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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: cstp Last modified by: National Union of Teachers Created Date: 6/18/2004 8:44:38 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Presentation by:


1

OECD MEXICO JOINT CONFERENCE OECD Case Study
- England
  • Presentation by
  • John Bangs, Assistant Secretary
  • (Education, Equality and Professional
    Development)
  • National Union of Teachers

2
TEACHERS AND GOVERNMENT A COMMON INTEREST?
  • Our aim a good school for every child and for
    every community
  • Histories of the teaching profession that
    teachers recognise.
  • Problems that teachers acknowledge.
  • Successes that teachers and Government celebrate.
  • A joint commitment to
  • - high standards
  • - high expectations for all children.

3
WHAT MOTIVATES TEACHERS?
  • Making a positive difference to young peoples
    lives.
  • Performance management/appraisal yes, if it
    works.
  • Performance management linked to pay/compensation
    determination
  • - significant motivation (depending on the
    principals knowledge and fairness) but
    short-term.
  • Linking pay/compensation with achievement of
    percentages of
  • tests or examination results
  • - no improvement

4
WHAT MOTIVATES TEACHERS? (2)
  • Praise and recognition of achievement and
    (specialist) expertise
  • - significant motivation
  • Opportunities for horizontal career development,
    based on growing expertise
  • - significant motivation
  • Teachers as learners teachers as researchers
  • - significant motivation
  • High quality professional development
  • - significant motivation

5
WHAT MAKES A GOOD TEACHER?
  • A rigorous selection procedure on entry to
    teaching based on high quality.
  • Basic motivation making a positive difference
    to young peoples lives.
  • Deep knowledge of subject disciplines.
  • Empathy with/consistency of approach to young
    people.
  • Deep knowledge of pedagogy/ability to adapt
    pedagogy to pupil needs.
  • Understanding and knowledge of pupil behaviour
    and classroom organisation and the need for a
    consistent relationship with pupils.
  • Working with colleagues.
  • Most importantly, the ability to work with
    colleagues within the context of clear aims and
    objectives for the school.

6
WHAT MAKES A GOOD TEACHER? (2)
  • A professional development strategy owned by
    teachers.
  • Leaders, teacher organisations and local learning
    communities.
  • A quality Initial Teacher Training/Masters
    Degrees continuum.
  • Teacher organisations central or marginal to
    teaching and learning?

7
THE ROLE OF LEADERSHIP IN PROMOTING PUPIL
ACHIEVEMENT
  • Basic strategies
  • Building vision and setting directions.
  • Understanding and developing people.
  • Designing the organisation.
  • Managing and supporting the teaching and learning
    programme.
  • Collecting, monitoring, analysing and using
    information.

8
LEADERSHIP INTELLIGENCES
  • Contextual intelligence.
  • Professional intelligence.
  • Social intelligence.

LEADER PERSONALITY TRAITS
  • Self-efficacy.
  • Internal locus of control.
  • Conscientiousness.
  • Rapport.

9
INCENTIVES TO BE LEADERS
  • Collegiate working
  • Ability to do the job.
  • Critical friendship with peers.
  • Career prospect of making a difference on a
    system basis.
  • Fair Pay/compensation commensurate with
    responsibility.

10
THE LESSONS THAT THE NATIONAL UNION OF TEACHERS
HAS LEARNT (NO.1)
  • Individual country education systems are not
    directly transferable.
  • But lessons can be learnt.
  • There needs to be an acknowledgement
  • - by the Government that the
    teaching profession has to understand the
    need for change
  • - by the teaching profession that
    change has to happen
  • - and understanding that the
    education system is no better
    than the quality and commitment of its teachers.

11
THE LESSONS THAT THE NATIONAL UNION OF TEACHERS
HAS LEARNT (NO.2)
  • It if vital that there are
  • - high quality teachers
  • - high quality teaching
  • - deep and embedded learning.
  • Therefore
  • - continuing professional development must be
    integral to teachers lives
  • - assessment of each pupils progress is
    embedded in teaching
  • - the purposes of evaluation are made clear.

12
THE LESSONS THAT THE NATIONAL UNION OF TEACHERS
HAS LEARNT (NO.3)
  • The nature of assessment and evaluation must be
    clear.
  • There is a distinction between
  • - the evaluation of pupils
  • - the evaluation of teachers
  • - the evaluation of schools
  • - the evaluation of the national education
    system.
  • While changes to the organisation of the
    education system may be necessary change must
    yield equity of high achievement, not widen
    parental choice.
  • No school can operate on its own.
  • A core National Curriculum is essential. It
    should describe expectations and entitlements.
  • It should contain a requirement on schools to
    adapt the curriculum at school level.

13
THE LESSONS THAT THE NATIONAL UNION OF TEACHERS
HAS LEARNT (NO.4)
  • Institutional evaluation should lead to
  • - school improvement
  • - improve the nature of teaching and learning
    within the schools
  • - diagnose problems and support improvements
  • - be understood and owned by teachers and
    parents
  • - school self-evaluation externally evaluated.

14
THE LESSONS THAT THE NATIONAL UNION OF TEACHERS
HAS LEARNT (NO.5)
  • Imposition of change rarely sustains reform.
  • Providing the conditions for change is better
    than imposing change.
  • Policies must be demonstrably evidence-informed.
  • Teachers will respond to offers of partnership
    working.
  • Excessive workload is usually a consequence of
    imposed change.
  • Fair compensation/pay has to be an integral part
    of the reform process.

15
THE LESSONS THAT THE NATIONAL UNION OF TEACHERS
HAS LEARNT (NO.6)
  • Unions
  • - protect, promote and provide for the members
  • - have an historical memory bank second to none
  • - historical knowledge is an advantage - weve
    been there before so we can deal with proposed
    change
  • - historical knowledge can be a disadvantage -
    nothing is new.
  • Unions can have a positive and negative influence
    on their memberships.

16
THE NUTS PROPOSALS IN ENGLAND
  • A continuum of professional learning .
  • Qualified teachers in all settings for all
    children and young people aged 0-19.
  • Relevant accreditation and degrees.
  • Initial Teacher Training link to a national
    professional development strategy.
  • A profession development entitlement for all
    teachers.
  • A pedagogic bank for teachers practice.
  • A professional Charter for teachers.
  • A professional Council for teachers.

17
THE ROLE OF TEACHER ORGANISATIONS IN SCHOOL
IMPROVEMENT
  • Provide professional development.
  • Work in partnership with Government.
  • Secure a National Teachers Professional
    Development Strategy.
  • Research into what is effective.
  • Be prepared to engage with Government equally to
    identify and protect members where injustice
    occurs.
  • Take on the opportunity to help teachers improve,
    or if no improvement possible, make it possible
    for teachers to leave the profession with their
    self-respect in tact.
  • and, of course, fight for fair pay/compensation
    and working conditions.

18
THE RESPONSIBILITY OF GOVERNMENT
  • The need for systemic rather than
    headline-grabbing reform.
  • Funding focused on long-term school improvement
    rather than short-time seed- corn pilots.
  • Equity of core funding coupled with additional
    funding directed at additional educational needs.
  • Have an articulate vision for education.
  • and the future of the teaching profession.
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