The Essential Speaking & Listening PDF
The Essential Speaking & Listening PDF
The Essential Speaking & Listening PDF
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4 The Essential Speaking
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6 and Listening
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3222
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5 Talk is the medium through which children learn; and yet children may not
6 realise why their contributions to classroom talk are so important. This book
7 provides teachers with resources for developing childrens understanding of
8 speaking and listening, and their skills in using talk for learning.
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20 The Essential Speaking and Listening will:
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2 help children to become more aware of how talk is valuable for learning
3 raise their awareness of how and why to listen attentively and to speak with
4 confidence
5 encourage dialogue and promote effective group discussion
6 integrate speaking and listening into all curriculum areas
7 help every child make the most of learning opportunities in whole class
8 and group work contexts.
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30 The inclusive and accessible activities are designed to increase childrens
1 engagement and motivation and help raise their achievement. Children will be
2 guided to make the links between speaking, listening, thinking and learning
3 and through the activities they will also be learning important skills for future
4 life.
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6 Teachers, education students and teacher educators will find a tried-and-tested
7 approach that makes a difference to childrens understanding of talk and how
8 to use it to learn.
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40 Lyn Dawes is Senior Lecturer in Education at Northampton University, a
1 visiting lecturer at Cambridge University and an experienced teacher. Her work
2 on speaking and listening has been included in guidance for teachers by the
3 National Strategies.
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4 The Essential Speaking
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6 and Listening
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Talk for Learning at
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Lyn Dawes
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2 Illustrated by Lynn Breeze
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52222
First published 2008
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
by Routledge
270 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10016
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledges
collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.
1222
2
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4 Contents
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3222 Acknowledgements vi
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5 Introduction
6 Speaking and listening for thinking and learning 1
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8 1 Class talk skills 10
9 Raising childrens awareness of the importance of talk
20 for learning
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2 Talking Points 32
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A strategy for encouraging dialogue between children and
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in whole-class sessions
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5 3 Listening 41
6 Helping children to understand how and why they should
7 become active listeners
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4 Dialogic teaching 61
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Orchestrating effective dialogue in whole-class sessions
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1 5 Group work 78
2 Ensuring that all children collaborate in educationally
3 effective group work
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6 Speaking 118
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Teaching children how to articulate their ideas
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7 7 Assessment 141
8 A straightforward assessment format for recording
9 experience and progress
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8 Summary 144
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Teaching speaking and listening enables the child to make
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the most of their education
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4 Further reading 148
52222 Index 151
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Acknowledgements
I am grateful to all staff and children at Middleton Primary School for their enthusiasm
for Thinking Together, especially Jo Clay, Nicola Fisher, Donna Tagg and Jonathan
Wilson, Sam, Warwick, Grace and Fritzie. Similarly my colleagues at the University of
Bedford and the University of Cambridge, especially Barbara Leedham, Chris Rix, Elaine
Wilson and Joan Dearman. I have been privileged to work with many students, now
teachers themselves, who have taken the idea of raising childrens voices to heart.
Particular thanks to Rita Kidd and Darrel Fox. I am extremely proud to be associated with
childrens raised achievement and growing confidence as reported by Janet Baynham,
Literacy Advisor for Newport.
My colleagues at the University of Northampton have helped me by putting ideas into
practice with astonishing panache; and by offering well-informed help with early drafts.
Thank you Babs Dore, Linda Nicholls and Peter Loxely.
This book is enriched by contributions freely given by a range of eminent professionals
in the field of education. Some will appear in a further volume but I would like to thank
everyone now for their insightful ideas and their generosity with time. Thank you to Janet
Baynham, Babs Dore, Harry Daniels, Linda Bartlett, Vikki Gamble, Prue Goodwin, Liz
Grugeon, Claire Sams and Rupert Wegerif. Especial thanks to Douglas Barnes for your
lecture extract.
My colleagues on the Thinking Together team have always been an inspiration and
invariably offered support and a conviction which I have found immensely helpful. This
book is infused with their ideas and would not exist without them. I am indebted to Rupert
Wegerif, Judith Kleine Staarman, Karen Littleton, Claire Sams, and Neil Mercer; also my
Dialogic Teaching in Science colleagues Phil Scott and Jaume Ametller.
Thank you to my mates Claire, Andrew, Chris, Tara, and Babs for their resilient friendship
and all the times they have listened and helped me to keep writing.
My family have provided me with constant input and the most brilliant distractions. Thank
you to Derwent, Betsy, Poppy, Emma, Greg, Auden, Cerelia, Mum and Anna, who has
been around all the time while this book has been written and who has recently begun to
tell me to switch off the computer and go and do something else.
My husband Neil provides me with open access to his ability to see through muddled
phrases and come up with neat ways of putting things. His intellectual generosity means
that I have had the unique privilege of discussing anything and everything about the book
at any time with a world expert in the field. I have been utterly reliant on this on-tap
source of knowledge and his profound understanding which has time and again kept
Thinking Together right and true.
Lyn Dawes
24 February 2008
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1222
2
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4 Introduction
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Speaking and listening for
8 thinking and learning
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3222 Thought development is determined by language; [. . .] the
4 childs intellectual growth is contingent on mastering the
5 social means of thought, that is, language.
6 (Lev Vygotsky 1994: 46)
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8
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20 About this book
1
2 The Primary Framework for Literacy has opportunities for speaking, listening,
3 group work and drama integrated throughout its Units of Study. However,
4 children unused to thinking aloud with others, or unaware of the importance
5 of talk for learning, may not benefit as fully as they might from such planned
6 opportunities for classroom talk. Teaching speaking and listening for learning
7 enables children and teachers to generate a talk-focused classroom in which
8 all understand the meaning and importance of key phrases such as talk
9 together to decide . . ., work with your group . . ., listen to your partner . .
30 . discuss what you are going to do . . ., and think together to decide . . ..
1
2 The activities in this book offer children an understanding of how they learn
3 in classrooms. They gain insight into what is really happening in whole-class
4 sessions and in group work. They develop shared strategies for collaboration
5 through talk. The hidden ground rules which govern learning and profoundly
6 affect the achievement of all learners are brought out for reflection and
7 discussion.
8
9 In 2006 Jim Rose, former Ofsted Director of Inspection, completed his
40 independent review of the teaching of early reading. He noted that:
1
2 The indications are that far more attention needs to be given,
3 right from the start, to promoting speaking and listening skills
4 to make sure that children build a good stock of words, learn
52222 to listen attentively and speak clearly and confidently. Speaking
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Teachers
Teachers are often judged to be the root cause of things that are wrong in
schools or children. As Michael Fullan (Professor Emeritus of the Ontario
Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto) says:
In reality, the complex, organic places that are schools are influenced by very
many factors; and our children are influenced educated by their life experi-
ences, not just school. Teachers have a vocation to educate, to help children
think, develop, learn and understand. Their success cannot be simply assessed
by measuring attributes of their pupils literacy or numeracy. However, people
are always trying to change teachers. This book aims to support and encourage
the work of teachers, without wishing to imply a deficit model in which
teachers are regarded as essentially and permanently in need of development.
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Introduction
2 and listening
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4 Some ways of thinking require deeper reflection; these ways of thinking
5 analysis, synthesis (creative thinking) and evaluation can be described as
6 higher order thinking (Bloom 1956). Such thinking allows a rational, critical
7 approach to solving problems or considering experience. This is what we
8 want children to develop in our classrooms. A fundamental aim for teachers
9 is to help children become aware of their capacity to use their minds for higher
10 order thinking. We can use dialogue and discussion to draw on knowledge and
1 understanding, and encourage opportunities for analysis and creativity. In
2 addition, children can use speaking and listening to reflect on and evaluate
3222 their own learning and that of others.
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7 Knowledge; understanding; application; analysis; synthesis; evaluation
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20 Blooms Taxonomy of Thinking
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6 Deep and surface learning
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8 Roger Sljo, Professor of Pedagogy at Gotenburg University, considers that if
9 we are to understand the way children use higher order thinking, we must find
30 out what language they are using for thinking. Sljo (1979) identifies the ways
1 that people approach learning as deep or surface, reflecting not just the
2 intention of the child as a learner, but the kind of understanding they are likely
3 to achieve. The use children can make of their learning depends on their
4 approach.
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6 Surface learning happens when the child sees a task or activity as imposed on
7 them. In this case, they look for superficial facts to memorise so that they can
8 do well in tests (written or whole-class questioning). They do not relate the
9 new information to their own experiences or to previous learning, and so find
40 it hard to recall later. They are not especially interested or motivated. They
1 will not continue to take part in the task or activity without supervision.
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3 Deep learning happens when the child feels an interest in the task and is
4 personally motivated to engage with an activity. The child relates new know-
52222 ledge to previous knowledge, and theoretical ideas to everyday experience.
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They are able to organise and structure new learning into coherent under-
Introduction
Deep learning is our aim in the classroom. One straightforward way to ensure
that children work in this way is to provide them with some basic learning
tools. Russian psychologist Lev Vygotskys (18961934) writing tells us that
spoken language is an essential tool with which children make meaning and
organise thinking. Children use talk to think and learn. Their capacity to take
part in deep learning depends on how well they listen, discuss, enter into
dialogue and negotiation, and take part in work sharing, interpreting and
judging. So it is that their understanding of the importance of their talk with
others can affect how they take up chances to learn.
Teaching children how to listen and helping them to increase their repertoire
of spoken language tools is a powerful way to support their engagement with
their own learning, and encourage deep learning. We neglect this area of
childrens development the direct teaching of speaking and listening at our
peril. Those children who have no understanding of how to talk rationally and
clearly to other people are going to have to find other means to make an
impression on society; for some, this may be constructive and imaginative.
They may become, for example, musicians, carers or academics. However, the
lack of spoken language skills can lead to a downward spiral of disaffection
and disengagement with society. We may witness the tragic consequences of
this in the behaviour of youngsters and others in our cities, towns, villages,
in Internet rooms, shopping centres, parks and public spaces.
The connection between speech and thinking is evident; this is definitely not
to say that all thought goes on through language. However, learning about oral
language is a good introduction to some sorts of thinking that will be of value
to children throughout their lives.
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Introduction
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3 We can teach children to use and understand the vocabulary associated with
4 higher order thinking. These vocabulary items can be thought of as language
5 tools. Examples of language tools are:
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7 To ask questions that support one anothers thinking:
8 What do you think?
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Why do you think that?
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1 Lets think again . . .
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3222 To encourage one another to elaborate or add detail:
4 Can you say a bit more?
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What else do we know?
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7 I can tell you about . . .
8 Can you explain . . .
9 I hadnt thought of that till you said it . . .
20 [name] pointed out to me that . . .
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2 To challenge one anothers thinking, with respect and interest:
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4 I disagree because . . .
5 But . . .
6 I agree but . . .
7 Youre right in my opinion . . .
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I believe that . . .
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30 I think . . .
1 Another point of view is . . . .
2 So-and-so said and I cant see how your view fits with . . .
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4 To justify what they assert:
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My reason for saying that is . . .
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7 Because . . .
8 I have noticed that . . .
9 I have found out that . . .
40 I see it differently . . .
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2 To speculate:
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4 If . . .
52222 What if . . .
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Why . . .
Introduction
Maybe we could . . .
I have a suggestion . . .
Thinking together
The Thinking Together team has, since 1988, conducted research in primary
and secondary classrooms to look at the impact of the direct teaching of spoken
language skills (Mercer and Littleton 2007). In summary, research evidence
indicates that:
Generally, children are not aware of the crucial importance of talk for
thinking and learning.
Teachers can help children to become more aware of talk for learning.
Children benefit from the direct teaching of specific talk skills.
This benefit is educational, in that they are able to make better use of their
classroom experiences.
The benefit is also social, in that children are better able to relate to and
collaborate with one another.
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1222
Introduction
2 Guest Speaker : Douglas Barnes, Reader in Education at the
3 University of Leeds, 19661989
4 Learning and the role of language
5 To explain the importance of talk in learning, we have to consider both what the learner does,
6 and how he or she relates and interacts with other people. We can begin with the tradition of
7 ideas about learning called constructivism. Its central contention is that each of us can only
8 learn by making sense of what happens to us, through actively constructing a world for
ourselves. Most learning does not happen suddenly: we do not one moment fail to understand
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something, and the next minute grasp it entirely. To take an example, compare the conception
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of electricity you had as a child with your understanding of it now. As a child you used the
1 word correctly, no doubt, but you lacked the ability to analyse and explain, as well as to make
2 links with those purposes and implications which make electricity important. Most of our
3222 systems of ideas call them schemes, frames, models or concepts go through a history of
4 development in our minds, some of them changing continually throughout our lives.
5 One implication of this is that learning is seldom a simple matter of adding bits of information
6 to an existing store of knowledge though some adults have received this idea of learning
7 from their own schooling. Most of our important learning, in school or out, is a matter of
8 constructing models of the world, finding how far they work by using them, and then reshaping
them in the light of what happens. Each new model or scheme potentially changes how we
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experience some aspect of the world, and therefore how we act on it. Information that finds
20 no place in our existing schemes is quickly forgotten. That is why some pupils seem to forget
1 so easily from one lesson to the next: the material that was presented to them made no
2 connection with their pictures of the world.
3 New learning, then, depends crucially on what the learner already knows. When we are told
4 something we can only make sense of it in terms of our existing schemes. A child who has
5 had no experience of blowing up balloons or pumping up bicycle tyres will make much less
6 sense of a lesson on air pressure, however clearly it is presented, than a child who has had
7 such experience.
8 There are various ways of working on understanding, that is, reshaping old knowledge in the
9 light of new ways of seeing things. The readiest way of working on understanding is often
30 through talk, because the flexibility of speech makes it easy for us to try out new ways of
arranging what we know, and easy too to change them if they seem inadequate. Of particular
1
importance is the fact that we can talk to one another, collaborating and trying out new ways
2 of thinking.
3
Not all kinds of talk are likely to contribute equally to working on understanding. It is useful
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to distinguish two functions of talk, according to whether the speakers attention is primarily
5 focused on the needs of an audience, or whether he or she is more concerned with sorting
6 out his or her own thoughts. These two functions can be called presentational and exploratory.
7 Presentational talk offers a final draft for display and evaluation; it is often much influenced
8 by what the audience expects. Presentational talk frequently occurs in response to teachers
9 questions.
40 Exploratory talk is often hesitant and incomplete; it enables the speaker to try out ideas, to
1 hear how they sound, to see what others make of them, to arrange information and ideas into
2 different patterns. Learners are unlikely to embark on it unless they feel relatively at ease, free
3 from the danger of being aggressively contradicted or made fun of. Exploratory talk provides
4 an important means of working on understanding.
52222
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The benefit is individual, in that by learning how to think aloud with others,
Introduction
Classes who learn about talk and agree a set of ground rules for exploratory
talk gain more from group work.
They are more likely to engage in deep learning because their own ideas,
concerns and suggestions are negotiated and discussed.
Some children can speak and listen much better in a language other than
English, but are largely expected to learn in English in school. Their capacity
to think in more than one language is of great value, but while they are
developing an understanding of English for learning, they may find classroom
conversations extremely demanding. These children can benefit from learning
language structures that will help them to converse more fluently with others,
including their teacher:
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Introduction
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3 The activities in this book have specified learning intentions (or objectives)
4 to share with children (Clarke 2001). Those to do with speaking and listening
5 would usually be considered background learning intentions. Teachers may
6 rarely make these background intentions explicit but are highly likely to believe
7 that are of utmost importance (Black et al. 2004). It would be good if there
8 were explicit speaking and listening learning intentions for every classroom
9 activity. The activities in this book should always be preceded by explaining
10 to children the relevant learning intentions so that they understand the point
1 and purpose of the work. Children are so often asked to be quiet in class, but
2 really we need them to talk. It is much less likely that they will waste time and
3222 drift off task once they understand why we ask them to talk together.
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6 Notes
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8 Drama is integrated into activities in all chapters, as is ICT use. In this book group
9 means a group of two or more children usually working without adult supervision. Little
20 special mention has been made of children with learning difficulties because this is an
1 inclusive approach, needing no differentiation.
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Abbreviation: in this book IWB stands for interactive white board.
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5
Further reading
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7 Daniels, H. (2001) Vygotsky and Pedagogy. London: Routledge.
