Archive for November, 2011

Educational Programme Must Include Global Edge

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

The world is getter tougher for UK Graduates. Despite having a good degree the now global market places higher demands and expectations on the educational values and range of the degree. But whilst the international competition is growing our students are slipping behind in the jobs stakes. There are 370,000 overseas students studying in the UK compared to only 33,000 UK students studying overseas. Importantly the take up by UK students in the Eramus programme, an important gateway to overseas commerce is a concern. Less than 12,000 UK students pursued the initiative compared to 100,000 students in Germany , France and Spain.

As multi-national companies tend to appoint personnel recruited from the home country of their base we could find UK students excluded if they are not prepared to grasp the global implications and extend their educational relevance overseas. more…

Early Years Learning In School Could Start With Two Year Olds

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

The learning journey for children  can start at a much earlier age so says a Canadian study. The review, completed into early childhood learning every three or four years shows that a school based programme could start with children at two years old. No formal curriculum is enforced but skilled early childhood educators are to be enlisted to support the opportunity. They are expected to gather educational games and teaching methods currently being used in drop-in centres, family resource workshops, kindergarten and nursery schools.

Sounds like manna form heaven for those busy career parents but the question is this a real gap or are many day care centres already offering this service at a cost. If the service is to be extended to offer lower income families the same  benefit this could cause a flood of transfers from commercial daycare centres. But there is some encouragement as more than half  2 – 4 years old regularly attend an early learning programme which bodes well for the development of the social and learning skills that benefit children in later schooling. more..

Keen2learn Adds BBC Science Educational Games To Range

Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

The popular BBC science clips TV series of simulations has been turned into eductaional software allowing it to be used as very effective teaching resources. Teachers can include the series as art of their lesson plans  to present science experiments in biology, chemistry and physics to children aged five – 16 years old.  The three CD ROMs each contain seven areas of science activity aimed at five to seven year old’s,  seven to eleven and 14- 16 year old children. The beauty of these fun educational games is they can effectively simulate the outcome of an experiment without the need for apparatus. The animations are highly effective in putting the subject  across and can be shown on whiteboards and PC’s.

There are several license version available including  a home version that allows parents to get involved in the science learning  games with their children.BBC Science Educational Games

University Intake Drops By Fifteen Per Cent

Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

Perhaps no great shock, the impact of tuition fees has resulted in a 15 per cent downturn in  university student application numbers. This educational gamble by the government could backfire significantly on both the government and the universities. Pressurised by economic difficulties middle England is also finding it difficult to raise the tuition funds introduced by a government that has also run out of cash. In turn the universities could now fail to generate the headcount  numbers required to attract government support. It all becomes a surreal vicious circle. Our universities could be forced to trim areas of educational and research expertise that have taken decades to build up. Tragically we could see many university Dons and research programmes disappearing overseas and many students shying away from further education because it is too expensive and does not necessarily lead to a good job. The only saving grace would be increased overseas student numbers, assuming they can gain entry to the UK. But event this could result in laying the foundation stones for future scientists and engineers who would promptly take their potential back home when they graduate.

Parents Can Rally To Reinforce Teaching Resources

Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

The active role of parents  supporting the teaching resources in school has been frequently reported  in the press. Each year a child spends 196 days in school and 169 days at home. Importantly the actual time spent learning during lessons can be surprisingly short. Time lost moving between classrooms, that needed by the teacher in settling the class down and moving teaching resources out and away depletes the day at an alarming rate. But there is a hidden army that can dramatically change things for the better. The secret army is called parents.

If teachers are considered to be the learning manager parents could effectively become the troops that provide the one to one support with children – either in the classroom or at home. The combined effect would dramatically increase the learning time and retention making the schooling process far more productive. more…

Educational Chaos As Thousands Of Bangkok Schools Still Closed

Monday, November 28th, 2011

The world seems to be  suffering in all directions. Ignoring the economic issues in Europe for once, the educational programmes in Thailand from the after effects of floods; Japan from earthquakes and also the Christchurch earthquakes have been all left a huge number of schools closed and the schooling of the children affected  seriously interrupted.

