During my time as a TA, I saw poetry taught very badly, very often. Two 'old school' teachers I observed seemed to believe the hallmark of good poetry teaching was ensuring that pupils had reams and reams of notes scrawled all over their texts - regardless of whether they understood them or not. I hated this approach - it amounted to little more than dictation and encouraged little thought, analysis or interpretation. Wherever possible, I would step in by offering to teach the lesson or by interjecting vociferously. Thankfully, the teachers encouraged this and the pupils seemed to enjoy it. Hopefully they learned something, too.
So now, despite having not yet started my PGCE, I'm bravely putting my lesson on Daljit Nagra's 'Singh Song' online. I focused on how Nagra created the character of Singh through language. Hopefully some of you will like it and use some of the ideas within.
Following some fantastic feedback from the Twitter community (much of which is in the comments section below), this plan has been revamped and reconfigured in an attempt to make better use of learning objectives, assessment and structured questioning. It's quite different to before - and hopefully much improved!
Click the links to download the plan, accompanying Powerpoint slides and handouts. All of these can be downloaded as regular documents or PDF files.
Singh Song: Creating Characters Through Language
Sing Song: Powerpoint Slides
Singh Song: Extracts Handout
Singh Song: Standard English Handout
Thanks to everyone who offered advice - it's much appreciated!
Showing posts with label National Curriculum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Curriculum. Show all posts
Tuesday, 7 August 2012
Singh Song by Daljit Nagra
Labels:
Creating Character Through Voice,
Daljit Nagra,
English,
GCSE,
Language,
Moon On The Tides,
National Curriculum,
PGCE,
Poetry,
Resources,
Singh Song,
Teaching
Saturday, 28 July 2012
Why Bother With My PGCE, Mr Gove?
Once again, and to nobody’s great surprise, Michael Gove has announced another ill-considered and absurd attack on the nation’s teachers. Now, in his infinite wisdom he has declared that anyone can teach in his academies without a relevant teaching qualification. Mere life experience and expertise will be enough. But where does this leave me as I prepare to embark on my PGCE year?
Firstly, I concede that experience and expertise are
important. I’m almost 33 years old and have plenty of ‘life experience’ (I
actually cringed as I wrote that) and relevant work experience having performed
various training, coaching and management jobs over a varied career. More important
than any of that, however, is the two years I’ve just spent working in a
school. With young people. And teachers. And a national curriculum.
Assuming that being a genius in your field enables you to
teach is plainly wrong. It’s the same wrong-headed attitude that sees those
with first class honours degrees awarded three times the training salaries of
their 2:1 toting contemporaries. The misguided assumption is that the better
you are at something, the better you’ll be able to transfer that knowledge to your
young charges. Anyone with opposable thumbs and a modicum of commonsense could
point out that this is utter horseshit. The way that message is conveyed, the
ability to relate to young people and making that learning memorable so that it
sticks is what’s important. You don’t need to know string theory to teach kids GCSE
physics. But you do need to inspire them and interest them in the subject –
knowledge alone is not enough.
Without having yet embarked upon my course, I know that I’ll
spend hours observing existing teachers, taking their advice, looking at the
theory behind education and managing a classroom, coping with different
behaviours, differentiating by task and outcome, setting learning objectives,
continually assessing my students, applying my subject knowledge to the
syllabus and correcting any gaps or weaknesses, absorbing the atmosphere of a
school and countless other tasks, exercises and activities designed to raise my
skill levels and my pupils’ attainment. Presumably Gove sees no value in any of
this, instead preferring to assume that my knowledge of my subject will seep by
osmosis into every child I come into contact with?
I took a huge risk to leave a well paid career behind and
work as a teaching assistant for two years (scraping by on less than £8000 a
year). I’m now committed to a further year of study which will cost me £9000 in
fees and will see my existing student loan debt swell beyond comprehension. I
did these things because I needed to do them to follow this path, because I
felt they would put me ahead of my contemporaries and because they were requirements
of the job. I made sacrifices that I deemed to be worthwhile because I really,
really want to teach English.
Now, it seems I may have wasted my time. I could’ve wandered
into one of Gove’s academies, given a whizz-bang interview and been hired
thanks largely to my charisma and fancy-talk. Of course, as soon as I entered a
classroom full of kids who weren’t interested in me and didn’t share my enthusiasm
for Simon Armitage and subordinate clauses, I’d have been up Excrement Creek
without the required rowing implement.
What Gove stupidly assumes is that anyone can wander into a
classroom and teach. They can’t. It is an art, a skill and a profession.
