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Title: LITERACY IMPACT!


1
LITERACY IMPACT!
Literacy Across the Curriculum Maintaining the
Momentum
Geoff Barton December 19, 2014
All resources can be downloaded at
www.geoffbarton.co.uk
2
LITERACY IMPACT!
  • 1 Where are we (and where are you) with literacy?
  • 2 Who are your key players and what do you need
    to do next?
  • 3 Developing practical approaches
  • in Humanities subjects
  • in Scientific subjects
  • in tutor time
  • in speaking listening

and how will you measure IMPACT?
3
LITERACY IMPACT!
The approach
4
LITERACY IMPACT!
SECTION 1 So where are we with whole-school
literacy?
5
Reasonable but horrible questions
1 - Name one child who has improved their reading
or writing based on a literacy initiative at your
school?
2 - If you have a literacy working party, how
much money do their salaries represent?
4 - What do your best teachers do to help
students read, write, think and spell better? How
do you know?
3 - If I asked 3 of your staff what your
whole-school policy said, what would they reply?
5 - If literacy is important, is it part of all
lesson observations? Reviews? Performance
management?
6
Subject Reviews 2005 2009 English at the
Crossroads
7
October 2005 Key findings
English is one of the best taught subjects in
both primary and secondary schools.
8
October 2005 Key findings
  • Standards of writing have improved as a result
    of guidance from the national strategies
  • Some teachers give too little thought to
    ensuring that pupils fully consider the audience,
    purpose and content for their writing.

9
October 2005 Key findings
  • Schools do not always seem to understand the
    importance of pupils talk in developing both
    reading and writing.
  • Myhill and Fisher spoken language forms a
    constraint, a ceiling not only on the ability to
    comprehend but also on the ability to write,
    beyond which literacy cannot progress.
  • Too many teachers appear to have forgotten that
    speech supports and propels writing forward.
  • Pupils do not improve writing solely by doing
    more of it good quality writing benefits from
    focused discussion that gives pupils a chance to
    talk through ideas before writing and to respond
    to friends suggestions.

10
October 2005 Key findings
  • The Progress in International Reading Literacy
    Study (PIRLS) 2003 although the reading skills
    of 10 year old pupils in England compared well
    with those of pupils in other countries, they
    read less frequently for pleasure and were less
    interested in reading than those elsewhere.
  • NFER 2003 childrens enjoyment of reading had
    declined significantly in recent years
  • A Nestlé/MORI report underclass of
    non-readers, plus cycles of non-reading where
    teenagers from families where parents are not
    readers will almost always be less likely to be
    enthusiastic readers themselves.

11
October 2005 Key findings
The role of teaching assistants was described in
the report as increasingly effective.
12
October 2005 Key findings
  • Despite the Strategy, weaknesses remain,
    including
  • the stalling of developments as senior
    management teams focus on other initiatives
  • lack of robust measures to evaluate the impact
    of developments across a range of subjects
  • a focus on writing at the expense of reading,
    speaking and listening.

13
June 2009 Key findings
The most effective schools understood that ICT
has fundamentally altered how we think about
reading and writing. Most teachers in the
survey had an interactive whiteboard but the
effectiveness with which they used it varied
greatly. They tended to use it to engage pupils
attention or make presentations and rarely
exploited its interactive element
14
June 2009 Key findings
The most effective schools used speaking and
listening activities successfully to help pupils
to think for themselves. Too few schools,
however, planned systematically for these,
although primary schools had improved their work
in this area. Promoting wider reading and using
homework were weaknesses.
15
June 2009 Key findings
There is a tendency of secondary schools to focus
support on the examination years, which was too
late for students who entered school with low
levels of literacy
16
June 2009 Key findings
  • The most effective secondary schools were working
    to personalise the curriculum by matching it more
    closely to students needs.
  • Examples included
  • varying groupings so that individuals received
    the most appropriate support for each activity
  • using integrated courses or a focus on generic
    learning skills to increase students motivation
  • entering higher-attaining students early for Key
    Stage 3 tests or GCSE examinations
  • providing adult literacy courses for older,
    lower-attaining students that suited their needs
    better than GCSE.

17
June 2009 Key findings
In both the primary and secondary schools
visited, outstanding leadership and management of
English resulted from highly effective
headteachers who understood the subjects
importance and placed it at the centre of their
drive for improvement.
18
Implications for you ?
SL Does it happen systematically anywhere to
develop thinking and to model writing?
  • Writing is there an understanding across any
    teams of how to develop writing - eg how to get
    better evaluations, better essays, better
    scientific writing?