Thailand’s worst hit flooded areas has 2,500 schools that still have no official or predicted reopening dates. Many parents and the schools teaching resources are concerned the gap in the schooling programme could disrupt the educational progress of the children affected compared to children whose schooling in unaffected areas has continued. Unfortunately the affected children have not been reallocated, even temporarily, to “dry schools” causing consternation with parents. more…

Reading To A Child In Early Years Gives Huge Educational Boost

Monday, November 28th, 2011

Despite the need for good teachers in schools  recent studies have shown just how vital the role  played by parents is in a child’s achievement.  Parents who read to their child during the early years in primary school showed a marked benefit in the Program for International Student Assessment ( PISA) tests. The practical involvement of parents on a one to one basis with their child compares favourably with the busy teacher in a class of 30 -40 children.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development ( O.E.C.D ) reviews the reading comprehension and ability to use what children have  learned in maths and science to solve real problems. This exercise forms part of the PISA  tests of  15-year-olds in the world’s leading industrialised nations. Britain’s 15-year-olds students, like  America’s,  do not excel in the  PISA review compared with pupils  in Singapore, Finland and Shanghai.

Why some students thrive taking the PISA tests and others do not has been assessed by  Andreas Schleicher who oversees the exams for the O.E.C.D. was encouraged by the better scoring countries to look beyond the classroom. So starting with four countries in 2006, and then adding 14 more in 2009, the PISA team interviewed the parents of 5,000 students about how they supported  their children then compared this with the overall test results for each of those years. . Schleicher explained  “just asking your child how was their school day and showing genuine interest in the learning that they are doing can have the same impact as hours of private tutouring. It is something every parent can do, no matter what their education level or social background.” more….

New Educational Policy Causes Backlash In New Zealand

Saturday, November 19th, 2011

The educational world is in turmoil. On a  scale relative to the crisis hanging over Europe teaching resources are reeling from the number of initiatives that loom on the horizon. The reaction by teachers  to options to  convert to academy or free school status are mixed. Generally the conversion results from the need to resurrect a failing school, occasionally  to gain freedom from the local educational authourities. But the sword of Damocles hovers over the whole system in the form of school league tables.

Scorned by many as presenting a false impression the league tables largely ignore local social conditions that can have a significant impact on a schools ability to match top flight schools. Mergers may seem a logical answer although this could be seen as neat solution to the main line system that has failed. Overall the Department of Education ebbs and flows with the tide and has tried financial rewards to teachers whose students excel, and the theoretical removal of teachers who students who do not, although this has yet to be instigated in any positive manner. We do not have the perfect solution despite the issue being evident for a generation. Hardly anything to crow about. Which why it is odd that we in the UK have predominately copied policies adopted by the USA that largely has not worked in the U.S.  And why, understandably, the teachers union in New Zealand are reluctant to adopt similar educational policies that according to Post-Primary Teacher’s Association president Robin Duff “Is just recycling policy from the past that has failed.”

“It’s just back to the old ideology of taking something that has failed in almost every country it’s been implemented or attempted to be implemented and bringing it here,” he said.

The New Zealand Educational Institute (NZEI), that represents primary school teachers, agrees; “Rolling out failing, outdated policy which won’t resonate with anyone who works in education”.

“Performance based systems don’t work anywhere else in the world, is fraught with problems and does nothing to enhance a quality education system,” NZEI says.

Perhaps we need closely to listen to these views  they may well be the voice in the song that saw that the Kings new suit of clothes doesn’t actually exist.

Play Educational Games At Home to Boost Performance In Class

Friday, November 18th, 2011

Whilst our teaching resources work throughout the school day the real truth is they can only apply their full skills to children for around 50 minutes a day yet whilst at home schoolchildren could see their parents for several hours. The downside is that parents are equally busy and the majority of this precious  time is lost. Anyway how many children really want to slog away at lessons at home -it’s their free time after all.

