3.1 Introduction In planning your unit you need to keep four questions in mind. What are you trying to achieve with this teaching unit - what are your aims? What activities do you wish the learners to engage with in order to demonstrate or achieve those aims - what are the learning objectives or outcomes and how are they to be assessed? How will you evaluate the effectiveness of what you have produced? In the light of the ev
Introduction This unit looks at the pedagogical issues involved in the creation and selection of self-study educational resources for a set of intended learning outcomes as exemplified here on OpenLearn. It is a unit about writing a unit. Although it considers the way that people at The Open University set about writing open-learning materials, it will not focus specifically on the University’s particular production system. Nor does it look deeply at the technical issues involved in producing certain ty
References 3 Sharing information If all governors are not involved in monitoring there must be procedures through which all are kept informed. Creese and Earley (1999). The role of the governor has changed considerably in recent years: there is a genuine need to know and understand the school much better, from the point of view of its performance and development priorities. At the same time, all governors have other commitment 4 Using data to set targets Target-setting will take place on a number of levels … but ultimately it should affect individual pupils. (Creese and Earley, 1999) As mentioned earlier, it is unlikely that the governing body will actually set the targets. The headteacher will have worked with the staff, drawing on a range of evidence including benchmarking information and consulting the teachers, who keep comprehensive reco References 3. Statutory responsibilities In broad terms, the statutory responsibilities that support the main objective of raising standards in the school cover the following areas: agreeing the aims of the school and ensuring that supporting policies are in place; ethos and discipline; the provision of an appropriate curriculum; staffing and related pay issues; managing the budget; setting targets for pupil 1.3.1 Teaching global science Science draws on a rich cultural heritage and continues to be a global endeavour. How can you bring global science to life for your students? Activity 3 will help to bring a global perspective to your science curriculum. Click "view document" to open 'Investigating Housing in Saudi Arabia'. 1.1 Experiencing film music People hear and experience film music differently, and it is important to respect and explore this subjectivity. No answer is wrong, but merely representative of different cultural perceptions. ‘All that I can say about my method in writing music for films is that it is intensely personal. I work completely emotionally. I cannot intellectualize about the role of music in film. I decide if it should be there purel 1.4. Encouraging students to think about etymology When is the best time to introduce students to making connections between languages? When introducing them to the new language. When introducing new vocabulary. When developing whole-class reading skills. It is very encouraging to students about to embark on the study of their first foreign language to know that they already possess a working knowledge of some of its vocabulary. English is littered with dir 4. In the classroom There are many possible strategies for making more use of visualisation within the mathematics classroom. There are several visualisation activities for you to experiment with in Activity 3. One teacher's approach to incorporating visualisation is given in the following case study and three-part video clip. 3.3 Responding to these initiatives A key implication of both initiatives is greater interagency working, which necessitates more engagement of school staff with other professionals. The DfES notes in Extended Schools: Providing Opportunities and Services for all that schools will need to work in partnership with other groups and agencies to enable: more diverse activities that involve parents, community members and local groups; a ‘joined-up’ approach Acknowledgements This unit was originally prepared for TeachandLearn.net by Jenny Brown, who is a chartered librarian and has worked as a school librarian in London for 15 years. She was one of the first to obtain the RSA Diploma in Technology for Teachers. Jenny has always had a keen interest in independent learning and higher-order thinking skills, and has championed the key role that librarians can play in developing these. While working for BECTa s Learning outcomes Once you have completed this unit you will be able to: clarify your own ideas on literacy criticism; explore with your pupils what makes a good book; produce a range of writing frames to encourage pupils to write book reviews; encourage your pupils to follow some of the award schemes for children's books and perhaps start one of your own. 4.1 Introduction Collective oeuvres* produce and sustain group solidarity. They help make a community. Works and works-in-progress create shared and negotiable ways of thinking in a group … externalising, in a word, rescues cognitive activity from implicitness, making it more public, negotiable and solidary. (Bruner, 1996, p. 22) *An oeuvre is normally defined as the total output of an individual writer or ar 1.4 What is creativity? All people are capable of creative achievements in some areas of activity, provided the conditions are right, and they have acquired the relevant knowledge and skills … creative possibilities are pervasive in the concerns of everyday life, its purposes and problems … creative activity is also pervasive … creativity can be expressed in collaborative as well as individual activities, in teamwork, in 3 A diversity of views Another vital strategy for survival (or for the justification of survival) is for geography teachers to teach well. Given the wealth and range of lively material available to geography teachers and the richness of life in the real world, it ought to be rare for a geography teacher not to be able to interest or stimulate students in some part of the subject on its own merits (Walford, 2001, p. 238) 2 The purposes of geography in schools The evidence shows that students who study geography through their school lives become some of the most employable people in our society. The organisation [the Geographical Association] comments: ‘Surely all parents would wish their children to engage with a subject that improves their life chances and helps them to develop an informed concern for the world and an ability and willingness to take positive action, both l Learning outcomes The learning outcomes of this unit are: review some of the recent debates about the place of geography in the school curriculum; consider the different aims of geographical education; links for further study 2 The subject discipline Click 'play' to watch the file
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