TeachMeet08 North East London

2366229408_808454a496_m TeachMeet08 North East London

Originally uploaded by Edublogger
TeachMeet08 North East London
Come one come all to TeachMeet08 the North East London unconference for anyone involved in education. You do not have to be an adviser or coordinator, in fact it’s really meant for those that are actually doing it in the classroom. This event is for primary and secondary and they are stretching a point and letting me in even though I teach adults :-)

An Un conference

This means no long presentations and no sales pitches to sit through. In fact powerpoint is discouraged! You can use video clips or images to illustrate your meaning.People put themselves down to speak for either seven or two minutes. During this time they talk about their experiences with technology in their schools

How it works

There is no strict running order. Speakers are chosen at random, using the electronic fruit machine and administered by the MC

Registration

TeachMeet08 North East London
You must register on the wiki if you want to go. First log on

A couple of people have struggled with that so here are some screenshots of how to log on to edit the wiki:

teachmeet081

Then on this screen:

teachmeet082
Once you are in you can register to do either a micropresentation (7 mins), a nanopresentation (2mins) or be an enthusiastic lurker. Your choice :-)

Music - luxury or nurture? A peripatetic music teacher advises parents.

Today I’ve got a guest blogger.

“A Peri” responds to my last post and adds some important advice for parents choosing schools:

You’ve hit the nail on the head with the luxury or nurture about the lack of music specialists.

I feel parents are not very clued up as to what to look for in a music department. If parents ask careful questions about music provision they can find out quite a bit. Here are some suggestions:

1) How many instrumentalists performed solos last year in concerts? Choirs etc. are great but it is by finding out what is being done for the children that learn instruments that you can tell the true level of support for music in a school. Sample concert programmes might reveal only one or two being showcased.

2) If the school is in a position to offer scholarships how many music scholarships does the school have and to what value? Make sure you know what some of the opposition are offering. Ring round a few other local schools.

3) Does the head always allow children out of school to go and perform at local, regional or national concerts? You would think this was a given, being good PR for the school, but not so. Imagine your child having practised for years and on being invited to perform at a prestigious event being told that they are not allowed to!

4) Do the school employ music peripatetics (specialist instrumental teachers) to coach string quartets, jazz groups, brass quintets etc? Any kind of chamber music or traditional music groups? These groups, if they are regularly rehearsed will be being entered for competitions and festivals e.g. National Chamber Music competition. The headmaster/headmistress should be able to tell you about them or you should see timetables in the Music department as you are being shown round. Look for details on noticeboards of groups other than orchestras being coached by named peripatetics specifying who is doing what on which day of the week. This should be happening in senior schools.

5) Are there concerts set up every term to give instrumental examination candidates practice just before music examinations?

6) How many teachers are involved in the running of junior orchestras and for how long each week? If there is a half hour session with one teacher then, by the time everything is set up and instruments tuned, there is not much time left. Plus as inexperienced junior school players frequently get lost when starting new tunes, it requires a high level of teacher competence/availability to keep players together. If management are prepared to offer the support of two teachers one can keep going on the piano or conducting and the other can go round rescuing players reducing the need for continual stopping and starting and avoiding pupils sitting there being miserably lost.

7) Does each school orchestra run for the whole year or is it a one term/two term option? Half a year can be the norm and even if it is two terms - just think - March to September without any rehearsals!

8) How many orchestra rehearsals are held as a minimum per term/year? If the music teacher is ill or unavailable is orchestra cancelled? Does a replacement music teacher/peripatetic get booked to take the rehearsal? It is possible to lose a huge amount of rehearsals this way and pupils get very fed up and drift off. I have known whole terms to go missing. In small schools you might judge this hard to avoid but certainly it should not be the case in larger schools or junior schools attached to senior schools. Staff could be shifted across if management support is there.

9) Is there an excellent pianist on the teaching staff or do the school hire a trained peripatetic to help out with accompaniments. Pupils can get to Grade 5 and find the school simply cannot cope with the piano accompaniments that are needed at this level. Some of the piano parts can really be very tricky. Pupils then find they are not selected to play in concerts or else parents end up sitting through concerts listening to somebody doing their best to stumble through the accompaniments.

10) Does the school take any kind of hire fee/rental/commission from the peripatetics? Is the peripatetic actually receiving what you are paying? It is a question well worth asking your County or Borough music service as well. Any organisation that really values their music staff will not be doing this. After all the rest of the teachers are not charged for teaching.