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Dawes, L., Wegerif, R. and Mercer, N. (2004) Thinking Together: A Programme of
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Activities for Developing Speaking, Listening and Thinking Skills for Children
30 Aged 811. Birmingham: Questions Publishing.
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CHAPTER 1
Conversations start, finish and punctuate the teaching day. Learning happens
during talk between teachers and children. Teachers use talk for a range of
purposes:
As teachers, we are aware of these purposes. But children may not know how
important it is to take part in whole-class talk sessions with their teacher and
classmates. They may not have realised that lesson introductions or closing
plenaries are anything but pleasant and rather relaxed episodes; the educational
purpose and impact of such sessions that take place might elude them. The
majority of children will have well-developed oral language, but individuals
may not know how to speak, listen, think and learn in the way that is expected
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1222 of them in a classroom. That is, they may be unaware or confused about the
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4 I dont think that talk is important. Speaking and listening can seem
Class talk skills
5 I know how to talk now. I dont need to learn any more. Children
arriving at school are indeed usually very good at using talk for many
purposes. They may not see developing speaking and listening as a set of
skills and competences, and may not realise that they dont know all there
is to know about it.
We teachers like the idea that children share their ideas, collaborating with
others, but classrooms are high-risk places where children may find that their
ideas are rejected, ridiculed or ignored. Some ideas are tenuous and easily
altered; other ideas are creative, firmly held and profoundly important.
Children need to know what will happen when they speak out. Galton considers
the level of risk of activities (how much the childs thinking is exposed) in
addition to how ambiguous an outcome is possible (whether they will gain or
lose confidence). He suggests establishing a classroom atmosphere in which
children and teachers feel themselves to be part of a learning community:
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Thinking skills are often seen as the property of individuals, so how does
engaging in dialogue with others influence the development of individual
thinking skills? The evidence increasingly suggests that we learn to think
for ourselves by first being drawn into dialogues with others. In dialogue
with their parents, even in non-verbal peek-a-boo games, young children
learn that things can be seen in different ways from different perspectives.
To learn something new, even to understand a sign as simple as a mother
pointing at a teddy bear, is to be drawn into taking the perspective of
another person. Once a child can take the perspective of another person,
that child is ready to learn anything.
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1222 Resources
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What things do you get done through talk at school? in class? at play?
Do you think it is hard to listen in class? Why?
Do you think it is important to talk to classmates during group work? Why?
Group work
Explain the learning intentions, and point out that children are expected to
work with everyone else in the class. Decide on a hand signal (e.g. hand up
with palm forward) which means please stop talking immediately. Practise
use of the signal and ask the children to decide why this is necessary in a
classroom.
Choose two children to model the group work. Provide one of them with a
picture. Explain that the activity involves using talk to do two things:
a) the child with picture will describe it to the other child (ensure that all
know what describe really means);
b) the child with no picture listens and asks questions.
Divide the class into two equal sized groups. Ask the children to form two
circles, one inside the other. Provide the children in the outer circle with a
picture. Ask the children to rotate so that the inner circle moves clockwise, the
outer anticlockwise. Choose when to stop. Ask children to speak/listen as
modelled. Remind the children to think about the volume needed for talking
to a nearby partner.
Stop, using your hand signal; ask children to give the picture/book to their
partner.
Rotate again. Stop; this time the child in the inner circle describes while the
outer child listens and questions.
Plenary
Ask a confident child to recall the description they heard. Ask the partner
named to say how they could tell they were being listened to. Ask this child
to nominate another to talk about their experience. Carry on this chain so that
children are contributing without raising hands. Finally, ask the whole class:
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1222 2 Collections
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My adjectives adjectives
adjectives adjectives
adjectives adjectives
adjectives adjectives
My hat designs: rain hat sun hat party hat with adjectives
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1222 Plenary
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Explain that they are going to work with everyone else in the class. They are
Class talk skills
going to ask their classmates questions, and thank them for their contributions.
They are going to remember what they are told, but also keep a record on paper.
Please could you choose one row and say what is your favourite?
Example: The row chosen is holiday, favourite holiday seaside. The partner
writes their name/initials in the first space and draws a small picture or logo
to represent their favourite perhaps sun or an ice cream cone then returns
the record. Children thank each other for contributions. In this way children
move around the entire classroom, collecting information from all other
children in the class. Early finishers can ask for favourites in a second category
from children they have already interviewed.
Plenary
Collect the Favourites records. Ask children to recall examples of who liked
what. Ask them to say who was helpful and drew useful pictures. What have
they learned about one another? Where did the talk go? Point out that the record
cards might help us remember for longer, but that our minds soak up talk
and store it.
Ask further questions about Jakes first week (or other previous learning) as
an example of memory.
For example:
Ask the children to reflect. Who seems to have a good memory? How can you
help yourself remember things better? Stress the importance of listening.
Bring out the idea that talking about things with others is a way of thinking
aloud, and that we can help one another recall things by talking. Discuss
achievement of the learning intentions.
Favourites records can be displayed and used for later discussion about
memory.
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1222
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Holiday
Sport
Toy
Drink
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Some people think weekends should be three days long. What do you
think?
Point out that the child may give a reason (I think . . . because . . .). If they
dont, however, a good way to encourage them to give a reason is to ask
Why?.
I think two days is long enough because I only see my friends in school.
Group work
Use 1.5 Talking Points: playing out. Read the information, then discuss ideas
using the Talking Points. These are statements for reflection and discussion
which can help children to articulate their ideas, listen to others, and rehearse
sensible ways to agree and disagree with a range of opinions.
Discuss with children the ways they can share ideas, challenge one another
with respect, listen and encourage one another, and find out what everyone
thinks.
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1222
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2 Meeting people outdoors helps children to get on well with one another.
4 Adults buy homes and own parks, so they should say if children are
allowed to play around them or not.
10 Playing outside can make you feel fit, strong and healthy.
11 Nature is boring and playing out is dull. Its more fun to stay in.
Design a survey
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1222 Plenary
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Explain that talk is a way of thinking aloud. Unless we talk to people they are
Class talk skills
likely to guess what we are thinking and they may be wrong, in ways that
can make life difficult. Also, even when we do talk, sometimes its hard to say
exactly what we mean, and misunderstandings do arise.
Explain the activity: to talk and think together to complete a story. Everyone
will have useful ideas, and its important that these are shared in a friendly
way. The work in this session is the discussion; what others say should be
valued by listening, challenging or agreeing, and showing respect for ideas.
The group do not have to agree what to write; each child will make their own
copy of the story later. The purpose of collaboration is to stimulate imagination
and generate a range of ideas through talk.
Group work
Provide every child with a copy of 1.6 Griffeys walk. Describe the tasks to
be done:
Plenary
Ask children to leave their cartoons at their places. Provide everyone with post-
it notes. Ask everyone to move around the room, looking at each others work,
and adding a post-it with a positive comment. Stress that children are looking
for what others have done well art work, speech bubbles, ideas, story ending.
With children back in their places, allow time to look at comments. Ask for
feedback about the group work. Was it easy to share ideas? Was anyone par-
ticularly helpful? Did talking to others help the children to think about their
stories and do their best?
Point out that talking is thinking aloud, and that thinking aloud together is
a way of collaborating that is, getting on well with others. Stress that the
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learning is in the talk, and that people often do better if they have chance to
Class talk skills
Discuss problems. Was it easy to stay on task? Did anyone fall out or argue
in a way that was not helpful? What can others suggest to get round any
problems next time there is group work? Keep a record of suggestions, and
check that there is chance to put them into practice and evaluate them.
Do the class feel that the learning intentions have been achieved?
Extension
a) The cartoons can be changed into written stories, or displayed, or acted out.
b) Ask the children to talk and think together to draw a similar cartoon in their
groups.
Put into practice ideas for collaboration suggested in the whole-class talk.
The plenary can be used to check if these strategies were effective, and if not,
decide what to do about it.
Children can make up their own stories, or use the following outline as a basis:
Merla is a small cat. She is hungry. She asks people to feed her the
cartoon shows her asking people one after another; everyone refuses to
give her some food.
Merla is sitting looking at her box of cat biscuits when she notices a
mouse behind the box. Merla is just about to pounce when the mouse
starts gnawing the corner of the box.
Biscuits fall out and Merla shares them with the mouse.
Summary
Children can learn how to join in with class talk. They can reflect on and
discuss the point and purpose of whole-class talk, gaining the confidence to
take part. They can become more aware of the importance of active listening
and respect for others.
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1222 They can use questions and answers, particularly the question What do you
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CHAPTER 2
Talking Points
A strategy for encouraging
dialogue between children
and in whole-class sessions
Talking Points offer a strategy for stimulating speaking, listening, thinking and
learning. Talking Points are basically a list of thoughts statements which may
be factually accurate, contentious or downright wrong. They provide a focus
for speaking and listening, and a chance to find out what others think. They
can be thought-provoking, interesting, irritating, amusing, smart, simple, brief
or wordy. Talking Points are easy to make up, read and understand, but offer
ways into thinking more deeply about the subject under discussion. They enable
everyone to say what is in their minds, so that others can decide whether they
agree or disagree.
So that there is plenty to talk about, there are always rather a lot of Talking
Points. Some groups become so involved that they never get to the end of
the list and this is good. High quality talk always takes time. Early finishers
are offered a joint, creative task at the end of the list, which draws on their
discussion and extends thinking. You may want to ask children to concentrate
on particular points.
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Talking Points
2
3 Children work in groups. One child should be able to read the Talking Points
4 on behalf of the others; if all are fluent readers, the group can take turns. They
5 should be aware that speaking and listening, not reading, is the focus. It is
6 everyones responsibility to make sure that everyone else is asked for their
7 opinion. Everyone must think about what is said, checking whether they agree
8 or disagree, or can add further information. No time limit is set. Each group
9 must monitor its own members, making sure that no one feels left out, and
10 that challenges are sensible and respectful of others. In particular, everyone is
1 asked to give reasons for what they say. The question Why? should occur
2 constantly.
3222
4 Groups should be aware that they will be asked to contribute to a whole-class
5 plenary about two things: (a) the content of the Talking Points, and (b) how
6 well the group talked and worked together. They should be able to identify and
7 remember who asked a helpful question, changed their mind, encouraged
8 someone else to talk, provided interesting ideas or information, and so on.
9
20 Children should know that they will only be asked for positive comments
1 on one anothers speaking and listening. Their explanation of difficulties
2 should be reported objectively without apportioning blame; otherwise, resent-
3 ments may be taken out of the classroom. Children can learn to use language
4 tools such as:
5
6 My group found it hard to agree about . . .
7
We fell out about . . .
8
9 Our problem was . . .
30
1 These help to indicate that it is the entire group that has to reflect and adjust,
2 not just one problem child. Difficulties can be discussed and evaluated as a
3 basis for developing new talk strategies to try out.
4
5 Make sure everyone understands the hand signal for stop talking please, and
6 knows why it is important to co-operate in this way. Also, make sure that
7 children know that they should be talking to someone very nearby at a sensible
8 volume.
9
40
1 During the discussion
2
3 Group discussion is a terrific opportunity to find out what children really think.
4 Its good to be drawn into a discussion when you know that a word or a question
52222 will set off new and helpful trains of thought. It is often a good idea to chip
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in and move a groups thinking along but a light touch is required. Similarly,
Talking Points
Sometimes, groups will take the easy option and give surface answers,
whizzing through the list of Talking Points with little engagement. The teacher
can re-start the group on a particular point, asking for their ideas or reasons,
or can ask the group to disband and become observant listeners to other groups,
learning a more productive model of discussion for next time.
Take a Talking Point which has raised uncertainty or interest, and ask one group
to explain their thinking about it. Draw on what you have heard during
group work, and ask particular children to repeat what they said. Everyone
should have something to say, so hands up isnt necessary. Use the nomination
strategy, which is to ask a child who has spoken to the whole class to choose
who contributes next. Contributions may need summing up and rephrasing for
clarity, but the discussion can proceed with children choosing who they think
they want to hear from. Ask the class to choose girl-boy-girl and so on if you
think necessary. This part of the lesson is a chance to give positive feedback
on interesting ideas and clear thinking and reasoning.
Ask children if they heard the question What do you think?. Ask if everyone
always agreed with what they heard, or whether they had different ideas, and
if so, how were they negotiated. Ask for examples of good listening, and
interesting ideas. Ask if the children enjoyed talking together. Can they think
of other times when the phrase What do you think? might be useful?
There is rarely time in class to deal with all the issues raised by all the groups
for each Talking Point. Talking Points discussions often have an unfinished
feel about them. There is benefit from having in mind questions that remain
unresolved, or ideas raised that have created uncertainty. Individual learning
can start from the friction of such wonderings, especially if children are
encouraged to take their musings and queries away to share them with others.
Ask groups to provide information about how well they worked together.
Children can give examples of good questions, changes of mind, asking for
contributions, and so on, and you can show the child who has done these things
how much you and the class value their contribution to the learning of others.
Groups who have had problems can be asked to suggest what they can do about
changing things. Other groups can be asked to suggest their ideas to help.
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1222
Talking Points
2 Guest Speaker : Claire Sams, Associate Lecturer, Open
3 University and Teacher/Researcher
4
The role of the teacher in teaching speaking
5
and listening
6
The role of the teacher in developing the quality of childrens speaking and listening
7
is crucial. Often children are asked to discuss their ideas or to work together in
8 groups, but it soon becomes clear that many dont know what is really being asked
9 of them. Some are happy to talk, but dont consider other peoples views. Others find
10 it hard to join in. But when a teacher makes explicit the kind of talk that is useful,
1 the effect on childrens ability to talk and think about things together is dramatic.
2 Children who had previously been reluctant to collaborate find a voice; all ideas are
carefully considered.
3222
4 One of the most important things teachers do is to model the kind of speaking and
5 listening we want children to use. This doesnt involve a huge amount of planning
6 or preparation, but a shift in awareness about how we engage in dialogue in all parts
of the lesson. Rather than doing the vast majority of talking and expecting children
7
to listen quietly or answer questions individually, teachers can engage children in a
8 more balanced dialogue. We can discuss with the class the kinds of phrases that help
9 everyone to collaborate effectively when working together in groups. This doesnt
20 take long but creates a sense of shared purpose and understanding, and helps
1 children to draw on previous learning.
2 Another important aspect of the teachers role is the way that we intervene in group
3 talk. This can either be a great opportunity for assessing and furthering effective
4 dialogue, or can stop it in its tracks. One of the most effective examples I came across
5 was when a teacher joined a group discussing various choices. As she listened to
6 the talk, she became aware that one of the children was trying to make a point but
7 others were not responding to her ideas as she wasnt explaining them clearly. First,
the teacher asked the others to give their opinions. Then she asked the child what
8
she thought and why. Through listening to the group talk, the child was able to
9 explain her point of view and go on to persuade the rest of the group to reconsider.
30
1 As a teacher, I found that learning how to enable children to think together created
a richer and more interactive learning environment for all. This is an inclusive
2
approach. Children of all abilities are able to contribute effectively to dialogue, once
3 they have been taught how to use exploratory talk. Those who may otherwise find
4 it hard to participate are not only able to do so, but can influence the outcome of a
5 discussion. I have seen a child explain a strategy for solving a problem to other more
6 able children, thus developing the understanding of all the children in the group,
7 because they had been taught how to use speaking and listening effectively by their
8 teacher while the more able children had not.
9 Teaching speaking and listening skills is important to children; they report that they
40 like this approach and recognise its value for learning:
1 We normally say What do you think? instead of leaving someone
2 out . . . [Im not] afraid to challenge someone with their answer
3 I dont just sit there and say All right pick that one I dont care.
4 It makes us feel more confident if were in a group.
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Talking Points
2 Shadows are the same shape as the thing they are next to.
6 Shadows get light darker in the day and lighter in the evening.
We can draw a light bulb, label all the parts, write what materials all the
parts are made from, and say why each part is made of that material.
We can draw a person with a big hat, long legs, and a shadow.
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1222
Talking Points
2 2.2 Talking Points example: The peacock butterfly
3
4 The peacock butterfly can be seen in summer feeding on thistles,
marjoram or buddleia. The peacock butterfly looks almost black
5
when its wings are closed. It is camouflaged to protect it from birds.
6
Its open wings are a rich red with vividly coloured spots
7 which look like eyes, in the same way that the markings on
8 a peacocks tail look like eyes.
9
If a bird comes too near, the peacock butterfly will open
10 and close its wings rapidly to flash its eyes and startle the
1 bird. Peacock butterflies seen in March have hibernated
2 over winter. The butterflies feed on the sugar (nectar)
3222 made by flowers. They cannot grow or repair their wings if
4 they get damaged.
