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High Challenge, Low Threat is Mary Myatt's smart and thoughtful exploration of all the things that wise leaders do.
Informed through thousands of conversations over a 20-year period in education, Mary shows the lessons that school management teams can learn from leaders in a wide range of other sectors and points to the conditions which these leaders create to allow colleagues to engage with difficult issues enthusiastically and wholeheartedly.
This book makes the case that any leadership role is concerned primarily with the relationships between individuals. It is the quality of these, whatever the size of the organisation, which make the difference between organisations which thrive, and those which stagnate.
This is not to argue for soft, easy and comfortable options. Instead it considers how top leaders manage to walk the line between the impossible and the possible, between the undoable and the doable, and to create conditions for productive work which transcend the difficulties which come towards us every day. Instead of dodging them, they embrace them. And by navigating high challenge, low threat, they show how others how to do the same.
Huh is the Egyptian god of endlessness, creativity, fertility and
regeneration. He is the deity Mary Myatt and John Tomsett have
adopted as their god of the curriculum. Their Huh series of books
focuses on how practitioners design the curriculum for the young
people in their schools. The Huh project is founded on
conversations with colleagues doing great work across the education
sector. In SEND Huh, Mary Myatt and John Tomsett discuss curriculum
provision for pupils with additional needs with some of the leading
experts in the field. Mary and John interviewed pupils, parents,
teachers, headteachers, CEOs, educational consultants and
lecturers. They then edited the transcriptions of those interviews
to provide an ambitious, thoughtful, nuanced and challenging vision
of what the best possible provision looks like for children with
additional learning needs. The challenging conversations that
comprise SEND Huh paint an inspiring picture that is hugely hopeful
for the future of SEND curriculum provision in our schools.
There are a lot of redundant processes in schools. We need to take
a hard look at these and consider whether they are adding value to
the core purpose of schools. We need to apply Greg McKeown's
'disciplined pursuit of less' in order to create the time and space
to do deep, satisfying work on the curriculum. This means that
there will be some hard choices and recognise that if we cannot do
everything, we need to move to a space which acknowledges there
will be trade offs. This is more than a workload issue, it is about
focusing our efforts on the most important agenda item in schools
today - the development of an ambitious curriculum for every child,
in every school.
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!
Schools need to have purchase on the curriculum: why they teach the
subjects beyond preparation for examinations, what they are
intending to achieve with the curriculum, how well it is planned
and enacted in classrooms and how they know whether it's doing what
it's supposed to. Fundamental to this understanding are the
conversations between subject leaders and their line managers.
However, there is sometimes a mismatch between the subject
specialisms of senior leaders and those they line manage. If I
don't know the terrain and the importance of a particular subject,
how can I talk intelligently with colleagues who are specialists?
This book sets out to offer some tentative answers to these
questions. Each of the national curriculum subjects is discussed
with a subject leader and provides an insight into what they view
as the importance of the subject, how they go about ensuring that
knowledge, understanding and skills are developed over time, how
they talk about the quality of the schemes in their departments and
what they would welcome from senior leaders by way of support. We
have chosen this way of opening up the potentially difficult
terrain of expertise on one side and relative lack of expertise on
the other, by providing these case studies. They are suggested as
prompts rather than the last word. Informed debate is, after all,
the fuel of curriculum development. And why Huh? Well, 'Huh?' may
be John's first response when he walks into a Year 8 German class
but, in fact, we chose 'Huh' as the title of our book as he is the
Egyptian god of endlessness. As Claire Hill so eloquently comments
in her chapter, "Curriculum development is an ongoing process; it's
not going to be finished, ever." And we believe that 'Huh' captures
a healthy and expansive way of considering curriculum
conversations.
