Reflective Learning Journal
When I was studying for my Masters Degree one of the requirements was to keep a reflective learning journal. Initially it felt like yet another thing I had to do on top of a full time job, studying, doing small scale research projects and the minor task of bringing up 4 boys. However I soon came to find this an extremely valuable exercise, something I would continue, albeit to a lesser degree, even after my studies were over. This has included reflecting not only on my teaching practice, but also on my role as SENCO and my approach to my doctoral studies. Looking back at some of my earliest entries, back in 2006, I thought some of them worth sharing in this blog. I may well add to this over the coming weeks.
These first three short entries are focused around year seven geography groups that I was teaching at the time. I’m not a geography teacher, but the school where I was teaching at the time felt that lower ability groups didn’t require specialist geography teachers. I was also told that didn’t actually matter what I taught them. This concerned me because surely every child should be valued equally. As is my nature, I found the positives in the experience. It’s interesting to note that this was 12 ½ years ago and the needs of ASD pupils and those with SLCN (speech language communication needs) were beginning to become more noticeable in schools. The special needs code of practice (CoP) in place at the time, just as the current one, highlighted that every teacher was a teacher of those with SEN, however the training and CPD required to enable teachers to accommodate the various needs in their classrooms and remove barriers to learning was not really in place. What follows are three brief entries to the learning journal that may be of interest.
20/09/06
Teaching geography – may sound fairly straightforward, but I’m no geographer! My specialism is SpLD (Specific Learning Difficulties, dyslexia, dyscalculia dyspraxia), and I graduated to teach English; geography was dropped at the earliest possible opportunity at secondary school. Thus a significant learning curve is taking place as I attempt to teach geography to 2 low ability sets in year 7 – each class being taught twice weekly. This is actually, in many ways, a positive development – although I have only really started to see that this week. Initially I was angry about having to take on this dreaded subject; partly because of my own limitations regarding subject knowledge, leading me to feel extremely vulnerable and insecure; partly as it was a fait accompli; partly because of the rational presented to me when I was told that I would be taking this on – I was told that it was felt that all teachers in the school needed to do proper classroom teaching. This undermined all that I do on a day-to–day basis, teaching pupils with a SpLD profile 1:1 and in small groups (up to 10 pupils). Was this teaching somehow less ‘proper’? I think not.
So why do I now start to view it more positively? I am fundamentally a SEN teacher. I spend my teaching time adapting materials to suit the pupils I encounter, often revising my ideas on a lesson by lesson basis as I discover that concepts I had taken for granted are alien to the pupils in front of me. I have to constantly find new ways of leading their learning so that they can grow less dependent on me as their teacher and discover ideas for themselves, the whole directed discovery process. The pupils in these geography groups are not only low ability, but have a range of SENs. One of the groups also contains most of the year 7 dyslexics who are in our provision. Thus this is simply an extension of what I already do. The materials and curriculum provided for me by the department have proved far too difficult for the pupils in these groups, so every lesson has had to be adapted and analyzed so that the fundamental concepts and knowledge required can be taught.
Adaptations I have had to make range from dropping the worksheets and taking the whole class outside to direct each other through a human maze of fellow classmates using only the terminology of compass points, since a holistic and physical approach was the only way I could help them to internalize the information, to simply using 2 sheets of paper for copying based exercises, so that worksheets are single-sided instead of one double-sided sheet, so that pupils didn’t have to cope with turning the page, memorizing minutia of detail and change of orientation as one side of the given sheet was portrait and the other landscape.
This has also helped me to see an area of development that I would like to pursue, namely the leadership and management of inclusion in our schools. Another incident that focused me in on this today concerns of one of our pupils with an ASD profile. This pupil had been late in handing in his homework for science. He was told that if it wasn’t given in the next day he would receive a detention. The pupil took this to mean the next day that he had science, so he duly handed in an extensive piece of homework today only to be given a detention slip at the same time. He was told that the detention was for not handing in his homework. He could not understand why he had been given this detention as he was handing the homework in at the time. The teacher simply kept telling him that it was for not handing in his homework. The situation was resolved with the help of the TA who was with him at the time but the incident highlighted the fact that we have a growing number of teachers in schools who are having to cope with ASD profile pupils in their classes yet have neither the specialist training nor the experience to cater for their needs. They also have the added complication of teaching them in larger sized groups than is appropriate for such pupils.
21/09/06
Planning for my geography lessons next week I encountered another of the inappropriate homework sheets set for the geography group. On the front side a seemingly simple sheet, yet the reverse side, containing all the necessary information for completing the sheet was so crammed full of information that the font was tiny and the information 100% inaccessible to the pupils in my groups. Study it and discover the concepts and skills that it is trying to reinforce, then ‘hey presto’ a simple homework sheet, containing a single sentence instruction and the basic information. The advantage of not being a subject specialist when teaching the subject at entrance level is that I am not making assumptions about the knowledge they have. I have to break down the work into its simplest components, so can deliver it ‘bite sized’. I have taught mainstream classes throughout my teaching career, it’s the non-specialist aspect that’s new to me and that’s where my learning comes in – not so much in the area of subject knowledge, but in getting back to basics in breaking down the learning. It’s refocusing my teaching.
27/09/06
Classroom management and getting the most from TAs. The geography group – yes, them again – that contains many of our dyslexic pupils is by far the most challenging of the 2 groups. Not because of the Dyslexics per se but simply because of the complex mix of the class. It falls naturally into 2 groups, one of which is predominantly female and the other totally male. In addition, having finally got to look at the SEN register details on these pupils, the needs are as many and diverse as I had already surmised.
The other group also has a range of needs and an equal number on the SEN register. Why then is it so much easier to manage them and direct their learning? Back to basics; it appeared to be largely down to the seating plan and a need to reinforce ground rules and reassert my authority on the class. This is where the TAs come in; firstly, they work with this group day in day out, so they know all of the dynamics far better than I do; secondly, I have found that the pupils show the TAs little, if any, respect even though they do show me respect and see me as someone of worth.
Solution – I spoke to both of the TAs after Monday’s lesson and discussed with them my ideas for the seating plan. They were able to add their thoughts so that I was able to devise a seating plan that really made a huge difference today. Then, at the start of today’s lesson, I reinforced all of the class rules, ensuring that the pupils understood how the TAs were there to help & that their authority counted and needed the same degree of respect that all people in the class deserved. I paid extra close attention to the treatment of the TAs so that I was able to quickly intervene where necessary to support the TAs and ensure that pupils asked them for support instead of always wanting to ask me. This in turn allowed me to teach more effectively, leading their learning more efficiently and using my own skills in a more productive way.
It is interesting that the other group is equally happy to ask the TA in the room for support, not needing to always ask me. They are a group with as many general additional learning needs but fewer social or speech and language type needs. With the growing numbers of ASD pupils in our classroom this is surely an area that is presenting and will continue to present major issues for leadership and management of learning as these pupils impact greatly on the learning in their groups. It is mainly my special needs training that is helping me to teach these groups, simple things like: using the pupil’s name before giving an instruction, so that the pupil knows that the instruction is for him to follow, so has listened to the instruction; asking the pupil to repeat back the task, the instruction or the action and its consequence in a way that shows whether he has actually understood my expectations; breaking the task down to doable sized chunks.
Hélène Cohen
