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It may be the height of the holiday
season, but about a million people are about to get life-altering
news. On Thursday, 300,000 school and college students will receive
their A level results. A week later, another 700,000 will find out
how they did in their GCSEs. |
It may be the height of the holiday season, but about a million people
are about to get life-altering news. On Thursday, 300,000 school and
college students will receive their A level results. A week later, another
700,000 will find out how they did in their GCSEs.
And it is not just the students who have a lot riding on these
high-stakes exams. For the schools they have attended and the teachers who
work in them, poor results can mean bad headlines and professional damage.
But we are now finding out about the factors that make some schools
more successful than others. New research carried out by the Economic and
Social Research Council’s Teaching and Learning Research Programme (TLRP),
and being sent to all schools in the UK at the start of next term, will
help schools turn into places where students can become independent
learners instead of being taught to pass tests and keep exam scores high.
Professor Mary James, deputy director of TLRP and an expert in school
examinations and assessment, said: “The government says it wants to put
less focus on targets when it assesses how well public services are doing.
The work we have done shows that this new emphasis is the right one. A
school where everything depends on paper results and performance does not
develop children as learners. And teachers who are forced to work in this
way cannot become more effective and responsible.”
Professor James had led a TLRP project on Learning How to Learn. It
worked with 40 schools to see how pupil assessment can help people become
more effective learners instead of being a barrier to success.
She says: “Our research showed that many teachers want to help pupils
develop their own learning skills. There are big differences in how
successfully different teachers manage to develop learners. But teachers
who have proper professional development and support can help children to
take responsibility for their own learning. These pupils can think about
what they are learning and how, and, improving their own learning.”
The project is one of 22 described in the new TLRP booklet and DVD,
Principles into Practice. All are aimed at improving learning in schools.
Further examples include:
- How can small children gain more from information technology" It
turns out that giving them your old mobile might be more use than buying
them a computer.
- Children at school usually work on their own or in the whole class.
TLRP research has shown that properly-run work in smaller groups can
help learning.
- Changing schools can disturb children. But a structured exchange of
knowledge between school and home, involving conversations, objects and
pictures, can make it much easier and less disruptive.
- What do children really need to know about science" TLRP found out
the key facts about modern science and developed successful teaching
modules to get them across.
- Pupils have good ideas about their learning. But few schools have
systems in place to make the most of their knowledge. TLRP showed how
their achievement can be increased by better ways of listening to what
they have to say.
Professor James said: “We have now carried out the UK’s biggest
programme of research into improving schools education. Everything we are
saying in Principles into Practice is based on solid evidence.”
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
Professor James and other TLRP researchers are available for interview.
Contact Martin Ince on Tel: 020 8672 6977/0771 939 0958, or email:
martin@martinince.com
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