Surviving and Thriving in the Secondary School: The NQT's Essential Companion: Learning to Teach Subjects in the Secondary School Series
Editat de Susan Capel, Julia Lawrence, Marilyn Leask, Sarah Younieen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 oct 2019
Including a wide range of tasks that will help guide and demonstrate successful practice, this book covers topics and concerns such as:
- Building relationships within teaching
- Managing and responding to change
- Becoming an inclusive educator
- Working to improve classroom climate and pupil behaviour
- Assessment, homework and marking
- Inclusion of digital technologies and ICT
- Looking after yourself and your professional development
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781138489707
ISBN-10: 1138489700
Pagini: 350
Ilustrații: 11 Line drawings, black and white; 6 Halftones, black and white; 35 Tables, black and white
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Learning to Teach Subjects in the Secondary School Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1138489700
Pagini: 350
Ilustrații: 11 Line drawings, black and white; 6 Halftones, black and white; 35 Tables, black and white
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Learning to Teach Subjects in the Secondary School Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate and Professional Practice & DevelopmentCuprins
Contents
List of illustrations
List of tasks
List of contributors
INTRODUCTION
Chapter 1 Beyond your initial teacher education: staying in teaching
Kate Reynolds
Culture and context; building relationships; building time for yourself; social media; subject associations; inspections
Chapter 2 Managing constant change
Lizana Oberholzer
Why change; managing and responding to change; strategies for implementing change
Chapter 3 Mentoring and being mentored
Trevor Wright
Some mentoring challenges; Competence, apprenticeship and reflection; The mentoring relationship
Chapter 4 Thriving in your subject department
Steve Puttick and Nick Gee
What makes a subject department; Organiation; Culture; Psychological safety.
Chapter 5 Working with teaching assistants and other adults in the classroom to support subject teaching
Fiona Hall and Maxine Pountney
Defining roles; Qualifications, Training experiences; Deployment, preparedness and practice; Classroom leadership and realtionships with other adults.
Chapter 6 Role of the form tutor
Alexandra Titchmarsh
Grouping pupils for pastoral care; The role of a form tutor; What does a form tutor do?; Preparation and organisation for, and running of, your form time; attributes and skills of a good form tutor
Chapter 7 Every teacher is a teacher of English
Paul Gardner
Text types; expectations at KS2; describing language; oral language; reading
Chapter 8 Every student counts: learning mathematics across the curriculum
Jennie Golding, Rosalyn Hyde and Alison Clark-Wilson
Nature of mathematics; curriculum; conceptions and misconceptions; representing mathematics; concrete – visual – abstract pedagogy; digital technologies; language for mathematics
Chapter 9 Personal, Social, Health and Economic Education (PSHE)
Natasha Bye-Brookes
Defining PSHE education; Programme of Study; Delivering PSHE education; Planning for PSHE education.
Chapter 10 Becoming an inclusive educator: developing your practice as a mainstream teacher of pupils with SEND
Mark Pulsford and Sana Rizvi
Building your knowledge base; Development of SEND in the UK; Definitions and areas of SEND; Models of disability; Understanding self and others; Inclusive practice
Chapter 11 Working to improve classroom climate and pupil behaviour
Terry Haydn
Learner behaviour; Classroom climate; Characteristics of teachers with excellence in behaviour management
Chapter 12 Understanding learners’ primary experiences and transition
Brian Matthews and Lyn Matthews
Fundamentals of Primary Education; Transition; Teaching year 7; Implications for teaching
Chapter 13 Learning beyond the classroom
Mark Chidler and Elizabeth Plummer
Defining learning beyond the classroom; LBtC and the curriculum; LBtC and developing everyday classroom practice; Museums to support teaching and learning; Planning for LBtC; Professional Development
Chapter 14 Improving pupil progress through quality questioning and talk
Nikki Booth
Using formative assessment to enhance the quality of teacher-learner talk; Taxonomies for higher-level thinking and talking: Bloom’s and SOLO; Effective questioning;
Chapter 15 Assessment, homework and marking
Helen Cassady and Barry Harwood
Accountability measures; Progress 8; Assessment 8; Marking; Homework
Chapter 16 Making the curriculum your own
Chris Shelton and Julia O’Kelly
Understanding the school curriculum; How a subject curriculum is made; Designing the curriculum; The curriculum and your professional autonomy
Chapter 17 Digital technologies: pedagogies and classroom practice
Andrew Csizmadia and Jon Audain
Digital technologies; Digital pedagogies; ICT competence framework; Flipped learning; Gamification; Professional Learning.
