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Speak Out! 2011-2014 Patcham High School Preliminary Findings from Evaluation Julia Sutherland, Mark...
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Transcript of Speak Out! 2011-2014 Patcham High School Preliminary Findings from Evaluation Julia Sutherland, Mark...
Speak Out! 2011-2014 Patcham High SchoolPreliminary Findings from EvaluationJulia Sutherland, Mark Warner & Jo Byrne
Overview
Introduction to team Research Context & rationale: Patcham High
School Speak Out! funded by Paul Hamlyn Project aims & ‘ingredients’ Main findings of Evaluation Implications for developing good practice?
How relevant to your school?
Pair buzz…
Why focus on talk and reading for students in receipt of the Pupil Premium?
Why talk or oracy? Develops cognitive ability, reasoning & understanding – measurable
impact on attainment in English, Mathematics & Science (Alexander, 2012)
Oral ability relates to social, emotional, moral & cultural development; well-being; ability to participate in democracy - citizenship
Oral language is foundation for all reading comprehension, writing Children’s unequal starting points: pre-school oral experiences &
practices – how far do they ‘fit’ with school’s? At 3 & 5 years, gap in vocabulary & cognitive development between
lowest SES 20% versus highest SES 20% = 1 year (Blanden/Michin, 2011 These gaps widen through schooling (Blanden/Michin, 2011; Feinstein, 2003)
Why reading?
Increases vocabulary, inference, comprehension, cognitive development, cross-curricular understanding
Fifth of students in UK/Europe have low reading attainment Attainment gap between weak/strong readers widens at
secondary school (EACEA, 2011; DCSF, 2010)
Motivation to read is strongly associated with reading ability (McKeown, 2013)
Children from low SES backgrounds are less likely to enjoy reading independently (Clarke and Akerman, 2006)
Reading enjoyment is a more important determinant of children’s educational success than their family’s socioeconomic status (Clarke & Rumbold, 2006; OECD, 2002)
Context for Reading & Talk projects, Patcham High School, 2009…
Urban, average-sized comprehensive. In 2009: high proportion of Pupil Premium;
nearly a quarter of students with SEND 60% had reading age 2 years below
chronological age Response to Ofsted Mark Warner’s & colleagues’ ongoing
commitment to students’ independent reading – beliefs + some research
Whole-school, 3-year Project Aims
1. Develop students’ oral skills & confidence, focusing on most disadvantaged, Yrs 7-11, enhancing ability to progress to education, employment & training
2. Enhance teachers’ ability to develop talk3. Establish community involvement4. Increase students’ motivation & engagement
in independent reading: focus on reading for pleasure
Project Ingredients High status for Reading & Talk DEAR + Talk + Awards for both Talk: Briefing, Assemblies, Friday Bk Talk School & Local libraries at heart: hosting events &
developing exciting stock of books Accelerated Reader to monitor reading progress & make
library more user-friendly for weaker readers Creative, linked projects: some outside Community links: volunteers, parents, writers, parents,
universities involved CPD: reading & talk; Teacher research: English Dept
Examples of interventions Structured group coaching on talk for most in need Paired reading with adult volunteer:10-week blocks Year 9 low set – storytelling to Year 5s Slam poetry: students with challenging behaviour;
collaborative training & strategies for Girls & talk TV project – creating a ‘One Show’ video Tiger’s Den & employer workshops & visits Reading competitions; After-dinner DEAR; book groups,
Friday Book Talk, Assemblies, Staff briefings Training for existing Student Voice activities: e.g.
