
  • Use the research on learning and teaching to
    impact on student achievement
  • Studying classroom practice increases the focus
    on student learning
  • Invest in school-based processes for improving
    teachers pedagogical content knowledge
  • By working in small groups the whole school staff
    can become a nurturing unit

43
Structuring Staff Development
  • Workshop
  • Understanding of Key Ideas and Principles
  • Modelling and Demonstration
  • Practice in Non-threatening Situations
  • Workplace
  • Immediate and Sustained Practice
  • Collaboration and Peer
  • Reflection and Action Research

44
Devise a programme around these core values
  • Every school can improve
  • Improvement is assessed in terms of enhanced
    pupil outcomes
  • Every individual in the school has a contribution
    to make
  • Start from where the school is, but set high
    goals
  • Model good practice with precision
  • Raise expectations of what is possible.

45
A Three Phase Strategy for School Improvement
  • Phase One Establishing the Process
  • Phase Two Going Whole School
  • Phase Three Sustaining Momentum

46
Phase One Establishing the Process
  • Commitment to the School Improvement Approach
  • Selection of School Improvement Group or Cadre
  • Enquiring into the Strengths and Weaknesses of
    the School
  • Designing the Whole School Programme
  • Seeking Partners and Seeding the Whole School
    Approach

47
Preparing for School Improvement
48
Phase Two Going Whole School
  • The Initial Whole School INSET Day(s)
  • Establishing the Curriculum and Teaching Focus
  • Establishing the Learning Teams
  • Curriculum groupings
  • Peer coaching or buddy groups
  • The Initial Cycle of Enquiry
  • Sharing Initial Success on the Curriculum Tour

49
Curriculum Tour
50
Phase Three Sustaining Momentum
  • Establishing Further Cycles of Enquiry
  • Building Teacher Learning into the Process
  • Sharpening the Focus on Student Learning
  • Finding Ways of Sharing Success and Building
    Networks
  • Reflecting on the Culture of the School and
    Department

51
Moving to Scale
Cohorts of 6 - 8 Schools 6 - 8 Members of School
Improvement Group
Year 1 Year 2
Year 3
PLAN Cohort A
. Cohort B
.........
Cohort C
.....
52
The Logic of School Improvement
Learning Potential of all Students
Repertoire of Learning Skills
Models of Learning - Tools for Teaching
Embedded in Curriculum Context and Schemes of Work
Whole School Emphasis on High Expectations and
Pedagogic Consistency
Sharing Schemes of Work and Curriculum Across and
Between Schools, Clusters, Districts, LEAs and
Nationally
53
Discussion
  • What are the implication of this presentation for
    our partnership?
  • What guidelines can we generate for the programme?

54
  • LUNCH!

55
Session ThreeEnriching Pedagogy for
Personalised Learning
56
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57
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58
The Moral Purpose of Schooling
I get to learn lots of interesting and different
subjects
I know what my learning objectives are and feel
in control of my learning
I can get a level 4 in English and Maths before I
go to secondary school
I know what good work looks like and can help
myself to learn
I know if I need extra help or to be challenged
to do better I will get the right support
My parents are involved with the school and I
feel I belong here
I can work well with and learn from many others
as well as my teacher
I know how I am being assessed and what I need to
do to improve my work
I can get the job that I want
I enjoy using ICT and know how it can help my
learning
All these . whatever my background, whatever my
abilities, wherever I start from
59
I wrote (with Bruce Joyce) some time ago that
  • Learning experiences are composed of content,
    process and social climate. As teachers we create
    for and with our children opportunities to
    explore and build important areas of knowledge,
    develop powerful tools for learning, and live in
    humanizing social conditions.