Huh is the Egyptian god of endlessness, creativity, fertility and
regeneration. He is the deity Mary Myatt and John Tomsett have
adopted as their god of the school curriculum. Their first book in
the Huh series focused upon how school practitioners design the Key
Stage 3 curriculum. Its popularity prompted calls from many
quarters for a similar book on the primary curriculum. Supported by
their primary colleagues, Rachel Higginson, Lekha Sharma & Emma
Turner, Mary and John interviewed over 30 primary practitioners
about how they design the primary curriculum. Considering the
diverse nature of primary schools in this country, it's not
surprising that they were soon confronted with numerous
context-dependent curriculum complexities. Designing the curriculum
for small primary schools, for instance, means solving the
conundrum of teaching the same subject at the same time to three
different year groups in one class. The conversations confirmed
that shaping a primary school curriculum is a tricky business! The
wisdom gleaned from the genuine experts Mary and John interviewed
was limitless. The material was so important it meant that they had
too much for a single volume. Twenty-one of those thirty-plus
conversations comprise the book Primary Huh, which focused upon the
curriculum of each individual subject from EYFS to Year 6. In this
companion book, Primary Huh 2, Mary and John give a platform to
practitioners who lead on the broader issues of primary curriculum
design, including, amongst other things: shaping the curriculum for
mixed-age classes; designing and implementing a cross-MAT
curriculum; building the "cradle to career" curriculum;
timetabling; assessment; transition, and diversity. Primary Huh 2
is riven through with authentic voices grappling with the endless
challenge of providing our children with a rich, challenging,
ambitious, beautiful curriculum.
When U.S. Marine Jenny Sutter returns from Iraq, she lays down her
rifle but isn't ready to pick up her children. Buying some time,
Jenny takes a one-way trip to a misfit desert community called Slab
City, where its kind residents gently nurture her wounded spirit,
and nudge her back to her own humanity.
Dramatic Comedy Characters: 3 males, 1 females WINNER! 2009 Ted
Schmitt Award for the world premiere of an Outstanding New Play -
Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Orange County, California, 1975.
For Walter Wells, it's the happiest place on earth. He has a
beautiful wife. Two great kids. A house with a pool. Contentment.
Until fate strikes a devastating blow, leaving Walter with no
reason to put the pieces of his life back together. He resists
attempts to help, especially the unexpected - and unwanted - offer
from a Vietnamese refugee named Bao Ngo, who bears his own sadness.
Then, across a cultural divide, Walter and Bao find a game to
share, a song, a meal and then a way back in this uplifting - and
surprisingly funny - new play by a rising star in American theatre.
"Wry and affecting...Myatt's characters are so engaging that it's
easy to push them toward comedy, which tends to reassure rather
than surprise us." -Los Angeles Times "...Understated power of this
gentle yet gripping dramedy...The most impressive element of
Myatt's new work is the dexterous way she elicits emotional
resonance by giving the human frailties of the characters a weight
equal to their innate compassion and goodness. Subtly depicting the
overwhelmingly difficult process of mourning and letting go, Myatt
leavens the tragedy without blunting its significance." -Backstage
Increasingly, across the system, people are talking about knowledge
and curriculum. In this timely new book, Mary Myatt is at her
brilliant best as she passionately argues that the solutions to
overcoming achievement barriers lie in understanding the curriculum
and in what children and meant to know. In order to reach coherence
on the curriculum, it's going to require teachers in schools to
engage in the conversation; it's a journey we need to share if
we're going to deliver a curriculum we understand and believe in.
In a series of crystal clear chapters, Mary guides teachers and
school leaders through one of the most important debates in
education.
No matter what you teach, there is a 100 Ideas title for you! The
100 Ideas series offers teachers practical, easy-to-implement
strategies and activities for the classroom. Each author is an
expert in their field and is passionate about sharing best practice
with their peers. Each title includes at least ten additional
extra-creative Bonus Ideas that won't fail to inspire and engage
all learners. _______________ No notice inspections are something
every teacher now has to be prepared for. This accessible book
provides strategies to embed into your everyday teaching to ensure
your English lessons are consistently outstanding every day,
whether you are being observed or not. Dip in and pick an idea to
use as a starter or develop a whole lesson plan from the practical,
step-by-step activities included. The ideas will help your students
develop strong foundation skills in spelling, punctuation, reading
and writing as well as learning how to work together, listen to
each other, give great presentations and tackle and analyse
different types of text. But it's not all about work! There are
strategies for inspiring in your class a love of literature and
English by delving into a wide variety of texts - poetry, plays,
novels, journalism and Shakespeare. There are also ideas to help
you improve your teaching practice, tips on how to create the best
learning environment for studying English and specific advice on
how to cope with those dreaded Ofsted inspections.
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Birder (Paperback)
Julie Marie Myatt
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R401
Discovery Miles 4 010
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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