11) How does the school’s system of extra curricular activities work? A junior school that requires that pupil’s sign up every term is likely to lose pupils as they forget or just don’t feel like it when the notice is up at the start of term. Encouraging children to think that they permanently belong to the orchestra and that this activity is part of their lifestyle is what is needed.

Likewise a senior school that requests pupils do two extra activities a week encouraging them to change activities every term is not a successful receipe for anything the music department might be wanting to do. Years of study turns out useful players by the time pupils reach Years 12 and 13. A term or so here and there will not do it.

Even worse if all music groups are only allowed to be counted as one activity whether it be orchestra, choir, jazz group etc. and the children are required to do something else in a different subject as well. Making progress on any instrument is exceedingly time consuming and musicians ought really to learn two instruments before even beginning to think about taking it up as a career. Many professionals play a lot more than two instruments. Encouraging instrumental students to do as many musical activities and styles of music as possible with consistent attendance at rehearsals is the way forward.

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Once you are in the school and watching concerts how do you keep track? If the orchestras are populated by a lot of peripatetics is this just for show or are the peripatetics actually paid to attend the rehearsals as well? I have taken part in a concert where the orchestra would have completely fallen apart if visiting teachers had not agreed to go in and shore the whole thing up. This made the orchestra seem a viable proposition for parents in the audience when it wasn’t by any stretch of the imagination. We weren’t there at the weekly rehearsals.

If your child’s instrumental teacher is there it might be worth discreetly asking if they were paid to play in the concert. A lot of goodwill by peripatetics goes unnoticed. You are in a position to thank them and a little appreciation goes a long way.

Listen for the level of difficulty of piano accompaniments that are needed. They take hours of extra time to practise and rehearse for whichever member of staff does it. Make sure the school knows you appreciate it if you feel they have invested in employing a really decent pianist on the teaching staff. It is the kind of leg up for your child at Grades 5,6,7,8 and beyond that you’ll notice dreadfully if lost. Plus having a competent pianist around is a gift for all the instrumental teachers. It means they do not have to rely on choosing pieces for their students on the basis of what the pianist can manage.

So……………… the website or the prospectus or even both may have a picture of children playing violins, cellos, horns but do the actions match the publicity? That is what parents need to find out in order to assess whether the deal is reasonable.

Asking these questions also has the added bonus that if the music passes muster then it will tell you a lot about the school as a whole.

Happy school hunting.

Music - Luxury or Nurture?

2364082383_2314a31ff7_m Music - Luxury or Nurture?


Luxury or Nurture?

Originally uploaded by mtsofan
One of my flickr contacts John raises and interesting question about music in school:

I remember making an appointment with the vice president of the college I attended. The topic was the music program. Though I cannot recall the exact reason for our desire to challenge him, the statement he uttered during our meeting is clear in my memory. He had made a decision based on his opinion that music is a “luxury” when it comes to an academic curriculum.

In this photo, a teacher, hired specifically to give our pre-school children early experience in music, explains how a drum works. Why, for example, it’s useful to have air beneath the head.

Within a half-hour session, the kids also sang, used hand movements, learned dynamics (loud and soft voices), and even used body movement.

Studies have shown that music and dancing can enhance a person’s performance in math. From my perspective, it can help people to think more creatively.

Is music really a luxury?

The continuing conversation below the photo on Flickr makes it clear that most people value music in school as a basic human need. John is in the US but in the UK schools also struggle to fit music into an already packed school day.

In many schools there are no music specialists, sometimes not even someone to play the piano for singing. Teachers in primary used to be expected to play a musical instrument when they applied for training. It’s one of the reasons I opted to work with older children :-) Now with the loss of older teachers and lack of music specialists many teachers dread music sessions or hand them over to teaching assistants (often with even less training in music!) to cover in PPA time.
In my last school we were lucky enough to have a singing teacher who came in to run “Sing your socks off” sessions but they were after school. Children mostly love to sing and no one can seriously believe that it isn’t good for them to do so. So what should we be doing about it?
Music services are under constant threat of cuts, yet the government makes pledges about children having access to music tuition.
It seems to come down to money and time, as usual.

Delightful Learning - it’s what your brain needs

Interesting article on brain based learning by a neurologist who is also an educator:

ASCD
Classroom experiences that are free of intimidation may help information pass through the amygdalas affective filter. In addition, when classroom activities are pleasurable, the brain releases dopamine, a neurotransmitter that stimulates the memory centers and promotes the release of acetylcholinem, which increases focused attention.

