Wednesday, 24 February 2016

DfE: Five things you need to know about changes to primary assessment...


A message to schools from the DfE:

1. Setting a higher bar

We want to see all children leaving primary school with a good standard of reading, writing and maths. Previous expectations for children were too low. The new assessment and accountability system - which marks the end of key stages - has been designed to reflect a new, more challenging national curriculum which sets high expectations for every child, setting them up to succeed at secondary school and beyond. These changes were first announced in March 2014, and since then the Department for Education and STA have provided schools with further information on the changes to help them adapt their approach and assessment arrangements - this includes sample questions published in summer 2014, and complete sample tests published in summer 2015.

We should not downplay the scale of these changes because they have been vital to raising standards - but the content or structure of the tests was made very clear last year and will not be changed again, so to suggest the system is in chaos, or to threaten to boycott these tests, is to undermine these important reforms.

2. Preparing for the new tests

The best way to prepare pupils remains to focus on teaching the new national curriculum.

In July 2015, we published guidance on scaled scores which made clear that we would not be setting standards on the new tests until pupils have taken them and the tests have been marked. As this is the first cohort to have reached the end of the key stage it wouldn’t be fair or accurate to set the new scale using data from pupils that had studied the old national curriculum.

However, this does not - and should not - affect schools’ ability to prepare for the test, because each child should be pushed to reach their full potential regardless of where the final standard is set.

3. Getting it right


The frameworks for teacher assessment this year are interim - but it’s disingenuous to suggest this is because we don’t know what we’re doing.

Significant reforms such as these take time to get right and for the system to catch up. We were clear in our response to the consultation on teacher assessment arrangements in February 2015 that we wanted to listen to the views of teachers in order to redesign the arrangements which meant they were published later than we had initially hoped. It is for that reason that the teacher assessment frameworks for this year are only an interim solution and we will be evaluating options for future years.

However, we recognise the unique situation this year with teachers working with a new framework, to new standards. That’s why we’ve listened to the sector, and, following constructive dialogue with NAHT, we have agreed to move back the date for submitting teacher assessment judgements in line with last year.

4. Teachers won’t have to fill out 6,120 check boxes

If anything is likely to cause chaos, it is unhelpful scaremongering and false claims from certain corners. For example, in a recent article in TES, Mary Bousted suggested teachers would have to undertake over 6,120 assessments for a class of 30 pupils.

The Standards and Testing Agency provides exemplification materials as a guide for the types of evidence that teachers may submit to support teacher assessment judgements at the end of key stage 1 and 2. The exemplification materials are intended to help schools interpret the interim frameworks if required - in fact the tick sheets were included in response to requests from teacher panels to help them cross-reference the materials with the particular ‘pupil can’ statements.

However, we trust teachers, and if they are confident in making judgements against the simple ‘pupil can’ statements in the interim frameworks, they may not need to refer to the exemplification materials. The exemplification should not be seen as a restrictive template on how these judgements should be made and certainly does not require teachers to make checklists of several hundred judgements as has been wrongly claimed.

It should go without saying that good teaching is the key to raising standards, not box-ticking.

5. A new floor standard which sets high expectations for all

We want to see every child reach their full potential, no matter what their starting point. As we announced in March 2014, from 2016 primary schools will be held to account for both the progress and attainment of their pupils. This is to allow better recognition of schools doing well with a challenging intake, and to challenge those with a high-attaining intake that are not doing enough to stretch the most able.

These reforms include:
  • new headline attainment and progress performance measures
  • a new floor standard

Schools will be above the floor standard if 65% or more of their pupils reach the expected standard in all of reading, writing and maths or if the school has a sufficient progress score in all 3 subjects. As this is the first year of new accountability measures and new assessments, we will wait until tests have been taken to set minimum expectations for a school’s progress scores.

Monday, 15 February 2016

UK Space Education Office

The UK Space Education Office has some super links and resources for schools to enhance their teaching of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) using space as the context. We are planning our own Science week and hope to use astronaut Tim Peake's mission to the international space station as an inspiration to pupils. The link is on the right of this page and here.

