Sunday, 22 May 2022

Course correction in curriculums - iceberg ahead, Captain!

 There seems to be a lot of chat about curriculum content and very discussion about the impact of a curriculum on students. We seem to be obsessed with the what more than the how. Look at my lovely scheme of work. It contains ‘Waiting for Godot’. Those Year 7s will love it and I think it really fits in with our overarching theme of growing up in Year 7.  Plus, it bleeds into Year 8s theme around the futility of life, and Year 9s theme of waiting for the inevitable. 


As a subject lead, I feel that the big ingredient missing from a lot of these discussions on curriculum is the students. Now, I don’t mean ‘what about the ‘likkle’ children, bless their hearts’, but I mean ‘what is unique about your Year 7s?’. A curriculum should be a wibbly wobbly thing. I think the curriculum changes depending on the needs of the year group, yet I don’t see much discussion on that. In truth, we don’t specify what the problems are with year groups. We don’t work on a collective picture of a year group. The only picture we have of year groups is the one about behaviour. The tough Year 8s nobody wants to teach period 5 on Friday. The really quiet Year 7s that don’t speak at all even when they are told what to say. A year group identity is rarely a thing of discussion. 


The problem with teaching is most things are linked to feelings, opinions and anecdotes. Put a group of teachers in a classroom and they can endlessly moan about how Year 7s don’t use up all the available space on a page. We are good and endlessly talking about the problems, yet that discussion is rarely turned into something that a department can act on. It becomes ‘letting off steam’ or ‘venting’ and, largely, a wasted opportunity. What happens instead, is that teachers go away and attempt to deal with the problems individually. Not collectively. 


And, that is largely the problem with our curriculums - they are collectively made, but individually administered, individually adapted, individually received and individually learnt. We need departments and schools to work collectively and not individually on addressing issues. You can see this in how we use pronouns. We talk about ‘my’ class and ‘my students’ but we rarely go ‘our’ classes or ‘our’ Year 7s. The notion of collective responsibility is important when dealing with curriculums. It should be the driving force in a department. Working together and solving together - that’s my unwritten rule as a head of department. I don’t have the answers and meetings are often us working to solve problems. The trick is to know what those problems are. That means collectively you need to know what the year group looks like. 


What is the year group's subject identity? 


Do you, or your departments,  know what your Year 7s can and cannot do? 


  • What is that year group’s identity? 

  • What are their strengths? 

  • What are their weaknesses? 

  • What lack of knowledge is holding them back? 

  • What about their approach is holding them back? 

  • What would make them better?  


It is interesting that this kind of thinking only happens in Year 10 and 11, but it should be a common part of what we do. The whole year group is identity. For my department, this is how it looks at the moment on a macro level. Of course, it is constantly changing and evolving, because things change all the time. 


We also do this on a fairly micro level by looking at tests. 


We have regular tests on spelling, vocabulary, core knowledge, topic knowledge (sticky), unseen reading and writing. From those tests, we identify the average percentage score. This is a really handy piece of information from an English point of view as the subject is largely subjective and this allows us to have a piece of data we can use with students. Where are they in relation to the average score? We share the student’s score and the year average with parents so that they can see where the student needs to focus their efforts on or how they are doing in relation with others. 


The micro data also gives us a picture of what we need to address in the curriculums. You can see that core knowledge is relatively low and the reading needs addressing. That informs them feeds into our curriculum. We need to build in more opportunities to address core knowledge and we need to address reading skills. 


The picture is so important to the team as we now have a collective responsibility to address these things. We know the what and now we need to look at the how. 


What is the process? 


The process for adapting curriculums is important. You don’t want knee jerk reactions but also you don’t want to have to suddenly stop because there is an iceberg up ahead, which you could have spotted years ago.


Data is only a small part. For me, there’s a ‘reflect and ‘inform’ part of the process. I build in a lot of opportunities for staff to read, mark and view work across a year group. Most assessments, I ask staff to feedback their findings or we take time to discuss things. We are building that collective identity, They are our Year 7s and not their Year 7s. If we can improve the majority, then we know that there is an impact. As a curriculum leader, I listen and note down and build the picture for staff. We then review it and work on how that will inform what we do. Reflecting is a key part of meetings, but the informing stage is narrowing things down and prioritising. 



Change or improvements don’t have to be massive and big. They just need to be meaningful and effective. And, they need to be done collectively. 


The last reading assessment highlighted that students were not automatically annotating the extract when preparing for the reading questions. Collectively, we are going to model that and build it regularly into the teaching. That’s what we are going to check with the next reading task and assessment. 


There may be discussions at a department level where we decide the order of units. If there is a problem with reading, do we need to move the reading unit next so we can work on that further? The idea is that the curriculum works and models itself to fit, suit and benefit the students.


This process will continue throughout the year as we work on course correction. Long gone are the days when you teach the same thing each year in exactly the same way and in the same style. Curriculums should be reactive and proactive rather than concrete and fixed. 