The acronym RAD can remind educators of three important neuroscience concepts to consider when preparing lessons:

  • Novelty promotes information transmission through the Reticular activating system.
  • Stress-free classrooms propel data through the Amygdalas affective filter.
  • Pleasurable associations linked with learning are more likely to release more Dopamine.

There are no neuroimaging or brain wave analysis data that demonstrate a negative effect of joy and exuberance in classrooms, yet some schools have unspoken mandates against these valuable components of the classroom experience. Now that hard science proves the negative effects of stress and anxiety, teachers can more confidently promote enthusiasm in their classrooms.

Let’s hear it for classrooms full of novelty, excitement and delight then :-) She even has some quite useful suggestions for how to achieve them. Good stuff :-)

All I have to do is remember that adults need this sort of consideration too!

Pass the Lucozade

128912356_e95f27c7c0_m Pass the Lucozade




Originally uploaded by the.burninator

Once long, long ago I worked in the St Andrews Castle visitor centre. This forms part of the exhibition. It is supposed to be someone pulling down the Saints’ statues in the cathedral in response to John Knox. Knox, standing at the lectern, his finger raised, had a movement activated tape that shouted “Cast them oot, I say” every single time someone walked past.
After a while he stopped being irritating, especially once we’d decided he was actually saying “Pass the Lucozade” :-)

Is it OK to say “I’m useless at maths” in the UK?

“Every primary school should have a maths specialist and parents should have a less negative attitude to the subject”

According to the BBC an interim report by Sir Peter Williams says the UK is one of the few developed nations where it is acceptable to say you are “useless at maths”.

Such attitudes will not help children see maths as an essential and rewarding part of their daily lives,

The study suggests the amount of in-service maths training primary teachers receive is inadequate. Although most (I’d assumed it would be all by now) teachers do have the basic requirement in maths for teacher training - GCSE maths at C or above.

All HLTAs and many TAs also have to have maths GCSE in order to even be considered for a job.
The report had a go at parents as well. It says they needed to have a “can-do” attitude to maths and to learn the modern techniques their children were using to help them and give them a love of maths.

So what do we get from this? More initiatives and funding for family learning perhaps? Parents expected to not only support the children whilst they do homework but also to make time themselves to learn the techniques schools are using to teach maths? I’ve been involved in family learning in school before and they are great for those who do get involved. The trouble is it’s never the parents you really need to reach who turn up to them.

One of the biggest contrast I’m seeing at the moment though is between these attitudes and those of some of my Teaching Assistant students. Mostly educated in non-European countries they express a deep love of Maths and a high level of confidence in their own abilities. They have exactly the ‘can- do’ attitude the report wants to promote, understand that maths is vital to children’s learning and actually look forward to numeracy lessons. As far as I can see the main thing they have in common is that they all did the International Baccalaureate.

Teaching Assistants ICT Training

I’m busy working out what to include in a one day ICT workshop for trainee primary school teaching assistants. I’ve got an ICT suite booked from 10 till 3 and I’m wondering what people think the TAs really need to know. I’ve had a few thoughts of my own and some great input from Andy. Last night I found that Anthony was thinking about something similar. He’s planning some longer training for TAs and has narrowed it down to 4 topics:

Redbridge Primary ICT Consultant: TA Training
* Using relevant software to support a child with special needs
* Training other TAs to create banners for display
* Researching websites for teachers and TAs to use in their lesson
* Using the IWB to teach

I agree with these and have added them to my list. I also think he’s hit on a couple of really important points but maybe not spelled them out. Teach one TA in a school how to do something really useful on the computer and it tends to spread :-) without the need for formal training. Teaching assistants tend to be a resourceful lot and if something is actually useful it spreads virally through the school.

Of course I was interested that he’d picked out making banner titles for classroom displays. This is something I’ve banged on about for ages. Hand cutting lettering for displays is a hugely wasteful use of teaching assistants’ time. Often schools don’t even have die cutters for the letters so that means using wooden templates, drawing them out and then cutting by hand. If TAs, and so by implication teachers, learn how easy it is to do banner titles, and how good they can look, maybe this can change.

Other areas I’ve thought about:

  • File saving and sharing - an introduction. Basic, but many people, including teachers, have no concept of the difference between files and folders, don’t understand about saving versions, or even sensible naming of .docs
  • Calibrating white boards. This is a simple but really helpful classroom skill!
  • Supporting from the side - how not to do it for them!
  • Very basic troubleshooting. Things like checking knowing how to check the in control panel of the laptop when the sound doesn’t work. It’s often just defaulted to ‘mute’.

