I intended this blog to be about sentences, yet, as with
teaching, you start with one thing and then suddenly you go off at a tangent
and end the lesson on something totally different. So, data. Yes, it has become
very important in the day-to-day teaching of lessons. Thanks to the new demigod,
Progress, we all sacrifice time, sanity and our waistlines in the hope of
achieving a pardon from being sacrificed on the altar of Gove. All hail, Progress.
Progress. Progress.
Since stepping in for the Head of English, data has become
my new best friend. It has become my Joey from ‘Friends’: a loveable thing that
makes me cry and laugh within thirty minutes. Before, I have always skirted around
it. Years ago I produced spreadsheets of numbers and messed around with
colouring boxes, but achieved very little. I have shown students in the past the
infamous spreadsheets and they have humoured me and pointed out how they liked the
nice colours. I responded by telling them off for using the word ‘nice’ and
then promptly agreed that the colours were nice. Sadly, the only progress it
produced was between parts of a lesson. Nonetheless, data now has helped me work
out what I need to do and how I need to do it.
I think the issue with English and data is often they represent
two parts of my brain: the creative and the mathematical. Often, I struggle with
a student if they love Maths, because they often find aspects of English
difficult because there are no clear answers in English or no clear formula. So
too, probably, the Maths departments across the land struggle with a student
that loves drama. There’s never enough feelings in algebra. Let’s role-play x in this equation guys. Furthermore, I
have sat there in the past listening to numbers being spouted out in a meeting
and ended up day-dreaming about windy
moors and fields of daffodils. Only to be awoken by the mention of something with
a whiff of English about it. But, now I am kind of obsessed with numbers. How
many people are doing this? How many people need to be doing that? In fact, a lot of people
have written lots of nice (sorry: interesting, good or thought-provoking) blogs
about redeveloping the curriculum and what they feel needs to be included in a
new curriculum. I tend to be a bit slap-dash with all that stuff, so here’s my
overview for KS3.
Year 7: Dickens /
Ibsen / Chaucer
Year 8: Dickens / Brecht / Tennyson
Year 9: Dickens / Strindberg / Marvell
I am only joking, but my thoughts of the curriculum have side-stepped
this focus on content. It has even side-stepped some of the focus on skills. I
have, surprisingly given the title of the blog, focused on data and
specifically on several questions:
What data do we need?
Why do we need the data?
How will we make the data reliable (or in trendy speak ‘robust’)?
I have worked in several English departments and they all do
the same thing: students study one topic at a time and then at the end of the
unit the students complete an assessment. Occasionally, students might have an
end of year assessment, or in the ‘APP-mad days’ an APP test every so often,
but this pattern is often repeated. This
formula is used no doubt in most schools. The students do the work and then
they get assessed on it. It is quite a sensible formula and that is why it is
so common and used by most schools. It works for what people have been doing in
the past. My problem, however, is that it can create a false picture of some of
their skills and some of their abilities. English teaching is cumulative. Like
a ball of fluff, students rolls through things and pick little bits as they go
along. At the end of it, the teacher assesses a piece of writing to see what
fluff they have picked up along the way. It becomes hard to separate independent
thought from thoughts that have clearly been lifted from another source. English
assessments then become a case of remembering all the clever things the teacher
said rather than a case of engaging and thinking about text or topic.
Recently with a very bright class, I asked them to write a
small essay based on ‘The Woman in Black’.
The question I gave them was this:
How does Susan Hill create tension in the opening few pages
of the second chapter?'
Their responses were typical of what I often see: a lack of
independence. They remembered some clever things I said about the previous
chapter and moulded them to fit the chapter. Rather than think about how Hill
used description, they spoke endlessly about what they had spotted in the previous
chapter. Now, you might say: they probably were not secure with their analysis and
terminology. Believe me: they could spot a piece of assonance blindfolded while
submerged in vat of Fanta. They find it far easier to recall and adapt instead
of think and question.
Therefore, I have adapted the assessment cycle for our KS3
Term
1 Class
assessment
2 Blind
assessments
3 Class
assessment
4 Blind
assessments
5 Class
assessment
6 Blind
assessments
We are using blind assessments. An assessment where the student
cannot prepare or revise beforehand. Or, the teacher crams them with the answers.
Only I will know the tasks. The tasks will take the form of a writing task and
a question based on an extract. We are building into our curriculum assessments
that demonstrate what students can do on their own. Class assessments, if we
are honest, are a mixture of a student’s ideas, the other students’ ideas, the
teacher’s ideas and the ideas of a model essay you showed the class. Taking
away these factors, will give teachers a clear idea of what a student can and
can’t do. Good teaching is about modelling, but maybe we are doing too much
modelling. Maybe we need to push the bird out of the nest to see if it can fly
or not.
The class assessments remain, but they run alongside the
blind assessments, so that we can see how reliable both sets of assessments
are. The class assessments are vital
because they help students to form, develop and extend ideas and they help them
with the important skill of drafting and redrafting work. However, the blind
assessments help students to work independently and work in exam conditions. Often we see students struggle to write in
exams and that is often due to the fact that they have always relied on a class
of thirty people to provide some ideas for them in their writing.
But, how do you make it reliable? Well, the blind
assessments are going to be blind in more than one way. The sets are going to
be broken up for the assessments. A teacher will invigilate and mark a group
that are made from the rest of the sets, but not their own class. Therefore,
the process will hopefully be objective and transparent. It will mean that two
people will mark the same student’s work every other term. There will be consistency
in the marking or, if not, it can be addressed. The results will be used to restructure the
sets and students will move as a result of the blind assessments.
Back to my original questions:
What data do we need?
Why do we need the data?
How will we make the data reliable (or in trendy speak ‘robust’)?
For me, we need the data to work out the areas to focus on.
We need to see where improvements have to be made. The data is to help us be
precise in our teaching. If the reading is where students struggle, then we
should be targeting the reading. The data tells us a story. So maybe after all English
and Mathematics go hand in hand. The numbers tell us a story, but the English
teachers work out how to end that story. A renewed focus on reliability will help
us to see if it is a believable story and not one where people comeback from
the dead and appear in the shower in the next season.
All hail, Progress!
Thanks for reading,
Xris