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Finish the day with an empty inbox

Most people use their email inbox incorrectly. It isn't a to do list, it isn't a calendar, it isn't a filing cabinet. Here's how I use my inbox and finish every day with 0 emails! Firstly we need to rethink how we send emails: 1. Ideally speak in person. No email sent, no email to reply to. 2. If you are sending a quick message or asking a small question, especially within your department/team you could make use of instant messaging e.g. Microsoft teams, WhatsApp, Google chats etc I think Adam Boxer uses this in his department. 3. If you have to send an email, make sure you only send it to those who need to see it, no whole school emails or CCing lots of people. 4. Include as much information as possible. Make it so that you shouldn't need to receive a reply or if you do it is only one email. Tell them what they need to do, by when and what finished looks like, be specific. If arranging meetings, give a range of times to meet up and have the other person decide what
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England v Wales: Who teaches Maths better?

England V Wales: Who teaches Maths better? Times are changing in Wales, there is a new Curriculum focus and in Maths there are 5 proficiencies that the government want to see. Here's my take as a new HOD crossing the border from England. The Welsh government have overhauled the curriculum and not just in Maths. They have identified key statements of what matters and laid out principles for progressing in each subject.  Maths in every country is the same though surely.... Well yes... we still focus on Number, Algebra, Geometry and Statistics. But also no....in Wales it is mandatory to use their 5 proficiencies to progress students in Maths. This isn't an explicit thing in England. The 5 proficiencies are: conceptual understanding, fluency, logical thinking, strategic competence and communication with symbols Lots of big words. But if you dive deeper into the detail that the Welsh government provides on each of them it is no different to what the NCETM in England recommend with t

Gradient of a line

Adapted a Don Steward diagram for a Year 8 lesson on the Gradient. Started with this, and asked students to put the staircases in order of steepness. Students were talking in pairs initially (Think-Pair-Share) before coming back to a whole class discussion. We discussed how they were deciding on what steepness is and what the key features were. We came to the conclusion that more information was needed.   I asked students what measurements would they like to have.  Student: "Can you tell us the angles?" Me: "Sorry guys, I don't have my protractor on me!" Instead I added these values and allowed students to discuss further.  The variation in the numbers allowed for comparisons and a 'discovery' of how we can calculate the gradient. This was a really nice 'hook' into the lesson and helped students understand the concept of the gradient better.  Following this we formalised our method for finding the gradient as rise over run. I went through one fu

Curriculum Progression

There are more and more conversations around the curriculum happening now but are we talking about the right things? I would argue not completely, let me explain: Vertical Progression of a topic Quite often we talk about how we can progress a topic vertically e.g. how percentages develops from finding a percentage, to increasing and decreasing, compound growth and decay, reverse percentages etc. This is often taught and learnt over a number of years and we look at where that fits in our Year 7 SOW and where it leads in Year 8,9,10 and so on. I love this from  @SarahFarrellKS2  about how she progresses times tables in her Primary school over a number of years.  https://mrsfclassroom.wordpress.com/2022/01/19/times-tables-understanding-and-applying-them/ Horizontal Progression of a topic We discuss horizontal progression less than vertically e.g. how percentages links across the curriculum. If we continue with the example of percentages, I am sure lots of maths teachers make the link with

📝 Weekly Report #33

This week I listened to a really good podcast episode from Greg McKeown called Where am I wrong? In it he talks about a really effective method to have deeper discussions on what is important.  Write down/say the 3-5 issues/priorities you think there are as well as the cost/consequence of them. Then just simply ask where am I wrong? It starts the conversation off with the other person talking and getting their points across. You can then get that shared understanding about what needs to be done and why.  It got me thinking about other areas this could be useful for e.g. dealing with conflicts, leading departments/teams, pitching a new initiative. I am going to start doing this in some of these scenarios as I think we can have more productive conversations from it.  Have a listen to the episode here .  🔊 Listen: Alan Stein Jr on the Modern Wisdom podcast discussing high performance and overcoming stress. He talks about thinking like an athlete with your work and improving every part of

📝 Weekly report #32

I've been thinking this week about CPD and more specifically how we deliver it to teachers. As teachers, we are trained on the best ways of explicitly teaching new knowledge to students however quite often we don't use the same techniques when teaching teachers. Why? Most, if not all of the techniques we use with students should also be used with teachers: retrieval of knowledge, teacher led instruction, opportunities for formative assessment. The difficulty with delivering CPD to teachers though is that there group you are delivering to is often very diverse in their understanding but will also be using the knowledge in different subjects and in different ways. It is a difficult task for anyone delivering CPD.  As part of my PD Lead course, I am being trained up to deliver effective CPD to teachers. Within the course we have spoken about having a common starting point, e.g. it could be a Maths question based on the topic I want to deliver to the Maths team, it could be asking

Drip feeding topics into your teaching

It's no wonder students struggle with Trigonometry, Pythagoras, Quadratic Formula etc. We overload them with too much new information all at once. Instead, drip feed these topics into the time before these lessons to reduce cognitive load and give students time to learn to a greater depth. Here's how I have done it: Drip feeding future content is an untapped gold mine that we can exploit further in our teaching. Why drip feed the content when we have dedicated time to teach it? - Reduces cognitive load - Can explore the topic to a greater depth - Ensure students have the relevant prior knowledge to be successful - Reduces the need for constantly reteaching In starters in the lead up to the topic and during lessons on substitution I use the relevant formulae students will use later in their Maths journey. My Yr 10s are about to learn about the Sine Rule and Cosine Rule, last term they were answering questions like this in the starter. They have no previous knowledge of these for