Saturday 16 November 2013

Open Invites and the best test of the year

Some real highlights this week. My Year 11s are currently preparing for their Controlled Assessment on the Civil Rights Movement in the USA. Whilst trawling through the internet last weekend (a poor excuse for not really doing any work) I cam across a fantastic resource - a scan of the literacy test used in Louisiana in the 1960s to stop black people from registering to vote. I typed it up so it looked a bit more like the kind of test they are used to and gave them it cold at the beginning of the lesson. They had 10 minutes to complete it and had to get all 23 questions right to pass. Every single student failed including several who are targeted A*. The best thing was how annoyed they were at the test - the questions weren't that hard but they were badly worded, vague and in some cases - just weird. This is just one example:

15. In the space below, write the word "noise" backwards and place a dot over what would be its second letter should it have been written forwards

And it was fascinating to see how many got "spell backwards, forwards" wrong.
The test was great for helping students to understand why so few blacks were registered to vote in the 1960s.

This week I have introduced a new idea at school called Open Invites - asking staff to nominate some of their lessons where they are happy for anyone to pop in and observe for 15 minutes. Three of us volunteered lessons this week and several teachers popped in. I have to admit it really made me raise my game knowing that anytime someone could appear and expect to see something good - like OFSTED but without the fear. The lessons that were observed went well and I got some good useful feedback. The next step is to persuade more staff to offer up invites and to give up a bit of time to go and watch.

I also got back into podcasts this week by putting some revision podcasts on Emdodo for year 11 (and 25/39 turned up for revision lesson on Wednesday - hurray!). Year 13 also recorded their own podcasts on the effect of World War One on Germany. I am now thinking about doing some video podcasts on YouTube if I can find a few minutes.

Busy week coming up - looking forward to leading an INSET session on Assessment, marking and feedback on Wednesday, looking at how the Nazis used emotion to gain support and attending an INSET day on Kagan structures on Friday.

And I managed to blog two weeks in a row :)



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