5 Peacock butterflies mate and lay eggs. They lay their eggs
6 on the underside of nettle leaves, because nettle leaves are the only thing
7 that their caterpillars can eat. The caterpillars live all together in a web of
silk. When they have eaten and grown, they separate and find a leaf where
8
they can hide. Then they form a pupa or chrysalis. Inside the pupa, they
9
change how their body is organised. In summer, the pupa splits and the
20 butterfly emerges to dry its wings. It flies away
1 to find food and to find others like itself.
2
In Britain, butterflies are disappearing faster
3 than any other wild creature. One hundred years
4 ago, there were a hundred times as many
5 butterflies as there are now.
6
7 Talking Points: What does your group think?
8
1 Nettles are essential to peacock butterflies. 6 We have seen a peacock butterfly and can
9 name other sorts.
30 2 We need butterflies. They show us how
healthy our environment is. 7 Butterflies are killed by the cold in winter.
1
2 3 Other butterflies also use camouflage to 8 Butterflies have cold blood and need the
3 protect themselves. sun to warm up.
4 4 Butterflies grow bigger as the summer 9 We can think of a list of other creatures
5 goes on. that hibernate.
6 5 Both butterflies and moths can spin silk 10 Nettles are dangerous to people, so we
7 so can spiders. should cut them all down.
8
9
40 Talk about and do individually, helping each other
1 We can draw a life-cycle of a peacock butterfly.
2 We can draw a food chain with a butterfly, a blackbird and a cat.
3
We can draw a butterfly, label all the parts of its body and say why it is an
4
insect.
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1 Think of the topics or concepts that you are, or will be, teaching. Would
there be merit in some exchange of ideas; are there puzzling facts or
possible misconceptions that need to be aired and examined?
2 Decide whether you want the children to have a discussion at the start of
the session or topic, in the middle, or at the end. Each has advantages at
the start, to take a sounding of current understanding; during group work,
to learn from and with one another; at the end, to evaluate learning and
share newly conceived thoughts.
3 Find a resource poem, story, picture or topic (such as magnetism or
the Vikings).
4 Use the resource to help you to generate around ten ideas that will get the
children talking. It helps to think of the statements as having an answer
true, false or unsure that is, as statements that can be rationally con-
sidered. Talking Points puts the children in the position of having to justify
their ideas and articulate their thinking. They are not questions.
5 Express your Talking Points simply and concisely.
6 Think of an extension activity; this will involve the group using their ideas
to create something or do further work together. This enables those who
rush their discussion (a stage on the way to learning how to think aloud
with others) to be productively occupied while others talk.
7 Number the list for easy reference in discussion.
8 Prepare the children for their Talking Points session by careful grouping,
reminders about talk as work, volume of talk, and the importance of
thoughtful contributions.
Creating questions and answers stimulates higher order thinking that is,
reflection, analysis and evaluation. To generate and phrase a question, a child
has to look at or experience something, match this against what they already
know or understand, and reflect on where their areas of uncertainty are. It can
be hard to think of what it is that you dont know and to put it into words.
Working through this process helps children to develop their capacity to
question. Once they can create questions using concrete experiences, they can
begin to question and reflect on more abstract ideas. Such reflection helps
children to consider their own assumptions and to check that they have thought
of all relevant information. Through this process, they are learning to reason,
to understand the workings of their own mind, and to be accountable to
themselves and others. These are attributes that will see them in good stead
throughout their lives.
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1222 Provide the class with a stimulus that relates to your topic for example,
Talking Points
2 a historical artefact, a model, toy or picture of an animal or plant, a poem, a
3 story, a drawing or cartoon. Ask the children to talk together in their groups
4 to decide on five things that they know about this and five they dont know.
5 Ask the group to write five questions which they would like to ask the rest
6 of the class, each on a separate post-it note. They can be genuine questions or
7 ones that the group can already answer.
8
9 Now ask the class to reflect on and answer questions from other groups.
10
1 This can be organised differently to suit your class:
2
3222 a) Ask children to leave their seats and walk around the tables with a partner,
4 reading questions and writing their answers on another post-it. More than
5 one group can add answers to any question, building up a set of information.
6
b) Ask groups to swap questions. Alternatively, leave questions where they
7
are and ask groups to swap tables.
8
9 c) Provide one child from each group with a sheet of A4 paper. Ask this child
20 to collect three or four post-its from around the room on their sheet, and
1 return to their group to discuss and make a note of answers.
2
3 Next, ask each group to talk about one of their questions and the sorts of
4 answers that their classmates have offered. Ask the class what they have
5 learned and who has helped them to learn. Bring out points about the ways
6 questions are phrased, the difference between open and closed questions, and
7 the importance of questioning own knowledge to check for understanding and
8 accuracy. Collect up the questions and their answers. Using these as a resource,
9 re-phrase them as Talking Points for use in your next session, as in the example
30 below.
1
2
3
4 Example: Looking at woodlice
5
6 A class of Year 3 children looked at woodlice in a plastic
7 aquarium and on a brief film on the IWB. These are some of
8 their questions and answers:
9
40 What does it eat? Plants and vegetables.
1 Do they have babies? Yes, you can get little woodlice and eggs.
2 Does it have a shell? No not like a snail.
3 How many legs does it have? Fourteen.
4 How fast can it move? Some faster than others, all pretty slow.
52222
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These answers were then phrased by the teacher as Talking Points and became
Talking Points
With your group think together to decide if these are true, false, or are you
unsure?
Summary
Further reading
Grugeon, E., Hubbard, L., Smith, C. and Dawes, L. (1998) Teaching Speaking and Listen-
ing in the Primary School. London: David Fulton Press.
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1222 CHAPTER 3
2
3
4 Listening
5
6
7 Helping children to understand
8 how and why they should
9
10 become active listeners
1
2
3222
4
I wash my hands of those who imagine chattering to be
5
knowledge, silence to be ignorance . . .
6
(Kahlil Gibran)
7
8
9 Why listen?
20
1 Children learn to speak by listening to what is said to them and creatively
2 putting things into words themselves. By the time they reach Key Stage 2, the
3 vast majority of children have functional language, and can speak and listen
4 in at least one language.
5
6 Listening is key to learning in classrooms, and yet how often do we say of a
7 child or a whole class they just dont listen! Why dont they? Is it because
8 they cant, and if not, why not? Are they deliberately or inadvertently choosing
9 not to? Why would they do that? What are they thinking about instead? Perhaps
30 we could ask them sometimes. It is crucial to recognise that when we note that
1 in class, children just arent listening! the reasons why not may be a complete
2 lack of interest in the lesson, or lack of understanding needed to make sense
3 of what is going on. These are perennial classroom problems that teachers
4 spend hours trying to remedy by creative planning, careful choice of resources
5 and personalised learning programmes. Having said this that children wont
6 listen if they dont want to we can also say that every child benefits from
lessons in listening. Generally, when children listen in class, they learn. When
7
they dont listen, they may lose the chance to learn and may stop others learning
8
too. How can we help children to listen in class? It is not an easy thing to do.
9
As much as anything, we need their help.
40
1
2 Listening and speaking
3
4 Developing physically depends on exercise; developing thinking depends
52222 on using spoken language. That is not to say that we cannot think without
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language. We can enjoy music, a sunset or a hug without ever really putting
Listening
our thoughts into words. Words, however, allow us to make meaning from what
we feel, to communicate our thoughts and ideas, and to organise our thinking.
Listening and putting what has been heard into their own words is fundamental
to childrens thinking and learning.
It is necessary for teachers to know how the ears and brain work together to
turn sound into meaning. For some children, this process does not work as
well as it might. Physical causes for loss of hearing and inattention in terms
of listening include problems with outer, middle or inner ear, or with the
brainstem or cerebral cortex. To understand spoken words, children must be
able to distinguish specific vowel and consonant sounds e.g. cat and bat; cat
and calf; want and wanted so that they can understand. They must respond
to pitch, loudness and rhythm, and understand the context of what they hear.
Listening is also influenced by the rooms acoustics, competition from other
senses, motivation and emotional state. Sometimes a child may arrive in class
so distressed or excited that their mind cannot settle to listening. Such things
as a family argument or the arrival of a new baby; a birthday or the death of
a pet, are truly important and necessarily affect the childs capacity to attend.
Memory is also important, perhaps especially important for learners with
EAL, who have to listen very carefully to follow the conversation (DfES;
Inclusion).
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1222 The state of a childs mind and their emotional condition can often be gauged
Listening
2 from how they respond or behave when asked to listen. Children ask for help
3 by not listening.
4
5 A common problem for the teacher is how to involve thirty children in listening
6 and thinking while only one of them speaks at a time. We can use talk partners,
7 talk buddies, or pair and share arrangements to encourage children to talk to
8 one another. We can make sure that children know how and why to listen when
9 working with the whole class.
10
1
2 Stop!
3222
4 Classrooms always need a reliable stop signal that cuts
5 through talk without having to use a raised voice. The
6 signal can be carefully explained and used consistently.
7 Those who respond immediately are given positive
8 feedback. You can take a moment or two to walk around
9 your groups while they are talking, telling each group
20 that time is nearly up and reminding them to get ready
1 for the stop signal.
2
3
4 Stop signals
5
6 Some stop signals are:
7
8 a hand signal hand up, palm forward;
9
a rhythmic clapping signal, started by the teacher or a
30
chosen child;
1
2 a small metal bowl and a brass tapper;
3
a gong;
4
5 a particular song on the CD player (your choice, or child of the weeks
6 choice);
7
a swanee whistle (as in The Clangers);
8
9 light signal room lights switched off for a moment then on again;
40
light signal 2 powerful torch with red filter shone in the corners of the
1
room in turn;
2
3 IWB switched to a particular picture or scrolling message.
4
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Listening
Children who are learning EAL are already proficient in speaking and
listening in one or more other languages, dependent upon age and
experience. Our aim is to facilitate transfer of these skills, while at the same
time supporting the development of further skills in both English and first
language. An EAL child can be placed along the continuum from complete
beginner to advanced learner in English. Speaking and listening is usually
acquired before writing, which requires greater cognitive and academic
language. Some learners react to a new language by becoming silent,
which can last for over a year. These learners need security and time to
process the language. In the early stages listening is often in chunks of
language rather than in individual words.
EAL learners need planned progression for speaking and listening (EMASS
2004). The learner can try out new vocabulary and develop working know-
ledge of language form and structure once visual prompts and culturally
familiar information are provided. Key visuals which graphically organise
new knowledge give further support. Kinaesthetic activities, linked to talk,
further enhance understanding. In oral learning, facial clues like intonation
and gesture aid comprehension.
Many strategies which aid EAL learners help others too. Teachers need to
plan for: the activation of prior knowledge; explicit modelling of talk in
context; opportunities for rehearsal, repetition and clarification; thinking
and reflection time to formulate speech or assimilate new language; oppor-
tunities for extended talk; linguistic prompts; and scaffolding and talk
frames. Specific needs are acquisition of key language which is commonly
used in speech but less in writing (like contractions, modal verbs, discourse
markers and idioms and colloquialisms); for learning to be structured into
manageable chunks; ideas to be expressed in more than one way; clear
pronunciation; trained adults to move learners beyond the comfort zone;
and inclusive contexts and recognition of cultural influences.
We have to be aware that there is no quick fix for the acquisition of oracy
in English. It is progressive and is dependent upon the development of
confidence, both in building a knowledge bank of appropriate language and
in being able to use it effectively. Each learner will react differently to this
challenge. By the use of careful observation and planning, all EAL learners
can be supported to become secure speakers and listeners in English.
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Listening
2
3
Activity 1: Music and thinking
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1
2
3222
4
5
6
7
8
9
20
1
2
3
4
5
6
Learning intention
7
To listen with focus and concentration, and to think of ones own ideas.
8
9
Resources
30
1 CD player and music CD ROMs.
2
Wide range of well-illustrated, colourful non-fiction books (e.g. birds,
3
fishes, bikes, cars, machines, materials, weather, space, insects, plants,
4
places, people . . .).
5
6
7
8 Use your favourite instrumental music jazz, classical, rock. For example:
9 Enya: Amarantine Buena Vista Social Club
40 William Orbit: Pieces in a Modern Adiemus: Songs of Sanctuary
1 Style: Cavalleria Rusticana Sibelius: Lemminkainen Suite
2 Edward Elgar: Enigma Sans-Saens: Carnival of the
3 Variations Animals
4 Respigi: The Pines of Rome Rumillatja: Sounds of the Andes
52222
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Introduction
Listening
Talk to the children about listening in class. Tell them you know who is
listening to you; ask them to say how you can tell. Ask:
Bring out the idea that we hear with our ears, but listen with our minds, and
that listening helps us to think about new things we hear.
Group work
Make it clear that listening is a valuable, difficult job and that the class expects
every one of the children to demonstrate their ability to listen well. Ask two
children to model a talklisten partnership; choose any topic your class is
interested in, or resort to the old favourite of food: what is your favourite
birthday party meal? Make it clear that during the plenary children will be
asked to talk about listening.
Ask groups to choose one non-fiction book and within it, one picture. (You
can short-cut this by providing the same picture for all groups if you prefer.)
Groups now think together to write a list of six words or phrases that describe
the picture.
Examples
Ask the children to listen to the music as it plays for about 45 seconds. When
the music stops, asks groups to discuss the following:
Do the words describe the music? Why do you think so? Can we add more
words?
If not, can we think of new words that do perhaps opposites?
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1222 Would the music be a good soundtrack if the picture was animated?
Listening
2 Why/why not?
3
Is there a different picture in the book that would suit the music?
4
5 What words describe this new picture and the music?
6
7 Plenary
8 Ask groups to contribute their ideas about the music and its relationship to
9 their picture.
10
Ask children to suggest examples of good listening, and to talk about how
1
easy or hard it was to listen to the music, and to one another.
2
3222 Ask the children for their ideas about the importance of listening, and any
4 difficulties they experience with listening in and out of class. Help them to
5 understand that by listening well they contribute to their own learning and,
6 crucially, that of their classmates. Active listening means that they are helping
7 themselves and helping each other.
8
9 Listen again to the music, this time with the ideas they have shared in mind.
20 Use the discussion to construct a story, a picture or a poem.
1
2
3 Extension
4
5 Keep building up the listening time if children are responding well to this
6 activity; listening with sustained concentration is an important skill. Children
7 can listen for up to three minutes. They can bring in music to share. They can
8 think creatively to link images, music and words to put together a presentation.
9 They can reflect on and discuss music using some specific vocabulary
30 (volume, pitch, instruments, genres of music, tone, emphasis). With no right
1 or wrong, group interpretations depend on careful listening and shared
2 creativity.
3
4
5 Activity 2: Market day
6
7 Learning intention
8 To listen to and follow instructions.
9
Resources
40
1 3.1 Market day illustration (one per child).
2 Market day picture description to read aloud.
3
4 Coloured crayons or felt tips.
52222 Pencils.
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Listening
Introduction
Explain that listening is very important to learning; discuss the learning
intention. Tell the children that this activity will help the whole class to think
about what is easy and hard about listening, and to think of some ideas to help
each other listen in class.
1 To listen to the picture description, making the picture match the descrip-
tion.
2 To share and add own ideas to finish the picture.
Tell the children that you are going to read the description twice and that you
cant stop during the reading. Check for worries about listening; is it going to
be easy? Stress that there will be time for everyone to help complete the
pictures after the reading is over. Importantly, explain that children are to share
what they hear, that is, not hide their pictures but help one another as the
reading proceeds. The class can only succeed if everyone succeeds.
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1222
Listening
2 3.1 Market day picture description
3 It was market day. Right in the middle of the fruit stall was a basket with four
4 big, juicy oranges.
5
Samya said, Two oranges please! As she felt in her bag for her purse, she
6 was startled by a loud cry. It was a little girl who had let go of her balloon.
7 Up and away it went until it was only a tiny red dot in the sky.
8
9 Pavel saw the balloon too. He held on tightly to his chocolate ice cream.
He loved chocolate ice cream and bought one every weekend for a treat.
10
He went to look at the toy stall. Perhaps his sister might like a pink
1
skipping rope?
2
3222 Sitting beside the flowerbed, Herbert was feeling good. He was going to meet
4 his friends and watch the football match.
5
Tom arrived at the market. He was a bit worried that it might rain.
6 His Mum had asked him to take his baby brother out for a walk and they
7 hadnt brought coats. He liked looking at the cloth stall. There were always
8 rolls of coloured cloth lined up in a row. Today they all seemed to be yellow
9 and purple.
20
It was very noisy at the market. A dog was barking; a plane was droning
1
overhead; and the ice cream van was playing music. The wheels of the
2
pushchair caught on something hard. It was a small green purse.
3
4 Hmm! thought Tom. I wonder who this belongs to!
5
6
7 Group work
8 Read the picture description slowly and distinctly but without stopping or
9 repeating any of it. Allow talk and comparison time. Now read the description
30 again.
