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Skills for Life Quality Improvement Programme

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Title: Skills for Life Quality Improvement Programme


1
Skills for Life Quality Improvement Programme
Embedding Literacy, Language and Numeracy for
Leaders and Managers
2
Purpose
  • To raise managers awareness of the potential
    organisational benefits for developing embedded
    literacy, language and numeracy.

3
Learning Outcomes
  • By the end of this training participants will be
    able to
  • plan a model of embedding suitable for their
    vocational area
  • identify ways to overcome barriers
  • identify critical success factors for effective
    embedding
  • identify financial implications of embedding LLN
  • recognise how the process of embedding LLN
    supports the Common Inspection Framework
  • reflect on their own practice and plan for the
    future.

4
Defining Embedded Learning
  • Embedded teaching and learning combine the
    development of literacy, language and numeracy
    with vocational and other skills. The skills
    acquired provide learners with the confidence,
    competence and motivation necessary for them to
    succeed in qualifications, in life and at work.
  • DfES/The National Research and Development
    Centre (NRDC), February 2004

5
Why embed?
  • Staff may prefer sharing planning and/or
    teaching
  • Skills for Life staff learn how vocational
    subjects are taught, find learners more engaged
  • vocational staff learn strategies for teaching
    learners with LLN needs.
  • Learners prefer it they are
  • more motivated
  • find learning easier in a work context
  • feel less stigmatised.
  • Organisation benefits
  • it improves achievement and retention rates (NRDC
    Research).

6
There is a positive association between embedded
approaches and
  • higher retention and achievement rates on
    vocational courses
  • achievement of literacy/language qualifications
  • achievement of numeracy qualifications
  • learners stating that they felt better prepared
    for work in the future.

7
In a study of 79 vocational courses,
each course rated on a scale of embeddedness
From Point 1 Separate vocational and LLN
Learners experience their LLN development and
vocational studies as entirely, or almost
entirely, separate
to Point 4 Fully embedded or
integrated Learners experience their LLN
development as an integral part of their
vocational studies
8
Learners completing vocational programmesFor all
learners in the sample
9
Learners achieving a literacy/ESOL
qualificationFor learners below Level 2 in
literacy/language and numeracy on initial
assessment
10
Learners achieving numeracy qualificationsFor
learners below Level 2 in literacy/language and
numeracy on initial assessment
11
Defining the range of Embedded Provision
  • Dual Skills Teaching
  • Integrated Team Teaching
  • Linked (or Contextualised) Teaching
  • Other forms of active collaboration between two
    or more teachers who are supporting learners
    progress towards their vocational goals,
    including their LLN support
  • Helen Casey NRDC 2005

12
Models Indicative not Prescriptive
  • The model of delivery will depend on
  • the learners needs
  • the course requirements
  • staff skills and experience
  • management and organisational structures
  • availability of resources rooms and equipment
    as well as funding and staff.

13
Features of effective embedding
  • Organisational features that support embedding
  • Teaching and learning practices that support
    successful integration of LLN and vocational
    teaching
  • Joint planning and teamwork between vocational
    staff and LLN specialists
  • Shared understandings, values and beliefs on the
    part of vocational and LLN teachers

14
Case Studies Learner Motivation
  • It is important for learner motivation that
  • LLN is part of professional identity for
    learners
  • learners value LLN as integral to learning the
    job they aspire to
  • there is empathy and respect in the teacher/
    learner relationship.
  • Adapted from Research Summary 24 Embedded
    teaching and learning of adult literacy, numeracy
    and ESOL Seven case studies of embedded
    provision NRDC/DfES 2005

15
Case Studies The Organisation of Learning
  • Good teaching skills and good relationships
    between vocational and LLN teacher(s) are more
    important than model.
  • However, directly linking LLN to a practical
    task, with support for LLN needs provided at the
    time of the practical task, is particularly
    effective.
  • There is a place for LLN-specific classroom work
    but it needs to be integral and linked.
  • Adapted from Research Summary 24 Embedded
    teaching and learning of adult literacy,
    numeracy and ESOL Seven case studies of
    embedded provision NRDC/DfES 2005

16
Case Studies Teaching
  • It is important that teachers
  • make explicit the value of LLN in relation to
    learners aspirations
  • demonstrate how aspects of LLN form integral
    parts of the professional working practices of
    different occupations (preferably early in
    course).
  • Adapted from Research Summary 24 Embedded
    teaching and learning of adult literacy,
    numeracy and ESOL Seven case studies of
    embedded provision NRDC/DfES 2005

17
Case Studies Successful Teaching Teams
  • Vocational teachers have a natural legitimacy and
    represent the role to which the learners aspire.
  • LLN teachers may feel they have less control of
    the curriculum and of how it is taught.
  • Both areas of expertise need to be acknowledged.
  • They can learn from each other if they
    collaborate.
  • Adapted from Research Summary 24 Embedded
    teaching and learning of adult literacy, numeracy
    and ESOL Seven case studies of embedded
    provision NRDC/DfES 2005

18
Case Studies Successful Teaching Teams
(continued)
  • Successful teacher teams
  • have expertise between them in the vocational
    subject and in the LLN needed
  • know their own strengths and weaknesses
  • are strongly motivated
  • are willing to learn from each other
  • are timetabled to work and plan together.