Reading Who is teaching reading? Has reading for
pleasure slipped from your radar?
Leadership Has your leadership team lost
interest in literacy? How will you reignite
interest?
19
LITERACY IMPACT!
Whats the latest news?
20
LITERACY LATEST!
What we know about Writing
  • The standard of writing has improved in recent
    years but still lags 20 behind reading at all
    key stages (eg around 60 of students get level 4
    at KS2 in writing, compared to 80 in reading).
  • Writing has improved as a result of the National
    Strategy.
  • SL has a big role in writing - it allows
    students to rehearse ideas and structures and
    builds confidence.
  • But SL has lower status because of assessment
    weightings.
  • In teaching writing we tend to focus too much on
    end-products rather than process (eg frames). We
    should think more about composition - how ideas
    are found and framed, how choices are made, how
    to decide about the medium, how to draft and
    edit.
  • We are still stuck with a narrow range of writing
    forms and need to emphasise creativity in
    non-fiction forms.
  • We need to rediscover the excitement of writing.

With thanks to Professor Richard Andrews,
University of York
21
LITERACY LATEST!
What we know about vocabulary
  • Aged 7 children in the top quartile have 7100
    words children in the lowest have around 3000.
    The main influence in parents.
  • Using and explaining high-level words is a key to
    expanding vocabulary. A low vocabulary has a
    negative effect throughout schooling.
  • Declining reading comprehension from 8 onwards is
    largely a result of low vocabulary. Vocabulary
    aged 6 accounts for 30 of reading variance aged
    16.
  • Catching up becomes very difficult. Children with
    low vocabularies would have to learn faster than
    their peers (4-5 roots words a day) to catch up
    within 5-6 years.
  • Vocabulary is built via reading to children,
    getting children to read themselves, engaging in
    rich oral language, encouraging reading and
    talking at home
  • In the classroom it involves defining and
    explaining word meanings, arranging frequent
    encounters with new words in different contexts,
    creating a word-rich environment, addressing
    vocabulary learning explicitly, selecting
    appropriate words for systematic
    instruction/reinforcement, teaching word-learning
    strategies

With thanks to DES Research Unit
22
LITERACY LATEST!
What we know about students who make slow
progress
Characteristics 2/3 boys. Generally
well-behaved. Positive in outlook. Invisible to
teachers. Keen to respond but unlikely to think
first. Persevere with tasks, especially with
tasks that are routine. Lack self-help
strategies. Stoical, patient, resigned. Reading
they over-rely on a limited range of strategies
and lack higher order reading skills Writing
struggle to combine different skills
simultaneously. Dont get much chance for oral
rehearsal, guided writing, precise feedback SL
dont see it as a key tool in thinking and
writing Targets set low-level targets overstate
functional skills infrequently review progress
With thanks to DfES
23
LITERACY LATEST!
What we know about TALK
Teachers are very aware that some children lack
experience and skills in using talk for
thinking.   However, most teachers do not
expressly teach children to become better at
using talk for reasoning, discussing and solving
problems.   If they teach talk, English
teachers tend to focus on developing good
presentational talk, not good exploratory
talk. It is still largely dominated by
teachers closed questions and students brief
attempts at right answers.
24
LITERACY LATEST!
25
LITERACY LATEST!
Good Practice in Talk
Teachers ask open questions about texts and
accept a variety of answers.   Teachers teach how
to read rather than teaching a text.   Teachers
encourage students to put the main idea into
their own words. Teachers regularly reformulate
and summarise what students say in the
appropriate discourse.   Teachers press the
students to elaborate their ideas, e.g. How did
you know that?   Teachers encourage thinking by
asking Why do you think that?.   Teachers
sometimes ask the same student a series of
progressively more challenging questions or
prompts (while the class listens).   Teachers ask
students to respond to other students views.
26
What we know about Literacy Across the Curriculum
  • Good literacy skills are a key factor in raising
    standards across all subjects
  • Language is the main medium we use for teaching,
    learning and developing thinking, so it is at the
    heart of teaching and learning
  • Literacy is best taught as part of the subject,
    not as an add-on
  • All teachers need to give explicit attention to
    the literacy needed in their subject.

