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Books > Social sciences > Education > Schools > Primary / junior schools
Consent in the Childhood Classroom challenges typical premises of
social and emotional learning, self-regulation, and putative
misbehavior by centering the theme of consent in the experiences of
young children and their teachers. Early childhood and elementary
teachers often face disruptions and acts of dissent from young
students, without a helpful conceptual framework for understanding
how these expressions may stem from social injustices,
developmental nuances, and problematic assumptions about the nature
of children's agency. By posing complex yet relatable questions
about the presumptions of authority, positivity, and routines in
learning environments, and drawing on classroom anecdotes along
with interviews with children and teachers, this book offers an
accessible approach to cultivating expansive relationships in the
classroom, a vision for a richer and more mutual education, and a
clearer understanding of what school means from the perspective of
the child.
1. Focuses on a popular literary form, picture books 2. Emphasizes
the uniqueness of childhood as a distinct stage of development 3.
Explains how to introduce philosophy into classrooms and provides
advice about issues related to the use of picture books
1. Focuses on a popular literary form, picture books 2. Emphasizes
the uniqueness of childhood as a distinct stage of development 3.
Explains how to introduce philosophy into classrooms and provides
advice about issues related to the use of picture books
Language teacher education is widely identified as one of the most
important areas that needs addressing in order to improve early
language instruction, yet research into teacher education for early
language teachers remains relatively sparse. This volume responds
to this gap by compiling studies with diverse methodological tenets
from a wide range of geographical and educational contexts around
the world. The volume aims to enhance understanding of early
language teacher education as well as to address the need to
prepare early language teachers and assist them in their
professional development. The chapters focus on the complexity of
teacher learning, innovations in mentoring and teacher supervision,
strategies in programme development and perceptions, and knowledge
and assessment in early language learning teacher education. The
volume offers comprehensive coverage of the field by addressing
various aspects of teacher education in different languages. The
contributions highlight examples of research into current practice
in the professional enhancement of early language learning
teachers, but with an emphasis on the implications for
practitioners.
Language teacher education is widely identified as one of the most
important areas that needs addressing in order to improve early
language instruction, yet research into teacher education for early
language teachers remains relatively sparse. This volume responds
to this gap by compiling studies with diverse methodological tenets
from a wide range of geographical and educational contexts around
the world. The volume aims to enhance understanding of early
language teacher education as well as to address the need to
prepare early language teachers and assist them in their
professional development. The chapters focus on the complexity of
teacher learning, innovations in mentoring and teacher supervision,
strategies in programme development and perceptions, and knowledge
and assessment in early language learning teacher education. The
volume offers comprehensive coverage of the field by addressing
various aspects of teacher education in different languages. The
contributions highlight examples of research into current practice
in the professional enhancement of early language learning
teachers, but with an emphasis on the implications for
practitioners.
This text draws on interviews, assignments, field notes, and
observations from a flipped writing methodology course conducted
with preservice elementary teachers in the US. In doing so, the
text powerfully illustrates the benefits of using flipped
methodologies in K-6 instruction to engage students, teachers, and
families in authentic writing practices. Engaging Teachers,
Students, and Families in K-6 Writing Instruction demonstrates the
use of flipped writing methodologies to engage preservice teachers
in literacy instruction, increase their confidence as writers, and
bolster their understanding and application of pedagogical content
knowledge. In turn, this underpins teachers' ability to teach
writing as an authentic, purpose-driven, audience-focused process.
In particular, chapters explore effective teaching strategies
including writing clinics, writing contests, and family literacy
sessions which encourage writing development within a community of
students, teachers, families, and authors. This text will be an
engaging and informative guide for educational researchers, teacher
educators, and preservice and inservice teachers looking to develop
effective flipped writing pedagogies to support educators,
students, and families.
* Explores the essential role of play-based approaches for SEND. *
Offers very practical guidance and provides detail on the physical,
cognitive and mental health benefits of play. * Considers some of
the challenges that arise in implementing play-based and
therapeutic approaches. * Gives examples of how play has been
successfully integrated into the practice of a number of special
schools. * Provides helpful photocopiable resources to help the
reader introduce therapeutic play and play-based learning in their
school.
