Thursday, 24 October 2013

Guardian 6 creative ways to use questions in the classroom


Teachers share ideas for how questions can be effectively used to engage students and check they've absorbed information
class questions
Questioning in the classroom: Get students to question the questions you ask, says Chris Curtis. Photograph: Alamy

Harry Fletcher-Wood, head of History and CPD co-ordinator at Greenwich Free School: @HFletcherWood

Using hinge Questions: I would not have believed that a major improvement in my teaching last year would have involved employing multiple choice questions. As I learned, however, multiple-choice hinge questions are a sophisticated and invaluable assessment technique to swiftly check whether the class has understood a critical point before moving on.
Crucially, the teacher designs responses to ensure student answers unambiguously demonstrate their underlying reasoning.
As a history teacher, for example, I might wish to know whether students appreciate what I mean by 'significant.' If I asked, 'what is significance?', one of the responses I would offer would be 'achieving something which improves people's lives'. Students frequently perceive significance to be synonymous with greatness and therefore would not deem a tyrant significant.
By designing each choice to represent a different line of reasoning, it is possible to immediately identify misunderstandings and take corrective action. If a lot of students have fallen into this trap, I may offer a brief example, or if it's a handful of pupils, I might have individual conversations. The hinge question is a key tool in ensuring students have understood a topic before a lesson ends.

David Doherty, has worked in a variety of roles in middle and secondary schools over the last 17 years: @dockers_hoops

Be creative with your questioning: Teachers ask around 400 questions every day, which adds up to a staggering 70,000 a year. Most of these are low cognitive questions and it's important to consider how to make these questions more effective in developing pupils' learning.
One way is to add variety to you questioning strategies. For example, randomly select pupils – there are many apps to help with this – so the same pupils aren't always answering questions. This also helps keep the class focused, as they don't know who's going to be chosen next.
Another idea is to vary the type of question you ask. Closed questions are fine when you're testing recall, but open questions allow pupils to explore a range of possible answers. The use of the word 'might' in a question also achieves this, as it removes the idea that there's a definitive right answer.
Lastly, well planned questions allow you to stretch all abilities in the class, as you can target questions at pupils based on their level. It also allows you to involve more pupils by playing volleyball with answers as you pass the responses around the room to other pupils.

Chris Curtis, English teacher and literacy co-ordinator: @Xris32

Question the questions: If you have been a teenager or have shared a house with a teenager, there is one thing you know: they question everything. Yet, we never really build this into lessons. Rarely do we get students to ask the questions. More importantly, we never get students to question the questions. Teenagers love questioning parents. Why were you late? Why didn't you pick me up, dad?
Aim to have occasions where students question the questions. For example, the question 'why did Shakespeare write about Othello losing control?' could lead to the following questions: What is losing control? What is Shakespeare trying to say about losing control?
Don't ask questions at the end of giving information: Intelligent people ask questions continually, yet the structure of lessons often revolves around learning followed by questions. Read this and answer the questions. Try to get students to ask questions throughout the learning and not at the end, where valuable opportunities are missed. Students often blank out words they don't know when reading, when they should be asking a question.
Harry, David and Chris were all speakers at a recent edsessential Teaching and Learning Takeover.

Wednesday, 23 October 2013

Developing higher order thinking skills with your learners

Developing higher order thinking skills with your learners

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Creativity thinking and evaluative skills are key to my students success. Without exam skills that demonstrate higher order thinking skills they cannot achieve a AB grade in the exam. I am an advocate for equipping my own learners with what they will need, not only for exam success but also for life after education- this means focusing on thinking skills and developing them not just for performance in exams, but also their progression as a learner in FE, and beyond.
With that in mind, I trailed a new idea this week where students made Question Cubes. These were made from a box net, and they were asked to generate 6 questions, one for each face of the box. Question led learning can be very powerful, and a good way of demonstrating pre-structural learning and thus progress in a lesson. The students engagement in their own learning is heightened when the lesson is led by questions generated by them rather than simply posed by a teacher. It allows them to demonstrate their understanding of key terms, as well as make links with learning from previous lessons.
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The students were encouraged to write higher order thinking questions, so they were framing their work with ‘evaluate’ or ‘analyse’ so they when asking the questions they could write answers that did more than simply demonstrate knowledge or understanding. As a starter they wrote questions on each face of the cube. The questions were based on the learning from the previous lesson, and will be used next lesson as part of a student led plenary. I also thought that they could be used by placing the blocks on top of each other, as this would create a 3D questioning prompt, which learners could use in a meaningful way to inform essay writing or planning.
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Another activity which I tried this week was creating evaluative bunting. During the previous lesson I had used SOLO taxonomy so that my learners had multi-structural knowledge on theorists on social deprivation and educational attainment. I wanted them to be able to apply this knowledge in an evaluative way, so I asked the class in groups to draw the theorists ideas on bunting- one theorist per flag, the focus of course was not on the art work and there were stickmen a plenty! They then swapped work with another group and tried to label the drawings with the correct theorists. I encouraged them to write in each other’s work, and to be comfortable with making mistakes- it was an excellent opportunity to promote some positive learner characteristics about celebrating effort and risk taking. They were then tasked with creating the physical bunting- an were asked to string in so that each flag had an evaluative relationship with the ones next to it. This was much enjoyed, and my classroom is now festooned with higher order bunting. In addition to that my learners are now comfortable talking about higher order thinking skills, and being creative in order to advance their academic skills.
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To consolidate this activity the class used hexagons and drew on relational links which they flag also created. They did his individually but drew on the work done in groups. I should also mention that the class were also live tweeting their learning, which is have written about before and is an excellent tool if you have the confidence with the technology.
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Improving our learners higher order thinking skills is really important. Not just for the exam but for their ability to be an effective learner in the long term. Making these evaluation part of a physical process has been successful for me- would be very interested to hear if you have tried anything similar. How else can we improve these skills?