This easy conclusion is reached by many families. Schooling is for the school to provide, that’s why we pay taxes. The trouble is we are missing a trick here. Learning retention is massively improved through practice but is extremely hard to achieve during the busy school day. More time spent at home at the individual learning pace of the child would allow performance back in class to move ahead significantly. Parents night meetings between teachers and parents could become a tactical  management programme rather than an historic one way summary of a child’s performance.

The breakthrough is to get the home work to become fun based and get parents mutually involved. This generally does not work with conventional homework long seen by children as a slog that interrupts television or Wii activities. Yet there are a massive selection of educational maths, English and science games matched to the curriculum that are entertaining for the whole family. Playing games for maths for example helps to focus families who can look forward to mutual learning instead of conflict. It provides the child with a huge additional resource to their learning scope. Bringing  parents into the learning equation also helps them to witness progress and perhaps some pitfalls that can be overcome on  a dynamic basis.

One Million Kids On Educational Scrap Heap

Thursday, November 17th, 2011

The end of the 10 year educational journey for many children now seems to end in a growing scrap heap. Shocking times indeed emphasised by our young population achieving the unenviable milestone of one million unemployed. The incentive to learn and aspire to a career once the target of us all in school has taken a hit. The possibility that the market will change by the time our children leave school is extremely fragile. Forecasts which imply the economic recovery will take five to 10 years to achieve means a generation of our children will drop off the end of the conveyor belt into the scrap skip.

It doesn’t get any better for graduates. Not withstanding the average student debt which the majority are saddled with on graduation, now students with a good degree are taking jobs well below their credible talent. This has two significant disadvantages; one is a waste of potential for the graduate, the other is loss of the job to a better suited school leaver. Let us hope tat the government spots  the strategic importance of getting young people into employment. It gives purpose to their education and we desperately need them to acquire the skills to ultimately succeed the current workforce.

New Omingraph Educational Software Added to Keen2learn Range

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

Some great new teaching resources have been added to the keen2learn range. Omingraph is the highly successful maths graphing software designed to let children see the graphical results of maths equations. There are over 150 starting points that have been developed by teachers who see the educational software as a huge benefit in letting children  see graphs of their results. There are three versions of the software license. The single user license is designed for home use and for a small group in school. The other licenses are for primary schools and secondary school. Both of these are for unlimited use.

Omingraph is a learning game that is a huge benefit in the maths lesson plans – perhaps why it is in such wide use.

Maths software teaching resources

Omingraph maths games

Non Smoking Policy Includes Head Teacher Selection In China

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Head teaching resources in China may be constrained by the stern  recruitment policy adopted by many Chinese government departments. Summarised in their recent edict the Ministry of Education announced they may not appoint future school headteachers who smoke. Although this policy has since been down rated to become  advisory there are many who believe it will become a significant unwritten influence  in future appointments.

The teaching role to lead by example is however compromised as clearly a significant role in the education of children is to lead by example. In a nation where  350 million people smoke, and that includes 70 per cent of all Chinese males, the role model set by the smoking head teacher has a predominately negative stance in PSHE heath education. The real difficulty would be to discover a good head teacher from the minority who don’t smoke. An interesting challenge was set by the parents lobby, who statistically are predominately smokers, requested the Ministry of education to respect the freedom of smokers in their workplace. Presumably until the MOE finally decides Chinese children will continue to be “taught” to smoke. Quite an own goal in the long term.

Eton School Is Target Of Disruption From Etonleaks.

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

In the midst of the claims and counter claims judged to be cause of the ills of society we now witness an educational establishment being targeted.  Too grandiose to to refer to it  merely as a school, the Eton institution has become the focus of  the “Etonleaks Collective” who plan to disrupt various elements of the school’s activities to highlight their claims.

A claim of elitism creating “future privileged social parasites” has been made by the group which is gathering  growing evidence of other dubious educational activities such how to avoid tax and suspect foreign investments in the school. Sounds almost like the Gaddafi regimes involvement in the London School of Economics (LSE). The pressure group has already disrupted the annual Old Boys association meeting scheduled for next week. There is nothing like a pressure group with a cause to scratch away to gain facts. Inevitably the dark secrets of Eton will emerge to sully its incredible educational success. Rather than looking solely for negatives it may help all schools to learn some of the secrets of its educational success. We could all learn something from that expose.

