Unlike the majority of fresh-from-university PGCE students on my course, my greatest fear has not been teaching, lesson-planning or workload. It has been 'academia' and the horrors of essay writing: I was never the most assiduous of students and left university more than ten years ago. My dissertation on digital music technologies seems like a vision of the future now (it made various salient predictions about file-sharing which have come true) but in academic terms it was a bit shit. So imagine my surprise when my 6000-word masters-level essay was returned to me with a score of 85/90.
The essay is about AfL and is centred on a critique of three lessons I taught on reviewing The Woman In Black. The lesson plans and anonymised samples of pupils' work are included in the appendices. I received particular praise for my varied references which include the obvious Ofsted and Dylan William quotes, but also more up-to-date references from the likes of Ross McGill (@TeacherToolkit, Claire Gadsby and Ian Gilbert (@ThatIanGilbert).
If you have a similar essay to write, a particular interest in AfL, wanna read it for your own CPD or just want to be nosy, the essay can be read by clicking the below link. I hope it's of use to someone.
A Critique Of Assessment For Learning: A Case Study
Showing posts with label Ofsted. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ofsted. Show all posts
Saturday, 30 March 2013
Want An AfL Essay?
Labels:
Academia,
AfL,
CPD,
English,
Essay,
Media,
Ofsted,
Resources,
TeacherToolkit,
Teaching,
University
Saturday, 29 September 2012
PGCEeeeeek!
Three weeks into my PGCE and this is my first blog in bloody ages. If only someone had warned me that this course would be so time consuming! I'm already into my second placement (the first was seven days in a primary school - eek!) and have spent hours and hours reading and annotating educational theorists' theories and Ofsted reports. I've observed good, bad and indifferent lessons, met some inspiring practitioners, spent half my bursary on printer ink and have now, thankfully, managed to overcome my shyness and forge some fledgling friendships with fellow students.
The course itself seems excellent. A varied programme of guests, tasks, workshops and lectures has rarely been anything other than illuminating - and has often been thoroughly good fun. My personal tutors (a job-sharing combo of avuncular idealist and maternal pragmatist) are utterly wonderful and, other than the token loud-mouthed irritant, the other student teachers are a decent bunch. I'm the eldest by a good few years, and although there are a couple more 'mature' students, the vast majority are fresh from university. I've yet to succumb to the temptation of going out on one of their regular post-lecture boozing sessions.
The workload has been enormous, with reams of reading to be done, auditing of our own subject knowledge to be completed, spelling and grammar tests, refelective journals, literature reviews and various other tasks to be completed. I'm keeping up admirably, but it's soon time for our first major essay and my first foray into masters-level academic writing. I'm shitting my pants at the prospect - it's a long time since my dissertation on how Napster would change the way we consumed music* - and i've done nothing similar in scope or scale since. I'll need plenty of help with it.
* Reading it again, my dissertation could have been written by Nostradamus. It predicted the rise of mySpace, Spotify, artists giving music away for free, online-only albums and various other digital music innovations. I'd like to have it retrospectively re-marked so that it got the grade it clearly deserved rather than the 2:1 it was awarded.
The course itself seems excellent. A varied programme of guests, tasks, workshops and lectures has rarely been anything other than illuminating - and has often been thoroughly good fun. My personal tutors (a job-sharing combo of avuncular idealist and maternal pragmatist) are utterly wonderful and, other than the token loud-mouthed irritant, the other student teachers are a decent bunch. I'm the eldest by a good few years, and although there are a couple more 'mature' students, the vast majority are fresh from university. I've yet to succumb to the temptation of going out on one of their regular post-lecture boozing sessions.
The workload has been enormous, with reams of reading to be done, auditing of our own subject knowledge to be completed, spelling and grammar tests, refelective journals, literature reviews and various other tasks to be completed. I'm keeping up admirably, but it's soon time for our first major essay and my first foray into masters-level academic writing. I'm shitting my pants at the prospect - it's a long time since my dissertation on how Napster would change the way we consumed music* - and i've done nothing similar in scope or scale since. I'll need plenty of help with it.
* Reading it again, my dissertation could have been written by Nostradamus. It predicted the rise of mySpace, Spotify, artists giving music away for free, online-only albums and various other digital music innovations. I'd like to have it retrospectively re-marked so that it got the grade it clearly deserved rather than the 2:1 it was awarded.
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
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