Friday, 12 February 2016

Writing Exemplification Materials 2016...


The exemplification materials for writing have been released by the DfE to schools for KS1 and 2. The documents are a suite of materials that exemplify the national standards for writing Teacher Assessments. The full suite including the interim TA framework, pupil scripts and annotated versions is available at:
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/2016-teacher-assessment-exemplification-ks1-english-writing
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/2016-teacher-assessment-exemplification-ks2-english-writing

Each collection exemplifies one pupil’s writing that meets the requirements for all of the statements within the interim TA framework for one of the following standards:
• working towards the expected standard
• working at the expected standard
• working at greater depth within the expected standard.

To meet a particular standard within the interim TA framework, a pupil must demonstrate attainment of all of the statements within that standard and all the statements in the preceding standard(s) as follows:

Working towards the expected standard:
The pupil can write for a range of purposes and audiences:
• using paragraphs to organise ideas
• describing settings and characters • using some cohesive devices* within and across sentences and paragraphs
• using different verb forms mostly accurately
• using co-ordinating and subordinating conjunctions
• using capital letters, full stops, question marks, exclamation marks, commas for lists and apostrophes for contraction mostly correctly
• spelling most words correctly* (years 3 and 4)
• spelling some words correctly* (years 5 and 6)
• producing legible joined handwriting.

Working at the expected standard
The pupil can write for a range of purposes and audiences (including writing a short story):
• creating atmosphere, and integrating dialogue to convey character and advance the action
• selecting vocabulary and grammatical structures that reflect the level of formality required mostly correctly
• using a range of cohesive devices*, including adverbials, within and across sentences and paragraphs
• using passive and modal verbs mostly appropriately
• using a wide range of clause structures, sometimes varying their position within the sentence
• using adverbs, preposition phrases and expanded noun phrases effectively to add detail, qualification and precision
• using inverted commas, commas for clarity, and punctuation for parenthesis mostly correctly, and making some correct use of semi-colons, dashes, colons and hyphens
• spelling most words correctly* (years 5 and 6)
• maintaining legibility, fluency and speed in handwriting through choosing whether or not to join specific letters.

Working at greater depth within the expected standard
The pupil can write for a range of purposes and audiences:
• managing shifts between levels of formality through selecting vocabulary precisely and by manipulating grammatical structures
• selecting verb forms for meaning and effect
• using the full range of punctuation taught at key stage 2, including colons and semi-colons to mark the boundary between independent clauses, mostly correctly.
[No additional requirements for spelling or handwriting.]

Thursday, 11 February 2016

Safer Internet Resources for Schools


Link to a new resource on the right from Hampshire & IOW Police. For more information follow the link here.

"The 'Safe4me' Education Resource Programme is a free resource available to schools, colleges and partners in Hampshire & IOW as part of Hampshire Constabulary's on-going committment to working in partnership with education and agencies to safeguard children and young people.

The programme has been carefully developed in partnership with teachers, experts, with guidance from The National PSHE Association to support schools to deliver education related specifically to law, consequences and choices by providing credible resources which align with common topics explored within current PSHE, PDL, SMSC, SRE and Citizenship curriculum and other intervention models.

The overall aim of the resource is to support teachers and professionals to help young people develop a basic level of knowledge and understanding to enable them to be risk aware, make healthy informed choices and stay safe."

Tuesday, 9 February 2016

Working at the expected standard in Maths...


The DfE have begun to release the exemplification materials for the end of KS2. The first document we have eyes on is Maths. For the whole document head here. Pupils are being judged at the expected standard if they can demonstrate the following standards:

The pupil can demonstrate an understanding of place value, including large numbers and decimals (e.g. what is the value of the ‘7’ in 276,541?; find the difference between the largest and smallest whole numbers that can be made from using three digits; 8.09 = 8 + 9/?; 28.13 = 28 + ? + 0.03).

