Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get...

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Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding, and enjoying teaching, the less able. Practical teaching strategies included!

Transcript of Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get...

Page 1: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes?

This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding, and enjoying teaching, the less able. Practical

teaching strategies included!

Page 2: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

• The less able are defined as pupils whose achievement and progress is significantly below that of the average learner.

– perform badly; – restless;– limited concentration; – difficulty in relating one lesson to the next;– limited memories;– often damage things;– present work in an untidy style.– the paperwork says so!

Page 3: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Putting you in the position of a less able learner…

Noun

Please try really hard to follow this next part…

Page 4: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

A noun is the name of a person, place, thing or idea. Whatever exists, we assume, can be named, and that name is a noun. A proper noun, which names a

specific person, place, or thing (Carlos, Queen Marguerite, Middle East, Jerusalem, Malaysia, Presbyterianism, God, Spanish, Buddhism, the Labour

Party), is almost always capitalized. A proper noun used as an addressed person's name is called a noun of address. Common nouns name everything

else, things that usually are not capitalized.

 

A group of related words can act as a single noun-like entity within a sentence. A Noun Clause contains a subject and verb and can do anything that a noun can

do:

 What he does for this town is a blessing.

 A Noun Phrase, frequently a noun accompanied by modifiers, is a group of related words acting as a noun: the oil depletion allowance; the abnormal,

hideously enlarged nose.

There is a separate section on word combinations that become Compound Nouns — such as daughter-in-law, half-moon, and stick-in-the-mud.

Page 5: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Categories of Nouns

Nouns can be classified further as count nouns, which name anything that can be counted (four books, two continents, a few dishes, a dozen buildings); mass nouns (or non-count nouns), which name something that can't be counted (water, air, energy, blood); and collective nouns, which can take a singular form but are composed of more than one individual person or items (jury, team, class, committee, herd). We should note that some words can be either a count noun or a non-count noun depending on how they're being used in a sentence:

 He got into trouble. (non-count)

He had many troubles. (countable)

Experience (non-count) is the best teacher.

Whether these words are count or non-count will determine whether they can be used with articles and determiners or not. (We would not write "He got into the

troubles," but we could write about "The troubles of Ireland."

 Some texts will include the category of abstract nouns, by which we mean the kind of word that is not tangible, such as warmth, justice, grief, and peace. Abstract nouns are sometimes troublesome for non-native writers because they can appear with determiners or without: "Peace settled over the countryside." "The skirmish disrupted the peace that had settled over the countryside."

Page 6: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

The less able learner… (probably) will always

give something a chance but when it is

abundantly clear understanding and

success is out of their reach, they will stop

trying. Usually, that is when difficulties for the

teacher occur.

Page 7: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Failure to meet learner needs.

Failure to differentiate.

Failure to deliver content appropriately.

Failure to allow pupils to learn.

Failure to engage the learners.

Failure to use common sense.

Failure to use a variety of delivery styles.

Failure to include images.

Failure to do anything worthwhile at all really!

Page 8: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Whilst the ‘learners’ complete the tasks, I would like the ‘observers’ to identify, by choosing the relevant sign and sticking it in the playdough.

Split into two groups – learners (micro teach but no voice needed!) and observers (analysis of the micro teach from multiple choice options!)

Page 9: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

• In the bag are signs.

• Take them out and lay them out in front of you.

• Read what they say.

• As I progress through the next 5 slides with the ‘learners’, please try to identify what teaching strategies I am using to help the learners to understand the topic.

• Choose the relevant sign from those given to you and place them in the play dough (which you will have in front of you).

• Please keep silent during the next 5 slides.

Let’s try it another way…

Observers…

Page 10: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Divide your whiteboard into 4.

Put the words ‘step 1’ in one quarter, ‘step 2’ in the next quarter, ‘step 3’ in the next quarter, and ‘step 4’ in the next quarter.

Look at the picture in front of you.

Learners…

Let’s try it another way…

Page 11: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

On your whiteboard, write down 8 things you can see or touch if you could physically enter the

painting. Name only the ‘singular’ items.

Page 12: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

On your whiteboard, write down 8 things you can see or touch if you could physically enter the

painting. Name only the ‘plural’ items.

Page 13: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

On your whiteboard, write down 4 things that you can’t really see or touch but that are in the

painting.

Page 14: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

On your whiteboard, write down any groups, or collections, of things.

Page 15: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Concrete nouns

Abstract nouns

Collective nouns

Page 16: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

The next slides are summaries of the training points from this evening’s session.

Please peruse at your own leisure.

Any questions, please come and see me!

Good luck!

Page 17: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Aspects of Learning

Learning needs to relate to the way our brain works.The four aspects of brain based learning are:

– Context – factors surrounding the learning helping to carry the ideas to the learner

– Input – the content, concepts and language of the learning

– Processing – research and manipulation of data & information

– Response – metacognition and knowledge of how we learn.

Page 18: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

“A style is a preferred way of using one's abilities. It is not in itself an ability but rather a preference.”

“Most teachers are best at teaching children who match their own styles of thinking and learning.”

“….matching students’ learning styles with appropriate learning strategies improves the ability of the pupil to concentrate and learn independently.”

Learning Styles

Page 19: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Planning learning situations to cater for less able pupils • Create a learning environment that is consistently interesting and

promotes curiosity.• Combine text with pictorial, visual and other interactive experiences

such as computer and video programmes with groups engaged in discussions to help pupils create and develop mental models and generalize their experiences.

• Know the needs of your pupils.• Every pupil must be aware of their goals/objectives for lesson.• The initial part of the lesson should be targeted at the lower end to

make sure that everyone understands the topic at its most basic level. • Flexible differentiation with negotiation – let them choose the level.• Interesting themes for activities leading to identifiable success for all

pupils -not always the same goal.• Non-threatening tasks – continually build up self-confidence.

• Focused assessment with constructive feedback.

Page 20: Do you do this when thinking about the less able in your classes? This session should help you get your head out of the sand and get you understanding,

Characteristics of a good lesson for a less able learner • Relating the work to the real world – something the less able learner can identify with.

• Providing variety in your approach (VAK) with short, highly structured tasks.

• Organising the learning into small steps with frequent repetition.

• Keeping written instructions to a minimum. Bullet points with clear visual directions given.

• Frequent contact with teachers or CTAs to gain confidence, encouragement and reassurance.

• The inclusion of ICT as a motivational tool and so as to be able to produce high quality work.

• Use of drama.

• Opportunities for checks on understanding of vocabulary.

• And many more!!