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Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors
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Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Jan 12, 2016

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Page 1: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Exeter Model of ITEInduction for ITE Coordinators,

Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors

and University Visiting Tutors

Page 2: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

We aim to give you an overview of the

main points of your role by:

Explaining the training roles involved

Introducing the Teachers’ Standards

and explaining how trainees are

assessed against them

Introducing the training tools and

documentation

Considering some good mentoring

and

coaching skills

Introducing the materials available

for

reminders and further details

Aims of the day

Page 3: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Our trainees’ greatest resource - You!

What experience do you already have of

working with trainees in Initial Teacher

Education?

What role will you be taking with the

trainee?

What skills do you think you have/need

to be good at coaching and mentoring in

any of these roles?

In pairs decide on your ‘top 5’ skills

Page 4: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

PGCE ProgrammesThe programme has three integrated components:

Curriculum Studies• All trainees study their specialist/main subject• Primary trainees only: Curriculum Studies

covering the ‘primary curriculum’

Education and Professional Studies: key

educational ideas and principles; classroom

and whole-school issues; the role of education

in wider society. University and school-based

elements are fully integrated

Professional Learning

NB The PGCE is a Masters level course

Page 5: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

The theory behind the Exeter Model of initial teacher education

Socio/Cultural Theory: Situated learning Scaffolded Learning

Reflective Practice: Critical reflection

Page 6: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Our Partnership:Who’s Who!

Trainee

Principal School/Subject Tutor – PST

Mentor – in secondary, from a

different subject area; primary, from a

different class

Initial Teacher Education Coordinator

– ITEC

University Visiting Tutor – UVT

Page 7: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Principal School/Subject Tutor

Inducts trainee(s) into class routines

Provides aspects of training through

discussion, explanation and

demonstration

Observes and gives feedback on

teaching – written and verbal

Holds weekly one-hour meeting to

review progress and set targets

Contributes to assessment: formative

and summative

Page 8: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Mentor

Facilitates trainees’ reflection

through questioning in the

supervisory conference

Does not observe the trainee

Contributes to assessment

Page 9: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

ITE Coordinator

Oversees and manages ITE in school

Is the main link for communication

between the university and school

Oversees quality assurance and

provision of good quality training

Oversees Professional Studies

programme in school

Page 10: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

University Visiting Tutor

Makes 1 visit in Spring term and 1 in

Summer term

Maintains email contact with ITE

Coordinator and other staff where

appropriate to provide support and

guidance throughout the placement

Page 11: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Standards and Assessment

Page 12: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Teachers’ Standards

Read through the Standards

Choose one and consider how it

could be interpreted differently in the

training year and at your own level

Discuss with others on your table

Page 13: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Profile Descriptors

Sept Nov Jan March June

Page 14: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Prior experience Aspirational Teachers

Programme Teaching Assistants Overseas (voluntary) work

Individual needs Black and Minority Ethnic Disability (inc reasonable adjustment)

Personalised Learning

Page 15: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Tracking and assessing trainee progress

All evidence will be found in Individual Development Profile (IDP)

Interview & pre-course tasks and gradesLesson observationsWeekly Development Meeting Records

Action Plans

Formative Reflection on Achievement

and Progress

Final Summative Report

Assignment grades

Page 16: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Tracking Progress – trainees giving concern

Cause for Concern letter:

• May be issued at any time

• Gives the trainee formal notice (and

clarity) of areas of concern

• Is issued jointly by Mentor and UVT

• Contains clear action plan

• Final deadlines:

Secondary 16 May, Primary 23 May

Page 17: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Training Tools

Page 18: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Framework for Dialogue about Teaching

Framework for Dialogue about

Teaching

• Academic Knowledge• Curricular Knowledge• Pedagogic Knowledge

• Theories of learning

and development• Progression• Assessment

Understanding Learning and Development

Subject Knowledge

Professional Knowledge and Enquiry

School Communities

Values and Beliefs

Teachers’ Standards

• Research• Theory• Aspirational practice

• Schools and national policies• Attitudes, expectations

and ethos• Working with others

• Trainees• Pupils• Teachers

• Professional Values and behaviour

• Teaching• Standards for

Professional and Personal conduct

Page 19: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Framework for Dialogue about Teaching

The Framework may be used in:

Planning

Evaluating

The Weekly Development meeting

The Supervisory Conference

UVT visits

For primary trainees it also provides a

structure for the Framework Tasks for

EAL, Modern Languages and PE

Page 20: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

PST with trainee (or pair together)

One hour a week, timetabled

Use Framework for Dialogue about

Teaching to review progress and

plan progression and set targets

Monitor Framework tasks

(primary)

Complete Weekly Development

Meeting Record together

Complete the Quality Assurance

Record

Training Tools: Weekly Development Meeting

Page 21: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

PST and trainee together decide on the

targets for the week at Weekly

Development Meeting

Training input: trainee watches PST or

other teachers demonstrate those foci

during lessons.