'An honest, down-to-earth story of one school's journey towards
replacing the tyranny of teacher marking with conferencing and
feedback.' - Dame Alison Peacock, Chief Executive, Chartered
College of Teaching One day, a headteacher saw a new teacher
wheeling a suitcase out of school. 'Going anywhere nice?' he asked
her. 'Oh! No, unfortunately,' she replied with dismay. 'This is my
marking for the weekend.' Sound familiar? Determined to make a
change, Lavender Primary School in North London took on the
challenge of abolishing written marking altogether by introducing
the revolutionary approach of providing immediate verbal feedback.
The outcome? Reduced teacher workload, improved staff retention and
more effective learning for children. Backed up by educational
theory and full of practical advice, this entertaining and
informative book takes you through the highs and lows of Lavender
Primary School's journey, so you can confidently follow the same
steps to reform marking in your school. It features quick tips,
reflective questions, fact files and chapter summaries for easy
navigation. The topics covered include success criteria, effective
questioning, mindset and resilience, reward and motivation and
verbal feedback. Fast Feedback is written in an open, easy-to-read
style and includes a foreword by Matthew Kleiner-Mann, leader of
Ivy Learning Trust. It's perfect for senior leaders looking for a
new whole-school approach to marking and feedback, as well as
teachers searching for strategies to implement in their classroom.
-Offers a structured, practical guide to reflection in teacher
education and development, helping educators learn from their
teaching, learning, and classroom experiences in a systematic and
inspiring way. -Demonstrates how reflection enhances awareness of
professional growth and identity, and can help overcome inner
obstacles to further social justice and help empower diverse
student populations. -Features examples based on everyday
challenges faced by practitioners, and numerous exercises, all
backed by the latest research, offering a useful for students,
teachers, teacher educators, and others involved in communities of
professional learning. -Offers a range of supporting material
including downloadable tools, structures, and tutorial videos at
www.korthagen.nl.
Early childhood can be a time of rich discovery, a period when
educators have an opportunity to harness their students'
fascination to create unique learning opportunities. Some teachers
engage with their students' ideas in ways that make learning
collaborative--but not all students have access to these kinds of
learning environments. In Segregation by Experience, the authors
filmed and studied a a first-grade classroom led by a Black
immigrant teacher who encouraged her diverse group of students to
exercise their agency. When the researchers showed the film to
other schools, everyone struggled. Educators admired the teacher
but didn't think her practices would work with their own Black and
brown students. Parents of color-many of them immigrants-liked many
of the practices, but worried that they would compromise their
children. And the young children who viewed the film thought that
the kids in the film were terrible, loud, and badly behaved; they
told the authors that learning was supposed to be quiet, still, and
obedient. In Segregation by Experience Jennifer Keys Adair and
Kiyomi Sanchez-Suzuki Colegrove show us just how much our
expectations of children of color affect what and how they learn at
school, and they ask us to consider which children get to have
sophisticated, dynamic learning experiences at school and which
children are denied such experiences because of our continued
racist assumptions about them.
This book provides a holistic overview of what leads to success in
foreign language learning at an early age and deepens our
understanding of early foreign language learning. The studies use
an array of methodological approaches to research learners aged
between three and ten, as well as their parents and teachers, in
instructional, minimal-input settings. They describe various ways
of organising and promoting very early foreign language learning,
both through language policy and innovative pedagogy, and focus on
ways of providing input for second language acquisition, which
include oral classroom discourse strategies, as well as learner
development of literacy skills. Special attention is given to the
necessity to develop critical reading skills, the ability to handle
multimodal texts, and attitudes, motivations and behaviours and how
these may impact on the teaching and learning process. Chapters
emphasise that ultimate outcomes depend on extra linguistic
environmental factors, such as parental involvement and teacher
competences. These include establishing control in the classroom,
as well as using appropriate strategies for Negotiation of Meaning,
and helping learners build positive self-concept. This book will be
of interest to all professionals involved in the teaching of
foreign languages to young learners, as well as to researchers,
teacher educators and students working in this area.
This book provides a holistic overview of what leads to success in
foreign language learning at an early age and deepens our
understanding of early foreign language learning. The studies use
an array of methodological approaches to research learners aged
between three and ten, as well as their parents and teachers, in
instructional, minimal-input settings. They describe various ways
of organising and promoting very early foreign language learning,
both through language policy and innovative pedagogy, and focus on
ways of providing input for second language acquisition, which
include oral classroom discourse strategies, as well as learner
development of literacy skills. Special attention is given to the
necessity to develop critical reading skills, the ability to handle
multimodal texts, and attitudes, motivations and behaviours and how
these may impact on the teaching and learning process. Chapters
emphasise that ultimate outcomes depend on extra linguistic
environmental factors, such as parental involvement and teacher
competences. These include establishing control in the classroom,
as well as using appropriate strategies for Negotiation of Meaning,
and helping learners build positive self-concept. This book will be
of interest to all professionals involved in the teaching of
foreign languages to young learners, as well as to researchers,
teacher educators and students working in this area.
