Not a surprise after the last two rises.
As much as I’d welcome further rises, recruitment won’t be solved by increasing wages.
The bigger issue is the lack of resources to support children in and out of school. We need more nurses, Ed Psychs, SEND support etc.
A rise of 2.8% next year will maintain the competitiveness of teachers’ pay, says DfE – but sector leaders say it is ‘extremely disappointing’ and will result in further cuts
https://t.co/zHHUE1cGjz
@RogersHistory If point 1 is true, would that mean that if you had two schools with identical cohorts of children, including the factors you mentioned, you’d expect them to do as well as each other, even if the teaching at one school is awful?
It’s day 4 of EduAdvent and we have another fantastic book giveaway thanks to @TeachLeadAAli and @gblackwellbooks. A total of 4 books up for grabs today! Just ‘like’ and ‘repost’ to enter! Good luck everyone!
@PrimaryRocks1 At my current school (junior school) we rotate who is out, in the hall and in classrooms to keep children on the playground to a minimum. Works very well.
@PrimaryRocks1 The way in which you do it is important. I try not to be surprised, upset or angry. I try to remain calm, ensure they’ve had a chance to have their say and be understanding when giving consequences.
@PrimaryRocks1 Being positive. Relentlessly positive. No matter how difficult the last lesson or the last 5 minutes were. See the good and praise it. Make a point to everyone just how brilliant it is to do the right thing.
@HeyMissSmith Sounds to me that the issue is the academisation and poor use of research informed practices. These things have the potential to do good if used properly, like any other PD.
@HeyMissSmith I would guess that less experienced teachers benefitted more than the more experienced. I agree that quite a few people have made a bit of £ out of it, but overall I think it’s been a positive thing.
Here we go!
We are back tomorrow night (8pm) for the most exciting half-term of the year! 🎅🏻
And to kick us off, @AdrianBethune joins us as special guest host!
And what a bunch of questions they are too!
@BeckyFrancis7 @AlisonMPeacock
#PrimaryRocks
@HeyMissSmith I’ve done this a few times, along with the marshmallow & spaghetti variation and the main thing children learn is add more tape/marshmallows.
Don't let what you see on social media skew your view of humanity.
Most bad behavior is due to a few bad apples:
• Just 3% of active users are toxic, but they generate 33% of online content
• 1% of communities launch 74% of conflict
• 0.1% of users spread 80% of fake news
@jayvanbavel https://t.co/tSstCxDIYL
OfSTED graded and ungraded inspections have started again. Are you in the window? If so….. you may want to read my reflections after 11 OfSTED inspections last year. You can find it on the Antwis Collaborative website. AC Blogs (https://t.co/Ns9eKiRNXW)
@PrimaryRocks1 Your classroom routine should include what to do when you’re finished. Either have something on display for them to move on to or have some pre-prepared resources for them to choose from. #primaryrocks q1
@greg_ashman I consider it an essential prelude to it. I agree that at this point they’re not learning how to write actual letters and words, but the importance of this step in seeing writing as having a purpose is essential
Can children learn some elements of R, W and M through play? Yes. And they should. Can they learn how to write a narrative that includes all the expected features of Y6 writing or how to do long division through play? No. Argument settled. You’re welcome.
I am very much in favour of play. Children should be given plenty of time to play because it develops so many life skills like social interaction. And they enjoy it, too.
It’s just that the knowledge schools were invented to pass on — reading, writing, maths and their applications — can’t really be learned through play.
These are ‘biologically secondary’ forms of knowledge, to use David Geary’s term. We have not evolved to learn them effortlessly through immersive play and sadly, we are not naturally motivated to learn them.
All the rest consists of the implications of this.
@greg_ashman Children mark make, imitating what they see others do when playing. This is the first step is seeing writing as a purposeful thing and not just something we learn because we have to