Plan for 2/3 demonstrations a week

Training Tools: Demonstrations of aspects of teaching

Page 22: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

At least 2 formal observations per

week, using the Lesson Observation

pro forma and related to the Teachers’

Standards

Focus on the impact of teaching on

pupil learning

Other observations by PST or other

teachers, giving written or verbal

feedback

Training Tools: Lesson observations

Page 23: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

2 agendas each week

Weekly targets identify areas of trainee’s

practice for observer to focus on

Different from a lesson plan (lesson plan

also needed)

Trainee plans how the focus will be

demonstrated

10 – 15 minutes long

Non-evaluative annotations on focus

Detailed: what trainee says/how pupils

respond/timing etc.

Training Tools: Agendas

Page 24: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Task: Packing Away Agenda

Annotate the agenda using the

video clip)

Compare your annotations with

a colleague

Are the annotations non-

evaluative and do they stick to

the focus?

Page 25: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Prompts for helping trainees with evaluation and critical reflection

Description WHAT? Brief description of what happened during the episode relative to Agenda focus

Explanation WHY? Why do you think things happened the way they did? What did you do/not do which caused it?

Justification WHY? Why did you do it that way/respond like that? (looking for underlying principles)

Reformulation WHAT NOW? What are the consequences of what you’ve learnt from this for future teaching? Future target(s)

Page 26: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

The training cycle

Standards

New targets for development

Training input through

demonstrations

Trainee models

Trainee observed/agenda/

evaluation

Weekly development

meeting

Supervisory conference

Page 27: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Three one-hour-long meetings per term, one-to-one with

Mentor.

Documentation submitted in advance:

1. Two annotated and evaluated agendas + relevant

lesson plans, pupils’ work etc.

2. Individual Development Portfolio

3. (Prior to assessment points) read Formative

Reflection on Achievement and Progress (‘FRAP’)

Part 1 completed by trainee justifying achievement

and progress through reflection based on evidence.Process:4. Develop critical evaluation based on agendas, using

Framework5. Complete Action Plan together6. (Prior to assessment points) interrogation of

evidence presented in FRAP Part 1 and completion of Part 2.

Training Tools: Supervisory Conference

Page 28: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

I’ve forgotten what you said!

DBS CHECKS

Page 30: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Check understanding

Look through the PST/Mentor/ITEC checklists to ensure understanding of what is expected

Any questions?

Page 31: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Discussions in pairsPSTs1. Choose 3 Agenda foci and plan a demonstration for each 2. Write a list of activities where the trainee can learn by working

with you in the classroom3. How will you help trainee to assess pupil learning?

Mentors4. List advantages and disadvantages of not observing lessons5. What are the advantages of mentoring someone from a

different discipline/class?6. Practice holding a Supervisory Conference. A describes part of

a recent lesson, B asks the what, why, what now questions. Use Framework for Dialogue.

7. How will you structure this hour? Suggest timings

Page 32: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Scenario 1 to debatePSTs Your trainee is very comfortable working with small

groups and individual children and taking the register. They keep making excuses for not taking more of the lesson. What strategies could you use to both encourage and move them forward constructively

Mentors The trainee complains that the PST is making

“unreasonable demands”

Page 33: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Scenario 2 to debatePSTs Your trainee has lots of experience in schools and

has worked as a Teaching Assistant previously. They are keen to teach whole lessons immediately but you feel it is more appropriate for them to teach smaller episodes.

Mentors The trainee never produces the correct paperwork,

despite frequent requests and many promises. The PST says the trainee is doing well.

Page 34: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Scenario 3 to debatePSTs The trainee is making reasonable progress but leaps

on constructive criticism and fails to take the positive comments on board. They are getting anxious and upset.

Mentors The PST is very committed to the Exeter Model of

ITE but other departmental colleagues are very reluctant to support the trainee as the model requires

Page 35: Exeter Model of ITE Induction for ITE Coordinators, Mentors, Principal School/Subject Tutors and University Visiting Tutors.

Any questions?