Chapter 18 Leadership and management
Rachel Peckover
School structures; Types of Leadership; Preparing for leadership: Competencies; Leadership development
Chapter 19 Researching your teaching
Eira Wyn Patterson
Developing your research design; Developing questions; Literature review; Research methodology; research methods and tools; ethics; data analysis
Chapter 20 Looking after yourself and your professional development
Derek Boyle
Surviving; Wellbeing and the mentoring relationship; Self-realisation to actualisation; support networks; recognising your own indicators; coping strategies; mentoring moving to coaching; onwards and upwards
Appendix 1 Glossary of terms
Appendix 2 Subject associations and teaching councils
Appendix 3 Useful websites
List of illustrations
List of tasks
List of contributors
INTRODUCTION
Chapter 1 Beyond your initial teacher education: staying in teaching
Kate Reynolds
Culture and context; building relationships; building time for yourself; social media; subject associations; inspections
Chapter 2 Managing constant change
Lizana Oberholzer
Why change; managing and responding to change; strategies for implementing change
Chapter 3 Mentoring and being mentored
Trevor Wright
Some mentoring challenges; Competence, apprenticeship and reflection; The mentoring relationship
Chapter 4 Thriving in your subject department
Steve Puttick and Nick Gee
What makes a subject department; Organiation; Culture; Psychological safety.
Chapter 5 Working with teaching assistants and other adults in the classroom to support subject teaching
Fiona Hall and Maxine Pountney
Defining roles; Qualifications, Training experiences; Deployment, preparedness and practice; Classroom leadership and realtionships with other adults.
Chapter 6 Role of the form tutor
Alexandra Titchmarsh
Grouping pupils for pastoral care; The role of a form tutor; What does a form tutor do?; Preparation and organisation for, and running of, your form time; attributes and skills of a good form tutor
Chapter 7 Every teacher is a teacher of English
Paul Gardner
Text types; expectations at KS2; describing language; oral language; reading
Chapter 8 Every student counts: learning mathematics across the curriculum
Jennie Golding, Rosalyn Hyde and Alison Clark-Wilson
Nature of mathematics; curriculum; conceptions and misconceptions; representing mathematics; concrete – visual – abstract pedagogy; digital technologies; language for mathematics
Chapter 9 Personal, Social, Health and Economic Education (PSHE)
Natasha Bye-Brookes
Defining PSHE education; Programme of Study; Delivering PSHE education; Planning for PSHE education.
Chapter 10 Becoming an inclusive educator: developing your practice as a mainstream teacher of pupils with SEND
Mark Pulsford and Sana Rizvi
Building your knowledge base; Development of SEND in the UK; Definitions and areas of SEND; Models of disability; Understanding self and others; Inclusive practice
Chapter 11 Working to improve classroom climate and pupil behaviour
Terry Haydn
Learner behaviour; Classroom climate; Characteristics of teachers with excellence in behaviour management
Chapter 12 Understanding learners’ primary experiences and transition
Brian Matthews and Lyn Matthews
Fundamentals of Primary Education; Transition; Teaching year 7; Implications for teaching
Chapter 13 Learning beyond the classroom
Mark Chidler and Elizabeth Plummer
Defining learning beyond the classroom; LBtC and the curriculum; LBtC and developing everyday classroom practice; Museums to support teaching and learning; Planning for LBtC; Professional Development
Chapter 14 Improving pupil progress through quality questioning and talk
Nikki Booth
Using formative assessment to enhance the quality of teacher-learner talk; Taxonomies for higher-level thinking and talking: Bloom’s and SOLO; Effective questioning;
Chapter 15 Assessment, homework and marking
Helen Cassady and Barry Harwood
Accountability measures; Progress 8; Assessment 8; Marking; Homework
Chapter 16 Making the curriculum your own
Chris Shelton and Julia O’Kelly
Understanding the school curriculum; How a subject curriculum is made; Designing the curriculum; The curriculum and your professional autonomy
Chapter 17 Digital technologies: pedagogies and classroom practice
Andrew Csizmadia and Jon Audain
Digital technologies; Digital pedagogies; ICT competence framework; Flipped learning; Gamification; Professional Learning.
Chapter 18 Leadership and management
Rachel Peckover
School structures; Types of Leadership; Preparing for leadership: Competencies; Leadership development
Chapter 19 Researching your teaching
Eira Wyn Patterson
Developing your research design; Developing questions; Literature review; Research methodology; research methods and tools; ethics; data analysis
Chapter 20 Looking after yourself and your professional development
Derek Boyle
Surviving; Wellbeing and the mentoring relationship; Self-realisation to actualisation; support networks; recognising your own indicators; coping strategies; mentoring moving to coaching; onwards and upwards
Appendix 1 Glossary of terms
Appendix 2 Subject associations and teaching councils
Appendix 3 Useful websites
Notă biografică
Susan Capel is Emeritus Professor (Physical Education) at Brunel University, UK.
Julia Lawrence is Senior Lecturer at the University of Hull, UK.
Marilyn Leask is Chief Editor of the MESH Guides initiative and visiting professor at the University of Winchester and De Montfort University, UK.
Sarah Younie is Professor of Education Innovation at De Montfort University, UK, and Co-Chair of the Education Futures Collaboration charity.
Julia Lawrence is Senior Lecturer at the University of Hull, UK.
Marilyn Leask is Chief Editor of the MESH Guides initiative and visiting professor at the University of Winchester and De Montfort University, UK.
Sarah Younie is Professor of Education Innovation at De Montfort University, UK, and Co-Chair of the Education Futures Collaboration charity.
Descriere
This book covers the key issues that may be encountered in day-to-day practice of teaching in the secondary school. With evidence-based practice, this volume allows new teachers to avoid the common pitfalls of teaching and will help provide a new-found confidence within the classroom.