27
Consistency in literacy is achieved when
  • Literacy skills are taught consistently and
    systematically across the curriculum
  • Expectation of standards of accuracy and
    presentation are similar in all classrooms
  • Teachers are equipped to deal with literacy
    issues in their subject both generically and
    specifically
  • The same strategies are used across the school
    the teaching sequence for writing active reading
    strategies planning speaking and listening for
    learning
  • Teachers use the same terminology to describe
    language.

28
Ofsted suggests literacy across the curriculum is
good when
  • Senior managers are actively involved in the
    planning and monitoring
  • Audits and action planning are rigorous
  • Monitoring focuses on a range of approaches, e.g.
    classroom observation, work scrutiny as well as
    formal tests
  • Time is given to training, its dissemination and
    embedding
  • Schools work to identified priorities.

29
KS3 IMPACT!
? Talking Point ?
  • What have been the successes in your own school?
  • What do you need to do next?

30
Literacy strategy The next phase
Self-evaluation So where are you up to in your
school?
0
3
5
NO PROGRESS
GOOD PROGRESS
31
Literacy strategy The next phase
Key player Progress rating Priority
Head
You
SENCO
Teachers
Teaching assistants
Governors
Librarian
Tutors
32
LITERACY IMPACT!
SECTION 2 Working with the key players
33
Focus relentlessly on TL
Standards are raised ONLY by changes which are
put into direct effect by teachers and pupils in
classrooms Black and Wiliam, Inside the Black
Box
Schools are places where the pupils go to watch
the teachers working (John West-Burnham)
For many years, attendance at school has been
required (for children and for teachers) while
learning at school has been optional. (Stoll,
Fink East)
34
Key players
Librarian
Strategy manager
Working party
Headteacher
Governors
Teaching assistants
Subject leaders
Students!
Tutors
35
Key players
Strategy manager
  • Focus, tailor, customise
  • See as professional development rather than
    delivery
  • Differentiate training
  • Emphasise monitoring more than initiatives
  • Use pupil surveys for learning teaching

36
Headteacher
Must be actively involved as head TEACHER Eg
monitoring books, breakfast with students,
feedback to staff Must be seen in lessons Must
be reined in to prioritise
37
Librarian
Key part in improving literacy Include in
training Part of curriculum meetings Library
should embody good practice - eg key words,
guidance on retrieving information, visual
excitement Active training for students, breaking
down subject barriers Get a library commitment
from every team Then sample to monitor it
38
Governors
Visit library, get in classrooms, talk to
students Clearly signal the literacy
focus Emphasise s/hes discussing
consistency Sample of students and feedback Part
of faculty reviews on (say) how we teach writing
39
Working party
Maintain or disband? Less doing and more
evaluating - questionnaires, looking at handouts,
working around rooms, talking to students Asking
questions What do teachers here do that helps
you to understand long texts better? Work
sampling Creating a critical mass
40
Students
Tell us how were doing Build into school
council Small groups work with faculty teams to
guide and evaluate Audit rooms for key words, etc
41
Teaching Assistants
  • Make them literacy experts
  • Let them lead training
  • Make their monitoring role explicit
  • Publish their feedback

42
Subject leaders
  • Help them to identify the 3 bits of literacy that
    will have the biggest impact
  • Prioritise one per term or year
  • Join their meetings at start and end of process
  • Help them to keep it simple
  • Provide models and sample texts
  • Evaluate
  • Build literacy into their teams performance
    management

43
Tutors
  • Reconceptualise tutor time as creating an ethos
    for learning / reviewing targets
  • Think therefore how the environment of tutor
    groups could embody good practice - key words,
    glossaries, approaches to reading and spelling,
    connectives
  • Reject silent reading and replace with
    literacy-based quizzes, etc
  • Make the school planner a central document for
    literacy

44
LITERACY IMPACT!
Your role
  1. Dont call it literacy - call it good learning
    teaching, or writing, or reading
  2. Build it into lesson observation sheets
  3. Build it into performance management
  4. Keep it in the public eye
  5. Emphasise increased student motivation
  6. Talk to your Head about core skills for all
    teachers

