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Making Good Progress in KS3 English

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In what ways do we track for progression across the subject? ... which teachers believed led to inappropriate informality in their writing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Making Good Progress in KS3 English


1
Making Good Progressin KS3 English
2
Focusing on progression
  • Key questions
  • In what ways do we track for progression across
    the subject?
  • How is this information used to identify those
    pupils who are making slow progress?
  • Which individual pupils and specific groups of
    pupils are currently identified through our
    tracking?
  • What actions are we taking to support these
    pupils?

3
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4
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5
School Pupil Progression Chart
  • Paste from RAISEonline English
  • Instruction on adding pupil progression charts
    from RAISEonline
  • Once you have logged onto RAISEonline and found
    the Pupil Progression chart you want in your
    presentation, you need to
  • On the select a format drop down menu, choose
    Acrobat (PDF) file
  • Click on Export
  • Click on Open
  • Once you have the PDF open, click on tools,
    select Select Zoom and click on Snapshot
    tool.
  • Using the cursor select the area you want to copy
    to your presentation.
  • When you let go of the left click on your mouse
    it should say Selected area has been copied
    Click ok.
  • Go to the power point slide, right-click on mouse
    and select paste.
  • You can adjust the chart size using the circles
    in each corner of the image

6
Discussion (1)
  • Consider the national pupil progression charts
    for Key
  • Stage 3 English and the schools own charts
  • How do the schools charts compare to the
    national ones?
  • Who are the pupils in your teaching groups who
    are potentially slow moving, stuck or
    falling behind?
  • What are some of the reasons for these pupils
    making slow progress in English?

7
Investigating progress in English at Key Stage 3
(1)
  • The findings presented on subsequent slides arise
    from three separate investigations focusing on
    slow movers in English, identified in terms of
    conversion from Level 3 at KS2 to Level 5 at KS3,
    from Level 4 at KS2 to Level 5 at KS3 and from
    Level 5 at KS2 to Level 7 at KS3
  • The schools involved in the investigations were
    selected on the basis of their KS2 to KS3
    conversion rates
  • A relatively small sample of 56 schools was chosen

8
Investigating progress in English at Key Stage 3
(2)
  • The investigations included
  • Focused discussions with approximately 360 pupils
    in Year 8 and Year 9
  • Discussions with headteachers/ senior leaders,
    subject leaders teachers
  • The findings have been cross-checked with
    evidence obtained by Ofsted, the National
    Strategies and the Training and Development
    Agency (TDA) and appropriate actions agreed with
    these partners

9
Pen portrait of the pupils struggling to progress
from Level 3 to Level 5
  • Could be slow to settle in lessons and
    occasionally engaged in low level disruption
  • Admitted that they sometimes chose when to work
    and their engagement in a lesson could depend on
    their mood
  • Struggled with personal organisation, tending to
    lose work, books and folders which teachers
    sometimes saw as avoidance tactics
  • Did not respond well to tests or to working under
    timed conditions
  • Preferred learning that was visual, practical and
    active and they could respond creatively and
    imaginatively to work of this nature
  • Preferred short focused activities and found it
    helpful when their work was broken into chunks
  • Appreciated an element of fun in their learning,
    such as word games
  • Lacked the confidence and the strategies to work
    independently, avoided risks and tended to be
    reliant on small group or one-to one adult
    support
  • Knew they were struggling in English, but seemed
    to accept that they were working below the level
    of many of their peers

10
Pen portrait of the pupils struggling to progress
from Level 4 to Level 5
  • Were easily distracted and disorganised
  • Would have liked some targeted support although
    they didnt always know what aspects of their
    work they needed help with
  • Wanted to work independently but lacked the self
    help strategies to do so effectively
  • Gave up easily, often leaving work unfinished
  • Were engaged and applied themselves to their work
    when they found it interesting otherwise they
    failed to see the point, describing it as
    boring
  • Felt deeply frustrated at their limitations in
    reading and writing and did not consider
    themselves to be good at English, despite having
    attained Level 4 at the end of Key Stage 2

11
Pen portrait of the pupils struggling to progress
from Level 5 to Level 7
  • Had clear opinions about what they liked and
    disliked in English
  • Were generally well motivated although several
    admitted to leaving their homework to the last
    minute
  • Were imaginative and a number of them used their
    ideas to write at home for pleasure
  • Liked choice and independence and preferred the
    freedom to write without constraint
  • Wanted to know the broader relevance of the work
    they did in class and felt that preparation for
    an examination was not a sufficient reason
  • Mostly knew that they had attained Level 5 at Key
    Stage 2 and many were aware that this represented
    high attainment
  • Were, in a minority of cases, negatively
    influenced by peer pressure and did not wish to
    be identified as able
  • Felt unnoticed and were conscious that much
    support in the school targeted the less able and
    the gifted and talented

12
Discussion (2)
  • Do you have pupils in your teaching groups who
    fit these profiles?
  • Which of the characteristics most closely match
    those of the pupils in your groups who are
    potentially slow moving, stuck or falling
    behind?

