Pedagogical Change Report
Pedagogical Change Report
Pedagogical Change Report
Pedagogical
change
through
critical
reflection
Contents
Scope
and
scale
Upskilling
of
staff
and
support
for
student
learning
Just
right
readers
and
classroom
libraries
The
Learning
Log
Sharing
of
professional
practice
Teacher
Feedback
Concluding
comments
Appendix
A
Teacher
Feedback
sheet
Appendix
B
Teachers,
curriculum
areas
and
foci
Appendix
C
Learning
Log
an
example
page
3
4
5
5
6
7
9
10
11
14
Report
produced
by:
Julie
Wilson,
Senior
Leader
Literacy,
Intervention
and
Support
Salisbury
High
School
August
2016
Teacher
feedback
The
feedback
form
has
five
sections.
Included
below
is
a
range
of
responses
that
teachers
involved
with
Cue
Learning
made
in
each
of
those
five
sections.
The
information
sought
was:
What
has
been
the
impact
for
you
of/on:
Professional
conversations
and
your
understanding
on
subject
based
literacy
The
post
lesson
conversations
provided
an
opportunity
for
real
reflection
on
classroom
practice.
General
awareness
of
subject
based
literacy
including
interpretation
of
diagrams
and
graphs.
Identifying
useful
strategies
like
thinking
squares
and
word
walls
to
help
in
the
interpretation
of
scientific
data.
Conversations
leading
to
the
development
and
unpacking
of
lessons
were
very
supportive
and
led
to
changes
in
classroom
practice
encouraging
active
listening,
students
making
decisions
about
sources
of
information.
Whilst
the
conversations
were
appreciated
and
enjoyed
(giving
reassurance
of
effective
learning
tasks)
the
advice
for
improvement
was
only
small
adjustments
I
know
understand
that
literacy
is
a
whole
school
responsibility.
I
have
geared
changes
to
all
our
design
brief
and
evaluation
exercises.
Explicit
and
beneficial
with
direction/ideas
towards
practical
and
purposeful
process/structures
to
help
shape
student
learning
and
communication.
Allowed
for
alternative
ideas/ways
of
thinking
to
be
unlocked
ahead
of
time
so
that
ideas
could
be
implemented
as
activities
in
class.
The
learning
logs
and
suggested
resources
The
learning
logs
were
useful
and
guided
my
own
reflection.
The
observation
notes
were
good
to
read
to
reinforce
that
what
I
was
doing
was
effective
for
my
students
learning.
The
Learning
Logs
were
useful
to
keep
track
of
progress.
The
students
responded
well
to
the
suggested
materials
and
strategies.
Classroom
practice
and
the
agreed
focus
Some
of
my
classroom
practices
have
changed
to
reflect
greater
emphasis
on
terminology,
definitions
and
sentence
construction
but
there
is
still
work
to
be
done
in
this
area.
The
literacy
focus
allowed
my
teaching
practice
to
develop.
I
was
able
to
focus
on
small
aspects
like
bookwork
and
neatness.
The
focus
on
decoding
unfamiliar
text
through
analysing
words,
expanding
student
vocabulary
and
other
strategies
allowed
students
to
be
able
to
access
more
sophisticated
texts.
I
was
able
to
utilise
more
effective
methods
of
using/teaching
subject
specific
language/terminology.
I
now
use
glossaries
across
all
classes
that
I
teach,
including
senior
classes.
I
was
able
to
make
huge
shifts
in
implementing
new
strategies
to
improve
the
writing
tasks.
The
discussions
on
communication/student
led
focus
has
benefited
me
individually
and
professionally
and
allowed
reflective
growth.
I
actually
found
it
easier
teaching
with
Sharon
in
the
class
as
the
kids
knew
what
she
was
there
for
and
were
able
to
show
off
their
work.
Her
insights
and
ideas
gave
students
ownership
and
responsibility
and
acted
as
a
sounding
board
for
me
in
class
practice.
Development
in
pedagogy
Changing
pedagogical
approaches
takes
a
great
deal
of
time.
Constant
reinforcement
from
CUE
Learning
facilitates
this.
My
awareness
of
my
use
of
language
has
improved
as
a
consequence.
Technical
terms
are
introduced
with
a
greater
concern
for
students
with
literacy
issues.
More
emphasis
is
placed
on
moving
students
language
across
the
register.
My
pedagogy
has
definitely
improved
in
relation
to
how
I
view
teaching
and
conveying
information.
I
actually
do
a
lot
without
realising
it
and
CUE
learning
has
helped
me
to
be
more
explicit.
I
have
developed
the
explicit
teaching
of
book
based
resources
for
humanities
looking
at
sources
of
information
and
making
judgements
about
reliability.
The
formal
identification
of
open
sorting
as
a
technique
is
now
something
I
consciously
do
across
my
classes
to
help
students
identify
patterns
or
links.