Teaching Resources of the Future May Not Be Tablets Of Stone.

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

As we hover near the precipice of recession keen2learn believes education be ring fenced from further cutbacks. Looking to the future children currently in school will be required to generate future prosperity and ultimately lead the country. On this basis we should be increasing the investment in education to groom those whose vital role will be to outperform their predecessors.

Not an easy situation to manage. Billions of pounds have been invested over the past decade to achieve this Utopian state. “Education, education, education” has been the mantra echoed by the many political leaders who rummaged  through our educational portals yet achieved nothing.  Investing in add-hoc schemes that ultimately became disruptive damp squids the waste of funds and impact on our teaching resources has been phenomenal. Comparing 2011 with 1987 science, technology and medicine have witnessed huge advances whilst education has struggled. The ability of teachers to teach and children to learn have maintained a disrupted approach to achievement. The countless initiatives have been launched with tumultuous fanfare to resolve an issue in maths, literacy or science that have quietly slipped, unloved and unmissed beneath the waves. Disastrously they each managed to leave a scar. Cohorts of children have been taken along paths, viewed by teachers as a waste of time and effort, from which they may struggle to recover.

And so our overall ranking in the world OECD educational league has slipped badly. We now languish in the mid 20’s position when we used to be in the top 10. Countries in the Far East having become the global  manufacturing and commercial hub are not unsurprisingly supported by children enjoying a far better ( although not perfect) standard of education. But why is that despite the ongoing development of society and the changing demands of commerce and industry we predominantly struggle to move the barriers forward. Our pedestrian approach maybe directly linked to the ponderous approach of national control. Would a fully independent schooling system influenced by the need to make a commercial profit directly supported by results provide the approach needed. The concept works with current independent schools, ignoring their financial constraints precipitated by the current climate, why cannot this be rolled out? Could Michale Gove’s Free School approach be taken to it ultimate conclusion. The waste of government spending being transformed into value for money.

Clearly this would remove the need for the department of educational and its myriad of support  outposts. More essentially it would transfer the scope and control of education that would have to match the demands of the modern world. It would remove the inflexibility of national curriculum, the unhealthy concentration on exam results and league tables. It avoid the intervention of countless  “temporary” Secretaries of state for Education who have a dabble to try and make their name, then move on having collectively, archived nothing.

Technology could surely play a significant role in the teaching resources of the future although this needs careful handling. The charge into interactive whiteboards over the past 10 years has resulted in investment programmes that never achieved their objective. Due to technical issues or inexperience by the user a huge majority of whiteboards ended up with the power switched off . Used as white blackboards that boosted the sales of dry wipe markers rather than achieve the interactive content. Indeed even when a success story emerged and the whiteboard was used efficiently, some teachers noticed whenever a child was asked to contribute the concentration of the rest of the class switched off until it was their turn.

Careful analysis is required before the technology path is pursued. And this involves the use of laptops, netbooks and  tablets.  A brave school, Mounts Bay Academy in Penzance is investing £300k to provide iPads for each of its 900 students. A key element of the plan is to reduce costs of textbooks and improve the pupils learning potential. Although Apple, who are supporting the programme and the teaching staff at the school believe it has potential this is early adopter territory. It will take a few years to to prove the efficacy of the project and allow teachers to adopt a teaching style tuned to tablets. We need to avoid another whiteboard “white elephant” and see if the tablets are robust enough, have the desired battery life, effectively support lesson plans and do not present  the pupils as a target for muggers.