Teachers are not knowledge-boxes to be tapped. Kids have got Wikipedia for
that. They are not lecturers or key-note speakers. I’ve spent two years sitting
in English lessons, have taught plenty of my own and have read dozens of highly
regarded books on the art of teaching. But I am not a teacher. I am not ready
to be one yet. I cannot do the job properly until I have been trained
appropriately. For Gove to assume that just anyone can walk in from whatever
sphere, and can do this complicated, demanding job is an insult to all
educators, prospective teachers and, worst of all, our children.
Labels:
Academies,
English,
GCSE,
Michael Gove,
National Curriculum,
NQT,
PGCE,
Teaching,
Teaching Assistant
Monday, 23 July 2012
Proper Preparation Prevents Piss Poor Performance
If one more person tells me how hard my PGCE year will be, I’ll
rip their spinal column out with my bare hands and whip them to death with it.
I know how difficult it will be. I
am ready for it. And I have been preparing.
Already, I’ve raced through some excellent books about
teaching. Not dry academic tomes, but useful and practical guides by leading
practitioners of the art of teaching. Phil Beadle’s How to Teach was absolutely
magnificent, Trevor Wright’s How to Be a Brilliant English Teacher was even
better. David Didau’s The Perfect Ofsted English Lesson is next on the agenda
and already looks to be rammed with useful and usable ideas and tools I can use
in my own classes. Rex Gibson’s guide to teaching Shakespeare is already on my
bookshelf. If there are other reads you’d recommend, please let me know.
My previous career in a secondary school has also furnished
me with absolutely invaluable experience. I’ve observed two years of English
teaching at every age group and ability – very few of my contemporaries will be
able to boast of that much experience. And in that time, I taught dozens of
lessons – and learned lessons from them. I have a good idea of what kind of
teacher I’ll be and the approach I find most comfortable. I already relate well
to kids and get on with them brilliantly. I’ve experienced every behavioural
challenge imaginable (i’m aware that some are simply unimaginable).
I have a cache of lesson plans which I’ve already written.
They’ll need to be moulded into my university’s style and adapted according to
my classes, but the bones are there to be fleshed out. Time consuming planning
like that for the Moon on the Tides anthology is largely done - provided my placement
schools study either Relationships or Character & Voice .I’m halfway
through producing a scheme of work based on a zombie apocalypse which will be
the starting point for all sorts of writing tasks. There are dozens of other
plans either completed or ready to be written over the next few weeks. Some of
them might never see the light of day but what’s the harm in practising?
What else can I do? What else should I be doing? I’m
probably ahead of the game already but I want to be over the hill and far away
by the time September ticks around. Your advice, tweets and comments would be massively
appreciated.
Labels:
English,
Language,
Literature,
National Curriculum,
Ofsted,
PGCE,
Phil Beadle,
Rex Gibson,
Teaching,
Trevor Wright
Tuesday, 17 July 2012
Kids Are Not Dumb - Not Even The Dumb Ones!
The role of Teaching Assistant affords a unique perspective
on the classroom. Placed amongst the students, the TA is neither a teacher nor
a pupil. Accordingly, they are treated as a hybrid of the two: an adult the
kids can trust and conspire with, but also learn from and admire. It’s a
wonderful position to be in.
Although it’s usually advisable to shut them up before they
divulge exactly which laws they broke or how much vodka they imbibed at the
weekend, it can be wholly instructive to listen to the pupils talk about school
life. The truth emerges about playground rumours, their perspective on
classroom incidents vary wildly from the staffroom equivalents and their true
feelings about the teaching staff are laid bare. After two years of being privy
to such revelations, i realised that students are enormously perceptive and
hugely demanding when it comes to their teachers. Here are the three keys
things i learned:
- 1 If a teacher doesn’t turn up, they got no respect.
- 2 If a teacher doesn’t do what they say, they get no respect.
- 3. If a teacher doesn’t make a class work, they got no respect.
(for the uninitiated, respect is a huge fucking deal to
teenage kids)
Some of these ‘revelations’ might seem counter-intuitive or surprising.
But they shouldn’t be. Kids are not dumb. None of them. Some might be less able
than others, but every single one of them can see straight through a faker.
They can spot a bullshitter. They know when you are ‘phoning it in’. They will
hate you for it. And they’ll make you suffer for not doing your job properly.
1. There are a number of kids in schools who live unstable
lives. It’s your job as a teacher to provide some measure of stability for them.
