An Inside Out Curriculum A pictorial guide - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 42
About This Presentation
Title:

An Inside Out Curriculum A pictorial guide

Description:

The period since the Education Reform Act of 1988 which first established the ... be developed' (Middlewood, Parker and Beere, Creating a Learning School, Paul ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:51
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 43
Provided by: RBT
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: An Inside Out Curriculum A pictorial guide


1
An Inside Out Curriculum(A pictorial guide)
  • Dudley Deputy Head Teachers
  • 1st February 2008

2
(No Transcript)
3

Leadership
Management
4
Streamlining based on means end analysis
Calculating numbers
Predicting outcomes
Setting and Getting Targets
5
True or False?
  • The period since the Education Reform Act of 1988
    which first established the National Curriculum
    has been a bleak time. Heavy prescription through
    the National Curriculum, testing, targets and
    league tables have resulted in an impoverished
    curriculum (Dominic Wyse Approaches to the
    Curriculum in Learning to Teach in the Primary
    School. Routledge 2006)
  • English primary education in 2000 is the
    nineteenth century elementary education modified
    much modified admittedly rather than
    transformed. Elementary education is at its
    centre of gravity. Elementary education provides
    it central point of reference. Elementary
    education is the form to which it most readily
    trends to regress.(R.J. Alexander Culture and
    Pedagogy International Comparisons in Primary
    Education Oxford Blackwell 20000
  • The National Curriculum for the United Kingdom is
    a document that outlines what needs to be taught.
    An alternative approach would be a curriculum
    that focuses not on content, but on the skills to
    be developed (Middlewood, Parker and Beere,
    Creating a Learning School, Paul Chapman
    Publishing

6
(No Transcript)
7
(No Transcript)
8
(No Transcript)
9
(No Transcript)
10
A Question of Balance
Knowledge Skills. Attitudes
Personal Achievement
Academic Achievement
11
(No Transcript)
12
(No Transcript)
13
(No Transcript)
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
(No Transcript)
17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
(No Transcript)
21
Dr Virginia Apgar Activity Pulse Grimace Appeara
nce Respiration
22
1st Trait Passion
23
1st Trait Passion 2nd Trait Belief
24
1st Trait Passion 2nd Trait Belief 3rd Trait
Energy.
25
(No Transcript)
26
1st Trait Passion, 2nd Trait Belief, 3rd Trait
Energy, 4th Trait Values 5th Trait Strategy
27
1st Trait Passion, 2nd Trait Belief, 3rd Trait
Energy, 4th Trait Values 5th Trait Strategy 6th
Trait Bonding Power
28
1st Trait Passion, 2nd Trait Belief, 3rd Trait
Energy, 4th Trait Values 5th Trait Strategy, 6th
Trait Bonding Power 7th Trait Communication
29
Communication Leadership of Learning
30
Communication Leadership of Learning
31
Communication Leadership of Learning
32
Communication Leadership of Learning
33
Communication Leadership of Learning
34
Communication Leadership of Learning
35
Communication Leadership of Learning
36
(No Transcript)
37
(No Transcript)
38
Strategies to develop influence
  • The focus on teaching and learning is persistent
    and consistent through dialogue, modelling, self
    evaluation.
  • Leadership is clearly differentiated according to
    the context
  • They are optimistic, positive and passionate
    (unwarranted optimism)
  • Their work is person centred (Winnie the Pooh).
  • When people do leadership rather than headship
    because leadership is a function and not a role.
    The challenge is to constantly seeking out and
    developing the other leaders and opinion formers.
  • Leadership clearly demonstrates a sense of
    direction and purpose ensuring constant movement,
    innovation and improvement. In these schools
    leadership is a verb rather than a noun.
  • Where there is a relentless focus on childrens
    achievements and progress within a broad range of
    contexts because this is what differentiates the
    school from any other organisation.

39
Professional learning communities
  • Make effective use of
  • National Strategy guidance and training
  • LEA support, advice, training and data
  • Ofsted inspections
  • Pertinent research
  • School networks, leading teachers
  • Specialist consultancy
  • Published resources
  • Web-based resources
  • Allocated funding
  • All staff and the local community

Slide 4.9
40
All actions determined by the needs of the school
and its community.
Constantly adapting To Outside Influences
Taking control and Turning it inside - out
41
Assessing a Schools State of Consciousness
Surviving
Adapting
Sustaining
42
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com