The pupil can calculate mentally, using efficient strategies such as manipulating
expressions using commutative and distributive properties to simplify the calculation
(e.g. 53 – 82 + 47 = 53 + 47 – 82 = 100 – 82 = 18; 20 × 7 × 5 = 20 × 5 × 7 = 100 × 7 = 700; 53 ÷ 7 + 3 ÷ 7 = (53 +3) ÷ 7 = 56 ÷ 7 = 8).

The pupil can use formal methods to solve multi-step problems (e.g. find the change from £20 for three items that cost £1.24, £7.92 and £2.55; a roll of material is 6m long: how much is left when 5 pieces of 1.15m are cut from the roll?; a bottle of drink is 1.5 litres, how many cups of 175ml can be filled from the bottle, and how much drink is left?).

The pupil can recognise the relationship between fractions, decimals and percentages and can express them as equivalent quantities (e.g. one piece of cake that has been cut into 5 equal slices can be expressed as 1/5 or 0.2 or 20% of the whole cake).

The pupil can calculate using fractions, decimals or percentages (e.g. knowing that 7
divided by 21 is the same as 7/21 and that this is equal to 1/3; 15% of 60; 11/2 + 3/4; 7/9 of 108; 0.8 x 70).

The pupil can substitute values into a simple formula to solve problems
(e.g. perimeter of a rectangle or area of a triangle).

The pupil can calculate with measures (e.g. calculate length of a bus journey given
start and end times; convert 0.05km into m and then into cm).

The pupil can use mathematical reasoning to find missing angles (e.g. the missing
angle in an isosceles triangle when one of the angles is given; the missing angle in a
more complex diagram using knowledge about angles at a point and vertically
opposite angles).



Monday, 8 February 2016

NCETM Assessment Materials


National Centre for Excellence in the Teaching of Mathematics is an excellent resource for teachers. While 'mastery' may mean many different things to many different people, members of NCETM are certainly doing some great thinking when it comes to improving Maths teaching. We've begun to dip into their assessment materials (available here) which might seem a little daunting at first but are a bank of really good activities and questions that are indicators of what children really understand about their learning in Maths. Remember to read the first page!


Friday, 5 February 2016

Collaborative Learning Project


An excellent resource for teachers and those interested in talk for learning activities. We've begun to use some of the resources here and would recommend them to others. The link is here and on the right!

"We have been in London since 1983 and on the net since there was a net. Teachers from 80% of the world's countries download our activities, but there are still schools within cycling distance that have not heard about us!
So if you like what we offer and want to support us, please tell others about our network!
That is the best way you can enlarge our network."

Wednesday, 3 February 2016

What does 'met' look like...?





The question in schools around the expectations at the end of Key Stage 2 continues... the interim framework has become our 'go to' document and we await the new exemplification materials due to be released shortly with baited breath...! The bigger picture has to be how we give pupils opportunities and gather evidence that they can show they've 'met' it...
  • A natural feel - regardless of topics - fluently using skills and concepts which aren't forced upon
  • Their skills are applied in many different areas of learning across the breadth of the curriculum
  • Evidence of their independence and choice away from the point of teaching
  • Evidence of their practice and process work which is important along with careful questioning and reflection with and by the pupil about their learning
  • Time is spent in developing their ideas and discussing experiences so they are articulating their learning in a variety of ways

Monday, 1 February 2016

The Role of the Pupil...


A key thought around our new curriculum is the role of the pupil. We led an assembly for our pupils on making learning look effortless recently which emphasised the need for 'grit' - the stuff that makes you stick at things when the going gets tough and stops you giving up - the grit that makes you flow to do the things you aspire to do. For more details head here! Consequently, the new curriculum is tough on learners - it's a tough love curriculum or TLC! An interesting idea recently espoused at a Southampton conference which we are pinching... our pupils need to be:

  • Taking greater responsibility
  • Developing the language to communicate learning - being articulate
  • Identifying and discussing their own next steps
  • Working collaboratively
  • Questioning
  • Growing their mindset!