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THE NECESSITY OF DIVERSITY
Tony Cotton
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I spend a lot of time in Drama classrooms. It is of interest that such
classrooms demand diversity. The drama teacher would not be able to operate effectively in
a setted group. She needs a range of skills and abilities in order to allow
creative and effective drama to take place. The classroom I visit also gets the
best grades in the school often from pupils who are described in other
subjects as les able. It is the clash between the common-sense view of the
drama classroom and the maths classroom that engages me most. Is it an epistemological
question? Is it to do with the aims of the two disciplines? Is it that Drama teachers may
hold different beliefs about education from many maths teachers? So allow me to play with
this for a while and describe a fictional assessment in mathematics education based on the
exam that the Drama pupils I work with will be facing in a few weeks.
The scene is a Y11 Mathematics Group. The group is an all attainment
group - although this would not be a description the learners would recognise. For this
group in this school it has always been the case that all pupils are taught in tutor
groups by teachers who remain as the focus teacher for that group over their whole time in
school. The school imported this idea from a school in Denmark which the staff and pupils
are regularly in contact with. Although they rejected the idea of one teacher covering the
whole curriculum with their tutor group they have worked hard at constructing a timetable
based around 'focus' specialists.
On our visit the group are engaged in their end of secondary phase
mathematics assessment. This takes place over a full week towards the end of the last term
in school. It is a process they are used to as a similar process has taken place at some
stage during each year of their time in school. Around the walls of the classroom are the
assessment criteria - these consist both of process criteria and content criteria.
Examples of each are:
You must show that you can trial and evaluate a variety of approaches
to solving a task and break a complex problem down into a series of tasks.
You must present your ideas clearly showing you can use diagrams,
symbols and graphs to explain your solutions.
You need to show evidence of effective and efficient use of calculators
and computers.
You need to show your understanding of fractions and percentages.
The pupils are engaged on a series of extended tasks, which lead to a
series of outcomes. Day 1 ends with a programme of student presentations. Day 2 begins
with pupils spending some quiet time evaluating their contribution to these presentations
before they move into another group activity, in a different working group. This activity
requires each group to produce a booklet summarising the main points of an area of
mathematics that deals with shape and space. During the third morning individuals work
with one of these booklets looking for errors or inconsistencies and suggest improvements.
The group are used to working in this way as these booklets are often used as learning
aids at all stages of their mathematics learning. (I will try this idea Im
always looking for active revision activities.) During the afternoon the
pupils work in a third group on a series of statistical data collection, representation
and interpretation activities. They are also handed the individual test papers which they
will sit on the final afternoon - this is to help them prepare and to support them in
selecting the appropriate notes and materials they wish to bring into the paper. The data
handling activity comes to end at the end of day 4. Day 5 opens with the test paper - this
focuses in particular on what has become defined as 'numeracy' by the government of the
day. The final afternoon is taken up by each individual pupil preparing a personal
portfolio gathered from the activities of the week. This portfolio is the evidence used to
give evidence of achievement measured against the explicit criteria which the pupils have
seen on the walls all week but which they are also used to working to constantly.
During the week a moderator from another local school has been present
during two afternoons to offer advice to the class teacher and the pupils as to the
judgements which are being made. All teachers are trained moderators to ensure that
consistency is seen to be applied across schools. Both teacher and moderator can be seen
encouraging pupils throughout the week to revisit parts of their work to give evidence of
mathematical skills they have but have not shown during a particular activity.
The teacher draws up a series of marks from the pupil portfolios
corresponding to the criteria. Each area of mathematics is marked out of 8. This mark
corresponds to the level the pupil has shown evidence of operating at during the week.
There are 5 areas, which correspond to the discrete areas of the National Curriculum.
These marks then go forward to an exam board at which the pupils are
graded. The pupils are aware of the grade the teacher is expecting from the marks which
are sent forward and the final grades awarded before the pupils leave school so they can
be involved in any discussion which takes place around borderline candidates.
Tony Cotton
Nottingham University
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