45
LITERACY IMPACT!
7 Show before after models 8 Dont focus on
grammar knowledge needed by staff 9 Show its
part of a whole-school strategy 10 Celebrate
every small-scale success 11 Quote students
feedback 12 Be consultant, not doer
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LITERACY IMPACT!
SECTION 3 Practical approaches
49
Book sampling
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Literacy strategy The next phase
IMPACT!
54
LITERACY IMPACT!
What are the core literacy skills needed by
teachers?
  • General teaching approaches to writing, handouts,
    vocabulary development
  • Specific approaches in humanities / scientific
    teaching?
  • Culturally - in SL, tutor time, the physical
    environment

55
Essential literacy rooted in professional
development An example
56
LITERACY IMPACT!
Teaching sequence
Key conventions
WRITING
Connectives
Sentence variety
57
LITERACY IMPACT!
1
  • Know the writing sequence
  • Establish clear aims
  • Provide examples
  • Explore conventions of the text
  • Define the conventions
  • Demonstrate how it is written
  • Compose together
  • Scaffold first attempts
  • Independent writing
  • Draw out key learning

58
LITERACY IMPACT!
2
Know the dominant text-types for your
subject Purpose What is its purpose? Who is it
for? How will it be used? Text level Layout?
Structure? Sentence level Prevailing tense?
Active/passive? Sentence types and length? Word
level Specialist vocabulary?
59
LITERACY IMPACT!
3
Know your connectives Adding and, also, as well
as, moreover, too Cause effect because, so,
therefore, thus, consequently Sequencing next,
then, first, finally, meanwhile, before,
after Qualifying however, although, unless,
except, if, as long as, apart from,
yet Emphasising above all, in particular,
especially, significantly, indeed,
notably Illustrating for example, such as, for
instance, as revealed by, in the case
of Comparing equally, in the same way,
similarly, likewise, as with, like Contrasting
whereas, instead of, alternatively, otherwise,
unlike, on the other hand
60
LITERACY IMPACT!
4
  • Encourage sentence variety
  • Start with an -ing verb (Reaching 60 these days
    is ..)
  • Start with an -ed verb (Frustrated by .)
  • Start with an adverb (Well-done chicken leads to
    )
  • Start with a preposition (Within the city limits
    you will )

61
LITERACY IMPACT!
5
Students must see you writing
62
LITERACY IMPACT!
63
KS3 IMPACT!
? Talking Point ?
  • What have been the successes in your own school?
  • What do you need to do next?

64
LITERACY IMPACT!
Subject-specific vocabulary
Approaches to reading
READING
Active research process, not FOFO
Using DARTs
65
LITERACY IMPACT!
6
  • Subject-specific vocabulary
  • Identifying
  • Playing with context
  • Actively exploring
  • Linking to spelling

66
LITERACY IMPACT!
7
  • Approaches to reading
  • Scanning
  • Skimming
  • Continuous reading
  • Close reading
  • Research skills, not FOFO

67
LITERACY IMPACT!
8
  • Using DARTs
  • Cloze
  • Diagram completion
  • Disordered text
  • Prediction

68
SKIMMING
69
Proud mum in a million Natalie Brown hugged her
beautiful baby daughter Casey yesterday and said
Shes my double miracle.
70
The climate of the Earth is always changing. In
the past it has altered as a result of natural
causes. Nowadays, however, the term climate
change is generally used when referring to
changes in our climate which have been identified
since the early part of the 1900's . The changes
we've seen over recent years and those which are
predicted over the next 80 years are thought to
be mainly as a result of human behaviour rather
than due to natural changes in the atmosphere.   
71
The best treatment for mouth ulcers. Gargle with
salt water. You should find that it works a
treat. Salt is cheap and easy to get hold of and
we all have it at home, so no need to splash out
and spend lots of money on expensive mouth ulcer
creams. 
72
Urquhart castle is probably one of the most
picturesquely situated castles in the Scottish
Highlands. Located 16 miles south-west of
Inverness, the castle, one of the largest in
Scotland, overlooks much of Loch Ness. Visitors
come to stroll through the ruins of the
13th-century castle because Urquhart has earned
the reputation of being one of the best spots for
sighting Loch Nesss most famous inhabitant.
73
SCANNING
74
  • Where did the first cell phones begin?
  • Name 2 other features that started to be included
    in phones
  • Why are cell phones especially useful in some
    countries?

75
  • Where did the first cell phones begin?
  • Name 2 other features that started to be included
    in phones
  • Why are cell phones especially useful in some
    countries?