1
2 Ask the children to talk together to complete the picture, and to decide what
3 other details they would like to add with their partner. Ask each group to make
4 up one more listening sentence that will help the class to add to the picture.
5 Ask groups to read these out for the class to hear.
6
7 Plenary
8 Ask children to pass their pictures around; or ask children to move around the
9 room looking at one anothers work; provide post-it notes for children to leave
40 a positive comment on the work of their classmates.
1
2 Ask one group to describe problems with listening. Ask this group to select
3 other children to contribute. Bring out the childrens concerns about listening
4 in class, in the hall, in school generally. Ask for suggestions on how to deal
52222 with these problems.
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Extension
Listening
Display the pictures. Ask each group to write a short story about their picture,
or to act out a scene starting with the picture.
Create a listening display: animals with big ears: children listening: speech
bubbles with listening and hearing vocabulary; have a corner with things
to listen to audio books, toys which generate sound; make links between
listening, thinking and speaking: link to Science 4 topic of sound; link to work
in music.
Keep listening on the class agenda as a talking point for other lessons. Create
other pictures and read out related information to support curriculum work.
Use plenary sessions to help children reflect on the mechanics of, and the
importance of, listening. Who is a good listener? Who is improving? Who finds
it difficult, and how can we help? Why do we need to listen? Whats the differ-
ence between listening and active listening?
Learning intention
To listen and remember; sharing memories with others.
Resources
Internet shopping on Mars story.
3.2 Internet shopping list.
Introduction
Tell the children that they are going to use their memories, and check that
everyone knows what that means. Do the children know how important
memory is, and do they consider themselves to have good memories? Ask how
we put things in our memories; bring out the idea that we can hear and
remember. Stress the importance of listening.
Explain the idea that the class has a memory; that by listening and thinking
together, the class can recall and describe events and activities and learning
which any one individual may not be able to recall in such detail alone.
Think of an example. What did your class do in a particularly memorable
session the previous week, month or term? By reflecting and sharing ideas
aloud, and listening to one another, children can recall incidents and what they
learned in surprising detail. Children benefit from raised awareness of this
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1222 whole-class ability the recall of common knowledge. It explains why and
Listening
2 how we teach in whole-class settings; why every class member is important,
3 and how knowledge and understanding are generated and consolidated over
4 the school year (Edwards and Mercer 1987).
5
6 The class are going to hear a story and remember some details. Internet
7 shopping on Mars provides rhythmic and alphabetical clues to aid memory.
8 You can use any suitable story, later asking children to recall names, events
9 and what characters did and said and looked like.
10
1 Group work
2 Read the story once. Allow talk time, asking children to recall and share what
3222 they heard; provide 3.2 Internet shopping list; then read the story again.
4
5 Ask groups to talk together to fill in the shopping list sheet with pictures of
6 the things that the Martians wanted and complete the word list of items for
7 each character.
8
9 Plenary
20 Ask the class to share their versions of the story. Build up a joint version before
1 reading the official version again. Which items were easy to recall; which
2 were more difficult? Can children suggest a classmate who seemed to
3 remember detail well?
4
5 Ask children to think about how we use memory to help us learn. Bring out
6 the idea that the class has a joint memory of shared events, activities and
7 instructions, and that if we all share what we remember, we will all do better
8 in class. Give a further example ask children to recall a detail from a lesson
9 in the previous week. Ask the children to think about how different it would
30 be if everything in class was a competition; and assure them that it isnt.
1
2
3 Extension
4
5 Ask children to write their own alphabetical shopping list. Choose one of these
6 lists to repeat this lesson.
7
8 Check if the class can remember shopping items the next day or the following
9 week.
40
1 Play the game I went on holiday and . . .. Children sit in a circle. First child
2 says, I went on holiday and I took swimming goggles i.e. one item. Next
3 child says, I went on holiday and we took swimming goggles and a camera.
4 Next child says, I went on holiday and we took swimming goggles and a camera
52222 and some chocolate buttons and so on.
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Listening
I want to travel, and I want something nice to eat, and some toys, and something to
wear, said Quixa.
Well, we can write a shopping list for when we win the Interplanetary Lottery, said Zoozo.
Quixa had just found a woolly hat with special holes for antennae when their Mum
appeared. I want some things from the Internet too, she said. Can you really get
anything you want?
Right you are, said Zoozo. Theres some stuff Id like to look at too. I want a pet, and some
sweets. Look, this is my list .
News of the Internet shopping list had got around, and Granny appeared.
What about me? she said. Id look myself, but I just spilt a cup of green
tea on my laptop and it wont work!
Dad appeared. Are we shopping or wishing? he said. Anyway, I only want two
things a quad bike and a zodiac map.
Ok, then, thats the lot, said Quixa, typing rapidly. One for every letter of the
alphabet. My cats going to be called Tabs. What will you call your hamster?
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Listening
3.2 Internet shopping on Mars story
a b c d
e f g h
i j k l
m n o p
q r s t
u v w x
y z
Quixa _____________________________________________________________________________________
Zozoo _____________________________________________________________________________________
Dad _____________________________________________________________________________________
Mum _____________________________________________________________________________________
Granny _____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
53
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If needed, the children can have thinking time first to decide on their item;
Listening
or can be given a card with an item on; or can be given a letter of the alphabet
that their item must start with; or can work in pairs to support one another.
Learning intention
To listen to others in class; sharing understanding
Resources
Use 3.3 Making a working leaf.
Six different kinds of leaves from trees or shrubs (for a class of 30, grouped
in 6 groups of 5, you will need at least 10 of each sort of leaf).
Centimetre squared paper.
Small amount of brown or white sugar.
Straws.
Gold or yellow paper.
Green highlighters.
Blue, black and red crayons.
Pencils.
Glue.
Scissors.
Calculators.
Name lists (put children in groups of five or six; each child needs a list of
names of the others in their group).
Introduction
Explain that listening to one another is really important if everyone is to do
well. At the end of the lesson you will be asking for examples of good listening.
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1222
Listening
2 3.3 Making a working leaf
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1
2
3222
4
5
6
7
8
9
20
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8 In this activity, everyone will make a model of a working leaf, and gain an
9 understanding of how leaves work. Explain this, then ask everyone to think
30 hard and see if they can tell their talk partner, what is the job of a leaf? That
1 is, what do leaves do, or why do plants have leaves?
2
3 After time to talk and listen, choose a starter child to share ideas with the class.
4 Ask this child to choose another and so on, until the class builds up a range
5 of ideas of what a leaf is and does. At this stage, there is no need to comment
6 on the ideas or do anything but encourage their expression, and ensure that all
7 are listening.
8
9 Group work 1
40 Divide the class into six groups of five. Tell the children that they are going
1 to find out how big a leaf is that is, how much it spreads out, or what its
2 surface area is. Provide each child in a group with two leaves, centimetre
3 squared paper, pencils and scissors. A group should all have the same kind of
4 leaves. Each child should draw round their leaves, cut out the shape, and then
52222 count the squares; add together halves and quarters to make whole boxes.
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Colour boxes if it helps accuracy. Early finishers should help others in their
Listening
Using the calculators, add up the numbers. Now divide by the number of leaves.
This gives an average leaf area in square centimetres. Ask the groups to stick
their cut-out leaves on coloured paper and record the average leaf area, with
their names, and if possible the name of the sort of leaf.
Now ask the class to listen again. Ask a member of each group to give the
average leaf area of their type of leaf. Ask the children to consider the idea
that leaves have a large surface area for their size; that they are very spread
out. They are this shape for a reason; their job is to catch sunlight. Hold out
hands to show how spreading out can increase surface area.
Group work 2
Provide each child with 3.3 Making a working leaf. Look at the illustrations
of carbon dioxide and oxygen, and explain that these are invisible gases found
in the air.
Make sure everyone knows which colours to use to colour carbon, hydrogen
and oxygen.
Ask the class to listen carefully, finding the things mentioned on their picture:
1 Carbon dioxide and oxygen are invisible gases, found in the air all around
the leaf.
2 The leaf lets air inside itself through small holes on the underside.
3 The leaf gets water from the plants roots through long tubes.
4 Leaves contain a green-coloured chemical called chlorophyll.
5 The green colour soaks up light energy from the sun, and the job of the
leaf is to store this trapped energy in a high-energy chemical, called sugar.
6 To make sugar, the leaf mixes carbon dioxide and water together, and adds
in energy from the sunlight.
7 As well as sugar, the leaf makes oxygen, which escapes from the leaf into
the air.
8 The sugar that the leaf makes is food for the whole plant to grow and live.
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1222 9 Sugar dissolves easily. The plant changes sugar into starch, because
Listening
2 otherwise rain would wash its sugar away.
3
10 Animals eat plants because they need sugar to live, and they cant make
4
their own like plants can.
5
6
Ask children to say what they heard. Encourage children to express ideas in
7
their own words without spending too long on this or insisting on absolute
8
accuracy. Now explain that the groups are going to help each other finish the
9
picture. Ask the children to listen to the instructions.
10
1
Instructions for using 3.3 Making a working leaf
2
3222 1 Colour and stick on the carbon dioxide, water and oxygen.
4
2 Stick on the straw for water.
5
6 3 Use shiny or yellow paper to make the sun, and the light arrow.
7
4 Highlight the chlorophyll green.
8
9 5 Stick sugar in the hexagon (CARE! Remind children that kitchen chemicals
20 in classrooms are not to be eaten because they may be poisonous and cause
1 tummy upsets!).
2
6 If finished early, help others; colour the leaf pale green; draw animals
3
(e.g. caterpillars) eating the leaf.
4
5
Some children may like to know that this process is photosynthesis (light used
6
for making).
7
8
During group work provide both the Instructions and Description list above
9
on the IWB, a poster or an A4 sheet so that children have access to the written
30
words as well as being able to discuss what they are doing.
1
2
Plenary
3
Ask groups to talk together to decide how a leaf works what it does and
4
why.
5
6
7
8 A leaf traps light energy using chlorophyll. It uses this
9 energy, carbon dioxide and water to make sugar. Sunlight
40 energy is stored in sugar and starch. Leaves also make
1 oxygen as a waste product, which it lets out into the air.
2 Plants have energy to grow because they make their own
3 food like this. Animals cannot make sugar. Plants support
4 animal life.
52222
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Choose a child to start telling the class their ideas. Reinforce accurate ideas.
Listening
Ask for contributions or corrections. Ask for children to choose the next con-
tributor to build up a clear idea of the job of a leaf. Finally, ask the groups to
decide why their leaves are so big and flat. Ask for class contributions to
support the idea of a large surface area to catch sunlight and allow carbon
dioxide in and oxygen out.
Tell the children to make sure they ask their parents the starter question when
they go home; do you know why trees have leaves? This might give the child
another chance to articulate their understanding.
Remind the children of the learning intention, and how important listening
was in this lesson. Ask them for examples of good listening. Also ask children
to decide who was helpful in the groups. This lesson can demonstrate that good
listening and collaboration means that everyone learns well. Ask the children
to reflect on their learning. What have they learned by listening?
Extension
Provide photocopies of the ten statements, cut up and mixed up. Ask groups
to sequence these correctly, to illustrate and stick in their books, or make a
poster, adding their Working leaf pictures.
Listening ideas
Use learning intentions for active listening for the whole class, or target specific
individual needs. Use in conjunction with curriculum learning intentions.
Review progress in your plenary session, asking children to provide examples
of effective listening and learning.
Play a traffic lights game during P.E. and transfer this into the classroom:
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1222 Children can make a sound tape at home, to share with the class, recording a
Listening
2 variety of sounds. Children working in groups listen, share ideas and identify
3 what they hear.
4
5 Create a display of sound words, for example:
6
7 Volume: noisy, loud, quiet.
8
9 Pitch: high, low.
10
Rhythm: regular, irregular.
1
2 Instruments: percussion, stringed, wind.
3222
4 Music: tune, rhythm, beat, tempo, waltz, march.
5 Noisy machines: car, lorry, tractor, motorbike, lawnmower, television.
6
7 Pleasant sounds: bird song, singing, laughter, kettle boiling.
8
9 Ask children to collect pictures of sound sources (trumpet, piano, people
20 talking, machines) to add to the display. Add describing words for each sound,
1 or onomatopoeia words (Crash! Squelch! Scrunch!) using comics as a source.
2
3 Display pictures of animal ears with emphasis on the difference between
4 hearing (passive) and listening (active). Consider why hearing is a vital sense
5 for animals and humans.
6
7 Use the British Library Sound Archives comprehensive collection of animal
8 sounds, rainstorms, Victorian street everything to enrich presentations and
9 for listening quizzes.
30
1
Look at hearing impairment and the ways people have found to get round
2
problems over the ages. Make the most of the link with science work on sound.
3
4
Ensure that your voice is not over-used. Use recordings of stories and sounds
5
6 instead of reading yourself. Use sound signals to indicate when the class should
7 stop or pack up. Save your energy and the impact your voice has for learning
8 conversations and for more personal talk with individuals in your class.
9
40 Research and discuss the impact of body language with the class. How
1 accurately can we convey meaning without words?
2
3
4
52222
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Summary
Listening
Further reading
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1222 CHAPTER 4
2
3
4 Dialogic teaching
5
6
7 Orchestrating effective dialogue
8 in whole-class sessions
9
10
1
2
3222
4 Dialogic teaching harnesses the power of talk to engage
5 children, stimulate and extend their thinking, and advance
6 learning and understanding.
7 (Alexander 2006: 37)
8
9 The emphasis upon language for performance rather than
20 for exploration is, of course, communicated by many
1 teachers when they treat classroom discussion as an
2 opportunity for cross questioning.
3 (Barnes 1992: 61)
4
5 Childrens questions, their tentative thoughts and hypothetical ideas, supply
6 the energy for their learning. How can we ensure that children are prepared to
7 express uncertainty, offer newly formed and uncertain ideas, and consider the
8 ideas of others as things to be challenged and tested out loud? Our talk with
9 children the way we teach is the most important tool we have available for
30 teaching and learning. Whether or not children think and learn through talk in
1 your classroom depends on your awareness of how you use language to inter-
2 act. This brings us to the concept of dialogic teaching. Teachers and children,
3 through dialogue, can work towards understanding, using and learning valuable
4 strategies for thinking.
5
6 Dialogic teaching can be thought of as a syndrome a combination of various
7 conditions that build up into a recognisable teaching approach. Dialogic
8 teaching was identified and described by eminent educational researcher Robin
9 Alexander, based on analysis of his detailed observations of classroom life:
40
1 Dialogic teaching deals not just with what is to be learned, but
2 how. It explores the learners thought processes.
3 (Alexander 2006: 35)
4
52222
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and ultimately to deeper learning. Can we analyse our own teaching and
discern patterns that Alexander identifies in others? Can we see the benefits
of dialogue and ensure that these benefits are achieved in our own classroom
on an everyday basis?
Dialogic teaching means finding out what children think, engaging with their
developing ideas and helping them to talk through misunderstandings.
Dialogic teaching allows teachers to have access to childrens ideas. These may
be deeply held or transient; either way, dialogue enables teachers to move on
childrens thinking. During dialogue, children have an unusual opportunity to
hear and consider new information, opinions and questions. They literally have
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1222 the chance to change their minds by matching their thinking against that of
Dialogic teaching
2 others. Subject learning is developed as new ideas are put forward, challenged
3 and generally mulled over. It is an opportunity to develop curiosity about the
4 thoughts of others and the capacity to reflect.
5
6 Children also learn that this sort of talk with other people can help them to
7 both understand and question things. With their classmates, as they practise
8 dialogue, children can see how ideas can be generated and questioned in order
9 to test and make sense of them. They can then think this way when working
10 alone through a problem or new set of ideas. They can learn to see that there
1 are reasons why people think differently. This is a step on the way to tolerance,
2 understanding and negotiating compromise.
3222
4
5 Indicators of dialogic teaching
6
7 Towards Dialogic Teaching (Alexander 2006) sets out to establish a description
8 of what dialogic teaching can be like in practice, with the intention of
9 provoking and informing a debate about what constitutes effective teaching.
20 As teachers, we can join in this debate to offer informed comment on key issues
1 such as the role of the teacher, the fundamental nature of classroom talk in
2 childrens learning and the impact that dialogic teaching might be expected to
3 have.
4
5 Among the most significant indicators of dialogic teaching are:
6
7 Questions are structured so as to encourage thoughtful answers.
8 Answers stimulate further questions and are seen as the building blocks of
9 a longer dialogue, rather than end points.
