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School Improvement Service Sue Atkinson – Science Consultant sue.atkinson@york/gov.uk Developing Thinking Skills

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School Improvement Service

Sue Atkinson – Science Consultant sue.atkinson@york/gov.uk

Developing Thinking Skills

School Improvement Service

Starter Activity 1:Maths puzzle

• Your task is:• Using numbers 1-8, to put a number in each

circle so that….• No two consecutive numbers must be in

adjacent or connected circles.• To be able to explain how you did it!

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Learning outcomes

By the end of this session you will……

• have tried out a variety of strategies• have had time to reflect on how you could

adapt these to use in schools.• know where to go to find out more.

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Can thinking be taught?

Regardless of our age, perceived ability or background, we can all improve our thinking with encouragement, guidance and practice.

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Can thinking be taught?

Six key principles for teaching thinking:• Active – explore ideas• Meaningful – relevant to everyday life• Challenging – cognitive challenge• Collaborative – differences of opinion• Mediated – act as guide/adviser• Reflective – what/how they have learnt

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The five ‘Thinking skills’ which pupils need to develop, as defined in Curriculum 2000 are:

• Information-processing skills eg. Sort, classify, sequence, analyse relationships

• Reasoning skills eg. Give reasons for opinions and actions, draw inferences, make deductions, making judgements informed by evidence

• Enquiry skills eg. Ask relevant questions, pose and define problems, predict outcomes, anticipate consequences

• Creative thinking skills eg. Generate and extend ideas, suggest hypotheses, look for alternative outcomes

• Evaluation skills eg. Evaluate information, develop criteria for judging the value of their own and others’ work

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Activity 2: Collective memory

• Your task is to work as a team to make a copy of the poster onto A3 paper.

• Try to ensure you include the key messages and information.

• Each member of the team, in turn, will only get 30 secs to look at the poster.

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What is the most powerful learning that has taken place here?• The strategies devised by the group• The conversations taking place• The collaboration

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Activity 3: Carousel

• You will have 3 minutes at each ‘station’ to try out the activity.

• Complete the task by ticking the relevant boxes on the grid, to record which thinking skills are used in each activity.

• Then think about if/ how you might use/adapt each one for your students.

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For effective group work:• Children need to be taught how to work well in

groups• Structure the task: ‘Chunk’ it up into smaller steps• Give clear time limits - and stick to them! (use a

countdown timer on screen?)• Give clear success criteria – what are they trying

to achieve?• Learning objectives and outcomes should

emphasise skills, not just knowledge.

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TEEP Visual Tools

• The booklets provide a range of further ideas and strategies to promote thinking skills, with templates to use.

• The bookmarks provide a useful reminder of some of these ideas to keep handy.

• You have 3 mins to look at these resources and consider how you might use them

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Where to get more ideas from?

• Thinkers Keys for Kids• By Tony Ryan, Special Needs (G&T)

consultant, Queensland, Australia• 20 Thinkers Keys to stimulate thinking

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Where to get more ideas from?

• Visit the TeachFind website at www.teachfind.com and ‘search’ for either ‘Thinking skills’ or ‘Leading in learning’, in either Primary or Secondary phase.

• Subject-specific exemplars

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Where to get more ideas from?• Teaching Thinking Pocketbook• A troubleshooting approach takes five types of

thinking that students typically struggle with - processing information; reasoning; inquiry; creative thinking; evaluation - and matches then with 'thinking tools'.

• Available from Amazon for £7.55 + free delivery

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Where to get more ideas from?

• Go to www.yorkla.org (then to Teaching & Learning/ Science/Thinking skills) for all the resources from this session

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Summary: To stimulate thinking …..It is NOT about giving pupils the right answer. Rather, it is about developing the skills needed through learning which is:

• Active– exploring ideas• Meaningful – relevant to everyday life• Challenging – cognitive challenge• Collaborative – differences of opinion• Mediated – act as guide/adviser• Reflective – on what/how they have learnt

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How might this impact on your work with pupils?

Think of 2 ‘golden nuggets’ you might take away from this session

to try out back in schools.

Reflection- so what now?