We are constantly criticized in the media, by politicians, by businessmen and by parents and carers who rightly are concerned about underperformance and underachievement at all levels in the education system. I know, of course, that there is still much to be done before we can claim that the school system in York or Leeds or Nottingham or Sheffield or any of our great cities is totally and systematically transformed. Personally, I have been constantly frustrated by the progress we've made and I have also been frustrated by the lack of leadership in almost every aspect of life in this country which against a background of initiatives, systems, targets and inspection has constrained individual creativity and initiative and limited great teaching and learning. However, even the skeptics would have to admit that, we made great progress over the last fifteen years, and with every challenge, every mishap and the many mistakes we've made, we’ve learned such a lot about the journey that schools need to make to become brilliant learning places.
So how do we do it? After fifteen years leading it and nearly forty years doing it I think I know what needs to be done to reach this ambitious and challenging goal. And, surprise, surprise it's all about learning leadership, beautiful systems and intelligent accountability. We must constantly focus on learning; helping all our children and young people learn how to learn and we must champion assessment for learning and the cultural change programmes we know work. We must focus on developing learning and teaching strategies that engage and challenge every child and every student, creating an entitlement curriculum for a conceptual age and championing the teaching and learning programmes we know work. WE must also understand that the evidence suggests that master coaching, deliberate practice, structured feedback and sheer hard work are key elements in any child or learners success. We must develop learning networks, learning schools and learning communities where we share, network, champion and support the continuing professional development of all our colleagues. We must build strong and dynamic partnerships beyond the school with parents and carers and other stakeholders and partners and championing the efficacy and self-esteem programmes we know that work. We must also develop more intelligent accountability systems with a better balance between internal and external assessment and between formative and summative assessment, making OFSTED focus once again focus on the things that really matter... learning, learning, learning!
Chris
No comments:
Post a Comment
More than anything else, feedback helps us improve and develop.
So, please let me know what you think?
Chris