And next year… 

I think the journey taken in one year should inform the next. The summer term should be an opportunity for departments to look at the order of the next year’s unit and see how it supports or hinders the specific year group. 


If you know writing is a weakness for Year 8, then your curriculum next year should reflect that in Year 9. Moving things about. Changing things. Adding things. 


Next year isn’t a fresh start and a clean slate. It should be building on and supporting improvement. That has largely been a problem with our curriculums. They are fixed on the idea that each new year is a fresh start and new beginning. Those problems in Year 7, 8 and 9 don’t magically heal themselves over the summer. They need picking up again in Term 1 and not after two terms when the teacher spots them.  


My curriculum plan is on one sheet and it is messy. It will always be messy. I’d love to have it beautiful with little pictures, but it needs to change to fit the needs of a year group. That will involve changes all the time. The more you teach a group, the more you understand. 



The Borg in Star Trek are a good model for this. They are constantly evolving and adding and adapting. They search for perfection and that means constantly changing. Yet, they do it together. The problem is that schools place all the emphasis on individual teachers to make big improvements and changes and that is neither fair or easy when you have thirty students and a busy timetable. Problems in schools are collective problems and not individual problems. If spelling is an issue in Year 7, it isn’t one teacher’s job to fix it on their own. The Department should be working on fixing it and not you with a 45 lesson timetable over two weeks. It is the Department’s job to fix it and help.


For too long teaching has placed the emphasis on the teacher to fix and solve. It is their class. It is their problem. Why is it the one teacher’s responsibility when it is a problem across the whole department? 


A problem shared is a problem halved in life. A problem shared is a problem addressed in schools. Be more Borg. Spot, reflect and fix together. Collectively. 


I am Xris; I am Borg. 





Sunday, 1 May 2022

There must be a better word - refining words

Like most people, I am in that ‘getting ready for the exam stage’ and looking at everything and anything that will help push students in the right direction. Currently, I am looking at Paper 1 Question 4 and the formation of opinions. 


A lot of students struggle on this question because simply they don’t engage with the opinion. They simply search and locate evidence for the statement. They don’t explore or even think about the statements. It is simple: search, find, write and a bit of waffle. The better students engage with the question on a cerebral level and explore ideas, but how can we get students to think, engage and explore the statement? 


Often, in English, our problem is with students being too general with their thinking, writing and reading. Teaching tends to work on getting students moving from the general to the specific. The problem is, unless the teacher is in the room, students don’t always think in specific terms. This, in exams, is damaging. Therefore, I have been working on students getting precise quickly in their writing on Q4. Instead of defaulting on ‘I agree because’ we’ve looked at a more nuanced way to be specific.  Doing something more with the opinion. Here are some of the things we’ve been doing: 


[1] I agree that Hartop is cruel but I’d say vindictive is a better word to describe how he behaves towards his family.   [ Refining with words] 

[2] Not only does the reader feel sympathy for Alice, but they feel sympathy for their whole family, especially the mother.  [Extending the opinion] 

[3] On the surface it might seem that Hartop is cruel, but I’d say he is only cruel because society forces him to behave that way.  [Opinion but] 


What this allowed us to do is engage with the subtext quickly without too much fuss. And, if I am honest, the most useful one was refining words. Because I can speak with authority on this, we spend too much time adding words rather than rewording things. We add and we list words, but we don’t refine and redefine the words that we use. As a thinking process, it is pivotal, yet we don’t really employ it in writing and reading. We tend to scroll through adjectives when describing a character, but rarely do we go -  Hang on! That word isn’t quite the right one - in writing




For literature, we can employ this thinking quite easily. 


A but B because ….



Greed is a word often associated with Scrooge, but empty is possibly a better word. Empty because … 


Power is one way to look at the poem, but a much better way of seeing it is as ‘control and the power to control people. 



For language, we can employ it when writing.


A but B because ….



Fame is what most people call it, but I’d call it attention-seeking behaviour. 


The word ‘sport’ does quite accurately describe the physical pain over a short space of time. 


Dark isn’t the word to describe the sky, but inky is better.  


Peaceful doesn’t convey the sense of the place, but perfection does.



The refining of a word helps a student to explore the idea without resorting to listing. Refining it makes students explore and develop an idea. Too much writing is listing and not enough exploring. If we are going to get students to think better, then we need structures to help support that thinking. We need students to refine their thoughts within the process of writing. How many times have we seen students rush out an essay quickly without a plan? What if students refined the word in the question? Explain how Shakespeare presents love. Love isn’t what the play is concerned about, but infatuation is. There's your thesis statement. 


We need to build a sense of questioning in the way students think - especially with the choice of words they use.


Refining words should be a common part of oracy and not just in writing.


We need it to be everywhere and so common. 


Thanks for reading, 


Xris