13
Obstacles to progress for all slow moving pupils
starting at Levels 3, 4 5
  • Typically, pupils
  • Were unsure of their strengths and weaknesses in
    reading, writing or speaking and listening
  • Made little use of teacher feedback
  • Were often unclear about how to progress from one
    level to the next

14
Obstacles hindering progression from Level 3 to
Level 5 in English
  • Typically, pupils
  • Were self conscious about reading aloud in front
    of their peers, as they sometimes stumbled over
    unfamiliar words
  • Enjoyed lightweight fiction and magazines which
    teachers believed led to inappropriate
    informality in their writing
  • Lacked a feel for the overall shape of a
    sentence, often losing track of the ending part
    way through
  • Had difficulty clustering and developing their
    ideas within a paragraph
  • Saw writing as a means of personal expression,
    but lacked the sense of writing for a wider
    readership.
  • Displayed good oral skills but their talk often
    lacked formality and a wider awareness of
    audience
  • Made good gains during interventions sessions but
    didnt readily transfer their learning to English
    lessons or to other lessons across the
    curriculum.

15
Obstacles hindering progression from Level 4 to
Level 5 in English
  • Typically, pupils
  • Did not regard themselves as readers although
    many of them had enjoyed a particular book or
    series of books by a favourite writer
  • Regarded their own personal reading as less valid
    than the texts they read in class
  • Saw punctuation as a chore or an afterthought and
    had little understanding of using punctuation to
    shape meaning.
  • Regarded planning as a waste of time, often
    resented having to do it and tended to focus on
    content rather than structure
  • Regarded speaking and listening as skills to be
    used rather than skills to be improved
  • Welcomed the opportunity to work in small groups,
    although for the most part, were expected to work
    on their own.
  • Would have liked some targeted intervention in
    Years 7 and 8

16
Obstacles hindering progression from Level 5 to
Level 7 in English
  • Typically, pupils
  • Had limited opportunities to build on their
    achievement from the previous key stage
  • Were unclear about the progress they were making
    from Level 5 to Level 7
  • Read independently, for the most part, but not
    always at an appropriate level of challenge
  • Felt frustrated at having to follow at the pace
    of other, slower readers in their class
  • Were able speakers and listeners and would have
    benefited from some more challenging
    opportunities to use these skills in lessons
  • Lacked confidence when evaluating their own work

17
Discussion (3)
  • Which of the descriptions and obstacles to
    progress are most pertinent to the pupils you
    teach?

18
What all slow moving pupils starting at Levels
3, 4 5 in English need
  • Clear and agreed success criteria before tasks
    are set as well as after
  • SMART targets precise targets that help clarify
    what they need to learn next and constructive
    feedback that motivates them to succeed
  • A raised profile of target setting ensuring
    that there are planned opportunities to have a
    dialogue with teachers about targets
  • Planned opportunities in the scheme of work to
    reflect on teacher marking/comments
  • Response time and a range of response
    opportunities, e.g. turning teacher marking into
    a question necessitating a written response
  • Support such as guided work for pupils with the
    same or similar targets
  • Attention to the target-getting process by
    ensuring that they know how to meet their targets
  • A clear expectation that the majority will make
    two levels of progress

19
Actions to support progression from Level 3 to
Level 5 in English
  • Pupils need
  • Opportunities to develop and apply a range of
    reading strategies in small group and whole class
    situations
  • Participation in schemes that support and
    encourage them to read more texts independently
  • Good models of appropriate texts in a range of
    genres on which to model their own writing
  • An increased focus on sentence level work,
    including oral rehearsal of sentences and
    re-reading during writing
  • Support to enable them to cluster and develop
    their ideas within a paragraph
  • Rewards for writing well including opportunities
    to receive responses from readers of their work
    other than the teacher
  • Explicit teaching to enable them to talk and
    write effectively for more formal audiences and
    purposes
  • Sustained support to secure and maintain the
    gains made though intervention programmes

20
Actions to support progression from Level 4 to
Level 5 in English
  • Pupils need
  • Guidance on making independent choices of texts
    and a willingness to take risks in selection
  • Opportunities to discuss their reading habits and
    reading diet
  • Opportunities to explore a writers structural
    and linguistic choices in a range of fiction and
    non-fiction texts
  • Modelling by the teacher which demonstrates the
    link between punctuation, meaning and effect on
    the reader
  • Teacher modelling, through shared and guided
    writing, of a range of planning strategies and
    formats
  • Explicit modelling of the conventions of speaking
    and listening
  • More opportunities to share ideas in small groups
  • Clarity about their strengths and areas for
    improvement, particularly if there is a
    difference in their levels for reading and writing

21
Actions to support progression from Level 5 to
Level 7 in English
  • Pupils need
  • Curricular targets which focus clearly on
    progression to Level 7
  • Clarity about their strengths and areas for
    improvement, particularly if there is a
    difference in their levels for reading and
    writing
  • Guided reading and writing which focuses on
    breaking down the barriers to Level 7 attainment
  • Support to develop wider reading of more
    challenging texts, both in class as well as
    independently
  • Classroom practice that encourages rather than
    frustrates their ability to read faster and write
    with greater independence and originality
  • Opportunities to adopt more challenging roles in
    structured speaking and listening activities
  • Confidence to assess their own work and evaluate
    their strengths and areas for improvement

22
Discussion (4)
  • Next steps
  • What do you think are the key issues arising from
    this session for the department?
  • What should be the departmental priorities to
    meet these pupils needs?
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