cpd and recruitment liam collins and tim matthews
Post on 15-Apr-2017
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Improving Recruitment in a challenging climate*Liam Collins FRSA (@kalinski1970)
* I don’t have the answers
Context• Good School, hopefully moving to great• VA 1012 (32nd percentile) • Value Added KS5• Small (ish) school• Members of Teacher Development Trust• No graded lesson observations• Personalised CPD• No blame culture• Differences in style of teaching celebrated• No colour pen preferred• No triple marking• All observations are developmental – Lesson study, lesson
study light, live coaching• The ‘O’ word is banned in the school
Underpinned by this philosophy
“If there was no Ofsted, no league tables, no SLT... just you and your class..what would you choose to do to make it GREAT? Well do that anyway...”
Tom Sherrington
Do what makes your pupils successful…
If a teacher can get amazing pupil outcomes from using films, Mr Men, constant teacher talk, or rote learning, then power to their elbow.
Laura McInerney
But! Test it. Question it. Share it.
And…
So…easy to recruit teachers then…?
Number of applicants2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 2014/15 2015/16
Head of Maths 3 - - - 1
Maths - 0 3 0 0
English 3 - 1 1 -
Geography 4 - 0 3 -
History - 3 2 - -
MFL 2 0 1 0 0
Head of Science 3 - - - -
D&T - - - 1 -
RE 2 - - 0 0
Drama - - 2 - -
Total 17 3 9 5 1
Cost £7,020 £3,510 £7,020 £7020 £5,850
Cost per applicant £412 £1,170 £780 £1,404 £5,850
So for us, this situation is not new, but it is still getting worse
One word sums it all up…
EXHAUSTING
janeldrewisanimation.blogspot.com
One bonus is that once here they stay!
Improving Recruitment in a
challenging climate*
* I don’t have the answers
Solving Recruitment
•Ways in•Keeping them in
(which Tim will be covering)
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Key Facts NAO report “Training new Teachers”. 10/02/16
4Years since the DfE’s trainee recruitment targets were met
Yet 155 school-centred training compared to 56 in 2011/12
841 School Direct partnerships in 2015/16 compared to none in 2011/12
These are very worrying based on the new Maths curriculum and the threat of compulsory languages
I worry about these courses surviving. We are having to remove courses because we can’t find the staff
Reason we are missing targets?
Choice of provider by region
The number of applicants for teacher training courses has continued to fall with new figures showing a drop of more than 4,500 compared to last year.
Trainees Entering Teaching – good news?
The latest initial teacher training statistics show that almost nine out of ten trainees who gain qualified status (QTS) are in a teaching job six months later
Cost of Routes
Cost/benefit – highest cost is Teach First
However, there is no data collected on any other route and retention rates?
Getting the figures or Zombie Stats
The correct data to use if you want to see how many people gain QTS and then don't start teaching shows just 15% of those who gained QTS in 2012 were either not in a teaching job or had an "unknown" status six months after completion. It was 16% in 2011.
ITT Performance Profiles 2012-13 Statistics - NCTL
Creating more time? Let Teachers Teach
• Fully fund the wrap around care for young people and families• Parenting classes and support• Fund transportation outside of cities for young people• CAMHS support• In school counsellors• Increase and fund alternative provision to stop students failing off
the bottom• Fund SEN properly• Fund a careers advice service
Opportunities? Under-represented. Men*?
DfE Statistics: school workforce SFR21/2015
* Until you get to SLT
Opportunities? Increase BAME
DfE Statistics: school workforce SFR21/2015
So the major problems are…• We have confused ways in to training• It is expensive to gain a degree and then a PGCE• There is very little planning in trainee teacher recruitment• The cut offs on trainee numbers have created a perverse
incentive to recruit quickly rather than carefully• There are regional issues that are causing regional
shortages• The most expensive route in has a two year cliff edge on
retention• The profession is not attractive
A promise…we will try to solve some of these issues
later
efficiencie.com
So how do we retain…?
Tim Matthews (@educatedcpd)
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How professional learning can support recruitment
and retention
#ShapingCPD
Tim MatthewsDeputy HeadteacherOriel High School
Recruitment & Retention crisis?
Have a relatively stable staff group – movement is for promotion / career advancement
A reduction in the number of applicants from traditional routes.
Increased the number of overseas trained colleagues
Schools Direct a process of controlling supply of teachers
Where it started...
