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Planning and evaluating learning Session1. 2. Promote good progress and outcomes by pupils 2b Be aware of pupils’ capabilities and their prior knowledge,

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Presentation on theme: "Planning and evaluating learning Session1. 2. Promote good progress and outcomes by pupils 2b Be aware of pupils’ capabilities and their prior knowledge,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Planning and evaluating learning Session1

2 2. Promote good progress and outcomes by pupils 2b Be aware of pupils’ capabilities and their prior knowledge, and plan to build on these 4. Plan and teach well structured lessons 4a Impart knowledge and develop understanding through effective use of lesson time 4d Reflect systematically on the effectiveness of lessons and approaches to teaching 5. Adapt teaching to respond to the strengths and needs of all pupils 5a Know when and how to differentiate appropriately, using approaches which enable pupils to be taught effectively 6. Make accurate and productive use of assessment 6c Use relevant data to monitor progress, set targets and plan subsequent lessons

3  Session 1  Why we plan  Different types of planning  What should be included in a lesson plan- what might be in the ‘perfect’ lesson plan?  Reviewing different planning formats  Session 2  Setting up and managing the learning environment  Planning to meet the needs of all learners  Reflecting on and evaluating lessons

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5 To allow us to think clearly and specifically about the type of learning To consider the structure, content and timing of session To reduce the amount of thinking we need to do whilst teaching the lesson To reflect on and prepare all resource materials To record what you have done and support future planning ( Jacques, Hayland, R- Professional Studies)

6  What you will teach- what you want the pupils to learn;  The most appropriate teaching style and classroom organisation;  The most effective method of assessment to monitor/evaluate learning;  How assessment/learning should be recorded;  If and how assessment should be reported back;  Reviewing and evaluating for future planning.

7 Planning types What do you understand by long term, medium term and short term plans?

8 Covers whole school or key stage Broad framework of curriculum provision for each subject across the school Specifies what is to be taught over academic year- may specify units and any cross- curricular links Maps out curriculum to ensure statutory requirements are met; there is continuity and progression and balance and coherence for KS

9  School subject leaders and other staff members may be involved in creating long term plans;  School curriculum and subject policy will influence planning  National Curriculum documents, other curriculum guidelines

10 Covers period of time such as term/unit of work School may have template to support planning format- may use schemes of work Gives more detail to long term plans re work covered in year groups to show progression Teachers involved in planning- sharing with subject leader

11  Detailed weekly/daily lesson plans  What is to be taught specifically day to day or over a teaching sequence  Review/evaluation for future planning/next steps

12 1. Know what they are looking for- outcome for learners, how do you or your students know they have achieved success? 2. Be present and in control right from the start- set up the learning environment 3. The starter that primes them for learning- first learning activity should stimulate, engage, challenge 4.Set objectives or learning outcomes :engage them in learning

13 5.The main lesson activity/activities. You need to:  understand and communicate your subject knowledge well;  plan for active,collaborative learning  make a choice of challenging activities or approaches available  Plan and use higher order questions ( which you don’t answer for them!)  Use visual aids and practical activities

14  6. Dish up the DIRT...often! DIRT= Dedicated Improvement and Reflection Time ( learning process and progress)  7. Final Plenary/Review: how far did we get towards our objectives? Sum up learning outcomes- even if there is still work to be done- this will support ‘next steps’ Ensure that you have time to demonstrate progress in learning- pupils should also be able to identify and share their own progress

15 DIRT= Dedicated Improvement and Reflection Time through assessment as learning  Raise awareness of process and progress of learning ( What have you learned? How have you learned it? How far have you travelled towards the learning outcome?)  Use checkpoints in your lesson- be aware of how different groups have performed and what their next steps should be- pay special attention to those with particular needs  Mini-plenaries help you to gather evidence of how learning is progressing

16 Note their key elements Note their key elements Review similarities and differences- which features do you consider must be included to make an effective lesson plan? Review similarities and differences- which features do you consider must be included to make an effective lesson plan?

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18  What is the focus for the lesson?  What do I want pupils to learn?  What do I want them to understand and be able to do at the end of this lesson?  What do I want them to take away from this particular lesson?  How will the pupils know that they have achieved the objective and have made progress in their learning? Describe the success criteria for different ability groups.

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20 For maximum impact, success criteria need to be:  known by teachers first  the same for all -- differentiation by supported activity  generated by pupils  constantly referred to  used for self and peer assessment  broken down into further criteria  linked with key skills for knowledge.

21 London, in the Year of 1666. It was the middle of the summer and not a single drop of rain had fallen from the warm sky. At Pudding Lane in a small baker’s factory, an exhausted baker called Thomas Farynor, totally forgot to put his oven out and little sparks began to jump out of the hearth. Nobody noticed, they just kept on snoozing in their cosy beds on the hottest, driest night of the year. Flames started to grow, naughty sparks joined them and the hungry fire grew and grew and spread very quickly through streets, eating its way from house to house until it was out of control.

22  Interesting start to hook reader in  Retell events in order  Factual information  Descriptive detail to engage reader  Include specific names  Past tense  Time connectives  Sentence starts  Non-negotiables- (transcriptional skills)

23  Review the Science lesson plan – note how the main objective is broken down into steps which link to success criteria  In pairs, discuss how this lesson plan compares with others you have reviewed.

24  This objective is from the statutory National Curriculum for English for Spoken Language for Years 1- 6  articulate and justify answers, arguments and opinions  ELG Communication and Language Development  ELG 01 Listening and attention: children listen attentively in a range of situations. They listen to stories, accurately anticipating key events and respond to what they hear with relevant comments, questions or actions How would you use a quality text to support you in meeting the objective for your own phase? Focus on the learning breakdown and on how you would devise success criteria to understand whether the children had met this objective.


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