who cares about a few pencils on the floor?

46
Who cares about a few pencils on the Floor? A look at environment and its impact on Learning

Upload: trevet

Post on 25-Feb-2016

45 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

DESCRIPTION

Who cares about a few pencils on the Floor?. A look at environment and its impact on Learning. Summer Term 2013. Taking Stock!. Hay McBer. Teaching Skills and Professional Characteristics ( input measures) Classroom Climate (Output measures). Teachers drive Climate. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

PowerPoint Presentation

Who cares about a few pencils on the Floor?A look at environment and its impact on LearningSummer Term 2013Taking Stock!

Hay McBer Teaching Skills and Professional Characteristics (input measures)Classroom Climate (Output measures)

Teachers drive ClimateTeachers need to determine what they can input into their daily teaching and classroom practice that will deliver effect output scores in terms of classroom climate.

Power of EnvironmentThe environment is the foundation block for establishing a clear learning culture and everything else builds upon it. It sends out powerful hidden messages about what is valued and the wider ethos of the school

Visiting two schools

Excellence and EnjoymentExcellence and Enjoyment (2003)

The physical environment has a significant influence on learning. It gives children clear messages about how we value them and how we value learning (Part 3 p 56)

Sea ViewWhy does a sea view room in a hotel command a premium price if environment has no impact?

Britain in Bloom

Power of DisplaysEducational psychologists have found that environment can have a large impact on children's learning. There are classrooms that alienate children and those that engage them, and much research shows that children who feel engaged in their classroom are more receptive.

(www.Teachernet Classroom Displays) Impact of EnvironmentResearch demonstrates that the learning environment affects the engagement, motivation, self-esteem, attendance, wellbeing and achievement of students

(Understanding and managing classroom space Jane McGregor)Hay McBer Pupil progress data from the primary classes in the classroom climate study correlated strongly with overall classroom climate This suggests that a pleasant physical environment is particularly important for academic progress in primary schools. (Teacher Effectiveness p30)

Peter Barratts ResearchA full 73 percent of the variation in pupil performance driven at the class level can be explained by the building environment factors.

Peter BarrettSalford University

Peter Barratts ResearchAll other things being equal, a child in the best environment could be expected to make two SATs sub-levels more progress during a school year than an equivalent child in the "poorest" classroom environment. That equates to a whole year's average improvement for a child in reading, writing and maths (quote from The Guardian 25th April 2013)

All other things being equal

The Broken Window Theory.In his book The Tipping Point, Malcolm Gladwell makes reference to the Broken WindowTheory.

Philip Zimbardo (1969)professor at StanfordThe Two cars and the Broken Windows

The Essence of the theoryit is not so much the actual broken window that is important, but rather the message the people receive from the broken window. (Wikipedia Broken Windows Theory)

New York Transit company In 1980 George Kelling was hired by the New York Transit company

The blitz on graffiti

New York Transit company In 1980 George Kelling was hired by the New York Transit company

The blitz on graffiti The Fare dodgers1 in 7 had an outstanding warrant for arrest1 in 20 had a weapon

ResultAs Galdwell points out; after a while the bad guys wised up, and began to leave their weapons at home and pay their fares.

All started by a lick of paint!!

Broken Windows theoryBroken Windows theory is based upon the premise that an epidemic can be reversed, can be tipped, by tinkering with the smallest details of the immediate environment

(Gladwell, 2000, p. 146).

The Link into schoolsWhen secondary school children were asked how they knew which teacher to play up in class one of the key factors that determined their behaviour was the state of the teachers desk

The Bookcase testThey say if you want to find out what a man believes look at his bookcase and see what he reads

The School in Bath

QuoteThose schools that have books falling off the shelves, with books laid on top of other books, some with ripped covers, others with pages falling out, give the visitor a clear impression of the school, and the culture

write neatly in their books Effective learning does not occur in arenas of dissonance

Quality produces qualityGet rid of everything which is broken, has pieces missing, or is worn and looks tatty. Although this may seem ruthless, remember it is impossible to create an ethos of respect for resources if they are in a poor state of repair and appear unloved

(High-quality environments for learning Pat Brunton and Linda Thornton 2007)

OCD or Good Teaching?to ignore one piece of trash on the floor. . .one shirt improperly tucked in, one fight between kids, one bit of foul language, would send a disastrous no-one-cares message

(No Excuses, Thernstrom, 2003)

The Reality isWe set standards by the environment we offer to children (Dean, 2001, p.197)

Power of the Cultural MessageA well cared for and attractive environment sends powerful messages about expectations, and isa potent influence on how well students achieve a range of desired educational outcomes

(Fraser, 1986, p.182).

Educational WarehousesThe First day of term

Visual Displays

Using visual displays in classrooms breeds success because 'students are provided with specific examples of how success is obtained

(The effect of the physical environment on teaching and learning Culp, B 2006:14). Broken Window TheoryFixing broken windows and attending to the physical appearance of a school cannot alone guarantee productive teaching and learning, ignoring them greatly increases the chances of a troubling downward spiral.

(An Application of the Broken Windows Theory, S Plank, 2009)

Working WallsWhat message do they send out?

Working WallsIt gives the students a real sense of ownership of the classroom in which they are taught, and this being so, they will be more likely to respect not just the school fabric, but also the learning that takes place in the room they have ownership over.

Emotional ownership Dr Who

Back to the BookcaseThe bookcase is our bookcase not only for us to use this year but it is a bookcase that others will use in the years after us, so why would we not wish to look after the books upon it?

Care for the global environmentCare for the presentation of workThe power of This is what we do around here

Returning to Classroom CultureWe are a tribal animal, which leads us to have a deep need to belong to a group of some sort. Conforming to group norms is a signal to the other group members that I am like you. David Straker36Solomon Asch (1950s)

Solomon Asch (1950s)75% of the participants gave an incorrect answer to at least one of the questionsOnly 25% were willing to go it alone

Solomon Aschhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F17JGDZDVUs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=uuvGh_n3I_M

Cultural Messages98.5% of drivers drove below 30 mph in this zone last month

Lady in the Burning Building

The Power of DisplayDisplays are not just creating an aesthetic base for the children to work in. They are delivering a very powerful cultural message to the children that this is the way we do things around here They are laying down social markers that will underpin what the class comes to believe and accept as their cultural normCultural ExpectationsWe cannot expect children to put pencils back in pencil pots if we leave coffee mugs on a classroom display.

Cultural ExpectationsWe cannot ask children to clear away at the end of the lesson, if some of the artefacts from yesterdays lesson remained piled up by the door waiting to be returned to the dungeon

Environment and CultureThe environment is a powerful driver; as it sets the tone and is the visual backdrop for all the learning that is undertaken in the class

A Final Quote Malaguzzi, founder of the Regio Emilia schools, wrote; Education must come to be recognised as the product of complex interactions, many of which can be realised when the environment is a fully participating element.(Malaguzzi, L, 1998 History, Ideas and Basic Philosophy)