Archbishop Sentamu Academy Presentation

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Here is Alex Thrower's presentation from the National Learning Platforms ConferenceAlex spoke in the Adopt session titled 'The impact of good parental involvement'

Transcript of Archbishop Sentamu Academy Presentation

  • 1.Artchbishop Sentamu Academy Kingston upon Hull
    • Engaging with parents and students through online tasks, forms and satisfaction surveys

Date 2. Background

  • New Academy (BSF) in 2009
  • New site, new students, new sixth form, new IT strategy
  • Significant levels of social deprivation - 47% FSM
  • Strong community cohesion and parental engagement
  • 90% walk to school
  • 100 minute lessons - Site IT provision 5 PC suites and 7 trolleys

3. Since 2009...

  • Implemented a school wide VLE with Frog
  • Built a new external website with links back into the VLE
  • Created a VLE presence for all departments
  • Created an online homework programme for lower school
  • Launched a new Sixth Form
  • Planned a new school building for growth: 1000 aiming for 1500
  • Planned a full migration to Apple as a preferred platform (2011)

4. Challenges...

  • Limited access to IT resources within the timetable
  • Limited access to IT resources beyond the school day
  • Low levels of literacy for many students when transferring
  • 50% of homes not accessing broadband
  • Students shifting to smart phone technology for web access
  • Curriculum at KS4 promotes coursework for supervised completion
  • Homework culture not embedded

5. Key aims - promoting independent learning, raising literacy, engaging with parents

  • Why?
  • Knock-on effect for the wider development of the student
  • Better access to the curriculum in all subjects
  • Life-skills and preparation for next stages
  • Raising the profile to learning in the wider community
  • Signalling a step-change in goals and operations of the Academy
  • Bringing parents in the homework process.

6. Why Frog?

  • Shallow learning curve for teachers - half a CPD day.
  • Template/module driven development - easy to scale up
  • Total control of content - text, image, video, links, feeds, forms
  • Feedback is instant - students see their score. They can try again.
  • Marking can be automated through the question types
  • Data retrieval is built into Frog (as a reporting widget)
  • Frog can personalise pages using the users data - name etc

7. Extra Mile 8. Navigation... 9. What students see...

  • Text
  • Image
  • Embedded Video
  • Link to Media
  • Questions
  • Space for free text responses

10. What do the questions look like? 11. What about feedback? 12. How does the teacher see results?

  • A table of data
  • A markbook made with simple tools!
  • Sortable data
  • Exportable
  • Real time access to results
  • Capable of being displayed to the student - or all students!!!

13. How does the teacher see results? 14. The impact...

  • High return rate within the pilot user group (Yrs 7 - 9) - 40%
  • High rate of pilot user satisfaction when surveyed - 75%
  • Parents ringing school to check the VLE link
  • Technical and performance testing proves system to be robust
  • Migration of parental surveys and option choices to Frog
  • Confidence amongst the SLT in effectiveness of reaching connected families
  • Tested systems for Options, Parent Satisfaction, IT Skills, Extended Day Survey.

15. Ongoing challenges...

  • Un-connected families and the digital divide. Some will not engage.
  • Administrative teams work to well-established data collection programmes.Paperwork is labour intensive and preserves jobs.
  • Quality control of text - teachers vary!
  • Multiple-choice question formulation is a science - and an art.
  • Assessment and reporting schedules may not support regular weekly on-line homework
  • Literacy is sometimes seen as a matter for English teachers!

16. Responses to challenges. What schools need to consider.

  • Raising literacy is vital for all subjects - can homework help?
  • Students appreciate instant feedback.
  • Automated marking leaves time for teacher to do better things.
  • Connection with parents and students can be in libraries or school foyers - not necessarily in the home.
  • Parents and students could be offered more regular access to grades.
  • Multiple choice is a valid mechanism for eliciting responses and surveying opinion or satisfaction BUT ...

17. 14 Rules for Multiple Choice Forms

  • 1. Use Plausible Distractors (wrong-response options)
  • 2. Use a Question Format
  • 3. Emphasize Higher-Level Thinking
  • Memory, Application of Knowledge, Interpretation of Evidence, identification of Cause-and-Effect, Inference and Deduction, Contextualisation, Empathy, Justification of Methods and Procedures
  • 4. Keep Option Lengths Similar
  • 7. Avoid Clues to the Correct Answer
  • 8. Avoid Negative Questions

18. 14 Rules for Multiple Choice Forms

  • 9. Use Only One Correct Option (Or be sure the best option is clearly the best option)
  • 10. Give Clear Instructions
  • 11. Use Only a Single, Clearly-Defined Problem and Include the Main Idea in the Question
  • 12. Avoid the All the Above Option
  • 13. Avoid the None of the Above Option
  • 14. Dont Use MC Questions When Other Item Types Are More Appropriate

19. Engaging parents through the use of meta-questions

  • How many minutes did spend on this homework?
  • Did he/she ask for help?
  • How easy (1-10) did you find the homework as a parent?
  • Which question was the hardest? Easiest?
  • Which word in the text needed the most explanation with your child?
  • Please make up one more question which would test your childs understanding

20. Technical 21. So what did we learn?

  • You cannot change a learning culture piecemeal...think big!
  • The championing of technology must come from the top!
  • Teachers need to be incentivized to change behaviours as much as students
  • VLE provide an increasingly robust vehicle for family engagament
  • On-line forms offer significant cost and time saving solutions for organisations with many potentially active stakeholders.
  • Some families may never engage on-line at home - seek other ways!

22. So where next for Frog champions?

  • Develop a whole-school approach to on-line engagement.
  • Use VLE as the default communication channel not an option b)
  • Encourage joined up thinking about paper based administration
  • Raise the status of multiple choice questions they can challenge!
  • Recognise the importance of the developer role think status!
  • Engage with subject leaders to agree protocols
  • Put parent and child together when developing on-line engagement