Archive for December, 2007

Dec 21 2007

Casual Pets

Published by Richard Wilson under Uncategorized

I heard the term casual pets for the first time on radio yesterday. It refers to any creature you feed in your garden such as birds, hedgehogs etc. Here at Pinkie we are blessed with a huge enclosed playing area that is refuge to many birds I would like to think of as our casual pets. Yesterday I counted in excess of 50 curlews and as many oyster catchers working our playing fields for worms, leatherjackets and any other small invertebrates. We have some noisy visitors over from Scandinavia who are steadily denuding our rowan trees of their berries and also working the fields, these fieldfares are fascinating in their behaviour, they seem to claim a tree and squabble like mad with their mates over the berries. But our pride of place must go to our resident hen harriers, we have a breeding pair somewhere on our premises who make spectacular watching. The male is a pale grey colour, the female, who is larger, is browny with a barred tail. During breeding the male provides the meals, he calls to her as he nears the nest, she leaves and pursues him, turns updside down in mid-flight and grabs the vole/bird as she flies underneath him. During the winter months she ambushes our feral pigeons as they leave our doocot and devours them alive. Who needs the Serengeti when you have this stuff right on your doorstep! In addition, we have visiting roe deer and foxes, who lie up in our bramble patches and help keep our rabbits in control.

male-harrier.jpg Female Hen Harrier

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Dec 18 2007

HMIe Follow-Through Report

Today we received the final copy of our HMIe follow through report on the Inspection of the school in 2006. A copy will go home with every child. As a staff we were very pleased with the findings of the inspection team and feel it gives a very fair and balanced view. I include it here for your interest and comment.

 

DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION & CHILDREN’S SERVICES

 

 

PROGRESS REPORT ON PINKIE ST PETER’S PRIMARY SCHOOL

 

Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Education (HMIe) published a report on the inspection of Pinkie St Peter’s Primary School in January 2006.  The school, in partnership with the Local Authority, prepared an action plan indicating how they would address the main findings of the report.

The school, in partnership with the local authority, prepared an action plan indicating how they would address the main points for action in the report.  Progress on the action plan has been regularly monitored and evaluated by an officer of the local authority.  This report evaluates the extent to which the school is continuing to improve the quality of its work and the progress made in responding to the main points for action.

Point for action 1:

·        Continue to improve overall quality of teaching

Good progress has been made.

Assessment strategies are well established in all classes.  They are making a positive impact on attainment.  The school has made a good start to the introduction of the new national initiative ‘A Curriculum for Excellence’.

An independent evaluation of the quality of enterprising approaches learning and teaching rated the school as very good to excellent. Active learning is evident in early years classes. Plans are in place to extend this to all classes in session 2007/8

Staff have attended a range of professional development courses on formative assessment and learning and teaching.  They have incorporated some of the recommended approaches into their own classroom practice and shared the impact of the changes with colleagues.

The headteacher and depute headteacher have established links with local businesses, organisations and Queen Margaret University. There is a wide range of extra curricular activities. The depute headteacher has continued to develop health education, eco schools and international education.  These partnerships provide excellent contexts for learning and promoting wider achievement.

Senior staff have monitored the introduction and quality of teaching approaches through classroom observation and discussion with staff. There is a collegiate approach to changes in teaching strategies across the whole school.

Point for action 2:

·        Further improve the overall quality of learning, addressing issues of pace and challenge, particularly for higher achieving pupils.

Good progress has been made.

The senior management team (SMT) used classroom observation and team teaching to work with classes to enhance pace and challenge.

There is an extensive evaluation and testing programme. Baseline assessment in P1 is informing discussions between senior managers and teachers on their forward planning to ensure an appropriate level of support and challenge for pupils.  Overall teachers’ expectations for pupils’ work and pace of learning have improved. Setting is in place in some classes. Teachers target support to ensure children are progressing appropriately.  Learning support teachers have identified higher achieving pupils and appropriate strategies that will improve the pace of their learning.

The school has developed an effective system for monitoring, evaluating and supporting children with additional needs. There is close liaison between outside agencies, support for learning teachers and class teachers. Children are well supported.

Teachers share next steps in learning with children as part of the formative assessment strategies. Children are aware of the specific criteria for reading, writing and maths. Core programme target sheets for mathematics are included in children’s jotters and clearly displayed in classes. Children have learning targets, assess their progress and are becoming more independent learners.

A programme for personal writing has been developed and children now work to higher standards. Progression of reading skills has been developed for all levels. This has led to better pace of learning and consistency at all stages.

Action Point 3

Ensure that pupils from the Support Base are effectively included in mainstream classes.

Very good progress has been made.

The Support Base is now called the Learning Zone. It is used as a whole school resource as well as providing an excellent base for those children with severe and complex needs. All Learning Zone children are involved in whole school activities.