I think the best way to take this forward might be to use a wiki page so I’ve set up a Teaching Assistants ICT Training page on usefulwiki.

If anyone wants to join in it is easy to edit. Just set yourself up a user name and away you go :-)

So what do you think teaching assistants need to know about using and supporting with ICT? Either add your thoughts to the wiki or leave a comment here.

Inflatable Spaces in the Classroom

I was browsing my feedreader when I saw Ewan had del.icio.us ed the company that made this:
InflatableClassroomSpace

They make inflatable spaces and this one was made for Dalry Primary School in Glasgow as an ICT area. Gorgeous, but too expensive to have one in your classroom.

It reminded me a lot of the wonderful mobile planetarium that visited my old school.
IMG_1519.JPG

Funnily enough I’d just spotted something similar but a bit more home-made in the photo stream of one of my Flickr contacts. Kids love all sort of dens and this one is just so great. I’ve made classroom dens from sheets, old cardboard boxes etc. before but this is just fantastic. I’m sure my ex-colleague Catherine would love to do this for her role play room space topic! Checking I discovered Liz has got full instructions on her blog:

InflatableClassroomDen

perspicacious.org ยป our space habitat
I built this thing with my summer camp kids, and wouldn’t it be the coolest thing ever to build with your kids? It’s easy to do. All you need is a big sheet of plastic drop cloth, some duct tape and a fan. This bubble has a 10 x 10 ft floor, and is 6 feet tall. It used a 20 x 25 ft piece of 4 mil plastic and a standard box fan to inflate.

I think a smaller one could make a very cool playhouse. I paid $17 for the plastic, but a smaller one would be less expensive. My kids loved having this in the classroom, and were content to play cards and board games in it for hours on end. (Note: The air does get stale inside after a while. A little Febreze helped ours. Can’t do anything about the stinky feet, though.)

I so want to make one but I’m not in the classroom anymore. I wonder of my adult learners would like one :-)

Maman in Paris

2313304952_65ee9b3efe_m Maman in Paris


Maman

Originally uploaded by Feuillu

My favourite spider is visiting Paris and I’m just testing blogging straight from Flickr to this blog. Andy was kind enough to sort out a work around as the hosting here doesn’t make it as easy as on my other blogs.

Summoned by Bells

John posted on Flickr about the sound of church bells, especially electronic carillons, and wondered if people find them intrusive or if they make them think of God. (These two are obviously not mutually exclusive but we won’t go there :-) )

Church Bells in Spain and Scotland

BellTowerI’m not a Christian but I love to hear the sound of church bells. I have lived in old towns and villages most of my life. These sounds that punctuate the day are something I miss in London. I just got back from Spain and the sound of the bells ringing the hours of the day, as they have for hundreds of years gives daily life a reassuringly grounded feeling. In the south of Spain at Christmas many towns have loud speakers that play traditional carols all day long. I love that too as the music is a wonderful mix of medieval chanting with Arabic overtones. I hated it when they played cheesy Christmas pop, like they did in Ronda :-(

In St Andrews (Fife) there is a wonderful carillon, not an electronic one but a 1920s version that can be played with a keyboard. It is one of only four churches in Scotland to have a carillon. The instrument consists of 27 bells and is housed in the church tower. It is always played before Sunday morning service around 10:45 am. Sometimes other times as well, most often for weddings. The church web site says :

the first fifteen bells were installed in 1926, as a memorial to Rev Patrick Playfair, minister of the first charge from 1899 to 1924, and the inspiration behind the 1909 restoration. The bells were cast by John Taylor of Loughborough and dedicated on St Andrews Day, 1926. Two more bells, an anonymous gift, were hung in 1938, and six more, in memory of members of the Mercer family, were presented by Miss Jane Mercer in 1962. Four more were added in 1998 and dedicated on Easter day in that year.

I remember the dedication of the new bells, it was a big deal in the town. I never minded the sound of them, it fact I always thought it was a pleasure to hear. Some visitors staying in nearby guest houses used to object to it getting them up on Sunday mornings though. I was usually ensconced in MacGregors with a big mug of black coffee & a Sunday paper by then :-)
The sound of bells doesn’t make me think of God. I’m just not wired that way :-) I like it because it connects me to all those people who went before, to a feeling of continuity and stability. It reminds me that those people were, in fact, just like us. People doing the best they can in difficult circumstances.

I think I’m with Larkin Summoned by Bells , not with Betjeman Summoned by Bells after all, standing awkwardly in a quiet church, enjoying the stillness and the solemnity of the bells.