In two weeks I’m returning to work after pretty much a year off on maternity leave. I had such plans – I was finally going to sort out my website, blog more, organise the stupid pile of resources on my memory stick, finish my #mathsconf blogs from 2017 (16, 15, …) – the list goes on. These plans were made in the naivety of late pregnancy, when I’d decided that I had loads of time off and a sleeping baby would be dead easy to work around.
Unfortunately, they aren’t, and I’d also seriously underestimated my need for a little bit of self-care time – the last thing I wanted to do once I’d got my daughter down for a nap was turn my computer on and start working – so none of my plans actually came to fruition.
However, I did manage to finish the book I’d been working on for the Tarquin A Level course and resources (shameless plug but I’m so proud that I finally achieved what I thought was a complete pipe dream of becoming an author – although I have to confess in my head I was the next JK Rowling, not writing maths revision guides). I also wrote a guest post for TeachWire in 45 minute spurts during naps, so I’m not entirely convinced it’s any good. Over the last couple of weeks I’ve made some attempt at deleting some old rubbish resources and trying to plan my first few lessons, but I’m aware that returning to work with a 9-month old (albeit part-time) will involve some serious expectation management on my part. Fortunately, over the last nine months I’ve become much more accustomed to “that’ll do”, and my plans for this academic year involve a significant amount of “work smarter, not harder”.
When I sat down to write this post, I discovered a prompt saved in my drafts from two years ago titled “Stop, Start, Continue, Change”, with nothing other than headers. Presumably that was a thing that was going round the blogosphere at the time, so I decided better late than never – so here’s my Stop Start Continue Change for academic year 2018-19.
START to use homework tasks more effectively
Homework generates a significant amount of my marking load, and I’m not sure it’s always entirely effective. My homeworks are generally a set of problems similar to those worked on in class, giving pupils an opportunity for further practise and for me to identify individual misconceptions when marking their work. The trouble with this is that by the time the homework comes back in, is marked and returned with feedback, a week has passed (due to peculiarities in our timetable, we only see classes once a week) and the feedback becomes less effective as the immediacy is lost.
A few years ago I experimented with flipped learning with one GCSE group, to great effect. I’m keen to look at this again this year, perhaps using our MathsWatch subscription to create tasks to revise prior knowledge before beginning a new unit. I also want to look at more effective strategies for revision homework, short of “there’s a test next week, revise” – as we’re all aware, that’s a week off for some pupils!
STOP reformatting resources constantly
I admit it, I love a well-formatted resource. Unfortunately, this can occasionally border on obsession, with a tendency for reformatting other people’s resources to fit my “style”, and also reformatting all of mine every three or four years when I change whatever style I’ve picked, not to mention dealing with the whole Promethean/Smartbook/PowerPoint choice. This will definitely be stopping this year – I’m not sure how many weeks of my life I’ve wasted on this pointless task, but it adds next to nothing to pedagogy or pupil engagement, and I don’t have the time to burn anymore. However, I will be making sure anything that I make new is in a consistent style with what I’ve already got and sticking with it!
CONTINUE blogging and updating
This is a bit of a cheat, really – I’m not sure you can consider one blog post a proper return, but I am going to attempt to keep up with blogging and updating this very neglected site this year. I’ve got a few ideas bouncing around already, and I’m sure the challenges of working part-time and balancing childcare and my career will give me plenty to write about. A fortnightly blog or update sounds manageable, particularly if I keep it short and simple (unfortunately not my forte), so I’ll be giving that a go!
CHANGE my teaching practice by focusing directly on the impact and effectiveness of my instruction
At the weekend I read Mark McCourt’s latest blog in his series on Mastery – of particular interest as I spent ages working on what I thought was an effective “Mastery curriculum” in my previous role. It’s the only bit of CPD I’ve done this year, but it really is an excellently written piece (I almost want to say manifesto). The bit that struck a real chord with me was titled “Moving from Current Practice to Mastery Approach” and examines the pattern of a typical lesson compared with a suggested mastery approach. I’m not going to attempt to paraphrase too far, as it really does need to be read in full – but the gist is that more time is spend on impactful teacher direction, perhaps interspersed with pupils trying examples for themselves, and questioning is planned carefully at each stage.
There is also an interesting discussion about problem-solving – or as Mark titles it, “behaving mathematically” in the section “Phasing Teaching”. My biggest takeaway from this was that pupils should not be asked to behave mathematically with content that they have just encountered, as they need time for this knowledge to mature in order to work flexibly with it; instead, pupils should work on problems linked to these topics but relying on earlier learning. As I’ve already decided that one of my performance management targets is to make use of open-ended or rich problems more effectively, I’ll be considering some of these points when planning tasks.