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Quality First Teaching In Any Subject From Good to Outstanding

Quality First Teaching In Any Subject From Good to Outstanding. There is not a checklist to make this happen but........... What does good modelling look like?. All groups of pupils. All groups of pupils in all parts of the lessons are engaged motivated and making progress.

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Quality First Teaching In Any Subject From Good to Outstanding

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  1. Quality First TeachingIn Any SubjectFrom Good to Outstanding

  2. There is not a checklist to make this happen but...........What does good modelling look like?

  3. All groups of pupils • All groups of pupils in all parts of the lessons are engaged motivated and making progress. • Teachers (and other adults) constantly evaluate and adapt learning to meet pupil needs. • Pace is high in all parts of the lesson • It is all about the outcomes for pupils and not about the teacher’s performance.

  4. Do you remember me?

  5. Vygotsky - Scaffolding

  6. Modelling This is simply the process of giving or demonstrating an approach that the children can use when they are working so that they are successful. What does this look like in the classroom? When do you use modelling?

  7. What does modelling look like... • In calculation? • In marking? • In success criteria? • On working walls?

  8. Teaching that leads to progress

  9. All groups of pupils in all parts of a lessons. When should modelling be used? • The introduction and the plenary • Who needs to do what? • Who needs to listen? • What should adults be doing ? • Differentiation

  10. Time to have a go - Maths How would you model the following calculation? 86 – 47 = You could use a number line, partitioning, a column method or an alternative....... Or if you are quick each one........... What order would you put each method in?

  11. Assessment and Feedback

  12. Modelling in Marking What would this look like in maths? Mark this: 23 – 19 = 16 You can decide how the error has been made and the method used by the child.

  13. Questioning • Effective questions stimulate thinking, and often generate more questions to clarify understanding. • Effective questions generate informative responses often revealing not only misconceptions and misunderstanding, but understanding and experience beyond that expected. • Effective questions encourage learners to make links. • Effective questions push learners to the limit of their understanding. • Effective questions from pupils push teachers to the limits of their understanding too, and challenge them to find better ways of explaining. • Effective questions offer opportunities for learners to hear others’ answers to questions, it helps them to reflect on their own understanding.

  14. Where questions are less effective: • questioning techniques are inappropriate for the material. • there may be an unconscious gender bias. • there may be an unconscious bias towards most able or more demanding students. • levels of questions might be targeted to different abilities inappropriately. • students don’t have enough thinking time. • learners don’t have any idea as to whether they are the only ones to get it wrong/right. • learners fear being seen by their peers to be wrong. • questions are too difficult. • questions are too easy.

  15. Positive Atmosphere • all children get a chance to answer • children  can see how others are thinking • teachers gain information about thinking and learning • children  have time to consider their answers • children  have time to discuss and follow up on their answers • the answers are not always clear-cut • children  feel safe to answer • questions stimulate more questions • questions stimulate thinking

  16. What could you ask about?

  17. Do’s and Don’ts or Dos and don’ts • Do: • Model approaches to children • Target questions to different abilities • Differentiate • Have high pace • Have high quality resources prepared and available • Choose content that stimulates interest and provides a context • Use talk • Don’t: • Talk too much • Expect one size to fit all • Fail to respond to pupils interests

  18. Teaching Strategies

  19. Be inspirational or at least pretend • Variety • VAK • Change of Scene • Do the unexpected • Motivate • Set challenges • Model expectations

  20. PupilEngagement

  21. Engagement • This is judged by watching the pupils • Children become increasingly independent and self motivated. For example using models to complete there own work. • The environment supports independence. Are models displayed? • Children are persistent and challenge themselves. Do they access support independently? • Children are not reliant on adults

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