60
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61
Traditional Teaching
Effective subject teaching
Knowledge of the discipline
62
General Teaching Knowledge
Generalised pedagogical knowledge
Effective subject teaching
63
Disconnected Knowledge
Knowledge of the discipline
Effective subject teaching
Generalised pedagogical knowledge
64
Pedagogical Content Knowledge
Knowledge of the discipline
Effective subject teaching
Pedagogical content knowledge
Generalised pedagogical knowledge
65
Capacity to Learn
  • Principles of learning
  • Effort is a more important determinant of
    achievement than ability
  • Given the right time and support, almost all can
    become proficient learners
  • Principles of teaching
  • High expectations and challenging targets should
    be set for all
  • While the standards should remain constant, time
    and support should be varied according to
    individual student need

Are there standards in place and targets
for all students? Do we vary time and support?
66
Constructing Knowledge
  • Principle of Learning
  • Knowledge is a constructive process learners
    actively make meaning and construct ideas and the
    connections between them
  • Principle of teaching
  • Students should be encouraged to be active
    learners and problem-solvers
  • Are students encouraged to be active
    learners when
  • About 2/3 of the talk in classrooms is done by
    the teacher,
  • About 2/3 of teacher talk is organization-controll
    ing talk?

67
So
  • We teach not to produce little living libraries
    on a subject, but rather to get students to think
    mathematically for themselves, to consider
    matters as an historian does, to take part in the
    process of knowledge-getting. Knowing is a
    process not a product.Adapted from Jerome
    Bruner, Toward a Theory of Instruction (1966)

68
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69
Personalised Learning is
  • An educational approach that focuses on every
    individual achieving their potential and
    enhancing their learning skills
  • About designing teaching, curriculum and the
    school organisation to address the needs of the
    student both individually and collectively
  • A system that is more accessible, open to
    customisation and involves the learner in their
    own learning
  • A learning offer to all children that extends
    beyond the school context into the local
    community and beyond

70
Three ways of thinking about Teaching
Teaching Models
Teaching Skills
Reflection
Teaching Relationships
71
Teaching Skills
  • Content coverage
  • Time allocated to instruction
  • Engaged time time on task
  • Consistent success
  • Active teaching
  • Structuring information
  • Effective questioning

72
Teaching Relationships
  • Expectation effects on student achievement are
    likely to occur both directly through opportunity
    to learn (differences in the amount and nature of
    exposure to content and opportunities to engage
    in various types of academic activities) and
    indirectly through differential treatment that is
    likely to affect students' self-concepts,
    attributional inferences, or motivation.
  • Good, T.L. and Brophy, J.E. (1994) Looking In
    Classrooms (2nd ed)

73
Teaching Models
  • Our toolbox is the models of teaching, actually
    models for learning, that simultaneously define
    the nature of the content, the learning
    strategies, and the arrangements for social
    interaction that create the learning contexts of
    our students. For example, in powerful
    classrooms students learn models for
  • Extracting information and ideas from lectures
    and presentations
  • Memorising information
  • Building hypotheses and theories
  • Attaining concepts and how to invent them
  • Using metaphors to think creatively
  • Working effectively with other to initiate and
    carry out co-operative tasks

74
The Key Question
  • What teaching strategies do I and my colleagues
    have in our repertoires to respond to the student
    diversity that walks through our classroom doors?

75
CURRICULUM
TEACHING and LEARNING STRATEGIES
ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING
76
Joineduplearningandteaching
  • 1. There are many teaching approaches that can
    impact powerfully on learning its all about
    fitness for purpose

77
Reaching for the Double Sigma Effect
Number of students
Achievement of students
78
Joineduplearningandteaching
  • There are many teaching approaches that can
    impact powerfully on learning its all about
    fitness for purpose
  • 2. The most successful teaching patterns induce
    students to construct knowledge - to inquire into
    subject areas intensively

79
Powerful Learning
  • Is the ability of learners to respond
    successfully to the tasks they are set, as well
    as the task they set themselves In particular,
    to
  • Integrate prior and new knowledge
  • Acquire and use a range of learning skills
  • Solve problems individually and in groups
  • Think carefully about their successes and
    failures
  • Accept that learning involves uncertainty and
    difficulty
  • All this has been termed meta-cognition it
    is the learners ability to take control over
    their own learning processes.

