Category Archives: Skills

Investing in Children

Investing in Children

Over the past year as part of my Health and Wellbeing role in the school I have been working closely with Investing in Children, a community interest group who have been liaising with different schools across the local authority. The main aim of this project has been to promote the rights and voices of young people by identifying areas to develop within the community to improve health and wellbeing, and encourage Inveralmond pupils to take an active lead in discussing, report writing and making effective, sustainable decisions that impact on them being part of the local community.

A group of around 15 pupils met recently to take part in an Agenda Day at Inveralmond which was designed and led by them and in partnership with a representative from Investing in Children and the Health and Wellbeing co-ordinator for West Lothian. The pupils took part in discussions on community safety around Livingston, the use of pedestrian paths, road safety, as well as having a say in decision making at Inveralmond, how to combat issues of bullying, and how to liaise with learner voice reps for your House.

I am hoping that the impact of this work will continue over the year ahead enabling more young people to have a say in what is happening in their own community as well as in the school community in order to further improve Getting it right for every child (GIRFEC, 2009) making sure our young people feel included, responsible and nurtured at all times.

Sarah Kerr

Youth and Philanthropy Initiative

YPI

I recently attended the Youth and Philanthropy Initiative (YPI) Showcase Event at Perth Concert Hall which brought together over 1000 pupils, teachers and charity representatives to share the experiences of being involved in YPI over the past year. YPI involves young people researching local charities in their community which they will raise awareness of and if successful in their winning presentation, can go on to secure £3000 for their chosen charity. This is a fantastic way for pupils to achieve in wider areas of school life and dedicate their time to issues of social concern. The pupils showcasing work from other schools highlighted their improved confidence, communication, team working and presentation skills and overall sense of enthusiasm from taking part in YPI which shows how well it connects to the skills for learning, life and work in Building the Curriculum 4 as well as across the four contexts for learning in Building the Curriculum 3.

I am hoping this will have a significant impact on Inveralmond over the coming year as part of senior phase wider opportunities. Hopefully this time next year we will have our own pupils showcasing their winning work at the event!

Sarah Kerr

Community Resilience

On Friday 5th June I attended a conference examining community resilience and how it is incorporated in to the curriculum. This area has been given a higher profile following the release of the Learning for Sustainability documentation that was the basis for the Learning Directorate’s visit to Inveralmond in April this year. Community resilience is examining ways in which schools encourage learners to take a more active role within their communities and how they could aid the response after events such as flooding, power cuts or rapid spread of disease – all of which are possible across large swathes of Scotland in the coming years.

The conference was a mix of presentations given by practitioners who have been early adopters of this new context for learning and professionals from various bodies who wish to promote community resilience (such as RNLI, Keep Scotland Beautiful, Save the Children and SEPA) and round table discussion in groups (taken from both educational and wider settings). The main thrust of these conversations was to examine what currently goes in schools which could be classified as community resilience and how do outside agencies best engage with schools to put across the benefits and assistance that they can provide to aid the implementation of this.

From these discussions, it became clear that the idea of community resilience would sit very well in a number of places within the secondary curriculum. Within traditional subject areas there is scope for examining previous responses to events such as flooding and the methods employed to reduce the impact within Geography and the Sciences. The organisers, primarily Eilidh Soussi from Education Scotland who has been seconded to the role of developing community resilience across Scotland, have provided a range of ideas with associated links to curricular areas for those interested.

Where community resilience as a context for learning may be more appropriate in Inveralmond’s setting would be in the inherent opportunities for interdisciplinary learning afforded by the context of flooding or other local issues. Similarly, the scope for community working with businesses and partner agencies would perhaps lend itself to accreditation in a wide range of awards (such as Saltire, Citizenship, Duke of Edinburgh or CREST) through volunteer work across a year and aiding the development of skills for learning, life and work. There is certainly a lot to think about regarding how to continue our understanding of Learning for Sustainability and the wider incorporation of its ethos within and across the curriculum.