Lead/Support Students; Teachers’ Critical Friends
CPD for teachers sssss by specialists internal/external External inputs
INSET day on oracy and literacy: workshops staff training on pair and group talk Better Reading Partners Training in
Teaching & learning communities TA training in Questioning and Talk for Writing Inset Day - Talk for Writing
Mixed-method Evaluation Comparative baseline & final oral attainment data Years 7-9
and 11, from English teachers, 2013-14 Comparative reading-test scores for Paired Readers 33 Interviews with groups of students, teachers, project
leaders and other stakeholders, across most projects [+ teacher questionnaires in process]
Observations, e.g. Awards Ceremony, coaching Yr 10 Student Questionnaires on Reading Attitudes 7 Case Studies on PP & SEND students Triangulation of perspectives and methods
Qualitative Findings on TalkWhat the students say…
All projects highly rated, especially by students with weaker oral skills, but also provide extension & challenge for all
Coaching well evaluated, once adapted for students with weak oral skills only – not ‘one size fits all’
Improvements in: Communication, fluency, confidence, extending talk registers Articulating feelings & ideas, negotiating with unfamiliar
adults/teachers & avoiding conflict Collaborating, building relationships & appreciating different
views, after early resistance, including out-of-school contexts Leading & supporting others Developing skills in interviews & making transition to FE, work
Students’ views Group, exploratory talk is useful for learning across curriculum – deepens
thinking, co-construction of understanding Value increased independence of teachers & peer support Show sophisticated understanding & reflection on talk: ‘go meta’: e.g.
range of discourses, audiences, purposes; relationship between talk and identity – power imbalances; rights to speak
Mid-Year 2: Year 10 students report teacher-practices changing: ‘Improved teacher questioning’: ‘more challenging with good follow-up questions’ – probing their thinking.
More effective use of pair and group talk & space for students to develop ideas –praise for dialogic teachers who create this space
Value ‘real-world’/out-of-classroom contexts: TV, Storytelling… Observations of ‘Awards’ show celebration of progress in talk, make links
between home/school & show Community of Practice developing
Findings on Reading Embedded whole-school culture of reading & book talk Greatly enhanced motivation & engagement – all year groups Reading data shows development in reading scores for PP: 10-wk paired
reading, average scores rose by 1 year Importance of talk, class & peer, to developing enthusiastic independent
readers: DEAR + Talk + Accelerated Reader Year 10 classes where tutors regularly engaged in rich talk about books
made the greatest development in: a) reading comprehension b) attitudes to reading – this engagement more likely to be sustained
after project Relationship between reading & talk constantly reinforced: Speak Out!
Awards celebrate reading achievements – After-Dinner Dear, Reading aloud
Evidence of sustained change in teacher practices?
Yes, where students draw parallels between interventions & pedagogy in lessons:
Year 9 storytelling; Poetry project; DEAR; Paired reading
Lessons cited often linked to Teacher Research Gradual shift to higher-level, collaborative talk &
space for student voices to develop Changes at KS4 particularly convincing & linked to
assessment – students report teachers recognising value of talk to deepen understanding
Issues and Challenges Time – luxury of 3-year project to learn from mistakes &
gradually change cultural & pedagogic practices Year 1 of project: ‘pockets of excellence’ some progress in
culture of pair/group talk in lessons, but not embedded ‘Coaching’ sessions initially disconnected from core
curriculum; little consolidation via AfL: ‘bolted-on’? Driven by pressure to meet quantitative targets expected in funded projects (900+ students targeted)?
How to gain whole-staff commitment & lasting change of pedagogy, embedding culture of developing talk/reading?
Resources & Leadership – Funding, Passion of team leaders
Implications Whole-school commitment – embedded over time Oracy & Reading at Centre of student learning Library as Fulcrum of Activity – See new NC & policy docs Real-world contexts – literacy must feel relevant, real audiences, opportunities
for talking more formally to range of unfamiliar people/different purposes Induction into school oral discourses - structured pair/group exploratory ‘talk
for thinking’ – use of ground-rules, reflection - KAL Creativity of approach – poetry-writing, TV project Teacher Researchers as Change Agents, driving project, with 2 critically
reflective ‘Teacher’ Coordinators: could more teachers be involved in sharing & developing practice from start of project?
School openness to change? Project benefitted from dynamic culture in school & esp. English Dept, after waves of research on reading & talk
Difficulty of measuring impact & attributing significance – collecting reliable quantitative data – S and L grades; Accelerated Reader data?
