Building Better Learners: Phase 2
Online course: The Professional Learning Power Game
The Professional Learning Power Game is the core of the second phase of Building Better Learners. It consists of thirteen online units, each expected to take about four to six weeks to implement in classrooms, using the professional learning team model.
The units are:
- Putting Perseverance into learning
- Putting Questioning into learning
- Putting Collaboration into learning
- Putting Revising into learning
- Putting Making Links into learning
- Putting Imagining into learning
- Putting Reasoning into learning
- Putting Capitalising into learning
- Putting Listening into learning
- Putting Planning into learning
- Putting Noticing into learning
- Putting Me Learning (meta learning) into learning
- Reviewing our progress
Each of these except the last explores one key learning behaviour: how to develop and grow it over time.
The final unit provides teachers and the school with ways of assessing the progress made to date. It can be used at times chosen by the team, or perhaps the school, throughout the programme; it is not intended to be left until the very end! See also Reviewing Learning below.
The units can be undertaken in any order.
- A team might start with those learning behaviours that have already been identified as relatively weak in relation to others, perhaps via students’ learning profiles arising from Finding Learning Power
- Or all teams may choose to focus on an area of common concern so that the school’s teams move forward together
- Or teams might make a start on one of the 8 ‘new’ behaviours introduced in this phase
- Or they might choose to dig in deeper with one of the four behaviours that were foregrounded in Playing the Learning Power Game before widening out to include others
- Any unit can be revisited, perhaps as a refresher or to explore at greater depth.
Unit structure
Each unit follows the same form, divided into four sections.
Three individual teacher sections
Teachers work their way through the materials at a time and place to suit them. Each section will usually take about 30-45 minutes to work through and think about. The materials introduce new thinking and practical ideas for staff to get their heads around prior to their team session.
A Professional Learning Team meeting section
This brings staff together as a learning team at monthly intervals (typically six to eight staff per team), convened and led by a learning champion from your school. Staff share and discuss how they have moved their practice to incorporate learning behaviours, consider new material introduced in the individual online learning sections, and plan their learning enquiries to be implemented in the next month. Each team session is planned to last about an hour to 75 minutes.
Each unit is accompanied by a Learning Diary. This helps participants to distil important messages, home in on key pieces of information, and design learning experiments specifically for their pupils.
You can find fuller descriptions of one typical learning-behaviour unit and the progress-review unit via the buttons:
Example Unit — Putting Collaboration into Learning
Example Unit — Putting Collaboration into Learning
At its least sophisticated, collaboration is little more than being cooperative. At its most sophisticated and complex level it goes beyond learning ‘in a team’ and becomes learning ‘as a team’. It is an invaluable life skill.
This unit is designed to guide you through a process of building the habit of Collaboration in your pupils. Sections 1–4 consider:
- Collaboration and how it develops. Includes a Collaboration Progression Chart. Unpick the meaning of Collaboration, how it develops over time and use the Collaboration chart to plot where your pupils are now.
- Taking Collaboration into classroom culture. Includes Collaboration classroom activities. This section offers numerous suggestions to develop a learning-friendly culture and build pupils’ learning skills. Here you will find ideas for lesson starters and quick wins; classroom activities; learning reflection tools; ideas for the appropriate learning language for each phase of progression in Collaboration. You are likely to browse in this section for about 30 minutes in preparation for the team meeting.
- Blending learning habits with content. Example dual focused lesson. This section suggests a series of questions and steps you might use to ensure the development of learning habits claims its place in the curriculum and is designed into lessons and activities to aid understanding. Here we look closely at how to blend improving pupils’ Collaboration with the content you have to teach. The section covers: The six principles behind any learning powered lesson; Big questions to ask about lesson design; Lesson planning in action: an exemplar Collaboration-focused task.
- Team reflection and planning. Share the impact of your experiments with colleagues and plan what you need to do next. It gives a skeleton plan for the Professional Learning Team session (usually undertaken about a week after the individual online sessions). It includes downloadable enquiry questions and planning formats. In team sessions you are invited to share the impact of your experiments with colleagues, discuss the online materials, and plan how you might use these to change your classroom practice. All the activities are designed to help you bring the learning behaviour into active use in the classroom. The section also includes a range of indicators that you could start looking for to begin to measure the impact of teacher development across the school. The team sessions are timed to last about 75 minutes.
Example Unit — Reviewing our Progress
Example Unit — Reviewing our Progress
This unit is designed to enable you to review your progress so far. You can use it at any suitable point in the programme.
The unit offers a rich variety of tools help you review your progress in developing a learning culture in your classrooms. This review will provide you with information to guide your approach in the next phase of building pupils’ learning powers. Sections 1–4 consider:
- Reflecting on your changing practice. Looking at what you have done and how your classroom has changed. This section answers the question “How far have we come?”
- Giving pupils a voice. Finding out how your pupils have benefitted. This section answers the question “How well have our pupils taken to this way of learning?”
- Learning with and from colleagues. Learning from learning walks and observations. This section answers the question “What are the variations on the theme and what can we learn from these variations?”
- Team session: Learning together. Putting your heads together and thinking “What next?” This team session answers the questions “How are we doing, how are our pupils doing and where do we need to go next?”
Building Better Learners: Phase 2
Online resource: Finding Learning Power
Finding Learning Power continues as a resource that sits alongside the course, helping teachers to watch their students’ developing learning power.
Building Better Learners: Phase 2
Online resource: Reviewing Learning
The Reviewing Learning online resource also sits alongside the course, for teams to use from time to time in assessing how they are doing.
Comments are closed.