I
now
approach
all
writing
tasks
in
a
manner
that
does
not
assume
that
students
are
writers.
This
is
the
only
T&D
that
has
made
a
lasting
change
for
me.
The
strategies
and
ideas
in
comprehension
and
professional/pedagogical
processes
have
allowed
immediate
implementation
of
practice
in
the
school
wide
humanities
curriculum.
Cue
helped
with
classroom
resources
in
a
significant
way,
the
activities
were
well
thought
out.
The
resources
were
very
supportive
in
developing
student
understanding.
I
was
able
to
try
different
tactics.
Student
engagement
and
achievement
Student
surveys
suggest
they
are
quite
happy
with
the
understandability
of
instructions.
Increased
ability
to
engage
with
content.
Appendix A
Teacher
feedback
Teacher
Your
feedback
is
important
in
evaluating
the
effectiveness
of
our
involvement
with
Cue
learning
over
time.
Please
respond
to
the
following
questions
and
return
to
me
by
the
end
of
Week
3
(Friday
19
Feb).
What
has
been
the
impact
for
you
of/on:
1.
professional
conversations
and
your
understanding
of
your
subject
based
literacy
4. development in pedagogy
5. student
engagement
and
achievement
10
Appendix B
Year
Semester
1
2011
2
2012
Teacher
Curriculum
area
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Science
English
Humanities
Humanities
Teacher
Teacher
LINK
Science
LINK
Science
Year
group
Focus
English
8
Science
PE/Health
8
2
Teacher
Maths
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Maths
LINK
Science
LINK
Maths
Presentation
to
staff
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
NAR
Comprehension
Expo
Classroom
libraries
in
maths
and
writing
Yes
Yes
Year
Semester
1
2013
Teacher
Curriculum
area
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
LINK
Science
Humanities
Digital
media
Dance
Drama
LINK
Science
Science
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
ICT
Digital
media
Humanities
Humanities
Teacher
Teacher
Maths
Science
Teacher
Humanities
2014
Focus
Presentation
to
staff
8
&
9
10
Writing
Reading
strategies
Writing
Vocabulary
Language
and
writing
Writing
Comprehension
and
reading
strategies
Language,
vocabulary
and
writing
Text
features
and
writing
Comprehension
strategies
Scaffolding
learning
Text
features,
scaffolding
and
writing
Building
vocabulary
and
homework
reading
tasks
Text
features
linked
to
Information
reports
Developing
reading
strategies
and
text
features
Developing
effective
sentences
and
paragraphs
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Teacher
9
2
2015
Year
group
Teacher
Science
Teacher
English
Teacher
English
Humanities
9X
12
Yes
Yes
Yes
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Science
Humanities
9X
8X
2
Teacher
Science
Yes
Yes
By
the
end
of
2015
a
total
of
32
staff
will
have
worked
with
Sharon
Callen
across
seven
curriculum
areas
on
a
variety
of
literacy
initiatives
with
students
across
Years
8,
9
and
10.
13
Appendix C
Consultant Name
Sharon Callen
Date
16/9/14
School Name
School Address
Salisbury
Region
Northern Adelaide
Type of Work
PARTICIPANTS
NEXT
STEPS
Teacher/Literacy
Coordinator
NEXT
STEPS
Consultant
Teacher
Year
8
English
the
teacher
and
her
student
teacher
have
been
co-planning
a
new
unit
of
work
around
the
text,
Dont
Call
Me
Ishmael.
The
student
teacher
delivered
this
lesson,
giving
the
teacher
and
Sharon
some
opportunity
to
extend
the
planning
process
and
consider
the
comprehension
strategies
that
could
form
a
strong
part
of
this
unit.
Sharon
provided
Barretts
Taxonomy
of
Thinking
strategies
to
both
teachers
Sharon
and
the
teacher
also
drew
on
two
further
resources
Sharon
provided
These
resources
were
left
with
the
teachers
at
their
request
the
teacher
is
incorporating
more
tools
and
techniques
into
the
lesson
structure
to
activate
the
students
thinking
Use
of
brainstorming,
thinking
prompts,
student
discussion,
students
being
called
on
individually
to
reveal
their
thinking
(in
this
double
lesson,
students
were
called
on
no
less
than
4
times
each,
to
articulate
thinking)
the
teachers
key
question:
How
do
I
better
engage
students
in
deeper
thinking?
Post
lesson
discussion
lead
to
2
focus
areas:
1.
Exit
strategies
for
the
lesson
to
capture
understandings,
new
learning,
confusions
2.
Develop
close
reading
strategies,
to
activate
students
thinking
when
reading
the
teacehr
combined
with
another
science
class
to
demonstrate
a
number
of
chemical
reactions
To
engage
students
in
thinking
and
sharing,
the
teacher
had
students
record
thinking,
ideas,
questions
on
small
whiteboards
Teacher
Year
9
Humanities
Teacher
Year
9
Science
14
Teacher
Year
9
Science
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