19
Implications for Management
  • Need for vocational and LLN teachers to work
    collaboratively
  • sharing responsibility for the course
  • sharing flexible approaches to developing
    learners LLN and vocational skills
  • sharing creation of new resources
  • possibly team teaching.
  • Creates challenges around
  • timetabling staff teaching and planning time
  • timetabling accommodation
  • CPD to up-skill LLN and vocational staff
  • funding the above.
  • Adapted from Research Summary 24
    Embedded teaching and learning of adult literacy,
    numeracy and ESOL Seven case studies of embedded
    provision NRDC/DfES 2005

20
Quality Issues
  • Our work so far indicates that, although many
    practitioners are aware of the Skills for Life
    Strategy, they are not always sure how it applies
    to them. Many occupational specialists do not
    understand that addressing individual learning
    needs is their responsibility. There are still
    too many people who are saying this does not
    apply to us.
  • Pat Higgenbottom, ALI Inspection Manager

21
Quality Issues
  • Basic and Key Skills are everybodys
    responsibility and will be inspected as such. ...
    Inspectors report on key and basic skills within
    practically every vocational area under the
    heading of teaching and learning. This convinces
    me that the ownership of basic and key skills
    must lie within the vocational areas.
  • from the Integrating Key Skills, Literacy and
    Numeracy Good Practice Guide, DfES/LSDA KSSP
    www.keyskillssupport.net

22
Review outcomes with reference to Learner Profile
The Whole Organisation Approach to Quality
Improvement taken from IAG presentation by
Helen Casey 2005
Analysis
Change
R E T E N T I O N
Q U A L I T Y I M P R O V E M E N T P L A N
Programme Type
Curriculum
L E A R N E R P R O F I L E
Partners
Local Needs Analysis Including. Benchmarking LSC
and other Data College/Provider profile
A C H I E V E M E N T
Funding MIS
Inspection
Human Resources
Strategy
Implementation
Teaching Learning
Teaching Materials
Self-Assessment
SMT Input
Assessment Qualifications
P R O G R E S S I O N
CPD
Policies Procedures
Quality Assurance
23
Which level of speaking and listening skills do
our learners need?
24
Which level of reading skills do our learners
need?
L2 61
L2 46
L1 52
E3 1
E3 2
L1 38
25
Which level of writing skills do our learners
need?
26
Which level of numeracy skills do our learners
need?
27
Case Studies Emerging ThemesThe Process of
Embedding
  • Embedding is not just about interlinking
    different curricula.
  • Mapping the literacy, language and numeracy
    curricula is only a starting point.
  • Staff need to consider how LLN are used for the
    particular job.
  • They need to plan teaching methods to take
    account of both situated and transferable
    skills.
  • They need to devise suitable resources.
  • Adapted from Research Summary 24 Embedded
    teaching and learning of adult literacy,
    numeracy and ESOL Seven case studies of
    embedded provision NRDC/DfES 2005.

28
Raising Standards
  • The teaching of specific vocational or other
    skills must include explicit teaching, where
    appropriate, of the relevant literacy, numeracy
    and language skills required to support them.
  • If this skills development is not tackled, then
    there is a very real danger that learners
    vocational or other skills will be insecure, and
    that skills will not be transferable.
  • From Raising Standards A Contextual Guide to
    Support Success in Literacy, Numeracy and ESOL
    Provision Embedded Learning DfES

29
Detailed Schemes of Work and Lesson Plans are
needed
  • Successful embedded learning will have clear
    mapping of literacy, numeracy and language skills
    against both vocational course and other course
    requirements.
  • From Raising Standards A Contextual Guide to
    Support Success in Literacy, Numeracy and ESOL
    Provision Embedded Learning, DfES
  • In effective practice, schemes of work are
    appropriately detailed and link to the core
    curricula for literacy and numeracy.
  • Ofsted

30
Direction of Developments?
  • Do you
  • develop vocational teachers,multi-skilled in
    vocational area and LLN
  • or
  • develop collaborative, integrated teams with
    complementary expertise who plan and teach
    together?

31
Dual-skilled or specialist teachers?
The embedded approach failed to work only
when vocational teachers were also expected to
teach literacy and numeracy. (National
Research and Development Centre for Adult
Literacy and Numeracy, 2006)
32
Teamwork
The key is for vocational and literacy,
language and numeracy teachers to plan and work
genuinely together and share responsibility for
the course. Tutors own fears of
the unknown other need to be dissipated through
team working. Embedding seems to require shared
working over intensive periods. (National
Research and Development Centre for Adult
Literacy and Numeracy, 2005)
33
Need for collaborative working
34
Implications for CPD
  • Vocational teachers/trainers
  • Increase awareness of LLN issues
  • Use teaching methods appropriate to learners LLN
    needs
  • Build strategies for working collaboratively with
    LLN specialist colleagues and learning support
    staff
  • Skills for Life specialist teachers/tutors
  • Research how LLN are used in the particular
    vocational training/employment situation
  • Build LLN development around the structure of the
    vocational programme
  • Build strategies for working collaboratively with
    vocational and learning support colleagues
  • Helen Casey, NRDC, 2005

35
Simplifying resources
  • Vocational tutors are sometimes unaware of just
    how difficult some of their texts are for their
    students.
  • from the Integrating Key Skills, Literacy and
    Numeracy Good Practice Guide, DfES/LSDA KSSP
    www.keyskillssupport.net
  • Literacy teachers can help vocational colleagues
    simplify the wording on resources and assignments.

36
Successful Teaching
  • Teachers in an effective embedded learning
    context
  • set tasks that are within the capabilities of
    learners, but that give opportunities for real
    development of skills tasks that combine
    literacy, numeracy and language and vocational or
    other course objectives.
  • In effective practice
  • learners have access to a good range of
    high-quality embedded learning materials that
    support their literacy, numeracy and language
    needs as well as their vocational or other
    learning needs.
  • From Raising Standards A Contextual Guide to
    Support Success in Literacy, Numeracy and ESOL
    Provision Embedded Learning, DfES
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