Yes, sometimes I sit upstairs and speak to my brother or I'll read to my brother and he sits down and listens and he's quite happy that I can actually read to him […] because I can read and talk better now. (Carrie, Yr 8 with ASC, School Action +)
I think that the Speak Out! TV project and everything we've done with speaking and listening has really helped with my life to like make it less daunting for speaking in front of other people and it's also helped with class discussion […] to join in with them, instead of just sit back and watch everyone else. It's raised my confidence a lot [Steve, Year 10]
I think that the Speak Out! TV project and everything we've done with speaking and listening has really helped with my life to like make it less daunting for speaking in front of other people and it's also helped with class discussion […] to join in with them, instead of just sit back and watch everyone else. It's raised my confidence a lot [Steve, Year 10]
Student voicesSpeak Out! 2014
The most valuable bit was that you were counting on yourselves to get it right […] This was good, instead of having a teacher telling you what to do and the different stages, you could do it your own way and with your own ideas (Jade, Yr 10, Sch Action +)
The most valuable bit was that you were counting on yourselves to get it right […] This was good, instead of having a teacher telling you what to do and the different stages, you could do it your own way and with your own ideas (Jade, Yr 10, Sch Action +)
I think [my talk] improved when I’m speaking to the teacher because
when I speak to them formally, they find it more polite and it helps me if I'm in trouble because I can put my
side of the story and they listen better… Teachers have started liking
me more now (Vince, Year 8)
The school’s strong focus on literacy is helping prepare students for the next stage of their education
DEAR is recognised locally and nationally for its success. This has encouraged students to read more widely, talk about their books and write about them in the school magazine.
DEAR is recognised locally and nationally for its success. This has encouraged students to read more widely, talk about their books and write about them in the school magazine.
Ofsted, 2013
Students now achieve well, gaining GCSE results in line with national averages and, in some subjects, notably English, well above them. This has been helped by the good range of literacy initiatives in place
Students now achieve well, gaining GCSE results in line with national averages and, in some subjects, notably English, well above them. This has been helped by the good range of literacy initiatives in place
Students are tolerant, work together happily and
understand the needs of others.
Implications & sharing practice
What is of immediate interest or concern? How far does it match your school context? Whole-school, creative literacy approaches: How achievable? What are issues & challenges? What is role of teacher? Senior leader? TLC? Match with policy – new NC?
Contacts
Julia Sutherland [email protected] Mark Warner
[email protected] Pleasure for Reading Conference2 Sussex Teacher Researcher conferences Jo Byrne [email protected]
Bibliography 1 Alexander, R. (2012) Improving oracy and classroom talk in English Schools:
Achievements and Challenges. Extended version of a presentation given at the DfE seminar on Oracy: the National Curriculum and Educational Standards, 20 February, 2012.
Blanden, Jo and Stephen Machin (2010) “Changes in inequality and intergenerational mobility in early years assessments” in Kirstine Hansen, Heather Joshi and Shirley Dex (eds) Children of the 21st century: The first five years. Bristol: Policy Press.
Clarke and Akerman, (2006) Social inclusion and reading An exploration. London: National Literacy Trust
Clarke & Rumbold (2006) Reading for Pleasure: A Research Overview. London: National Literacy Trust
Dickerson, A. & Popli, G. (2012) Persistent poverty and children’s cognitive development: evidence from the UK Millennium Cohort Study. Working paper 2012/2. London: Centre for Longitudinal Studies, Institute of Ed, University of London
Bibliography 2 DCSF (2007) English Subject Leader Training Materials Speaking &
Listening (2007) London: DCSF EACEA (Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive
Agency/Eurydice). (2011) Teaching Reading in Europe: Contexts, Policies and Practices. Brussels: EACEA, Eurydice (Excellent report & key few pages on reading comprehension)
Feinstein, Leon (2003) Inequality in the Early Cognitive Development of British Children in the 1970 Cohort, Economica, 70, 73-97.
Literacy Guide for Secondary Schools: 2013-2014. (2014)London: National Literacy Trust.
McKeown, S.P. (2013) Reading Motivation and engagement in the primary classroom: theory, research and practice. London: UKLA (mini-books series; see Talk for Reading, C. Warner, same series)