Sir Tim Brighouse at the ‘Raising the Quality of Teaching’ event (2013) co organised by the Teacher Development Trust.
You know you are in a good school when;
1. Teachers talk about teaching.
2. Teachers observe each other’s practice.
3. Teachers plan, organise and evaluate their work together.
4. Teachers teach each other.
Moral compass & intelligent accountability
Removal of Lesson Grading
Appraisal
• Recognising and valuing risk taking in the appraisal process
Staff have been encouraged to pursue autonomous developmental targets that are phrased:
• For mastery
• For innovation
• For performance
The core purpose of all of these self-derived targets is to develop practice to improve outcomes for students.
Collegiate Faculty Structure
DHT DHT
HOF HOFHOFHOFHOF
Subject Leader
Subject Leader
Subject Leader
Building Professional Capital:
For teachers to be able to function as members of a community of practitioners who share knowledge and commitments, who work together to create coherent
curriculum and systems that support students, and collaborate in ways that advance their combined
understanding and skill. (Darling-Hammond and Bransford, 2005)
Teacher learning and development is important not because ‘you need to’ but because ‘we could be
better.’
Building Professional Capital:
Core activities:Termly IRIS self reflection incl. peer feedback. Termly Observation of colleague
Safeguarding SystemsBehaviour
Professional Studies:Action planning. Lesson planning. Emotional Literacy. NQT survival. Pedagogical basics (effective teacher behaviours)
PTI:New teacher subject days
Champion
IRIS Groups
Teacher Behaviours
Learner Behaviours
Research Lesson Study Coaching
ResearcherContributor
Mentor
Participant
Coach
Improved Student Outcomes
Teacher Learning
Impact of CPL
• Surplus view of education - impact on culture
• Retention of staff
• Risk taking encouraged
• Dialogue developmental
• Results: VA / progress / threshold
• OFSTED
• Tdtrust validation: Bronze (2015) Silver (2016)
“I believe in the power of people to collaboratively achieve great things,
teachers in particular are amazingly creative and effective problem solvers - let's create
schools that give them a chance!"
So How do we improve recruitment and retention?
How do we make the route(s) into teaching attractive but robust?
How do we satisfy the need for teachers to advance without having to leave the classroom?
How do we provide teachers with meaningful recognition?
How do we provide teachers with more flexibility and time without sacrificing outcomes for kids?
livebettermagazine.com
Feedback from the tables
Polish Round Table Talks in Warsaw, Poland, on February 6, 1989. © Erazm Ciołek
How do we make the route(s) into teaching attractive but robust?• Sort out the routes into teaching• Make them more robust by having real selection processes – akin to teach first• Lessen the confusion by having one portal and way in – good IAG at the first point• Fully fund salaried entry routes• Keep HEI involvement in the initial teacher training– research based organisations• Have regional analysis completed on shortages – no point closing a subject if all
the places are in the north and all the vacancies are in the south• Pay off student loans incrementally with years of service• Be clear about expectations and support expectations• Great exemplars of growing teachers• Enrichment in research• Offering great mentoring • Personality v’s academic ability
How do we satisfy the need for teachers to advance without having to leave the classroom?
• Make the profession more attractive• Invest in increasing non-contact time, but use the breaks for professional
development• Pay better• Penalise school set-ups that are punitive – opposite direction to current thinking • Capture the routes in and therefore retention• Pay increases after the first three years connected to professional development• Have a adult discussion about accountability measures• Hold all changes to curriculum for five years and any changes are given a two year
lead in from the point the specifications are published• Innovative approaches to taking risks.• Need a combination of classroom based learning (through tech) and classroom
focused external learning & collaboration. Blended approach.• Give the same leadership scale to those who stay in the classroom and share their
expertise within & outside of school.
How do we provide teachers with meaningful recognition?
• Have a research based professional development• NQT lasts two years • Next three years of training gains an MA• Then following the College of Teaching model with designatory titles
• Giving them time and space• Positive peer recognition• Personalised thank you from SLT• Create environment where we recognise great teaching• Social recognition – perception of teachers by public/press• Collect student feedback • Non-monetary rewards showcasing teachers work• Personalised CPD• Technology to facilitate growth/recognition• Empower teachers to collect meaningful data from their students
How do we provide teachers with more flexibility and time without sacrificing outcomes for students?
• Collaborative planning – saves time • Better technology• Working with others in networks like Lesson Study. • Actually find out what works in feedback and only
do that• Assess less
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