PERSONALISED LEARNING AND PUPIL VOICE Carol Robinson From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 7.1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Questioning Language, either written or spoken, helps us to think.
Advertisements

Really interested bit Been-there, done-that lobe Evaluating speakers complex Racing heartbeat inhibitor Timing ganglion Conference-goers brain.
PLANNING FOR AN INCLUSIVE APPROACH TO LEARNING AND TEACHING Philip Vickerman From: Learning to Teach Physical Education in the Secondary School 3rd edition,
Key distinguishers Progress made Degree of differentiation Learner autonomy - degree to which students are enabled to take responsibility for their own.
An Infant School Online Learning Environment Simple, easy to edit.
Westbury Leigh Primary School Digital Leaders By Bethany.
USING ICT TO SUPPORT LEARNING AND TEACHING IN PE Susan Capel and Gary Stidder From: Learning to Teach Physical Education in the Secondary School 3rd edition,
STARTING OUT AS A PE TEACHER
TEACHER AS A RESEARCHER/ REFLECTIVE PRACTITIONER
WIDER ROLE OF A PE TEACHER Margaret Whitehead and Jes Woodhouse CHAPTER 14 From: Learning to Teach Physical Education in the Secondary School 3rd edition,
COMMUNICATING WITH PUPILS
GIFTED AND TALENTED Deborah Eyre From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 7.5.
CREATIVITY Teresa Cremin and Jonathan Barnes From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 7.3.
National Science Standards  Teachers of science plan an inquiry-based science program for their students.
PRIMARY TEACHING: A PERSONAL PERSPECTIVE Colin Richards From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 1.1.
ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING: SUMMATIVE APPROACHES Kathy Hall and Keiron Sheehy From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010.
MANAGING CLASSROOM BEHAVIOUR
COMMUNICATION IN PE Paula Zwozdiak-Myers CHAPTER 5 From: Learning to Teach Physical Education in the Secondary School 3rd edition, Routledge © 2010.
What makes behaviour better?. 9 elements of good behaviour A consistent approach Effective leadership from the top Classroom management Rewards and Sanctions.
OBSERVATION OF PUPILS IN PE
ACTIVE LEARNING Françoise Allen and Alexis Taylor From: Learning to Teach in the Secondary School 5th edition, Routledge © 2009 UNIT 5.2.
Susan Capel and Misia Gervis
DEVELOPING EXCELLENCE TOGETHER Marking, Feedback and Assessment Unit two: Giving & Receiving Feedback Presenter details and credentials 1.
Engagement Profile and Scale Presented by: Neil Jourdan Registered Music Therapist Dean of Engagement Parkside School
UNDERSTANDING THE TEACHER’S PASTORAL ROLE Ben Whitney From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 8.4.
ORGANISING EFFECTIVE CLASSROOM TALK Lyn Dawes From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 3.5.
DEVELOPING AND MAINTAINING AN EFFECTIVE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT Peter Breckon, Susan Capel, Margaret Whitehead and Paula Zwozdiak-Myers CHAPTER 7.
THE NATIONAL CONTEXT FOR THE CURRICULUM Carrie Ansell and Maureen Lewis From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT.
UNIT 6.1 DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION: PROVIDING FOR INCLUSION ( ). Simon Ellis and Janet Tod.
Learning and Teaching Scotland Confucius Classroom Hubs Professor Kay Livingston 11 th May 2009.
EARLY YEARS PRACTICE: BUILDING ON FIRM FOUNDATIONS Sue Rogers and Janet Rose From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010.
Section V: Vocabulary Teaching Reading Sourcebook 2 nd edition.
P7 Transition 2015 What the pupils thought!. Before transition visit how confident did you feel about coming to CHS?
PERSONALISED LEARNING Carrie Winstanley From: Learning to Teach in the Secondary School 5th edition, Routledge © 2009 UNIT 5.5.
Providing Inspection Services for Department of Education Department for Employment and Learning Department of Culture, Arts and Leisure Leading Learning.
TEACHING MODERN FOREIGN LANGUAGES Carrie Cable From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 7.2.
TEACHING STYLES John McCormick and Marilyn Leask From: Learning to Teach in the Secondary School 5th edition, Routledge © 2009 UNIT 5.3.
CHILD DEVELOPMENT Sandra Smidt From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 2.1.
1 Click to edit Master title style Planning Development and diversity.
Personalising learning through the use of technology Carol Robinson, Steve Higgins, Duncan Mackrill, Judy Sebba Universities of Sussex and Durham.
RESPONDING TO LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY Anny Northcote From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 6.5.
THINKING SKILLS Robert Fisher From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 7.4.
THE CHANGING ROLE OF THE TEACHER Tony Eaude From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 8.1.
PROVIDING FOR INCLUSION Simon Ellis and Janet Tod From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 6.1.
Listening to learners At Oakdale Comprehensive.. Student Lesson Audit. The audit was carried out on Monday 8 th of November Lesson 2. All pupils.
WORKING WITH OTHER ADULTS IN THE CLASSROOM Elizabeth Wood From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 8.2.
THE AIMS OF PRIMARY EDUCATION Richard Bailey and Justine Earl From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 4.1.
The fundamental problem in education What the Teacher would like to teach.
Cranborne Primary Learning Together
English and technology T STL
APPROACHING SHORT-TERM PLANNING
Learning and Teaching –
ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING: FORMATIVE APPROACHES
PARTNERSHIPS WITH PARENTS
Vicki Stokes School of Education 19/09/17
RESPONDING TO GENDER DIFFERENCES
PROVIDING FOR DIFFERENTIATION
Successful Lessons – Reflective Teaching
Teacher snapshot Who are you? Where do you work? Experience, interests
Group Talk Feedback – A focus on the individual
APPLYING FOR JOBS AND PREPARING YOUR INDUCTION YEAR
RESPONDING TO CULTURAL DIVERSITY AND CITIZENSHIP
C C Conversation.
APPROACHING LONG- AND MEDIUM-TERM PLANNING
7.6 E-LEARNING John Meadows UNIT
School seating plan template Class :
ORGANISING YOUR CLASSROOM FOR LEARNING
ORGANISING AND MANAGING LEARNING OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM
© Crown copyright vision © Crown copyright 2006
How do you keep your young learners active?
Presentation transcript:

PERSONALISED LEARNING AND PUPIL VOICE Carol Robinson From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010 UNIT 7.1

 WHAT DO WE MEAN BY ‘LEARNER VOICE’ WORK?  LEGISLATION PROMPTING ‘LISTENING TO LEARNERS’ From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010

 SO WHY IS IT SO IMPORTANT TO LISTEN TO LEARNERS?  HOW CAN LISTENING TO LEARNERS BENEFIT LEARNERS? From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010

 HOW CAN LISTENING TO LEARNERS BENEFIT TEACHERS?  WHAT DOES PUPIL VOICE WORK LOOK LIKE IN SCHOOLS? From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010

 HOW CAN WE LISTEN TO LEARNERS?  WHO DOES LEARNER VOICE WORK HAPPEN TO AND WITH? From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010

 LEARNER PARTICIPATION  WHAT DO WE MEAN BY PERSONALISED LEARNING? From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010

 WHAT DOES PERSONALISED LEARNING ‘LOOK LIKE’ IN SCHOOLS?  BARRIERS TO LEARNER VOICE WORK AND THE PERSONALISATION OF LEARNING From: Learning to Teach in the Primary School 2nd edition, Routledge © 2010