There's plenty to do when planning the curriculum in primary
schools. If it feels daunting, then one of the most helpful things
is to talk to other people about how they have developed the
curriculum for their particular subject or key stage. This is what
John Tomsett and Mary Myatt have done. After the secondary 'Huh:
Curriculum conversations between subject and senior leaders' was
published, they were flooded with requests to produce a primary
version. They enlisted the help of renowned primary specialists,
Rachel Higginson, Lekha Sharma and Emma Turner to have
conversations with primary teachers and key stage co-ordinators who
are doing great curriculum development work. Each chapter provides
insights into the importance of individual subjects and the unique
contribution each makes to pupils' cognitive and personal
development. The subject chapters discuss the steps colleagues take
to ensure that there is a coherent thread across the year groups,
as the discrete subjects deliver, collectively, the primary
curriculum. These conversations show how the craft of creating a
rich, challenging curriculum for every subject is not a quick fix.
This is a nuanced piece of work, and there are many ways of
approaching it. Each chapter also contains links to subject
associations and helpful resources. Primary Huh has been written
for subject leaders and key stage co-ordinators; it has also been
written for senior leaders, as they prepare to have supportive
conversations with their colleagues who are responsible for
curriculum development. Primary Huh is offered as a prompt rather
than the last word. Informed debate is, as they say, the fuel of
curriculum development. And why have John and Mary called it 'Huh'?
Well, John discovered that Huh is the Egyptian god of endlessness,
creativity, fertility and regeneration, and they thought that was a
pretty good metaphor for their work on the curriculum!
With the rise of teacher stressors, new and changing state
standards, and high-stakes testing, it is more important than ever
to remind literacy teachers and teacher-librarians about the reason
that brought them to this profession: the love of story. The Gift
of Story, by John Schu (affectionately known as "Mr. Schu" all over
reading communities), invites readers to consider literacy beyond
its academic benefits and explore how universal truths found in
stories can change us, inspire us, connect us to others, answer our
deepest questions, and even help us heal along the way. Using his
experience as a teacher, librarian, book lover, and story
ambassador, Mr. Schu asks readers to reflect on what it means to
share their hearts through stories and how it can connect us to
individuals and learning communities. The Gift of Story is
presented through a study of five affective elements: Healer,
Inspiration, Clarifier, Compassion, and Connector. Along the way,
readers will encounter insightful contributions from educators,
children's writers, and illustrators, as well as recommendations
for sharing the gift of story with learning communities including:
treasured book suggestions that stir reflection, engaging tips for
celebrating literacy, and heart-growing applications to lift
classroom and library practices. Celebrate the way we define and
imagine ourselves through literacy by using stories to connect to
others, build and strengthen community, and honor the children we
were called to teach.
* Provides a focus on Middle School education specifically rather
than "adolescents" * Each chapter includes a call to action
section, designed to aid in the implementation of theory into
practice * Provides a helpful frame for identity work in practice
for equity and equality, and covers important topics, such as
teaching trans- and non-binary students, critical digital literacy,
teaching diverse texts, multilingual students.