80
The Common Curriculum of L2L
  • Thinking skills
  • Learning styles
  • Gardners multiple intelligences
  • Golemans emotional intelligence
  • How the brain works and brain gym
  • Study skills
  • Guy Claxtons 4Rs (resilience,
    recoursefullness, reflectiveness, and
    reciprocity)
  • Mindmapping

81
The Dialectic between Curriculum, Learning and
Teaching
Non directive
Synectics
Simulations
Group Investigation
Role Playing
Problem solving
Curriculum Development
Concept Attainment
Inductive Thinking
Rule using
Simulations
Classifying

Models of Learning Tools for Teaching
Multiple discrimination
Group Investigation (data gathering activities)
Phase 1 Inductive thinking
Phase 2 of Concept Attainment
Specific Responding
Mnemonic
Simulations
82
Joineduplearningandteaching
  • There are many teaching approaches that can
    impact powerfully on learning its all about
    fitness for purpose
  • The most successful teaching patterns induce
    students to construct knowledge - to inquire into
    subject areas intensively
  • 3. Importantly, the most effective models of
    teaching are also models of learning they
    increase the intellectual capacity of every
    student

83
Relationship between Model of Teaching and
Learning Skills
84
Whole Class Teaching Model - Syntax
  • Phase One Review
  • Phase Two Presenting Information
  • Phase Three Involving students in discussion
  • Phase Four Engaging students in learning
    activities
  • Phase Five Summary and review

85
Cooperative Group Work Teaching Model - Syntax
  • Positive interdependence
  • Individual Accountability
  • Face-to-face interaction
  • Social skills
  • Processing

86
Cooperative Group Work Teaching Model - Examples
  • Numbered Heads
  • Jigsaw
  • Twos to fours or snowballing
  • Rainbow groups
  • Envoys
  • Listening triads
  • Critical Friends

87
Inductive Teaching Model - Syntax
  • Phase One Identify the domain
  • Phase Two Collect, present and enumerate data
  • Phase Three Examine data
  • Phase Four Form concepts by classifying
  • Phase Five Generate and test hypotheses
  • Phase Six Consolidate and transfer

88
Joineduplearningandteaching
  • There are many teaching approaches that can
    impact powerfully on learning its all about
    fitness for purpose
  • The most successful teaching patterns induce
    students to construct knowledge - to inquire into
    subject areas intensively
  • Importantly, the most effective models of
    teaching are also models of learning they
    increase the intellectual capacity of every
    student
  • 4. The application of specific models of
    curriculum and teaching can greatly reduce the
    effects of gender, socio-economic status and
    linguistic background as factors in student
    learning

89
Effects of Complex Co-operative Learning by SES
(Social Economic Status)
90
Joineduplearningandteaching
  • There are many teaching approaches that can
    impact powerfully on learning its all about
    fitness for purpose
  • The most successful teaching patterns induce
    students to construct knowledge - to inquire into
    subject areas intensively
  • Importantly, the most effective models of
    teaching are also models of learning they
    increase the intellectual capacity of every
    student
  • The application of specific models of curriculum
    and teaching can greatly reduce the effects of
    gender, socio-economic status and linguistic
    background as factors in student learning.
  • 5. Teaching strategies should also be adapted to
    individual need through Assessment for Learning.

91
Assessment for Learning
  • The Given
  • A detailed map of a given curriculum with precise
    knowledge of how best to teach to the learning
    objectives in regular classroom settings.
  • What Else is Needed
  • A set of formative assessment tools for each
    lesson
  • Formative assessment that is not time-consuming
  • Using the assessment information on each student
    to design and deliver differentiated instruction
  • A built-in means of systematically improving the
    effectiveness of classroom instruction
  • If classroom instruction could be thus
    organised, then for the first time, teaching
    would follow the student.

92
Discussion
93
Partnership Researchers Programme
  • Planning

94
Discussion
  • What are the implications of todays discussions
    for our partnership planning over the next months
    and beyond?

95
From today
  • What is your focus?
  • What aspects of teaching and learning will you
    focus on?
  • How will you organise the whole school approach
  • What will be your first steps?
  • What input or support will you need?
  • What will you be able to share with the Leading
    Edge Partnership Programme in June?

96
Next Steps
The Practitioner Research Programme Spring and
Autumn 2007
97
Key Milestones
  • March and April research activity
  • Strengthening the network online and school to
    school
  • May sharing progress
  • 20th June - The Leading Edge Partnership
    Programme conference
  • July - Contributing to the LEPP dissemination
    materials
  • Autumn workshop

98
Paulo Freire once said -
  • No one educates anyone else
  • Nor do we educate ourselves
  • We educate one another in communion
  • In the context of living in this world

99
Professor David Hopkins HSBC Chair in
International Leadership
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