Cellular telephones The first cellular
telephone system began operation in Tokyo in
1979, and the first U.S. system began operation
in 1983 in Chicago. A camera phone is a cellular
phone that also has picture taking capabilities.
Some camera phones have the capability to send
these photos to another cellular phone or
computer. Advances in digital technology and
microelectronics has led to the inclusion of
unrelated applications in cellular telephones,
such as alarm clocks, calculators, Internet
browsers, and voice memos for recording short
verbal reminders, while at the same time making
such telephones vulnerable to certain software
viruses. In many countries with inadequate
wire-based telephone networks, cellular telephone
systems have provided a means of more quickly
establishing a national telecommunications
network.
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LITERACY IMPACT!
No hands up
Break tyranny of QA
Thinking time
Speaking listening
Key words / connectives
Reflective groupings
Rehearsing responses
Get teachers watching teachers who manage SL
well
86
KS3 IMPACT!
? Talking Point ?
  • What have been the successes in your own school?
  • What do you need to do next?

87
LITERACY IMPACT!
Better Handouts
88
LITERACY IMPACT!
Better Handouts
Readability
Morphine, C17H19NO3, is the most abundant of
opiums 24 alkaloids, accounting for 9 to 14 of
opium-extract by mass. Named after the Roman god
of dreams, Morpheus, who also became the god of
slumber, the drug morphine, appropriately enough,
numbs pain, alters mood and induces sleep.
Morphine and its related synthetic derivatives,
known as opioids, are so far unbeatable at
dulling chronic or so-called slow pain, but
unfortunately they are all physically addictive.
During the American Civil War, 400 000 soldiers
became addicted to morphine.
Morphine is a powerful sleeping drug. It is named
after Morpheus, the Roman god of slumber and is
famous for numbing pain, changing our moods and
making people sleepy. With its related forms
(known as opioids) it is unbeatable at dulling
severe pain. However, it is also highly addictive
and in the American Civil War 400 000 soldiers
became addicted to it. Morphine is also known as
C17H19NO3 and is made from an extract of opium (a
seed in poppy plants).
17 14
89
LITERACY IMPACT!
Better Handouts
Layout guidance
  • ? Aim for
  • spacious presentation (as much white page as
    black text)
  • use of typographical features
  • headlines and subheadings
  • bold, italic, underline, different font styles
    and sizes (though not too many in a single
    document)
  • boxes, shaded panels, vertical lines to add
    visual interest
  • use of columns to make reading more efficient
  • short paragraphs
  • glossary of key words
  • Avoid
  • densely-packed writing
  • cramped margins
  • excessive use of upper case lettering
  • poor reprographics
  • lack of images / typographical features
  • excessive use of colour (which can actually prove
    distracting)

90
LITERACY IMPACT!
So what would you suggest ?
91
LITERACY IMPACT!
3 Highlight key words
1 Mention big picture / purpose
2 Flag first task in advance
4 Add more visuals
92
LITERACY IMPACT!
5 Use small-scale questions to build comprehension
7 Provide sentence starters / connectives
6 Give guidance on the style and conventions of
the writing task
8 Give some indication of how the task will be
assessed
93
LITERACY IMPACT!
For teachers of humanities subjects
  1. Readability through questions, subheadings,
    layout
  2. Use of connectives like later, despite this,
    although
  3. Formality (eg essay style that avoids I and
    emotion)

94
LITERACY IMPACT!
For teachers of Science subjects
  1. Demystifying complex vocabulary (making
    connections between words)
  2. Modelling an impersonal style (including passive
    v active)
  3. Teaching causal connectives

95
LITERACY IMPACT!
A Culture for Literacy
96
LITERACY IMPACT!
Creating a literacy culture
  1. Have core skills for all teachers
  2. Have specific skills for specific teachers / TAs
  3. Focus on library and tutor time
  4. Have simple principles on speaking and listening
    - why its important how it helps students to
    learn what good teachers do
  5. Build into school systems

97
LITERACY IMPACT!
Final Thoughts
  1. Small steps
  2. Youre coordinator not doer
  3. Work with key players
  4. Focus on impact and evaluate endlessly (involving
    students)
  5. Its all about learning and teaching, not literacy

98
LITERACY IMPACT!
Literacy Across the Curriculum Maintaining the
Momentum
Geoff Barton December 19, 2014
All resources can be downloaded at
www.geoffbarton.co.uk
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