* This practical resource guides students step-by-step through the
writing of a personal narrative * Provides young writers with an
opportunity to link their personal lives and school experiences via
writing * Will transform a writing classroom into one of enthusiasm
and engagement in which children find their own voice and style *
Provides a detailed guide to the writing process, demonstrates
different techniques, and provides useful tips and suggestions on
how to revise a text and transform it into a vivid, powerful,
descriptive personal narrative. * A great vehicle for welcoming and
celebrating different cultures, experiences and stories into the
writing curriculum. * An ideal resource to dramatically improve
children's writing for all KS2 primary and KS3 secondary English
teachers, literacy coordinators and parents
* Presents a wide range of pedagogies and strategies that center
students' linguistic repertoires as strengths * Contributions from
top scholars including Shawna Shapiro, Bee Chamcharatsri, Christina
Ortmeier-Hooper, Todd Ruecker and more * Offers an asset-based
orientation for teaching writing in a way that supports students'
individual identities and diverse linguistic backgrounds
This text demonstrates how collective reflection can function as a
central part of effective teacher preparation for work in inclusive
bilingual environments. Through analysis of rich qualitative data,
Teacher Education for Inclusive Bilingual Contexts shows how group
reflection supports pre-service educators to recognize the
intersectional circumstances faced by students and understand their
identities beyond the possible confines of disability. This, in
turn, engenders reconceptualization of standardized expectations
and implicates the educator in developing student agency through
individualized use of routine, language, and materials. The author
offers cultural historical activity theory and disability studies
in education as a basis for dialectal interactions to unearth
contradictions and misunderstandings surrounding language
acquisition and the learning of emergent bilinguals and highlight
the ways in which educators can disrupt oppressive practices
through expansive learning opportunities. This insightful volume
will be of interest to researchers, scholars, and postgraduate
students in the fields of inclusive education and disability
studies, bilingual and language education, and teacher education.
- There has been a huge increase in mental health issues in young
children - this book sets out practical strategies to build strong
relationships between practitioners and children which will support
their wellbeing and learning - Applicable to all primary age
children (not just those who have experienced trauma or diagnosed
with a mental health issue) - Provides a range of practical
strategies and uses accessible language, but also underpinned by a
recent and rigorous theoretical perspective - Sets out an holistic
approach that extends to a whole learning culture
Helps to develop knowledge of authentic instructional methods (such
as role playing, inquiry, and values clarification) that are
applicable to ESS. Provides a comprehensive view of social studies
that encourages reader awareness of and appreciation for their
emotional and social identities. Provides readers with the context
for social studies teaching, offers explanations of current content
topics, and presents authentic instructional strategies for
classroom use.
A national system of education cannot function without policy. But
the path to practice is seldom smooth, especially when ideology
overrules evidence or when ministers seek to micromanage what is
best left to teachers. And once the media join the fray the mixture
becomes downright combustible. Drawing on his long experience as
teacher, researcher, government adviser, campaigner and
international consultant, and on over 600 published sources, Robin
Alexander expertly illustrates and illuminates these processes.
This selection from his recent writing, some hitherto unpublished,
opens windows onto cases and issues that concern every teacher.
Part 1 tackles system-level reform. It revisits the Cambridge
Primary Review, an evidence-rich enquiry into the condition and
future of primary education in England, which challenged the UK
government's policies on curriculum, testing, standards and more
besides. Here the reform narratives and strategies of successive
governments are confronted and dissected. Part 2 follows the
development of England's current National Curriculum, exposing its
narrow vision and questionable use of evidence and offering a more
generous aims-driven alternative. This section also investigates
the expertise and leadership needed if children are to experience a
curriculum of the highest quality in all its aspects. Part 3
reaches the heart of the matter: securing the place in effective
pedagogy of well-founded classroom talk, a mission repeatedly
frustrated by political intervention. The centrepiece is dialogic
teaching, a proven tool for advancing students' speaking, thinking,
learning and arguing, and an essential response to the corrosion of
democracy and the nihilism of 'post-truth'. Part 4 goes global. It
investigates governments' PISA-fuelled flirtations with what they
think can be adapted or copied from education elsewhere, examines
the benefits and pitfalls of international comparison, and ends
with the ultimate policy initiative: the United Nations mission to
ensure 'inclusive and equitable quality education' for all the
world's children. Education in Spite of Policy is for all those
teachers, students, school leaders and researchers who value the
conversation of policy, evidence and practice, and who wish to
explore the parts of education that policy cannot reach.
* Provides a focus on Middle School education specifically rather
than "adolescents" * Each chapter includes a call to action
section, designed to aid in the implementation of theory into
practice * Provides a helpful frame for identity work in practice
for equity and equality, and covers important topics, such as
teaching trans- and non-binary students, critical digital literacy,
teaching diverse texts, multilingual students.
Helps to develop knowledge of authentic instructional methods (such
as role playing, inquiry, and values clarification) that are
applicable to ESS. Provides a comprehensive view of social studies
that encourages reader awareness of and appreciation for their
emotional and social identities. Provides readers with the context
for social studies teaching, offers explanations of current content
topics, and presents authentic instructional strategies for
classroom use.
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