Ways we can do this:
Practitioners are mindful about noticing and seeing the learning as it occurs. Without this, practitioners cannot document it. For example, if a photograph is taken, it should be annotated to show why it was significant and what learning it demonstrates.
Children are given regular opportunities to share their ideas and thoughts about their learning by contributing to Floorbooks, interactive learning, and planning walls.
Ensure that all practitioners are confident in talking about and using a language of learning that is developmentally appropriate to the children, such as using the vocabulary of “I Can” statements and learning dispositions.
Mind-maps, Floorbooks and/or learning walls demonstrate thinking together and sustained shared thinking.
Practitioners make explicit to the children what they notice about their learning, for example, “Wow, you are concentrating really hard on that”, “I noticed that you found that tricky at first, but you kept going and persevered”, or “You counted all that way back from 10”.
Practitioners cannot expect children to reflect and discuss their learning if adults have not previously demonstrated and provided the language for them.
Floorbooks:
When creating Floorbooks, practitioners must record children’s voices and ideas for use in intentional planning. For example, instead of adult-initiated activities taking precedence, practitioners should take the learning ideas from the children’s interests and ideas. The Floorbooks can then record the progression of thinking and learning over time and support learning conversations with children and an increased depth of learning.
Practitioners analyse the learning and determine what thinking is going on in children’s heads. Practitioners then ensure progression through the creation of PLODs.
Practitioners can then show action due to those observations; PLOD’s are then ticked and dated to how the adults and children carried them out.
Current Floorbooks are kept within the main room. Remember ”out of sight, out of mind”.
Past Floorbooks are stored in a central place, e.g. the foyer, to enable families and visitors to access them.
Additional information: Highland Literacy “Using Floorbooks”
Mind-maps:
Use mind-maps to identify prior knowledge, find out what the children already know and what they want to find out. These might be questions to be answered or things to do and can be included within the Floorbook or on learning walls.
Summative mind-maps can be used by practitioners to show all the different lines of enquiry that the children have been exploring, the children’s experiences and cross-referenced these with the experiences and outcomes.
Record and display the children’s learning in various ways, including notes, transcripts, photographs, voice recordings, film. The children’s creations and achievements can be added alongside observations to make the learning visible.
Inclusion of social media and using closed pages to share learning and skills of learning with parents.
Use displays and documentation to encourage children to use the language associated with learning and reflect learning back to children. This enables them to understand their learning and see themselves as capable learners.
Ensure that learning displays are accessible to all children, parents and carers, and practitioners to ensure that all contributors feel genuine ownership. Where possible, displays of children’s work should be at child height.