30
The teacher chains contributions into a coherent whole, helping children
1
to discern meaning and think of new questions.
2
3
4
Indicators in teacher talk
5
6
Dialogic teaching involves talk in which:
7
8 questions are structured to provoke thoughtful answers;
9
40 answers provoke further questions;
1 exchanges are chained into coherent lines of enquiry;
2
there is a balance between encouraging participation and extending
3
understanding;
4
52222 pupils ask questions and provide explanations;
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narrate;
explain;
instruct;
ask different kinds of questions;
receive, act and build upon answers;
analyse and solve problems;
speculate and imagine;
explore and evaluate ideas;
discuss;
argue, reason and justify;
negotiate.
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1222
Dialogic teaching
2 Guest Speaker : Harry Daniels, Professor of Education,
3 Centre for Sociocultural and Activity Theory Research,
4 University of Bath
5
6 Language as a pedagogic tool
7 People speak in ways that are specific to the context in which they are speak-
8 ing. For example, mothers speak in particular ways to their babies; pupils and
9 teachers speak to each other in ways that reflect the nature of the curriculum
10 context. Speakers are not simply constrained and determined by the context
1 in which they are speaking, they also shape and transform that context and
2 the ways in which practices of communication are enacted. From this point
3222 of view, speech may be seen as a construction, a device or artefact that
4 mediates, or goes between people and the places in which they speak.
5
6
Speech and forms of speaking are social creations that carry the histories of
7
their use and are tools for the creation of new meanings. When contexts
8
change or are changed, new forms of speech arise. This happens as children
9
learn and develop, as well as when historical, social change takes place.
20
1
Speaking always involves the negotiation of meaning. However much politi-
2
cians and the popular press would like us to believe that simply structuring
3
and sequencing instruction guarantee learning, social and cultural psychol-
4
ogists have shown how every response to teaching is best thought of as a
5
creative response. The very act of negotiation of meaning and dialogue that
6
7 underpins modern understandings of communication, including pedagogic
65
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1a Introduction recap
Context: whole-class introduction during an ongoing topic. Provide key
vocabulary. Ask groups to talk together to summarise previous lessons or recall
what they experienced. Each group is then asked for a sentence saying what
they have learned or understood; the teacher invites one group to contribute,
moving round the groups until all feel that the summary of previous work is
complete. During this summary, the child who is speaking may ask others in
the room to contribute or comment.
a sentence about something they learned and how they learned it;
a question about some aspect of the work;
something they did not understand or would like to learn more about;
a suggestion for what they may need to revise;
a suggestion for what they think would be useful or interesting to do next.
Invite groups to offer their ideas. Questions can be answered by other groups
or individuals, and similar or contrasting viewpoints noted.
1c Nomination
Context: whole-class dialogue session. A child who has just contributed to the
whole-class discussion is asked to nominate the next child to speak. They may
also think up a question for the person they have nominated. You may need to
rephrase some responses to help things along, or chain ideas so that they link
up. While children are learning how and why the turn-taking of nomination
works, it may also be necessary to ask children to make their choice from
another group or boy/girl to ensure that everyone has the chance to speak. Nom-
ination is a very good strategy for getting away from the constraints of teacher
questions and brief answers, with children bidding for turns with hands up.
Context: group work. Children can talk and think together, aware that they will
be asked to explain and give reasons for their jointly agreed ideas.
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Dialogic teaching
2 Concept maps. A concept map is a graphic representation of how an individual
3 or group understands or thinks. Concept maps can be used to examine thinking
4 about a topic or for a story the class is reading. The ability to construct and
5 use concept maps can be built up in stages:
6
7 1 Provide pairs or groups with key words arranged so that the links between
8 them become apparent. Ask groups to discuss how the key words are linked
9 that is, to explain their conception relationships between ideas. Draw lines
10 to show links.
1
2 Children discuss which word, phrase or sentence can be written along
2
linking lines to describe the relationship.
3222
4 3 Provide up to twelve key words on cards and ask groups to discuss how
5 to arrange them so that linked concepts are physically near to one another
6 before linking lines and relationship words are added.
7
4 Children discuss and choose their own key words and create mind maps.
8
9
Concept maps can help children to share their ideas, so that their reasoning is
20
apparent. Gaps or errors in understanding become evident through differences
1
of opinion. Areas of uncertainty can be highlighted, discussed with the whole
2
class, and form the basis of subsequent teaching.
3
4
Collecting information. Each group is given a relevant
5
item of information, picture or object to talk and think
6
about. One child leaves their group, visits another
7
group, talks with them about their information (etc.),
8
then returns to their own group and recounts or
9
explains what they have been told or shown.
30
The children discuss this input before a different
1
child visits another group.
2
3 Whole-class work sharing. During
4 group activity, ask one person at a
5 time to leave their group and take
6 a minute or two to visit others
7 around the room, looking at their
8 work, offering positive comments
9 and sharing ideas about it. During
40 the plenary, invite children to give
1 examples of effective work of
2 others, or say how this helped their
3 own work.
4
52222
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Group mix. Give each group a number. Provide each child in a group with a
Dialogic teaching
different coloured sticker. Once group work is under way, ask (for example)
all orange children to move to the group with the next number. Ensure that
they are welcomed and that the groups work so far is explained. Once groups
are established and working again, if time, ask (for example) green children
to move to the group with the previous number. Again, the group explains and
describes its work before continuing. Finally, all children return to their original
group. As well as asking children to show what they have learned, ask for
comments on the experience of re-grouping advantages, surprises, problems.
There may be particular value in asking those who did not move to describe
the effect of changes on learning and their impression of being the anchor
for the group.
Group consequences. These are effective when drafting text, problem solving
or planning an enquiry. Provide an activity in which children discuss their ideas
with their group and then work individually on separate paper/books/computer
pages. Once work is underway, ask children to swap papers/computers etc.,
look at what is there, discuss and continue. Once enough time has elapsed,
exchange again with a different member of the group to make sure that
everyone has contributed to each others work. If possible, you can also ask
children to choose another person in the class they would
like to exchange with. Finally, return the work to
its original owner to look at and complete. Ask
groups to think together to evaluate the shared
work and decide how contributions helped. It
may be that some contributions were not
wanted, allowing the child or group to clarify
what they did want.
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1222
Dialogic teaching
2 4.1 Talking Points: Magnetism
3
4 Talk with your group to find out what everyone thinks, and agree on your
5 ideas. Are these points true, false, or are you unsure? Please give REASONS for
6 your ideas.
7
8 1 Magnets have poles. The north pole of a magnet points north.
9
10 2 The earth is a magnet because it is made of metal inside.
1
3 Magnets pull metal things but not all metals are magnetic.
2
3222 4 Magnetism is a force.
4
5 5 Magnetism is strongest near the ends of magnets.
6
7 7 Magnets always point in the same direction if free to move.
8
8 Steel can act as a barrier to a magnetic field.
9
20 9 You can make magnetism from electricity.
1
2 10 Magnets dont work under water.
3
4 11 Magnets attract each other and repel each other.
5
12 We get the word magnet from the metal magnesium.
6
7 13 A compass needle is a magnet that turns as the earth turns.
8
9 14 If you cut a magnet in half, you get two magnets.
30
15 Magnets can be any shape at all.
1
2
16 Magnets are just toys.
3
4 17 Round magnets do not have poles.
5
6 18 Magnets dont work through paper.
7
19 Magnetic force is all round a magnet, not just at the poles.
8
9 20 The earths north magnetic pole is at the actual North Pole in the Arctic.
40
1
Now draw a cartoon to show how magnets work. What would a magnetic
2
character look like?
3
4
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Dialogic teaching
Read the poem. Discuss the talking points. Ask everyone for their ideas and
reasons, before deciding what your group agrees.
Talking Points
1 This poem was written a long time ago.
Draw a picture of the house. Use the words of the poem and your own words
to label your picture.
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Dialogic teaching
2 speaking and listening
3
4 Discussion can aid assessment by bringing out misconceptions or areas of
5 uncertainty. Everything a child says is an opportunity to assess their thinking
6 and learning.
7
8 3a Talk about examination questions
9 Formal assessment is full of pitfalls for children. Their understanding
10 or otherwise of what the question is actually asking them can affect the
1 clarity and accuracy of their response. Through discussion, we can help
2 children to understand what is really wanted. This is not teaching to the
3222 tests which means selectively teaching children specific factual know-
4 ledge. Encouraging children to reflect on, discuss and evaluate questions
5 and articulate a range of ideas about possible answers calls into play
6 higher order thinking skills. Children need to know how to answer paper-
7 based questions.
8
9 Provide each child with a paper-based question to complete alone; collect
20 in and mark.
1
Using the same question, ask children to talk through their ideas with you
2
or a teaching assistant. Ask them to explain the thinking behind their
3
answers. Would your understanding of their thinking affect their mark?
4
5 Ask groups to look at the question and share their ideas about what it is
6 asking without writing anything down.
7
Ask children to contribute to a whole-class discussion of a question,
8
ensuring that uncertainties are aired and those who initially answered the
9
question inaccurately have the chance to say what they think and respond
30
to the different ideas of others.
1
2
3b Evaluating the work of others
3
Provide groups of children with examples of class work, preferably anonymous
4
work from another class. Help them to understand marking criteria by asking
5
groups to decide what is good work; list the things that make the work good.
6
Discuss the need to focus on specific aspects of the work. For example, will
7
spelling and handwriting matter?
8
9
40
1
2
3
4
52222
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Dialogic teaching
My name is _____________________________________________
My plan
I am going to ___________________________________________
Because ________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
My review
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1222 In discussion with a partner, mark the work provided using agreed criteria.
Dialogic teaching
2
3 Decide what help the person needs if they are to improve.
4 Mark a different sample of work. Check if the mark matches that of the
5 original markers. Discuss any discrepancies.
6
7 Repeat the process using samples of their own work.
8
9
10 3c Assessing motivation
1 Learning is intricately bound up with motivation; how interesting is the topic
2 to the child? Set out resources for three or more activities related to your on-
3222 going topics. Ask children to choose which to use. Start by recording briefly
4 what they want to do or find out; that is, make a plan using 4.3 My choice
5 plan.
6
7 Provide time to use the resources. Afterwards, ask children to talk with you or
8 to one another to evaluate their current thinking; how does this match with
9 their plan?
20
1 Ask them to think and record their plan for what to do next.
2
3
4
5
4 Giving children time to think
6
7
Context: whole-class discussion.
8
9
Ask children not to raise their hands. Talk to them to set out the problem, ideas
30
or questions for discussion. Ask the children to think alone for a minute or so,
1
2 then share ideas with those nearby. Remind everyone that the class learning
3 depends on active listening. Now ask a child by name to contribute. Build
4 thinking time into the ensuing discussion by asking children not to put up their
5 hands; then wait a few moments after they have spoken before asking another
6 child to speak.
7
8 Context: at the computer.
9
40 Use an on-screen timer or conventional sand timer. Ask each group to ensure
1 that they think about the problem, their writing and so on, for a set length of
2 time before moving on.
3
4
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Encouraging classroom talk can cause problems. Children may not listen to
one another; some children may never contribute; others may be overly
aggressive when challenging or challenged. Some barriers can be overcome
by planning, for example:
Make explicit the ground rules that govern talk in the classroom by
teaching children about the purpose of their talk with you and their
classmates.
Analyse the talk that has gone on, asking children to evaluate its quality
and impact.
Establish a talk focus and a thinking atmosphere, valuing contributions,
and asking questions to which you really do not know the answer.
Discuss with children their role as listeners. Not all voices can be heard
because there is not enough time. You can find out what the children think
about this, and ask for their suggestions for fairer turn-taking. Find out
who they like to listen to.
Ask confident children to talk about their perceptions of class talk.
Compare with the views of quieter children.
Have a dialogue star. Choose a child who is expected to make the initial
contribution and change every week so each child in class eventually takes
this role.
Use talk partners and groups so that questions and ideas can be shared
with someone, if not with everyone.
Dialogue has the potential to wander off into uncharted territory. Decide in
advance how much freedom is useful, interesting or helpful. Sometimes the
answer is none, and it is fine to keep the learning intention clearly in focus.
Sometimes there is chance to explore. Help the children to recognise what sort
of discussion you expect, and teach them how to elaborate on their ideas and
those of others.
Time your discussions carefully stop while you are winning. Some children
may want to continue to talk about the topic with you later; some may take
their thoughts away for reflection or discussion at home. Teach the children
that conclusions cannot always be reached.
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1222 whole process makes more sense. Talk which has a real point can be more
Dialogic teaching
2 interesting than the everyday distractions children devise for one another.
3
4
5 Reviewing your work space and teaching strategies
6 to encourage dialogue
7
8 Classroom organisation
9
10 Where can the children sit so that they can see one another as well as
1 possible?
2 Where can you stand or sit to be visible and to orchestrate the talk?
3222
4 Will moving tables and chairs create an atmosphere more suitable for talk?
5
6
7 Learning intentions
8
Are the children aware of the learning intentions for the topic and for their
9
talk?
20
1 Is it really necessary to write out the learning intentions?
2 Do children know how dialogue can help achieve learning intentions?
3
4
5 Your talk with the children
6
7 Does your planning include time for you to involve children in a dialogue
8 with you and each other?
9
Have you planned why, how or what do you think questions to help
30
initiate dialogue?
1
2 Are you and the class prepared to continue a line of thinking with an
3 individual child?
4 Does your class understand the importance of extended responses?
5
6 Are children willing to share tentative thoughts with you and one another,
7 admitting errors and asking questions?
8 Can members of your class talk to one another, examining ideas and
9 following a line of reasoning, with you in support?
40
Do all children in your class have the confidence, ability and motivation
1
to speak and listen during whole-class discussions?
2
3 Do you use what happens during the lesson to think of some plenary
4 questions that will help children to think aloud, building on one anothers
52222 responses?
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Are the ground rules that help to generate and sustain whole-class dialogue
transparent to the children, commonly talked about and open to review?
Can the children evaluate the effectiveness of their group and whole-class
talk? Do they have the understanding and vocabulary to do so, and do they
know how important this is?
Do the children understand that learning is a whole-class enterprise and
that if one person is uncertain, the whole class cannot succeed unless they
help?
A learning dialogue
Teachers have a wide range of techniques for example, they explain, question,
describe and instruct depending on what they are trying to achieve. Teaching
episodes taken out of context may not allow us to understand what is happening
in a classroom, but we can each consider and evaluate our own teaching style,
aiming to achieve a range of talk-focused strategies and an overall balance in
which dialogic teaching episodes are thoughtfully and frequent used.
Degrees Celsius
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Dialogic teaching
2 Teacher Well, there are lots, there are reactions going on in your cells, all
3 the time, that give out heat. You are a source of heat. Your food,
4 you use food as fuel and you burn it up to move and breathe and
5 make heat.
6 Ben Ah.
7
8 Comment. Ben, surprised by the difference between room and body tempera-
9 ture, had the confidence to challenge information offered by the teacher. To
10 do so three times with reasons, is commendable and indicates that there
1 is trust between teacher and class. The dialogue that Ben initiated contributed
2 to the learning of his classmates.
3222
4
5 Summary
6
7 Too often educational change is externally imposed and its the thankless task
8 of the teacher to try to make innovation work in practice. However, change
9 towards dialogic teaching can be a personal goal. The benefits for children as
20 individuals, for the class as a unit, for everyones learning and for our own job
1 satisfaction are evident. Listening to children, discussing their ideas in ways
2 that help them make meaning together, and showing them how best to use their
3 minds and their spoken language, are all reasons why we enlist as teachers in
4 the first place. Dialogic teaching, as its name says quite clearly,
5 is the responsibility of the teacher. Its outcomes for teachers
6 include finding out what children really think and being
7 able to teach them what they need to know, honestly
8 and clearly. Its outcomes for children are a deeper
9 engagement with learning, and a better understanding
30 of how and why they should talk with everyone in
1 their class.
2
3 They should also have time to think. Isnt this what we
4 want in our classrooms?
5
6
7 Further reading
8
9 Alexander, R. J. (2006) Towards Dialogic Teaching: Rethinking Classroom Talk. York:
40 Dialogos. (First edition 2004.)
1 Mercer, N. (1995) The Guided Construction of Knowledge. Clevedon: Multilingual
2 Matters.
3 Mercer, N. and Littleton, K. (2007) Dialogue and the Development of Childrens Thinking.
4 London: Routledge.
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CHAPTER 5
Group work
Ensuring that all children
collaborate in educationally
effective group work
We can teach children how and why they can have a good discussion; every
one of them can learn to contribute, reason, elaborate and generally think aloud
with others. Collaborative working is not created by seating arrangements,
but by teaching children why and how they should talk to one another during
class activities. Its easy for them to wander off task when they are talking
during group work. It is crucial to give children the understanding and skills
they need to defer social talk without creating conflict. They must know how
to agree and how to disagree by showing that it is the idea or opinion they
wish to challenge, not the speaker. This is essential learning.
