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School Self Evaluation in Mathematics
The main aims of school self-evaluation in mathematics:
- To know how well we are doing and celebrate it
- To know what we need to do now
Principles of self-evaluation:
- To monitor performance
- To analyse whether standards in mathematics are high enough
- To identify strengths and diagnose areas for development
- To plan what needs to be done and prioritise those actions
- To act on the findings
Important questions to raise about school self-evaluation in mathematics:
- Is our school’ self- evaluation based on a good range of telling evidence?
- Does it identify the most important questions about how well our school serves its learners and other stakeholders (e.g. does it include the views of parents and pupils?)
- How do we compare with the best comparable schools?
- Is our self-evaluation process an integral part of our systems?
- Does our self-evaluation process lead to identifiable actions?
Using the SIP (School Improvement Profile)
- Identify trends in mathematics over time
- Raise any issues – e.g. staff movement, impact of any support
- Use data as a starting point
- Link any questions raised to other forms of monitoring
Scrutiny of Work
- By subject
- By class
- By grouping
- By gender/ethnicity/SEN
Outcomes of scrutiny should inform
- quality of teaching and learning
- pupil attainment and progress
- curriculum provision (breadth and balance)
Pupil Interviews
- A key tool
- Discuss work (e.g. ask them to show which is their best work and why)
- Discuss attitudes to mathematical learning
- Explore their knowledge and understanding of mathematics
Outcomes of Pupil Interviews should:
- improve understanding of pupil attitudes and therefore behaviour
- clarify pupil attainment and progress in mathematics
- inform pupils perceptions of current teaching and learning
Classroom Observations
- By Senior Mgt Team
- By Subject Leader
- By others?
Outcomes of Classroom Observations should:
- evidence the quality of teaching and learning in mathematics
- clarify pupil attainment and progress
- inform the school about effectiveness of curriculum provision
Consider:
- Which children made progress during the lesson
- Agreeing a set of criteria prior to lesson observations (ask staff to agree what a good lesson looks like, and use their responses to set the criteria)
How well are we doing:
In this school ------ governors, senior mgt, all staff
In this team ------ senior mgt, subject leaders, teachers
In this class senior mgt, teachers, pupils
With this pupils ------ teachers, pupils, parents(?)
Subject Leaders
- Encourage the maintenance of a portfolio of evidence – use during discussions
To summarise with 3 key questions:
- How high are standards in our school?
- How do we know?
- What are we doing about it?
Partnered Walkthrough
A partnered walkthrough or ‘learning walk:
- Is part of school self-evaluation NOT inspection
- Uses locally agreed indicators, (not a tick list)
- Is about a structured tour through a part or a whole of a school
- Identifies areas of excellence as well as areas for development, using local (* national) indicators
- Is about having a critical friend/coach
During the Walkthrough:
- Observe snapshots of mathematical teaching and learning, no more than 10 mins in each classroom – ‘touch the back wall and then leave’
- Concentrate on the learning
- Talk to children about their work:
- Is this your best work?
- Why are you doing this?
- What have you done before this?
- What are you going to do next?
- Observe class organisations
- Observe the learning environment
- Try not to appear ‘inspectorial’ (leave the clipboard out!!)
- Complete a work scrutiny
- Discuss outcomes
- Agree future priorities/action plans
- Give feedback in the form of questions (this is an awareness-raising
- exercise)
- Use ‘Excellence and Enjoyment’ materials for further support on walkthroughs
Agree on the key questions prior to the walkthrough:
- Where are we going to look?
- What are we looking at?
- What are we looking for?
- What does this tell us?
- Look in communal areas
- Concentrate on the learning opportunities, environment and organisation
- Are the aims and purpose of the vision for mathematics clear to everyone in the school community?
- Are the aims and purpose of this vision evident in the work of the school?