Monday, 21 October 2013

Nudge theory in education

Nudge Theory and Education

Anthony Steed
I have recently finished reading an interesting book entitled Nudge: Improving decision about Health, Wealth and Happiness. Authors David Thaler and Cass Sunstein draw upon research in behavioural economics to make some interesting assertions about human psychology and behaviour. The central notion of the book is that human beings make poor choices and are often irrational in their behaviour; that is to say they do not always make the best judgements given the information available and that these judgements are often influenced detrimentally by their peers. Anybody who has spent about 10 minutes in a classroom or has children of their own will immediately be able to identify with this notion.
The authors argue that the correction of these behaviours require a series of subtle ‘nudges’ as a way of encouraging people to make certain choices. They argue that simply telling people what to do often fails to work because more often than not the person doing the telling is wrong. So what, if anything, can the book teach us about correcting this irrationality and how could this translate into practical education policy? Below are some ideas I had as to its applications in the classroom and across the school;
1. Replace detention with ‘freetentions’ – OK the name doesn’t really work but the principle is sound. People are loss averse. The idea here is that human beings respond better to incentives than punishments. Imagine a school where the standard day finishes at 3.30pm. All students currently finish at this time, with the exception of the naughty ones who are often kept behind. Those children who struggle with their behaviour are regularly kept behind, as a result they begin to assimilate this into their expectations – in their mind the day finishes at 4.30pm as they are used to being put into detention and this is a price they are willing to pay for their behaviour. The result is that the disincentive loses its impact. Now imagine the same school where the typical day finishes at 3.30pm, but any child whose behaviour is good will be allowed to leave at 3pm. Moreover, they could choose to save these ‘time bonuses’ up and cash them in for a full or half-day off. What impact do we think this might have on some students? Remember…people (and kids) are loss averse.
2. Parents Day – not a totally new idea as I’m aware some schools already do this effectively already. This strategy could be directed at groups of parents to enhance their role in their child’s education and improve relationships between teachers and parents. The idea here is that many parents still maintain a negative perception of their child’s school and teachers. This is often based on memories of their own educational experience which create negative bias. Nudge theory would contend that these opinions are incorrect for two reasons;  firstly, in most cases the child will be taught by a different teacher and at a different school than the parent was, and so any such comparisons are spurious; secondly, the parents memories are often inaccurate, with particular incidents remembered and other positive experiences forgotten. In other words the parents’ negative perceptions are based on incomplete information. A Parents Day, where parents go into school and have a day of lessons without their children may give the parents a more accurate picture of what a school experience is all about and close the information gap.
3. Allow kids to choose which lessons they attend – Controversial I know but please bear with me. Imagine a school gives students a free choice that goes something like this, “Today you can attend any lessons you want, but you must attend for the entire day and you can only attend each lesson once”. What do we think would happen? If we take boys for example, I would hazard a guess that PE, Computing and perhaps Music would be packed. I would also hazard a guess that English and Languages classes would be devoid of males. OK, so obviously we want a balanced curriculum but how can we ‘nudge’ them into doing a variety of subjects whilst maintaining the illusion of choice? What if we made it easier or more appealing for boys to attend English but did this in a subtle way? For instance, we could make English lessons 45 minutes as opposed to an hour and offer English at the end of the day (so they could get away earlier). Or we could put English lessons on in the most comfortable rooms? Or we could give boys a ‘bonus’ (to be determined) if they attend an English lesson? By giving kids a choice but offering different levels of incentives to ‘guide’ their behaviour we are engaging in what the authors called ‘choice architecture’ – maintaining the notion of free choice whilst subverting this free choice with incentives to achieve the best outcome.