This chapter suggests activities for the direct teaching of talk based on the
Thinking Together approach. Thinking Together has been shown to raise
achievement in curriculum areas such as literacy, numeracy, science and
citizenship where discussion takes place (Mercer, Wegerif & Dawes 1999).
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1222
Group work
2 Guest Speaker : Neil Mercer, Professor of Education,
3 University of Cambridge
4
5 The importance of teaching speaking and listening
6
7 Two or more people working together can achieve more than the sum of their
8 individual contributions. Language is designed for doing something much
9 more interesting than transmitting information accurately from one person to
10
another: it enables individual minds to be combined in a collective, communi-
1
cative intelligence, so that people can make better sense of the world and
2
devise practical ways of dealing with it. Language enables people jointly to
3222
create new ideas and reflect on them. With language, we can not only
4
interact, we can interthink. Helping children to understand why people suc-
5
6 ceed or fail in using talk for thinking together should be an important function
7 of classroom education.
8
9 Teachers can agree on what constitutes good group work and effective speak-
20 ing and listening, but it seems that such discussion is rare in classrooms.
1 Recordings capture talk in which children dont listen to each other, in which
2 one person dominates the proceedings, in which they argue unproductively,
3 or in which they seem happy to go along with whatever anyone says without
4 any reflection or debate. So there is an apparent paradox: teachers are able
5 to specify what makes a good discussion, but such discussions occur very
6 rarely in classrooms. Why should this be so?
7
8
One likely reason is that we may too readily assume that most children know
9
how to talk and work together, when asked to do so, and so we rarely give
30
explicit guidance or training in how to make a good discussion happen. We
1
rely on childrens wider social language experience to provide them with the
2
resources for thinking together, but that experience may not include enough
3
4 reasoned discussion. Children may not be familiar with the communicative
5 strategies involved, and talk is such a taken-for-granted aspect of life that
6 people rarely reflect on how they use it. This is why it is crucial that teachers
7 help children to understand speaking and listening, and to develop their
8 repertoire of ways of using talk to get things done.
9
40
1
2
3
4
52222
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before deciding on ground rules for talk to ensure that everyone has the
necessary experience of collaborative group work;
after creating the class ground rules, to reinforce particular skills and to
ensure that the rules are doing what they should making sure groups ask
everyone to join in, ask for and provide reasons, negotiate ideas and try to
come to an agreement.
Do we really need another set of classroom rules? Yes. Each child has
their own deep understanding of rules that they have learned to govern
their talk with others. This range of contradictory and unhelpful rules is
what creates problems such as dominance, lack of reasoning and disrespect.
A class must create its own explicit ground rules for talk that everyone has
agreed to use.
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Group work
2
3 Groups of three, boys and girls, helps to ensure a range of opinions.
4
Mixed ability groups ensure that each group has a reader if needed.
5
6 Friendship groups are not helpful because friends may agree too readily
7 to generate discussion and are also very good at distracting one another.
8 Each child should know that they have been allocated to a particular group
9 for a positive reason, e.g. they are: good at general knowledge; co-operative;
10 creative; a good listener; good at thinking up questions; a good reader;
1 supportive of others; friendly; good at asking probing questions.
2
3222 Groups should remain together for several activities if possible. Problems
4 and there will be some should be discussed by the whole class and
5 suggestions offered. Ultimately, it should be possible to ask any children
6 from the class to form a group.
7 Children with extreme behaviour problems can, if it helps them, work with
8 a different group for each session. As a guest they benefit from the oppor-
9 tunity to listen to a range of models of good discussion. They can be asked
20 to contribute examples of effective talk in the plenary, and the group can
1 provide positive feedback of their guests positive moves towards achieving
2 the learning intentions. This strategy is successful if a supporting adult also
3 moves with the child until they understand how the system works; the adult
4 then gradually withdraws.
5
6 Seating arrangements make a surprising difference; make sure children
7 know that. Sitting around the end of a table works well.
8 If the children are sharing a paper resource, pencil, scissors, the mouse
9 anything at all then how it is shared should be discussed in advance to
30 avoid ownership and distracting disputes.
1
Ensure that all children are asked to take a turn reporting on their groups
2
discussion.
3
4 Move around the groups, listening, re-focusing, suggesting and questioning
5 that is, offering a model for how discussions are conducted. As children
6 gain an understanding of how to think together, you can withdraw this
7 support, telling the children why you are able to let them carry on alone.
8
9
40 Exploratory talk
1
2 Thinking Together activities encourage children to use exploratory talk.
3
4 Exploratory talk is talk in which everyone is invited to give their ideas.
52222 Children know how to challenge one another respectfully, share information,
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and give and ask for reasons. Contributions may be hesitant first attempts to
Group work
articulate new thinking. There is active listening and interest in different points
of view. Children know that it is a strength to change their mind in response
to a good reason or line of thinking. Group discussion proceeds as everyone
seeks to reach an agreement.
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Group work
2
3
Activity 1: Talk works
4
5
Learning intention
6
To understand the purpose of speaking and listening.
7
8
Think aloud with your class about the jobs that people can get done
9
through talk.
10
1 What do the children suggest when asked for their ideas?
2
3222
4 By talking with others, people can:
5 explain tell people how they feel
6 find out how others feel
question
7 justify a point of view
remember
8
solve puzzles and problems inform
9
decide things discover
20
make things up share knowledge and information.
1
2
3
4
Ask your class to provide examples of these types of talk work. Point out
5
what sort of talk is happening during the whole-class work; introduce the idea
6
of a good discussion as a special sort of talk, focused on the task in hand, in
7
which everyone works to support one another and further each others
8
understanding. Help children to see that taking part in such talk is why they
9
are in class.
30
1
2
Activity 2: Whats important about talk?
3
4
Learning intention
5
To understand the importance of speaking and listening.
6
7
Ask the whole class, or groups, what they think about these questions:
8
9
How did you learn to talk? Who taught you? How did they do that?
40
1 Have you helped to teach anyone else how to talk?
2
How many languages can you speak?
3
4 Who do you like to talk to, at home, in the playground, in class? What is
52222 good about it?
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Bring out the ideas that by working together, everyone does better than each
person would alone; that everyone in class is a good resource for everyone
else; and that explaining and describing things helps you to sort out and make
sense of your own ideas.
Establish the idea that talk is a valuable tool for thinking together and getting
things done.
Outline
Children listen and recall, using what James Wertsch, Professor of Education
at Washington University, St Louis calls collective remembering (Wertsch
2002). Memory of an activity can be thought of as being distributed around
the class as they listen to a text together, then try to piece it together afterwards.
By talking about what we recall, we lay out our memories for comparison,
confirmation and correction, building up a joint picture of things past. Of
course, memory can be stimulated by taste, touch, sounds, sights and scents
as well as by speaking and listening. We commonly use collective remembering
to help children recall key features of previous lessons, or what they
experienced on a school trip. They should be aware that this is a powerful tool
for learning. What is recalled inevitably has an individual perspective or is
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1222 represented in a particular way. Knowing this and what it means to offer a
Group work
2 clear description can help children in and out of class for example, when
3 talking to you and others about playground problems. In this activity, speaking
4 and listening together calls up the details that help the class to re-create what
5 they know and understand.
6
7 Learning intention
8 To know that we can listen and remember to help us learn.
9
10 Explain the learning intention. Remind children that active listening involves
1 thinking. Ask them to try to imagine pictures as you read a description.
2
3222 Read Parrys Journey or another suitable text.
4
5
6 Parrys Journey
7
8 Parry shook his bike and jumped on as it moved. He had to get to the park. Because it
9 was so cold, the handlebars felt hard to grip and the gear change was stiff. There was
20 no wind but going fast down hill made the air rush by.
1 It was so early that he only saw one car moving, and that was an old taxi going in the
2 opposite direction, its
3 engine noisy and its lights
4 glaring. All the other cars
5 were still as if set solid by
6 the frost. Parrys jacket was
7 thin and unzipped and his
8 chilly fingers began to feel
9 as if they were being
30 bitten. He braked to turn
1 on to the canal bridge.
2 The wheel rims sent out a
3 raw squawk, very loud in
4 the silence.
5
Crossing the canal, there
6
was yellow light from a boat in a circle on the water, and a thin grey mist that wasnt
7
moving. The water birds were all on the towpath, each a little huddle like a warm
8
stone. Parry stayed on the road, trying to keep his weight balanced over the
9
handlebars to get the front wheel to grip. Somewhere a church bell rang. A dog
40
began to bark. An engine started, and the railings along the park appeared in a stiff
1
row.
2
3 He reached the park gates and stopped suddenly, his breath in a cloud around him.
4 What if
52222
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Group work
Group work
Outline
In groups, children discuss choices and make a reasoned selection of resources
to create a joint picture. Within the group there are different tasks to do that
contribute to the finished work. Essentially, the children undertake a simple
open-ended activity that requires them to use the difficult skills of negotiation
through talk, with a focus on encouraging respect for the choices of others.
Resources
Use 5.1 Choose-it! and 5.2 Word list (one of each per group).
Also:
scissors
glue
highlighter pens
felt tips
stencils
collage materials
coloured A4 paper.
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1222 Red, blue and green tables with words, information and equipment as
Group work
2 detailed on 5.3 Resources on the colour tables.
3 Heres one I made earlier picture if needed for demonstration.
4
5 Introduction
6
7 Learning intention
8 To use talk to share ideas and make a decision.
9
10 Explain the learning intention, and that the groups are going to think about
1 words that seem to go together. The groups ideas are going to be used to make
2 a picture. Each groups picture will be very different. The overall aim of this
3222 activity is for children to support all members of their group, respect one
4 anothers ideas, and come to joint decisions. They must collaborate using talk
5 in order to achieve a satisfactory outcome.
6
7 Group work
8 Share learning intentions for speaking and listening to do with respect for one
9 anothers ideas. Discuss talk structures that enable collaboration:
20
1 Shall we . . . ?
2 Would you like to . . . ?
3
4 What do you think . . . ?
5 I agree because . . .
6
I disagree because . . .
7
8 Make clear the idea that such collaborative talk is the focus for the lesson, and
9 that you would like children to be aware of this so that everyone can contribute
30 examples of such talk to the plenary session. Individual children must choose
1 a colour (red, blue or green) so that they can collect equipment, words and
2 information you have set out on the colour tables.
3
4 Provide each group with 5.1 Choose-it! and 5.2 Word list. Listen to group
5 talk as the children work, collecting examples of high quality collaborative
6 talk and reasoning. Timing depends on how well the class collaborates. You
7 may wish to have a mini-plenary to re-state the lesson aims or share examples
8 of effective talk.
9
40 Whole-class plenary
1 Can groups offer examples of a good discussion? What negotiation was
2 required? Can children provide examples of talk that showed respect for others,
3 or in which someone changed their mind, or was persuaded by a good reason?
4 Who was good at sharing information? At talking about choices? Giving ideas
52222 and suggestions? Listening?
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Group work
5.1 Choose-it!
2 Start by reading out loud all the words on 5.2 Word list.
listening carefully
making sure that you try to understand everyones point of view.
Choose:
You can only go to the table of your colour red, green or blue to:
Remember:
You can ask the group which words or equipment they think would be
useful, once you have looked at what is on your colour table.
6 Arrange your words on your display page. Decide how to make them
really stand out.
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1222
Group work
2 5.2 Word list
3
4 Box A
5
6
7 day night journey games stories
8 music sing laugh friends meetings time
9 people places party family talk
10
1
2
3222
4 Box B
5
6 film computer mouse rainy
7
8 play indoors jump smile shout cold
9 game theme park dark light noise snow run
20 grass colour sleep moon sea race desert
1
2 dream shiny fast hot dog seaside
3 travel learn think book bat
4 cat hat ill activity
5
6
7
8
Box C
9
30
1 badge ticket tired train grey
2
red blue bike sunny earth scared
3
4 car stars excited talk caravan dragon think
5 play tent rules walk swim boat run den
6
home sand castle lake mountain eat
7
8 plane key space watch empty alone
9 crowded funny gold big
40
old mystery dance
1
2
3
4
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Group work
RED TABLE
Information
Decide how to arrange the words on your picture what will you
draw?
BLUE TABLE
Glue/stencils/collage material
Information
You can stick the words down flat, fold them, bend them, zig-zag a
piece of paper to hold them out anything you like!
Read out your words and arrange them so that they sound good.
GREEN TABLE
Information
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1222 Ask each group in turn to show and explain their picture. Encourage others to
Group work
2 ask questions. Why were certain words chosen? What was the thinking behind
3 the layout of the picture? Enable groups to provide feedback for one another.
4 Ask children to leave their places to look at and think about one anothers work.
5 Provide sticky notes on which children can leave a positive comment.
6
7 Finally, ask groups to discuss their ideas for titles of future Choose-it pictures.
8
9
10 Extension
1
2 1 For children who speak another language, ask the child, parent or TA to
3222 translate words into home languages or make a bilingual picture.
4 2 Ask each group to write a brief paragraph explaining their choices, giving
5 reasons. Display pictures with this paragraph. Ask each group to draw a
6 small picture of themselves and add to the display. Each person should be
7 drawn with a speech bubble, agreed by the group, which might say
8 something like:
9
20 I am good at listening/talking/asking questions/giving
1 reasons/sharing information/helping others/working in a
2 group.
3 3 Once they are familiar with the materials, children might benefit from the
4 chance to re-group and repeat the Choose-it activity, discussing in advance
5 what groups of words they intend to choose and why.
6
7 4 Theme picture. Use the Choose-it structure, for example, to do the
8 following: categorise materials or creatures in science; to introduce a new
9 story or geography topic; or, in art, to bring out learning about colour, shape
30 or texture words.
1
2
Activity 5: Whats a good discussion?
3
4 Provide each group with a dictionary and thesaurus.
5
6 Group work 1
7 Ask children to think together to make up a list of five statements describing
8 what they understand by the phrase a good discussion. Offer this phrase in
9 context, for example I would like you to have a good discussion about your
40 five statements!.
1
2 Children can take roles for this activity, acting as scribe, researcher, reporter,
3 and so on. These roles should be discussed and decided before the talk activity
4 is described. Ask the children to use the talk tools I agree because . . . and
52222 I disagree because . . ..
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Take ideas from one group at a time, ensuring all groups contribute. Highlight
Group work
What is it?
A sort of talk that has been found to help everyone learn together.
Everyone listens and joins in, talking clearly and with respect.
To make clear what you know and understand at the moment. Then you can
go on to learn more. Also, to help others in your group learn more.
Everyone shares what they think, so everyone can learn from one another.
Talking helps people to make sense of new ideas and new experiences.
You can try out ideas by putting thoughts into words for others to hear and
talk about.
Group work 2
Learning intention
To know what exploratory talk is, and why and how to use it.
Provide each group with a copy of 5.4 About exploratory talk. Explain the
learning intention and that exploratory talk is a special kind of talk that people
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1222 use for discussion. Ask children to read the questions and ideas, and then think
Group work
2 together by discussing:
3
4 their own ideas about talk, in comparison with those given;
5
the reasons for any differences;
6
7 the advantages of exploratory talk;
8
what makes it difficult to have a discussion using exploratory talk.
9
10
1
2 Activity 6: What do you think and why do you
3222 think that?
4
5 Remind the children of the importance of exploratory talk for thinking and
6 learning.
7 Provide each group with a copy of 5.5 A trip to the shop. Read the story
8 aloud.
9
20 Ask groups to think together using What do you think? and Why do you
1 think that?. Stress the importance of asking for and giving reasons to come
2 to decisions about the Talking Points. After discussion, ask the groups to
3 give their ideas with reasons. Ask for different points of view and relate
4 them to one another.
5 Ask the groups to give examples of exploratory talk or examples of
6 questions and reasons. Ask for suggestions of who listened carefully, asked
7 questions, gave reasons, or was supportive in keeping the discussion going.
8
9 Ask the groups to write a story ending and act it out for the class, or to
30 draw a cartoon ending with speech bubbles for display. Discuss the chil-
1 drens ideas about the issues raised in the story.
