Title: Realising and measuring pupil gains and middleclassableness Alastair Wilson
1Realising and measuring pupil gains and
middleclassableness? Alastair Wilson Donald
Gillies University of Strathclyde
2LONDON (Reuters) - A student who scribbled an
expletive on an English language exam paper was
awarded 7.5 percent for accurate spelling and
effective communication, The Times newspaper
reported on Monday.The pupil, who wrote "f---
off" after being asked in an English exam to
"describe the room you are sitting in", got 2
marks out of 27 and would have got more if he had
added some punctuation, chief examiner Peter
Buckroyd told The Times."It does show some very
basic skills we are looking for -- like conveying
some meaning and some spelling," said Buckroyd,
who works for the Assessment and Qualifications
Alliance examinations board. "It shows some
nominal skills but no relevance to the
task"."If it had had an exclamation mark it
would have got a little bit more because it would
have been showing a little bit of
skill".According to The Times, to gain minimum
marks in English GSCE papers -- an exam taken by
hundreds of thousands of 16-year-olds across
England every year -- pupils must demonstrate
"some simple sequencing of ideas" and an ability
to put "some words in appropriate
order".(Reporting by Kate Kelland. Editing by
Keith Weir)
3AERS Learners Learning and Teaching (LLT) Network
- Applied Educational Research Scheme (AERS)
five year (2004-2008) research programme
consortium involving Universities of Edinburgh,
Stirling Strathclyde with four research
networks - Learners, Learning and Teaching Network Project
3 Pupil engagement in learning (2004-2008)
4AERS Learners Learning and Teaching (LLT) Network
- Outline LLT3 project research
- Provide example of small constituent project
- Pose issues from this research for discussion of
pupil gains
5Engagement in learning - school based project -
Key research questions
- What is the social context within which the
school is operating? - In what ways does the school interface with this
context? - What is the impact of this context on teaching
and learning?
6Engagement in learning - school based project
- Ongoing 2 yr plus school based research
- Large secondary school in area of socio-economic
disadvantage - Researcher time allocated and teacher-researcher
position, range of mutually beneficial work - Research focus from macro-meso -neighbourhood,
school culture, classroom experience.
7School stats
TABLE 2 Brookhaven school data
8Socio-economic factors
- Reality of statistics Local area/neighbourhood
health stats, free school meals etc. - Health survey 60 of children S1-S4 experienced
death of someone close to them - Lived experience of pupils as carers, working
parents/shift work - Aspirations S4 interview data - hairdresser,
secretary logical in circumstances? - Lure of immediate increase in family income?
9Brookhaven neighbourhood statistics
- Brookhaven
Local council National - Income/employment deprived 34
22 13 - Children in workless households 50
- 18 - Male life expectancy
65.3 - 73.5 - Female life expectancy
74.4 - 79.0 - Hospital /alcohol per 100,000 1899
1240 723 - Hospital /drugs per 100,000 518
295 127 - Low birthweight per 1000
78 37 25 - Houses owner occupied 24
49 63 - Adults without qualifications
57 - 33 - Single parent households
35 - 38 - Minority ethnic
4 - 3.2
10Aspects of school response
- Broad school response to current policy
- Focus on specific pupils and nurture their
academic achievement - Largely successful? Small numbers careers
interviews links to FE - Engaging pupils meeting pupil cultures, footba,
outdoor activities S1,library hours - Learning to Learn making explicit aspects of
learning, unnecessary in other schools?
11Summarising LLT3 work
- Effectively an action research project focused on
pupil engagement in learning - Variety of means of engaging with school/pupils
- Developing VLE for the school, examining teacher
learning in Learning to Learn project, film
making etc - Ongoing allows research to develop in way
informed by school example PhD studentships
12Case study increasing poupil engagement in
learning - AERS Virtual Environment
13Virtual environments and pupil engagement in
learning
- School initially experimented with a virtual
environment as a means of supporting an S4/S5
modern studies class - Pupil access to notes, resources and support
- Attraction to school of enabling pupils to have
easy access to their coursework, resources and
assignments - Interest in pupils being able to help each other
in their learning - Access to discussion with other pupils and
teachers outside school hours - Virtual space then expanded to include all those
pupils in S4-S6
14Teacher response to the virtual space
- Some teachers found the virtual space a valuable
addition to their teaching and an extremely
useful way of managing resources and interacting
with pupils - Others, less familiar with the technology, had
difficulty in understanding ways in which the
environment could be useful to them - Technology challenging for some in terms of
logging in and uploading files - Support weak - researcher development time limited
15Barriers to use of virtual space
- Only small amount of practical support and
training available - Restrictions on time teachers could devote
frustrated their attempts to get to grips with
the technology - Initial barriers such as unfamiliar login
procedures, or knowing how to add files halted
their (and their pupils) use of the environment
16Pupil use of the virtual environment
- Pupil use of the VRE grew steadily from the
outset realised usefulness of having all their
work safely collated in one place and easily
accessible from home - It helps you be more independent and kinda
thing. If youre off then you dont go to the
teacher and ask him and be dependent on him, you
actually do everything yourself kinda thing - Only teacher had access to a networked computer,
pupils then had little opportunity to access
their personal work and other resources during
class time
17Incorporating into classroom
- By the time you get it up and the time you get
logged onto a laptop your periods over. As a
classroom resource, were a long way, you know,
away from that. I think as a school we need to
address our lack of ICT provision for our pupils.
Unless we start giving pupils a laptop, which if
were expecting the kids to do things like this,
and were expecting them to work hard and do 5
Highers, then I think they should look at some
way of providing this for them.
18Developing the use of virtual spaces
- What we did was to present teachers with a
variety of tools - This approach confined new ICT to a supportive
role in existing pedagogy rather than one that
facilitated new approaches - Need for teachers to be involved closely with the
development of the technology.
19Developing the use of virtual spaces
- Pupils interested but did not meet with young
peoples experience of ICT. - Anticipation of teacher contact out of
class/school hours. - Virtual environments for pupils need to be
constructed in ways which encourage and nurture
their active participation rather than passive
observation.
20A future for virtual environments?
- Our research/development experience is positive
BUT - Teachers will need time and support to discover
the ways in which virtual environments may
effectively support their teaching - Teacher use of virtual environments needs to be
recognized as a legitimate, alternative, and
effective way of engaging in collaborative
working and teaching.
21School VLE concluding points
- Example of school VLE - teacher innovation
problematic - Collaborative ventures with academia
underdeveloped - Accessible knowledge? Access to academic research
literature problematic - Time to innovate restricted contrast to other
schools?
22Wider concluding points
- Appears a dynamic and progressive school HMIE
no areas of school life weak or
unsatisfactory. - Considerable effort of school (in comparison) to
manage pupil support, needs - This effort largely unfunded
- Innovation is difficult both to nurture and
resource (S1 outdoor activities weekend
suspended) - Despite getting on with it reality of social
economic circumstances overshadows school - Considerable challenge to pupils
23Questions
- How will discourse of pupil gains further impact
on the school? - Increased teacher accountability, performativity
and a threat to innovation? - Are pupils going to be increasingly required to
be middleclassable?