This means being in their lesson EVERY SINGLE DAY. If you’re not there you are
letting them down. You are failing them. You undermining your own teaching by
suggesting that your subject is not important. You are implying that it’s okay
for them to miss your lesson – after all, you do! Worst of all, you are leaving
them with a substitute teacher and a shitty pile of pointless timewasting tasks
which will never get marked: cover lessons are not taken seriously by anyone.
Kids hate teachers who miss lessons and have absolutely no respect for them: do
not be ill and do not put yourself forward for every school trip available: DO
NOT ABSENT YOURSELF FROM YOUR OWN LESSONS.
2, If you show weakness and inconsistency, kids will eat you
alive. If you fail to keep your promises or follow through on your threats,
they will seek to take advantage at every available opportunity. They will
quickly ascertain how to appeal to your better nature, worm their way into your
affections and talk you out of your sanctions. Set out your standards for
behaviour and then adhere to them ruthlessly. Contrary to what you might think,
they will respect you for this - because they will always know where they stand
with you. They will know your threats are never empty. They will not be able to
complain that others are treated differently or that they are being victimised.
3. Once you have managed to drag yourself into school and
instilled some discipline in your class, don’t forget to make them do some
work. Proper work. Set objectives and teach to them. Make them think for
themselves. Communicate clearly and enable discussion, groupwork and
peer-to-peer learning. Make them write things down. Ensure they can recognise
their own progress. And then mark their books, grade their oral work and praise
them to the heavens. Kids like doing work. But they don’t like boring work.
They like fun tasks, variety and thinking for themselves. They like clarity in
their teaching and they like the work they produce to be appreciated and graded
so they know how to make improve the next time. You would not believe the
number of times i’ve heard kids moan about teachers who “never make us do any
writing” or who refuse to work because “it won’t get marked anyway”.
Isolated from the reality of the classroom, cocooned in
their bubbles at the front of the room, too many teachers are
blissfully/painfully unaware of the demands their students have of them. I’ve
sat through too many shitty lessons with ill-prepared teachers to ever make
those mistakes myself: if i want my kids to respect me, i have to treat them
with respect too.
Labels:
English,
Language,
Literature,
Michael Gove,
National Curriculum,
PGCE,
Teaching,
Teaching Assistant
An Introduction!
At the age of thirty I decided to become an teacher of English. This was a problematic/idiotic decision for a lot of reasons, chief amongst them my complete lack of relevant experience and my completely irrelevant degree. So I started at the very bottom of the teaching ladder: I became a teaching assistant.
Two years on, I'm about to embark on my PGCE. I've worked with every age group in my inner city school, working exclusively in the English department and observing the whole secondary English curriculum taught by a variety of teachers. I've clocked up hours of teaching time myself and learned enormous amounts about life in schools: hopefully this will give me a massive head start as I work towards NQT status.
Predictably, I learned most from those teachers whose style and approach I held in disdain - and there were plenty of shitty teachers in my school. But there were also wonderful, inspirational staff members whose success lessons I will seek to emulate, copy and shamelessly pass off as my own for years to come.
Over the course of the summer I'll be detailing what I've learned in my teaching career so far. Names will be changed to protect people's identities and salaries - but I'll not hold back from corruscating criticism of those who deserve it (teachers with appalling attendance records, my feckless manager and Michael Gove will be getting both barrels). The many positives (and they far outweight the negatives) will also be detailed.
From September I'll document my journey through my PGCE, share my lesson plans and thoughts on teaching, and hopefully inspire debate and conversation amongst fellow students of language, literature and education. Here we go...
Two years on, I'm about to embark on my PGCE. I've worked with every age group in my inner city school, working exclusively in the English department and observing the whole secondary English curriculum taught by a variety of teachers. I've clocked up hours of teaching time myself and learned enormous amounts about life in schools: hopefully this will give me a massive head start as I work towards NQT status.
Predictably, I learned most from those teachers whose style and approach I held in disdain - and there were plenty of shitty teachers in my school. But there were also wonderful, inspirational staff members whose success lessons I will seek to emulate, copy and shamelessly pass off as my own for years to come.
Over the course of the summer I'll be detailing what I've learned in my teaching career so far. Names will be changed to protect people's identities and salaries - but I'll not hold back from corruscating criticism of those who deserve it (teachers with appalling attendance records, my feckless manager and Michael Gove will be getting both barrels). The many positives (and they far outweight the negatives) will also be detailed.
From September I'll document my journey through my PGCE, share my lesson plans and thoughts on teaching, and hopefully inspire debate and conversation amongst fellow students of language, literature and education. Here we go...
Labels:
English,
Language,
Literature,
Michael Gove,
National Curriculum,
PGCE,
Teaching,
Teaching Assistant
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