2
3
4 Activity 7: Coming to an agreement
5
6 Christine Howe, Professor of Education at Cambridge University, carried out
7 detailed research on children working in groups to complete science tasks
8 (Howe 2003). An interesting finding was that learning was influenced by
9 asking groups to discuss their ideas and reach agreement, or consensus, before
40 carrying out their science investigation. It seemed to help learning just to try
1 to reach agreement, even if this wasnt achieved. Having discussed ideas and
2 made joint decisions, children are better prepared for guidance from their
3 teacher, which is then both manageable and meaningful to them. The groups
4 decision may reflect genuine agreement or be less firmly held; but the process
52222 of agreeing a course of action or a hypothesis may help the group to keep their
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Group work
Suddenly Alex appeared round the corner, coming towards them. Alex was
smiling, nastily. Sam kept out of Alexs way at school. Alex was usually in a
big gang who seemed to get each other into trouble or just to fight among
themselves.
Nice ice cream, Sammy! said Alex, standing right in front of Poppys
pushchair. You can go and get me one.
Here have mine, said Sam, holding out the cone. I havent started it.
Alex knocked it to the ground and stamped on it, then started kicking the
pushchair wheels. Poppy squawked and looked frantically at Sam.
Go on. Run in and get one. Ill look after the pushchair. Or maybe hers will
fall on the floor as well . . . Alex reached out to grab Poppys lolly. She
screeched and snatched it away, and now Alex, sneering, grabbed the toy
tiger and held it up in the air. Poppy wailed.
Yeah . . . or this might fly on to the road . . . go on Sammy, I want a choc ice,
NOW . . .
Losing the toy tiger is not important compared to committing the crime
of shoplifting.
There are ways to deal with bullies that stop them doing it.
Sam has many choices at the end of the story we can say what they are.
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1222 focus and make progress in their thinking. Children stimulated by consensus
Group work
2 (Howe & Tolmie 2003: 64) may be better able to refer to their agreed hypo-
3 thesis or course of action as they proceed through the activity. They have talked
4 and thought about their ideas, and have this as a resource to draw on, so each
5 child avoids the worry that they are alone in their thinking. Consensus offers
6 groups the chance to clear the decks and get going on a common idea. If it
7 proves to be wrong in some way, the safety-net of the group is there to prevent
8 any one individual losing too much confidence. Its very stimulating to be part
9 of a group that makes a discovery and generates new learning for everyone.
10
1
Outline. Children work in groups to think about their break times in school.
2
They find out what others think about break times by conducting some
3222
classroom research.
4
5
6 Ask the groups to think together to discuss 5.6 Break research. Stress the
7 importance of reaching a consensus. Once agreement is reached, groups
8 make brief notes of their ideas for others to read.
9 Ask groups to think up further Talking Points. Pair up with a different group
20
to discuss the new Talking Points, again reaching agreement and noting
1
key ideas.
2
3 Each group now takes a separate Talking Point. Everyone gives their notes
4 and ideas to this presenting group. Ask groups to present ideas in a lively,
5 meaningful way with everyone taking part. Discuss ideas; what changes
6 could be made to break time?
7
8 Talk about the information that has been shared and the quality of the group
9 discussion. What makes it easier to talk with others? Bring out the import-
30 ance of listening and explaining clearly, as well as highlighting previous
1 learning such as showing respect for other points of view. Check that
2 children feel they have achieved the learning intentions
3
4
5 Extension
6
7 Pairs or groups can interview children from other classes during lessons or at
8 break time.
9
40 Discuss other issues: homework; the curriculum; marking; what will happen
1 at Parents Evening; school uniform; assembly; use of the school grounds;
2 evaluation of initiatives such as reading buddies; a new timetable.
3
4
52222
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Group work
Write your ideas briefly and neatly for other groups to use.
yes, because . . . ;
no, because . . . ;
unsure, because . . .
Discuss them, then choose a different group and discuss the talking points
with them.
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Group work
2
3 Outline
4 Groups discuss climate change using a jigsaw strategy.
5
6 In advance
7 Collect or bookmark a range of information resources about climate change.
8 Organise your class into groups of four.
9
10 Learning intention
1 To be able to ask for and give reasons for ideas.
2
3222 Explain the learning intention. Ask the groups you have established to separate
4 so that each person works in one of four research groups. Use 5.7 Climate
5 change, divided into its four sections, one per research group.
6
7 Group work 1
8 Ask the research groups to discuss the issues. Children should not make notes
9 unless you have a particular reason for wishing them to do so. If they are asked
20 to write, the discussion will be much less effective. They should be made aware
1 that for this activity, their memory will be the best way to retain information.
2 Timing depends on the class but allow about 15 minutes. Once research time
3 is complete, ask the original groups to reconvene.
4
5 Group work 2
6
Use 5.8 Talking Points: Climate change ideas.
7
8 Ask the groups to read the instructions, then discuss everyones ideas,
9 making sure that they use key talk tools:
30
What do you think?
1
Why?
2
I agree because . . .
3
I disagree because . . .
4
My opinion is . . .
5
I have found out that . . .
6
My reason is . . .
7
But . . .
8
9
After discussion, organise a plenary in which:
40
1
Dialogue between yourself and the children enables ideas to be aired and
2
suggestions heard.
3
4 The class evaluates the quality of their group talk, with a focus on identify-
52222 ing others who challenged and listened in a courteous manner.
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Group work
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1222
Group work
2 5.8 Talking Points: Climate change ideas
3
4 Read each talking point aloud, then discuss it with your group.
5 Remember that the quality of your talk is extremely important.
6
Use these words to express your ideas:
7
What do you think . . . ?
8
Why . . . ?
9
I agree because . . .
10
1 I disagree because . . .
2 My opinion is . . .
3222 My reason is . . .
4 I have found out that . . .
5 But . . .
6 Try to keep in your mind a good example of any of these words in use, so that
7 you can share it with everyone during the plenary.
8
9
Talking Points: Do you agree or disagree with one
20 another?
1
1 The greenhouse effect is a bad thing for the planet.
2
3 2 Climate change is caused by people.
4 3 Carbon dioxide is a chemical that does not occur in nature.
5
4 All of us are responsible for putting carbon dioxide into the air.
6
7 5 Leaving the television on standby causes climate change.
8 6 It is too late to do anything about global warming.
9 7 Global warming doesnt matter; it will just make it warmer and
30 that will mean we have better summers.
1
8 Global warming is the fault of car drivers.
2
3 9 We can think of ways that we could make a difference to how much
4 carbon dioxide goes into the air.
5 10 If the polar ice cap melts, we will have no polar bears on earth. That
6 doesnt matter because we never see them anyway.
7
Now decide together how to draw a diagram to
8
illustrate how carbon dioxide causes global warming.
9
40
1
2
3
4
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Discuss reasoning, its importance, and how its possible to tell what is a
Group work
Discuss problems groups may have had, with the class suggesting strategies
to help.
Extension
Ask groups to choose one of the four areas, or a different topic (wildlife, the
polar ice caps, catastrophic weather events, energy in the home; our food, and
so on) to prepare material to create an interactive display that will stimulate
further discussion.
Activity 9: Elaborate!
Outline
Children play a simple dice game called Elaborate!. The example included
here has a science content, but Elaborate! cards can be created for any
curriculum area. Cards are set out in a circle, face up. The children take turns
to throw the dice. The number shown dictates both how far the childs counter
travels, and the talk task the child is asked to do once they land on a card.
Children practise group talk skills but especially the capacity to elaborate. The
aim of the game is to use one anothers support to gain confidence in talking
about the topics on the cards. After the group work, each group is asked to
select one topic to explain to the class, answering questions that is, to
elaborate their understanding.
Resources
Every group needs:
A dice
A pair of scissors
Coloured counters
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1222 Introduction
Group work
2
3 Learning intention
4 To understand how to elaborate, explain or add detail.
5
6 Explain the learning intention, and define the word elaborate as adding detail
7 or explaining further (or ask the children to find in a dictionary and note its
8 alternative but related use, to complicate). Ask the children to reflect on and
9 share what might be the advantages of elaborating ideas in group work. Bring
10 out the idea that, as people talk, they put into words thoughts that may not
1 have been clear before; they draw on all they know to inform what they say.
2 By elaborating we can help ourselves, and others, understand. Discussion is
3222 closed down by brief, laconic or throw-away responses. There are ways that
4 we can help others to say more or elaborate.
5
6 In educationally effective group work, elaboration must be relevant to the topic.
7
8 Display these talk tools that help people to elaborate, and ask for examples of
9 use:
20
1 Can you say more about . . . ?
2
Can you explain again . . . ?
3
4 What do you mean by . . . ?
5 How do you know about . . . ?
6
7 What you said about . . . was interesting can you add detail . . . ?
8
9 Using 5.9 Elaborate! explain the aims of the game and prepare the children
30 for their role in the plenary. Ensure that they understand how, and why, they
1 will be playing this game. Stress taking turns; collaboration; using prompts to
2 encourage one another; and mention that the ultimate success is for groups to
3 remember to talk like this when they are not playing a game.
4
5 Using the dice, go through the numbers on the dice, modelling each type of
6 talk and checking for understanding:
7
8 1 make up a sentence
9 2 definition
40
1 3 spelling
2 4 paraphrase
3
5 question
4
52222 6 elaborate.
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Example: Throwing a dice and moving the counter to the Light card:
Group work
1 Use the words on the card to think of a sentence about the topic.
Shadows are formed when opaque objects block light.
2 Choose a word from the card and describe or define what it means.
Vision means the ability to see with our eyes.
3 Spelling: A group mate takes the card and the child is asked to spell a word
from it.
e.g. reflection
4 Paraphrase: A child uses the word on the card to think of a sentence. Group
mates paraphrase this that is, put it in their own words, using so you are
saying that . . ., or in other words . . ..
Child: Reflection is when light bounces off something.
Paraphrase: In other words, light hits something and is reflected back.
5 Question: A child thinks of a question about the topic to ask group mates.
They may be able to answer it themselves, or not. Reference books and
the internet can be used to answer questions if children wish to do this.
Questions are recorded for use in the plenary.
How far is a light year?
A light year measures the distance between stars and is the distance
that light will travel in a year. The speed of light is 186,000 miles per
second. A light year is about 6 million million miles.
6 Elaborate: A child prepares, then is timed for one minute talking about the
topic. Group mates support by using talk tools.
Variation: After thirty seconds the child can PASS the topic to a group
mate to continue. Times can be altered to suit your class, building up to
one minute.
Group work
With children in groups of three or four, provide 5.9 Rules for Elaborate!
and 5.10 Elaborate! Cards. Allow about twenty minutes.
Whole-class plenary
Ask groups to choose a card and prepare to talk. If two groups choose the
same card, both throw a dice and the lower number must choose a different
card. Every child must contribute.
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1222
Group work
2 5.9 Rules for Elaborate! Dice game
3
4 Cut out the cards.
5 Arrange them face up in a circle.
6
Choose a counter each and put them on any card.
7
8 Everyone throws the dice; highest number starts.
9
First person throws the dice and counts clockwise round the cards.
10
1
If you throw a:
2
3222 1 Use the words on the card to think of a sentence about the
4 topic.
5
6 2 Choose a word from the card and say what it means.
7 3 Spelling. A group mate will ask you to spell a word from the card.
8 Keep trying till you get one right! Replace the card.
9
4 Use the words on the card to think of a sentence.
20
1 Your group mates now have to paraphrase what youve said
2 that is, put it in their own words, using So you are saying
3 that . . ., or In other words . . ..
4
5 Think of a question about the topic and ask your group mates.
5
Talk about or look up the answer. Write down your question and
6
the answer.
7
8 6 Elaborate! Get ready! Read all the words on the card. Ask your
9 group for help with meanings. Now you are going to talk about
30 the topic for ONE MINUTE.
1
2 Group mates will help by using:
3
Can you say more about . . . ?
4
5 Could you explain again . . . ?
6
What do you mean by . . . ?
7
8 How do you know about . . . ?
9 What you said about . . . was interesting can you add detail . . . ?
40
1 Ready? Go!
2
Make a note of your name and the topic you have elaborated.
3
4
52222
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Group work
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1222 After the presentation, ask for questions on the topic with the whole class
Group work
2 contributing to the answers.
3
4 Remind the class of the learning intention and ask for their opinions about
5 whether they understand how to say more about what they know, taking turns
6 and helping others take theirs. Ask the children to provide examples of effective
7 group talk, especially elaboration.
8
9
10 Extension
1
2 Can the class suggest other topics for the game, or other rules to encourage
3222 further discussion?
4
5
6 Activity 10: Ground rules for exploratory talk
7
8 The most important section of this whole book!
9
20 Learning intention
1 To create and choose ground rules that will help everyone to use exploratory
2 talk when working in a group.
3
4 Introduction: raising awareness of the importance of talk
5 Ask children for their ideas and opinions about:
6
7 what makes a good discussion;
8
why speaking and listening is important in a classroom;
9
30 what they understand by the term exploratory talk and why it is special;
1
their understanding of the link between talk and thinking;
2
3 how the class has a shared memory;
4
sharing strategies for dealing with off-task talk;
5
6 how they learn from one another through talk;
7
someone who is a good listener and why.
8
9
Awareness of the value of shared ground rules for exploratory
40
talk
1
Ask children to share their ideas about:
2
3
what rules operate in the playground;
4
52222 what can happen if one or two people break the rules;
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what happens if a new child arrives who has in mind a different set of
Group work
rules;
the importance of shared rules.
Explain that the basic ground rules for behaviour are often unspoken. Bring
out the idea that we need to share rules for group talk, or things might go
wrong that is, special learning time will go to waste. Ask the children to give
examples of ineffective group work without naming others, what can be
difficult or can stop learning?
Establish the idea that the class can create, share and agree on a set of ground
rules for exploratory talk that will benefit everyone.
Group work 1
Ask the children to discuss the Talking Points. Listen to groups talking and
note the points to be shared in whole-class work. You may wish to tackle the
entire list or ask the children to concentrate on three or four talking points.
Group work 2
Ask groups to think together to decide on a set of ideas or rules, which if used
would help everyone to talk and think together. Establish the idea of positive
language for rules, that is, it is best if the starter phrase Do not . . . is avoided.
Whole-class plenary
Ask groups to explain their suggestions and comment on one anothers ideas.
Tell the class that you will collect all suggestions and collate them to produce
a set of ground rules for exploratory talk in the childrens own words.
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Group work
2
3 If the class agrees, they are then responsible for helping one another to
4 stick to the rules; they should be able to give a reason for each rule and
5 should know why the rules matter.
6 Display the rules prominently.
7
8 Provide individual copies for each child.
9
Send a copy home to ask for comments.
10
1 Ensure the rules are visible when children are working at computers
2 together.
3222
4 Keep the rules in childrens minds by mentioning in introductions, group
5 work and plenaries. Focus on a particular rule if it is obvious that the class
6 needs input.
7
Ask children for examples of people who are using the rules during group
8
talk.
9
20 Share the rules with other classes/the school in assembly.
1
2 Revise the rules if children feel that there is a problem with their discussion.
3
Remind the children to use the rules and ask them to remind one another.
4
5
6 Examples of class ground rules for exploratory talk
7 Rules such as be polite, speak when you are spoken to or always take
8 turns are social rules and inappropriate here. They will not help to generate
9 a good discussion or exploratory talk. High quality talk in groups is
30 characterised by being inclusive, on-task, and chained into lines of reasoning
1 and coherence. An element of challenge is essential and the drive to seek an
2 agreement useful.
3
4 Class ground rules are uniquely worded to embody the principles of
5 exploratory talk. Two examples are:
6
7 Year Threes ground rules for exploratory talk
8
9 Always include everyone.
40
Share ideas with other people.
1
2 Discuss things.
3
Ask for opinions and reasons.
4
52222 We listen to others so we can learn.
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Group work
2 You are naturally good at talk or not, and nothing can be done
about it.
9 When other people talk, you can be thinking what you will
say next.
14 Making mistakes when you talk to the whole class is not helping
anyone.
15 People make fun of you if you let them know what you really
think.
21 If you share what you know out loud, other people will do better
than you.
23 Its dishonest to stop and consider others. Say what you think.
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1222
Group work
2 5.12 Choosing ground rules for exploratory talk
3
4
Our group names: _____________________________________________________
5
6 Our suggestions for rules to encourage exploratory talk
7
8 listening
9
10 joining in
1
2
3222 respect
4
5
agree or challenge
6
7
8 sharing opinions
9 and ideas
20
1 things that we know
2
3 making decisions
4
5
6 concentrating
7
8
your ideas
9
30
1
2
3 Now put a star by your top three ideas.
4
Identify six key words: _______________ _______________
5
6 _______________ _______________
7 _______________ _______________
8
9 What problems do people have when they work in groups?
40
_____________________________________________________________________
1
2 _____________________________________________________________________
3
_____________________________________________________________________
4
52222
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We will ask, What do you think? and Why do you think that?.