Stephen Small

SQA Internal Verification Toolkit

Today Pamela McConnell from the SQA spoke to PTCs about the resources available online from the SQA regarding understanding standards and internal verification procedures. Pamela was a very engaging presenter and took us all through a wide range of services available from the SQA and approaches to verification and moderation.

The understanding standards materials are available on the SQA open site and provide evidence and commentaries on assessment judgements for exam scripts and assignments. All materials online currently are from National 5 courses and Higher will come online as materials are made available over the summer. The website for this is SQA Understanding Standards, and should be of great use over the coming months. She also raised awareness of the forthcoming Understanding Standards events that will be held specifically for Higher during the autumn so look out for updates about how to book on to these events.

Pamela also wished to raise awareness of the verification and course reports to allow staff to gain up to date information on current issues and strengths in their subject areas. These are available on the SQA page and allow all staff to identify consistent messages coming out of the SQA subject teams. There were also numerous NQ changes notified in May 2015 and there will be many new UASPs coming on stream in August 2015 so staff should be vigilant for any updated materials for units they are delivering.

Finally, she delivered a short presentation on approaches to internal verification and the need to have rigorous systems in place to ensure consistency and high standards, which I am sure we can reflect positively on in Inveralmond. Pamela talked through different ways to undertake internal verification from the common ‘Team Peer Review’ approach where staff pass their marking to a colleague to cross mark and provide feedback to the more formal Lead IV approach where a member of staff will chair discussion around a table with a group of colleagues, agree marking principles beforehand and then commence marking (similar to the SQA model for marking of exams).

 

Stephen Small

L Duncan: Higher Team Leader Standardisation Event

The event was held over two days and was designed to establish and share the standard for the Critical Reading paper for Higher English and provide essential training in the new RM Assessor e- marking system. The two days also provided training in the new front-loaded self-evaluation and support systems being implemented this year by SQA. Team Leaders were provided with both generic and specific training in the required coaching and feedback methodologies.
Team Leaders worked through practice and qualification scripts, supporting the PA as national standards were finalised. Practical experience of RM Assessor was provided on both days as appointees accessed materials and applied agreed standards, annotation and recording protocols.
The training provided me with clarity re national standards for Higher; these will impact directly on the Department’s practice next session as appropriate knowledge is shared and implemented.
The training has wider significance as knowledge of RM Assessor and its requirements will prove invaluable as we prepare pupils for the increasing number of e-marked exams. The assessor training and support processes rehearsed at the event have, in any case, immediate relevance to whole- school practice: support mechanisms for markers/colleagues at a time of change and challenge; monitoring and tracking of progress/systems knowledge and the rigorous application of shared standards.

SERA/WERA Conference – Edinburgh 2014

As part of my MSc I have recently presented findings from my research at the SERA/WERA (Scottish Educational Research Association/World Educational Research Association) conference held in Edinburgh this November. It was a rather nerve-wracking build up creating an academic poster to present to academics from across the world (USA, Taiwan, Norway, Iceland, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia and over 40 other countries) and with a few glitches along the way I eventually managed to get everything brought together in the poster below. Continue reading SERA/WERA Conference – Edinburgh 2014

MSc in Educational Research: Use of iPads to Develop Higher Order Thinking Skills

Over the last three years I have been undertaking an MSc in Educational Leadership at the University of Stirling. This culminated recently with my final submitted piece of work on how iPads can be used effectively within Social Subjects to support pupils’ development of higher order thinking skills (taken from Anderson et al’s 2001 reworking of Bloom’s Taxonomy). This project was run within the Social Subjects faculty and from the intervention, which was incorporated in to the S3 curriculum, there were several interesting findings. Firstly, pupils were less confident in their use of iPads and associated software than we as teachers perhaps assume and it was interesting to note that the majority of pupils reported increasingly levels of confidence with the use of mobile technology to enhance learning. Secondly, pupils were more capable of discussing and identifying how they can apply knowledge and skills across the discrete subject areas and this aided us in moving past the “but this is Maths/English/insert random subject” type of response to a more holistic view of learning.

Continue reading MSc in Educational Research: Use of iPads to Develop Higher Order Thinking Skills