Building Capacity in School
From OER in Education
- Aspects Of Engagement
- Assessment Overview
- Assessment for Learning Introduction
- Assessment for Learning Research Summary
- Building Capacity in School
- Classroom Management - Thinking Point
- Creating Engagement
- Developing Higher Order Scientific Enquiry Skills
- Developing Your Teaching
- Factors Affecting Lesson Design
- Fibonacci Project
- Group Talk - Benefits for Science Teaching
- Group Work - Practical Considerations
- Group Work - Research Summary
- Improving Reading - Research Summary
- Improving Writing - Research Summary
- Inclusive Teaching in Mathematics
- Inclusive Teaching in Science
- Modelling Introduction
- Purposes and characteristics of whole-class dialogue
- Questioning Research Summary
- Speaking and Listening in Group Work
- TESSA Working With Teachers
- Teaching Learning Developing Approaches to CPD
- Teaching Learning and Whole School Improvement
- The Importance of Speaking and Listening
- The Process of Lesson Design
- The educational value of dialogic talk in whole-class dialogue
- The impact of enquiry-based science teaching on students' attitudes and achievement
- Types Of Question
- Using Digital Video in Professional Development
- Whole Class Work - Research Summary
Building capacity in school
The table below explains the characteristics of a school or department with a well-developed capacity for improvement in teaching and learning approaches.
Attribute | Examples at whole-school level | Examples at department level | How are you doing? |
It routinely shares its expertise | Staff meetings regularly feature teachers demonstrating or illustrating how they teach | Collaborative planning involves teachers sharing their ideas on how work can be delivered. The department shares demonstration lessons with staff | |
It uses external support and challenge to enhance practice | Teachers are regularly encouraged to attend external INSET. LEA school advisers are drawn in to contribute to school self-review processes | The department uses the LEA KS3 consultants to observe lessons and provide feedback | |
It has a clear, operational focus | The SMT signals clearly that certain items in meetings are significant in improving teaching and learning and ensures they are given significantly more time | Meetings are focused on teaching and
learning issues. The team is clear about which items require only a little time. Administrative items are given later slots in meetings |
|
It has a well- developed set of priorities | It has a clear and operational (not cosmetic) development plan which guides resource decisions and action taken | The department has an action plan based firmly on an audit of teaching strengths and weaknesses. Resource decisions are based on declared priorities
of strengths and weaknesses |
|
It elevates professional development to a continual process | Individual teachers are enabled to watch colleagues teach on a regular and systematic basis | An audit of each team member’s skills is used as a basis for termly review discussions and lesson observations |
- This resource is part of the DfES resource "Pedagogy and practice: Teaching and learning in secondary schools" (ref: 0423-2004G) which can be downloaded from the National Archives http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20110809101133/nsonline.org.uk/node/97131 The whole resource (512 pages) can be downloaded as a pdf File:Pedagogy and Practice DfES.pdf
- The resource booklets, and many 'harvested' documents are available to download, generally in editable formats from the ORBIT resources, see Category:DfE.
- The videos from the accompanying DVDs are available: Video/Pedpack1 and Video/Pedpack2