4. Change an ‘opt in’ to an ‘opt out’ – rather than letting kids off the hook by asking them to ‘opt in’ to something change the default position to an ‘opt out’. This idea gets to the heart of human psychology and plays on our inbuilt desire to avoid confrontation and our ability to feel guilt. This could be applied effectively to a number of areas around the school – for example, as a means of encouraging students to partake in extra-curricular activities a letter could be sent to parents stating that an after school club is compulsory unless the parents choose for their child to opt out.
5. Improve information for school leavers (when they’re 11) – this is one idea that is currently being pursued on a national level. Research has shown that children from poor disadvantaged backgrounds often have poor knowledge of their further or higher education options and the careers they could lead them into. As a result such children often view professional qualifications and careers as unobtainable. By filling this information gap it may be possible to raise aspirations among the most disaffected. This idea could be taken even further by providing parents with this information as well.
6. Pay kids to go to school – some schools have already employed similar policy, somewhat controversially, as a way of improving student attendance. However, the policy could applied much more broadly and linked directly to students performance. The argument is simple – kids react to incentives (like all of us). The problem is that some children don’t feel or understand their incentives to go to school and work hard. A monetary incentive (or something similar) is an incentive they can easily understand. Although the policy may seem morally wrong actually, based purely on a cost benefit analysis  it may actually make financial sense. If we consider the enormous amount of resources devoted to improving student attainment, paying students to do well in school may actually save the treasury money in the long run
7. Use peer pressure – put up posters in your classroom showing statistics about homework completion or behaviour  i.e. “75% of the class completed their homework last week”. This policy again draws upon and exploits human guilt in a similar way to the ‘opt out’ idea. A similar policy was trialled with great success in Bedfordshire hospitals in 2011. Doctors began placing notices in their waiting rooms along the lines of “95% of patients kept their appointments this month”. The result was a marked improvement in the number kept appointments or prompt cancellations (although it should be acknowledged that this policy was one of a number)
8. Send personalised text message as reminders about deadlines – Again drawing upon a policy implemented by Bedfordshire hospitals as a way of reducing missed appointments. This time we are closing the information gap. I have trialled something similar myself, having set up an email group and emailing students prior to a submission date.
9. Share progress information – this is already being used to great success in some areas within my own school and doubtless in schools up and down the country. Set up a spreadsheet for all of the students in your class. Use a traffic light system – green for a good piece, yellow for an acceptable piece and red for uncompleted or inadequate – and watch the impact on the kids. Like us adults, children often judge their own progress against their peers. Closing the information gap so that the children can easily make that judgement should help to increase competitiveness and motivation
10. Students make their own assessments – set up two trays at the front of the class. When pupils have finished a piece of work ask them to come up and place it in one of the trays. Explain to them that one of the trays is for work they deem to be a good piece of work and the other tray is for a piece of work they deem to be poor. Most of us would tend to be modest the first time around and place our work in the ‘poor’ tray (even if we didn’t necessarily believe  it belonged there!). However, next lesson the pupils will know what to expect and will be keen to produce a better piece of work to be able to justify placing the work in the ‘good’ tray