Mainstream children access the Learning Zone as part of integration, working alongside Learning Zone children and others from mainstream. Pupils and staff from the Learning Zone are timetabled to support children in class where appropriate. These timetables are sophisticated but well managed and clearly support the needs of the small number of very vulnerable children. Teachers across the school have benefited from partnership with the Learning Zone.  They have introduced an increased range of teaching approaches.

Mainstream class teachers are involved in the formation of Individualised Educational Programmes and receive copies of Forward Plans for individual pupils. These plans are evaluated on a regular basis through liaison meetings for each planning block.

An excellent soft play room has been established and well resourced after the school secured funding from a local business.

Teachers and support staff were very committed to the support and integration of pupils from the Learning Zone.

Action Point 4

Improve the use made of the system of tracking pupils’ progress to ensure they consistently attain in line with their capabilities.

Good progress has been made.

This is linked to Action Point 2.

The school introduced additional tests and evaluations to provide more detailed analysis of pupil performance and trends at all stages. Staff plan next steps in learning and ensure that pupils made more appropriate progress. More effective systems for tracking pupil progress were now in place. Pupils’ performance was discussed regularly between teachers and promoted staff and this was helping to improve attainment. Teachers’ assessments were now used to monitor pupils’ progress against predicted levels. Staff used assessment information to inform action where pupils were not making the progress that their earlier attainment had indicated they should. Plans are now in place for staff, with support from SMT, to take ownership of predictions and monitoring of attainment levels.

Continuous Improvement

The school shows very good capacity for continuous improvement.  Levels of attainment continue to be good.

Staff have been engaging with A Curriculum for Excellence and have adopted a range of appropriate strategies to improve learning.  The Primary 1 & 2 teachers have incorporated more active learning into the pupils’ experiences. This has had an impact on their achievement.

The school has continued to develop the use of ICT across the curriculum.  There is a wide range of technology in use and pupils are motivated and engaged by the activities.  Some classes used animations, garage band, i-tunes and made i-movies.

The school has achieved level 1 accreditation as a Healthy School and a Bronze Eco-School Award and is currently building on this success.

Plans are in place to further develop active learning, learning teams, links with local businesses and to investigate underachievement of boys in the upper stages.

Working Groups have been established to take forward improvements in, for example, reading and mathematics.

The school has recently refurbished the school library and, after discussion with staff and pupils, invested in new resources that will interest pupils of all ages and boys in particular.

The school is well placed to sustain and build on its current levels of good practice.

Conclusion

Pinkie St Peter’s Primary School has made good progress overall in the points for action set out in the HMIe report and has continued to provide a high standard of education for its pupils.  The current Head Teacher took up his post in May 2007 and improvements have continued.  There is a strong basis for continued improvement.

 

 

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Dec 13 2007

All I Want For Christmas

Published by Richard Wilson under Uncategorized

Dear Santa,

I’m a very uncomplicated soul whose needs are simple, I like any whisky with a cork, a light hearted book, and if anyone feel really generous a new motorbike, but, mostly, a quiet stroll along a deserted beach then back to the requests of course!

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Dec 11 2007

Phonics for the Upper School

Published by Richard Wilson under Uncategorized

In Pinkie we have a working group looking at all aspects of reading and trying to come up with ways of improving reading skills across the whole school. I have just received an inspection copy of a resource called Read Write Inc that re-introduces the pupils to synthetic phonics, which are widely recognised as being a crucial component of learning how to read. The link takes you to the 5-14 Special Focus page on LT Scotland website. If you haven’t been there before it is well worth a look. Part of the discussion we started was to look at current school resources and to try to enhance our provision by making better use of existing materials and re-discovering ways of teaching reading better and improving our level of pace. The catch 22 situation here is neatly summed up by a quote from William Glasser, “The faster you go, the more students you leave behind. It doesn’t matter how much or how fast you teach. The true measure is how much students have learned. “

Read write inc. stresses the importance of partner work to improve learning, very much formative assessment techiques, the emphasis being:

We Learn: (William Glasser)

  • 10% of what we read
  • 20% of what we see
  • 30% of what we hear
  • 50% of what we see and hear
  • 70% of what we discuss with another person
  • 85% of what we experience personally
  • 95% of what we teach

By working together, pupils are taught to teach and support each other to read, comprehend, spell and write their own compositions which will then be able to be published on our collaborative writing wiki.

If we adopt this system I will keep a log of its use and how it impacts on our reading here.

Ending with another Glasser quote, “Effective teaching may be the hardest job there is”.

Says it all.

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Dec 03 2007

More help with writing

Published by Richard Wilson under Uncategorized, Using ICT

reading-cartoon2.png

The above cartoon was quickly and easily created using a super free on-line cartoon maker called Toondoo. There are loads of backgrounds, characters, and a text tool among many other features. There is also a safe search option which is useful. I will be using this with the pupils in school to stimulate their interest in writing. The cartoon can be saved as a png file which is easy to insert in your blog or web pages. Thanks to Rajendran for pointing me in the right direction. Registration is quick and easy, try it out.

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