Children See Reading Books As Low Priority

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

The wonderful world of a child’s imagination fueled by reading books is being stifled. Instead of developing literacy skills in education through reading books children are turning to text and Facebook messages. Instead of developing their creative skills and the use of the written word less than 50 per cent of children admit they have read a book outside of school. There are several educational games that help in story writing that teachers and parents can use to inspire the reluctant reader. Fables and Cautionary Tales Story Spinners

Watching children converse by text and mobile phone clearly demonstrates their instant communications expertise. But predicative text and abbreviations are not conducive to developing their skill in English prose. Maybe this is nothing new and has all happened before. Some 30 years ago the form of instant communication was Telex. Speed and brevity was the essence in telex use as charged by the character messages had to be short and unequivocal as the content could be used as a bidding contract. It was a very particular form of communication – perhaps for this reason perhaps there were very few novels written in the abbreviated  language used in Telex communications. A salutary point if our children focus on instant communication rather developed argument.

A survey commissioned by The National Literacy Trust surveyed 18,000 school children aged eight to 17 years old revealed that outside the classroom they preferred to read text messages and emails than a novel. Parents are not blameless in the results. Twenty percent of children had never received a book as a present yet 50 per cent of those surveyed said they liked reading a lot.

The use of technology may thought to have been an influence on the street cred of reading but the use of eBooks such as the Kindle were the least liked source of reading well behind email and text. National Literacy Trust director Jonathan Douglas said he was worried the youngsters who did read not for pleasure would “grow up to be the one in six adults who struggle with literacy”. He added: “Getting these children reading and helping them to love reading is the way to turn their lives around and give them new opportunities and aspirations.”

Only so much can be done in the classroom. The love of books that nurtures creative writing skills can be supported by parents. Somehow we have to get children to see that a book for Christmas is far from the most boring present ever.

STEM Students Could Grab All Future Jobs

Saturday, November 5th, 2011

Many countries including the UK and USA have adopted the Science Engineering Technology and Maths (STEM) theme for their national curriculum. In this rapidly changing world the needs of employers is is being reflected in the learning content included in our educational programmes in secondary schools. But this is not just planning for the future; there are critical shortfalls now as employers fail consistently to attract the skilled workers they need.

There is a general shortfall in workers required by U.S. manufactures especially in computer, maths and science. Siemens has revealed it is currently struggling to recruit more than 3,000 workers with the requisite skills in STEM subjects. Chillingly the study sees the shortfall increasing with a general shortage of more than 1.2 million recruits by 2020. Hard to believe with the current level of unemployment especially in young people that employers are crying out for recruits. Harder to believe the pundits looking at the demands of the future employment market failed to spot the trend and adjust the curriculum earlier. A survey by ManpowerGroup in the U.S. found that a record 52 percent of U.S. employers have difficulty filling critical positions within their organizations — up from 14 percent in 2010.

Many manufacturing bases may suffer geographical changes but the support in design and service are still developing and will more than likely stay in the home countries. The UK has seen more that its fair share of manufacturing changes but is it hugely disappointing to see the numbers of children an young adults mismatched to the current and future needs of manufacturing. In the UK these children and young adults not in education employment or training (NEET) is a testament to an educational programme that is far from fit for purpose.

Exam Results Improved By Learning In Quiet Classrooms

Saturday, November 5th, 2011

Keeping quiet in the classroom can boost children’s exam results a researcher from Stirling University’s school of education has claimed. Silence can also improve a child’s self-esteem and cut down on bad behaviour. But perhaps the greatest result arises in the bottom line; silence in class can boost exam results.

The results compiled by Dr. Helen Lees of Sterling University implied that getting children to remain quiet allowed them to concentrate on the teaching resources before them. Importantly it also removed the element of stress associated with noisy and disruptive classes allowing the children to concentrate and experinece behavior patterns that would be beneficial in adult life. “There is no educational reason why silent practices in some way should not be an integral part of a child’s education,” said Dr Lees. “In fact, when we take various strands of research on school settings and put them together, what we see is that education without silence does not make much sense. In areas of better learning outcomes, better interpersonal relationships, better self-esteem and well-being measures, silence in a person’s life and an individual’s education is shown throughout the relevant research literature to be a benefit,” she added.

Dr Lees is due to present her research at a conference – Just This Day – at London’s St Martin-in-the-Fields church on November 23.

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