Thursday, 10 October 2013

The SSAT National Conference 2013


The SSAT National Conference 2013 in December will seek to develop a blueprint for the future of education and is calling on school leaders and teachers to take the lead on this agenda.
The four key Conference themes are: Professional Capital, Teaching & Learning, Curriculum Redesign, and Intelligent Accountability.
SecEd's 8-page preview supplement explores each of these themes and hears from leading academics and teachers, many of whom will be presenting at the event. We consider the key challenges that we face, both as an education system and as individual schools, and look at how we can work together to meet the needs of 21st century learners.
The supplement outlines the key debates that will be taking place and the questions that we, as a profession, must answer if we are to take control of the future direction of education.

The SSAT National Conference supplement

Top 100 Tools for Learning 2013

Top 100 Tools for Learning 2013

Here are the Top 100 Tools for Learning 2013 –  the results of the 7th Annual Learning Tools Survey.  The list was compiled by Jane Hart, Founder of the Centre for Learning & Performance Technologie from the votes of over 500 learning professionals from 48 countries worldwide. (Released 30 September 2013).
“A learning tool is a tool for your own personal or professional learning or one you use for teaching or training.”
Here is a summary presentation of the Top 100 Tools and beneath it the text list. Click the name of the tool to find out more about it, its cost, availability, its past rankings and to read some of the comments from those who voted for it.  You will find an analysis of this year’s list here.
RankingToolChange
since 2012
1TwitterSocial network and micro-blogging sitesame
2Google Drive/DocsOffice suite & file storage serviceup 1
3YouTubeVideo-sharing sitedown 1
4Google SearchWeb search engine same
5PowerPointPresentation software up 3
6EvernoteProductivity toolup 6
7DropboxFile storage & synchronization down 1
8WordPressBlogging/website tooldown 3
9FacebookSocial networksame
10Google+ & HangoutsSocial networking & video meetings up 7
11MoodleCourse management system same
12LinkedInProfessional social network up 11
13SkypeText and voice chat tool down 6
14WikipediaCollaborative encyclopaedia down 4
15PreziPresentation creation and hosting service down 1
16SlidesharePresentation hosting service down 3
17WordWord processing softwareup 2
18Blogger/BlogspotBlogging tool down 3
19FeedlyRSS reader/aggregator NEW
20YammerEnterprise social network same
21DiigoSocial bookmarking/ annotation tool down 3
22PinterestPinning toolup 14
23ScoopitCuration tool up 1
24ArticulateE-learning authoring software up 13
25TED Talks/EdInspirational tools/lessonssame
26Google ChromeWeb browser and appsup 9
27JingScreen capture and screencasting tool down 1
28CamtasiaScreencasting toolsame
29EdmodoEducational social networking platform down 7
30Adobe ConnectWeb conferencing software up 2
31SnagitScreen capture softwareup 11
32GmailWeb maildown 5
33AudacityAudio recorder/editing tooldown 4
34iPad and appsApple tablet and appssame
35Google ScholarSearch engine for scholarly works up 17
36FlipboardSocial magazine for iPad up 25
37Adobe CaptivateSimulation authoring softwareup 6
38CourseraMOOC platformNEW
39OutlookEmail clientup 10
40VoicethreadDigital storytelling platformdown 9
41Khan AcademyVideo learning platform up 15
42Adobe PhotoshopPhoto editing software up 11
43SkydriveFile storage and synchronization up 55
44WebExWeb conferencing software up 9
45ScreenrScreencasting tool up 19
46iSpringE-Learning authoring tools NEW
47HootsuiteSocial media dashboard down 6
48GoToMeeting/TrainingWeb meeting and conferencing tools BACK
49PocketRead it later softwareup 27
50UdutuCollaborative course authoring up 17
51SymbalooVisual bookmarking dashboardup 29
52FlickrPhoto sharing site up 8
53KeynotePresentation softwareup 40
54ExcelSpreadsheet softwareup 27
55SurveyMonkeySurvey softwaredown 4
56QuizletFlashcards & study games up 2
57Padlet (prev Wallwisher)Online noticeboardup 15
58StorifyCurate stories using social media BACK
59SharePointEnterprise collaboration platformdown 14
60DeliciousSocial bookmarking tooldown 12
61iTunes & iTunesUDigital media player & course distribution platform down 14
62EtherpadOnline editor for collaborative writing  BACK
63TweetdeckTwitter dashboard down 23
64Glogster EDUInteractive poster tool down 43
65TumblrBlogging platform up 31
66Blackboard CollaborateWeb conferencing software down 16
67eFrontCourse/learning management system up 19
68iMovieVideo creation software up 32
69OneNoteNote taking software up 2
70Google MapsInteractive maps down 32
71Google AppsBranded Google Apps for Bus & Edu down 16
72SocrativeStudent response system NEW
73WordleWord cloud generator up 6
74PB WorksWiki/collaboration software up 14
75Poll EverywhereAudience poling software same
76PoppletOnline noticeboard up 23
77Google TranslateOnline language translator down 20
78Kindle & Kindle AppE-Book reader device & app down 8
79DoodleEvent scheduling tool up 13
80WikispacesWiki hosting platform down 50
81AnimotoVideo creation software down 42
82LivebindersDigital organiser down 38
83VokiCreate speaking avatars up 1
84ZiteSocial magazine for mobile devicesdown 11
85Todays MeetPrivate backchannel service NEW
86WhatsAppPersonal real-time messaging app NEW
87TrelloProductivity tool NEW
88Blackboard LearnCourse management system up 7
89VimeoVideo sharing site down 11
90eLearningArteLearning images and templatesNEW
91ProProfs Quiz MakerOnline quiz makerNEW
92Mindjet (Mindmanager)Mindmapping softwredown 23
93Google SitesWeb/wiki hosting platform down 60
94PearltreesVisual curation toolNEW
95Android tables/phones & apps down 1
96NingPrivate social network hosting platform down 33
97FirefoxWeb browser and add-onsdown 32
98OpenOfficeOffice softwaredown 11
99
LearnistPinning tool for learningdown 10
100Paper.liCuration tool down 18