Btl and Science at MMHS

I have been busy for several weeks in following up a discussion that two of the  teachers at MMHS have embarked on: namely,  to explore how subject teachers can make a link between the work the learners do in BtL and their own specialist teaching. Two teachers – Science and Modern Languages – came down to Birmingham for the day to discuss this with me. I had already been working with one of the Science teachers, as I was concerned that the way BtL models the writing up of experiments is not what is required by at least one of the exam papers.

To try to make explicit what is going on in Science learning and teaching, I applied to two exam papers the discourse model (Michael Hoey’s) that is taught in Book 3 of BtL (Part 2 of the Fasttrack). It proved very powerful. Hoey offers three discourse structures which make sense of how academic (and other) discourse is constructed:

1. problem / solution     2. general / particular      3. compare / contrast Continue reading

TED talks

A number of people have been urging me to Google TED talks for 12-minute lectures.

I’ve at last done this and a world of new thinking has opened up. I’ve heard talks by Sugata Mitra, Ken Robinson and John McWhorter. Not least of the gifts of the lecturers is that they are often very funny. The antique rubbish that passes for discussion on public education at present in this country is cleared away and a sense of reality takes its place.

I treat myself to one a day and suggest anyone reading this does the same.

 

 

Analysis of Science GCSE paper

During the snowy weather, cooped up in the flat, I had a happy time applying the linguistic insights of BtL to a GCSE exam paper in Science.  I went through questions and answers highlighting in green the frequent occurrences of the passive, nominalizations in yellow and I added special technical words that are not part of non-scientific vocabulary in pink (e.g. ethane, ethanol, fermentation) – there were a lot of these and it is an obvious feature of scientific language. Continue reading

Language and Gender 3

Daniel L. Maltz and Ruth A. Barker: A Cultural Approach to Male-Female Miscommunication (in Language and Gender ed. Jennifer Coates)

This paper surveys work by scholars in a number of fields whose findings and frameworks can be used to throw light on problems in cross-sex informal conversations. The model is first taken from the approach to difficulties in cross-ethnic communication.

Sociologists have shown that, even though children in America (and UK) go to mixed sex schools, it is customary for girls to play with girls and boys with boys. Each sex therefore grows up with separate views on the purpose of conversation – girls (as we saw in my last blog) for creating supportive relationships and boys for control and problem solving. The authors refer to fascinating research into the differences between girls’ games and boys’ games. Continue reading

Language and gender 2

If the mind boggled at the sheer amount of labour that went into Jennifer Coates’ paper in this book*, it was still more amazed at the kind of negotiation that must have preceded the tape-recording and transcribing of another series of conversations.

These are described in Linguistic Variation and Social Function by Jenny Cheshire. She managed to record some hours of conversation of adolescent boys in an adventure playground in Reading, taken down when they should have been in school. These were analysed for nine non-standard vernacular features, most of them common to other dialects (e.g. Birmingham) but two at least peculiar to the local dialect in Reading. These were “we goes shopping on Saturdays” and “we has a little fire, keeps us warm”. Cheshire related the frequency of these grammatical features to the degree to which the different boys showed allegiance to the anti-school vernacular culture of their peer group. The boys that were most delinquent (on a “vernacular culture index”, compiled, the reader infers from the recorded conversations) used the most non-standard grammatical features. Continue reading

Tomasello and Watkins

Michael Tomasello is Co-Director of the Max Planck institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig. He is a developmental psychologist who has challenged Noam Chomsky’s hypothesis that language is an innate structure in the human brain. Tomasello has studied the social cognition of the great apes and found a crucial difference between their apprehension of the world and ours as human beings.*

The communication of the great apes is what he calls diadic: that is, an ape interacts EITHER with another ape – grooming, threat, sex etc. – OR with the world – finding food, reacting to danger etc.

By contrast, human interactions are triadic: we communicate WITH other humans ABOUT the world. Interestingly, apes do not point to things in the world; human beings do. Continue reading

Thinking, Fast and Slow

This illuminating book, by Daniel Kahneman, begins by noting that we have to name things before we can study them. The title indicates the objects of study – two different kinds of thinking. One of the pleasures of reading this book is that one recognizes immediately the thinking he is describing, both the fast and the slow.

Fast thinking he calls System 1: it is the intuitive thinking that enables us to operate instantaneously in a complex world; it is the thinking that constructs our understanding of space and time, our automatic comprehension of human feelings and responses, and our practice of habitual skills.  At its most rapid this kind of thinking takes evasive action in a potential road accident before it happens. Continue reading

An Ethic of Excellence (continued)

On the first page of this book Ron Berger says: “If you’re going to do something, I believe, you should do it well.” He argues that the pride of the craftsman should apply to teaching and learning, as well as to carpentry. His book shows how this can be achieved in the most ordinary school – but only by changing the culture.

Better than any of the other literature recommended to me by the teachers at MMHS, his book explains the principles that underlie the way the school is run. Perhaps the most important of these is that the emphasis is on learning rather than teaching. The focus is on enabling young people to learn how to learn. The teachers themselves are lifelong learners and, when starting a new project, have to learn alongside the pupils. Continue reading

An Ethic of Excellence

This book, by Ron Berger, helped me to understand what is going on at Matthew Moss High School. As Lindsey said, when she lent me a copy, it is inspirational.

In this blog, however,  I’ll mention only one point that the author makes towards the end of the book, because I felt this passionately throughout my fourteen years in Teacher Education:

TEACHING IS HARD!!! Continue reading

ELLI

I’m still working through the material given to me by the staff at MMHS. Last week I picked up some flash cards they had given me, which, it seemed, encapsulated ELLI – Effective Lifelong Learning Inventory. There are seven cards, each inviting the learner to reflect on a different aspect of her own learning. The headings are: Meaning making, Resilience, Learning relationships, Creativity, Strategic awareness, Critical curiosity, Changing and Learning. Continue reading