When tasks were too easy for the group, little talk took place. Since every-
one knew what to do and why, there was no need for discussion.
When tasks were too difficult for the group, disputes and recriminations
were a feature of the talk, as children attempted to shift the responsibility
on to others.
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1222
Group work
2 Interthinking in class
3
4 The concept of interthinking is a way to describe and understand learning
5 with others.
6
7 Interthinking is our use of spoken language to support:
8
thinking together;
9
10 collectively making sense of experience and solving problems;
1
joint, co-ordinated intellectual activity;
2
3222 the dynamic interaction of minds;
4 the essential, collective nature of human thinking.
5
6 Language is a tool for interthinking that each child can learn to use effectively.
7
(Adapted from Mercer, 2000)
8
9
20
1
2 Interthinking activity
3
4 Outline
5 Using higher order thinking skills analysis and evaluation, children discuss
6 talk to identify the features of exploratory talk and decide whether inter-
7 thinking is taking place. Such experience makes it more possible to recognise
8 and take opportunities for interthinking during group work.
9
30
Resources
1
2 Use 5.13: The Vikings and 5.14: Interthinking (one per group).
3
4 Optional: pictures of Viking ships, helmets, shields, etc.
5
6 In advance
7 Choose nine extrovert children, good readers, or good actors to help with the
8 starter activity. In advance of the lesson, provide them with 5.13: The Vikings.
9 Allocate each child a role to practise. They should aim to read rather than learn
40 by heart.
1
2
Learning intention
3
4 To know how and why we use interthinking in group work.
52222
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Introduction
Group work
Explain the learning intention. Discuss Viking artefacts and explain that the
class is going to watch three groups working at the computer on a programme
in which they are acting as Vikings. Ask the children to listen carefully to the
talk of each group. Ask the Narrator to begin; watch the short plays.
Group work
Ask children to think together about the ways children speak and listen in
5.13: The Vikings plays. What comments can they offer? Do they have
personal experience of any of the three sorts of talk? Which sort of talk do
they think will help the group to succeed best with the software? Which sort
of talk involves everyone? What problems arise in each play and how are they
dealt with? Is any interthinking happening?
Use 5.14: Interthinking. Ask the groups to interthink to analyse the talk they
have heard and complete the talk analysis table. Share the results and ideas
with the class. Which sort of talk is exploratory talk? What are its features?
Which questions help others to talk?
Extension
Ask groups to take on playing the roles of the children as in the Vikings plays.
Ensure that there is an even mix of Viking Groups 1, 2 and 3. The children
can change their characters name, add a character or change whether the
children are boys or girls, but they cannot change the way the children talk to
each other. Ask the groups to create a One-minute play in the speaking and
listening style of their Viking group.
After the performance, ask the class to comment on how well the group have
achieved the sort of talk they set out to create.
One-minute play!
You can choose whether to play a board game, watch a DVD, or draw
pictures.
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1222
Group work
2 5.13 The Vikings
3
4 Narrator
5 The class were working at the computer. The children were acting as Viking invaders who
6 had arrived on the coast in their long boats. They were looking for somewhere safe with
7 water and food to go ashore and make camp.
8 We can listen to three groups making a decision about where to land and camp.
9 The first group is [indicates] Fenella and Germain.
10
1 Group 1 Fenella and Germain
2 [Note to actors this group is grumpy and loud!]
3222 F OK a place to land let me see.
4 G I know, I know, Ill show you.
5 F You must be joking. Youve had your go.
6 G Well, I know where to land, go there, go there. [tries to take the mouse]
7 F Oh, right, just where all the soldiers are waiting. [clicks around, humming]
8
G For goodness sake, get on with it. Just go there then.
9
F No.
20
G Yes.
1
F No. I know where to go. So just shut up and wait.
2
G You dont know anything. I know where to go, Ive done this screen once.
3
F Rubbish. Anyway, hard luck, its my turn. [clicks again]
4
G The soldiers got you!! Ha ha! See! Told you it was wrong. Stupid. Right, my turn
5
now. Youll see how to do it now. [grabs the mouse]
6
F You wait. I bet you dont know where the treasure is. I do.
7
G So you say. You are so useless at finding it, arent you?
8
F Only because you never let me have a go. Here my turn. [grabs the mouse]
9
30 Narrator: Right. Very interesting. Thank you, Fenella and Germaine. Now we can look at
1 Group 2 deciding where to land. Here are Pavel, Milly and Samra.
2
3 Group 2 Pavel, Milly and Samra
4 [Note: this group is quiet and dull!]
5 P A place to land. Maybe there, by the church.
6 M OK, whatever.
7 P Or perhaps by that monastery. There might be treasure.
8 M Oh, wow. Suits me.
9 P Right, Im landing by the monastery. Now, where should I camp . . . ? By a stream . . .
40 M By the stream, oh, yeah. Samra, are you having packed lunch today?
1 S Yes.
2 P Right, I am clicking on the stream for my camp. Oh no!! We have been flooded! We
3 have lost all our horses!
4 M You have, you mean. Its your fault; you chose the stream.
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Group work
Narrator [yawning too]: Is that it? Oh, well. Thank you very much Group 2. And now we
can have a look at Group 3 choosing where to land. Here are Daren, Robyn and Alex.
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1222
Group work
2 5.14 Interthinking
3
4 Think together to analyse the childrens talk in each of the Vikings plays.
5 Use the written copy of the plays to help you. Make sure you invite everyone to give their
6 opinion and reasons, and that you reach agreement before putting a tick or cross.
7
8
The group in this play Group 1 Group 2 Group 3
9 Fenella and Pavel, Milly Daren,
10 Germain and Samra Robyn and
1 Alex
2 Made sure that everyone contributed
3222
Asked each other questions
4
5 Listened carefully to what was said
6 Answered questions thoughtfully
7
Gave reasons for ideas
8
9 Shared everything they knew
20 Were concentrating on the decisions
1 they had to make
2 Always agreed
3
Made mistakes in the programme
4
5 Sorted things out by agreeing a new
6 plan
7 All took responsibility for doing well
8 or badly
9 Respected one anothers suggestions
30
Are going to do well as Vikings
1
2 Enjoyed working with one another
3 Took plenty of time to talk things
4 through before deciding
5 Were interthinking
6
7 Two more things to discuss:
8
What difference does it
9 make if the children are boys
40 or girls?
1
What difference does it make
2 if there are two rather than
3 three people in a group?
4
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Summary
Group work
Exploratory talk is symmetrical; the participants are all equal in terms of status.
This affects turn-taking and how outcomes are negotiated. Dialogic teaching
is asymmetrical the teacher has their hands on the reins. Who talks, the
direction of the discussion and summing up are the teachers responsibility.
This is what teaching is; the professional expertise to create dialogue in which
learning takes place. Exploratory talk, just as valuable for learning, is
dependent on childrens understanding of why and how they discuss things in
groups. Many children need to be taught this. All will benefit from making
explicit the hidden rules that muddle children and scupper their educational
discussion. Whole classes can move forward by deciding which clear rules
will really help them to talk and think together.
Learning through talk should not just be a chance occurrence, but an everyday
event. Teaching Thinking Together such as by using the activities in this
chapter and indeed the entire book offers a set of transferable skills and
ensures that children have an understanding of the importance of their talk for
learning. It is essential that teachers help to raise childrens awareness of the
speaking and listening tools that, once acquired, will benefit their thinking and
learning over time and in any setting. The skills that contribute to the childs
ability to take part in effective discussion are learnt in social settings. The
classroom is, for all children, a crucial social context for learning how to learn
through talk.
Lessons with learning intentions and plenary sessions that focus on talk and
the chance to establish class ground rules for talk, enable children to think
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1222 together using higher order thinking skills. Deep learning becomes possible.
Group work
2 Evaluations of Thinking Together suggest that, by interthinking with one
3 another, children internalise rational thought processes that help them to do
4 better when working alone. Chances to reflect on how talk supports learning
5 can give children insight into their own development and help them to see how
6 they can positively influence others. There are social benefits as children learn
7 how to give their own point of view, elicit and challenge the point of view of
8 others with some respect, seek consensus and negotiate compromise.
9
10 It may take an entire school year for a class to be able to use exploratory talk
1 independently of adult support. The increments of understanding are rather
2 small and easily over-ridden by other models of speaking and listening
3222 behaviour. However, some children seem to catch on to the idea from day
4 one, finding their voice rapidly once offered the talk tools to do so. The
5 powerful questions, What do you think?, Why? come as a revelation to some
6 children. They get to work on using them straight away. Their enthusiasm in
7 using the class ground rules ensuring that everyone contributes, requiring
8 reasons for assertions, holding out for a negotiated consensus is infectious
9 and seems to raise the quality of discussion almost immediately. Once a critical
20 mass is established, the whole class takes on the responsibility of making sure
1 that they conduct a good discussion.
2
The role of the teacher is to provide direct teaching of talk skills and to foster
3
understanding of the relationship between speaking, listening, thinking and
4
learning. In addition, the teacher offers a model of exploratory talk through
5
dialogic teaching in whole-class settings. We can show that when problems
6
are thoroughly discussed, joint decisions become possible. We can support
7
children as they move into exploratory talk by keeping a focus on the talk itself
8
as a learning outcome, and taking opportunities to remind children how often
9
their discussion skills can be put to good use. Exploratory talk is tentative and
30
hypothetical; teachers can value childrens hesitant offerings and make sure
1
that there is time to listen. Children can become active listeners for one
2
another.
3
4 Thinking Together is a practical approach that can be integrated into planning
5 across the curriculum. Strategies in this chapters activities can be used for all
6 curriculum areas. Children are motivated by the chance to discuss things
7 during the lessons because they do like to talk to each other and to us.
8
9
40 Further reading
1
2 Corden, R. (2000) Literacy and Learning through Talk. Buckingham: Open University
3 Press.
4 Mercer, N. (2000) Words and Minds. London: Routledge.
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CHAPTER 6
Speaking
Teaching children how to
articulate their ideas
Children move from an informal approximation of what they hear baby talk
to a joining in with what their community says and how they say it. They
learn to speak by copying others. Speaking aloud in school helps children to
develop the skills and confidence they need to communicate in a range of
contexts.
The progression in speaking skills is from talk with familiar adults or friends
towards talk with strangers; and from reading or recounting known informa-
tion to talking about their own ideas. Becoming articulate also involves
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Speaking
2 6.1 What speaking skills can we teach?
3
4 Speaking skill Contexts Progression
5
describe events audibly
6
clearly
7
8 read aloud given text for meaning
9 own work different ways
10 variety of pace
1 variety of emphasis
2 choral speaking poem clarity
3222 given text improved intonation
4
5 tell a story given text including detail
own work with props
6
oral story with expression
7
use story language
8
9 explain a process logically
20 an idea including detail
1
present information from own research logically
2 provided by others including detail
3
4 perform work of others with meaning
5 own work with expression
volume and use of
6
sound
7
8 sustain a conversation about a given topic elaborate
9 about ideas take account of others
30
present a spoken given topic use reasons
1
argument personal topic answer queries and
2 points
3 respect differences
4
5 ask and answer questions devised in probing
questions advance/with partner more thoughtful
6
questions occur during varied and sequenced
7
talk
8
9 discuss ideas, topics, partner increasing use of
40 issues group agreed ground rules
1 whole-class debate
2 interview friend devising questions
3 other responding to
4 interviewee
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Speaking
An observer of this lesson may question various aspects of it. What planning
had taken place? How well had the teacher presented the lesson? How
would the learning outcome be assessed? But it could be argued that
storytelling is something far more important than any curriculum
requirement, and with a far greater potential for successful learning than
any lesson plan. For a start, the children were totally engaged. If their
teacher asked them to follow up the story with a retelling, drama or literacy
activity, the expectation of enjoyment would motivate and sustain their
work. Importantly, there was now a model of how stories operate. Good
stories whether told or read aloud can be vehicles for all sorts of learning,
but if we want children to read and write stories themselves, they must have
heard and told stories as often as possible.
Every day teachers tell and read stories from their cultural and literary
heritage, but they also use narrative to explain practical ideas; for example,
how water changes into ice; how two added to three makes five; what it was
like to live in Victorian days. Even doing a forward roll in PE can be described
as a narrative sequence having an opening, a complication and a resolution.
Provide a set of facts and they will soon be forgotten; put the same
information into a story and it is easy to remember. Teaching involves using
stories; narrative develops cognition, promotes abstract thought and offers
that most powerful means of representing the world metaphor.
In telling the monster story, the teacher was not only using a powerful tool
for teaching, she was tapping into the natural inclination of all human beings
to tell and listen to stories. Stories offer us order in a random universe and
comfort in what can seem an irrational existence; they provide cognitive
frames of reference through which we can make connections between
ourselves, the physical world and the experiences of others. By telling, reading
and listening to stories we learn what it is to be human. Stories are enjoyable,
support learning, and most of all are an essential part of human experience.
All classrooms should be full of stories.
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Speaking
2 words, to extended turns in conversations; and from saying what is immediately
3 necessary to developing an awareness of the listener, asking and answering
4 questions and reflecting on what will be said. Children who speak well can be
5 expected to explore ideas with one another, sustaining the discussion by giving,
6 listening to and reflecting on reasons, and to manage disagreement without
7 this halting their interaction.
8
9 Whole-class talk sessions provide opportunities to help children move towards
10 independence as speakers in a safe context. Whether a particular child speaks
1 may depend on who else wishes to speak, how turns are organised, the childs
2 perception of how others will respond and their confidence to join in. In turn,
3222 these factors depend on how you organise whole-class sessions. A childs con-
4 tribution may also depend on how well they listen and think about what they
5 are hearing. You can help children to understand these things and find their
6 voice in the classroom.
7
8 Identified in 6.1 What speaking skills can we teach? are some crucial
9 speaking skills, a range of contexts and a progression that can be developed
20 based on the Speaking strand of the Primary National Strategy. Children can
1 also learn to understand the criteria that are used to assess how they speak,
2 but there is a fine line to tread between helping children to recognise and
3 evaluate clarity of speech, and making them self-conscious and more likely to
4 be tongue-tied. An overall learning intention is to enable children to communi-
5 cate better through oral language.
6
7
8 An important aside: the quiet child
9
30 Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is
1 unhappy in its own way.
2 (Leo Tolstoy: Anna Karenina)
3
4 Noisy children seem all alike; every quiet child is quiet in their own way.
5 Because quiet children are good in class, they may escape notice. A thorough
6 investigation of the underlying reasons for persistent quietness is the key to
7 deciding whether or not to intervene. Children can be quiet in class because
8 they are content, cowed or angry. They can refuse to speak if they perceive a
9 threat or if something has happened to upset them, or if they need slightly
40 longer to think. They may have hearing or language difficulties that affect their
1 capacity to receive or process what they hear or see. They may just not feel
2 like talking. Some children are habitually quiet; others never speak in school
3 and become elective mutes. Some children are quiet in class much to the
4 astonishment of their family on parents evening, who report that they live
52222 with a chatterbox. Causes of quietness are extremely important, particularly
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ships with their peers. We can ensure that every child is carefully attended to,
properly assessed, and their difficulties addressed (see Further reading).
Learning intention
To understand how talk works and what we can use it for.
Resources
Using class ground rules for talk, ask children to think together to decide:
Ask each group to write speech bubbles for the picture using post-its.
Now ask children to consider their ideas, and think together to decide what
sorts of things we get done with other people through talk.
Ask groups to share their ideas with the class. Bring out examples such as: we
give instructions how to do something, find a place if travelling, tell stories,
read aloud, ask questions, give answers, share what we know, say what we have
been doing or what we think, or ask for help. We listen to our friends.
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Speaking
2 6.2 Talk works
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1
2
3222
4
5
6
7
8
9
20
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
40
1
2
3
4
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Speaking
Make sure that everyone is invited to speak, using What do you think?
and Why do you think that?
5 We can think of some people who are good speakers and say
why.
11 If you are a good speaker, you can talk for longer than anyone
else.
Now think about learning in class and decide together on five things that
go to make a good speaker!
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1222 Ask groups to think together about speaking in class, using 6.3 Talking Points:
Speaking
2 Speak up! No need to write anything down.
3
4 Ask the whole class to discuss their responses to the Talking Points. You might
5 want to concentrate on just a few; 913 are the most relevant to understand
6 the importance of classroom talk.
7
8 A good speaker can describe different ways of speaking, depending on the
9 context. A good after-dinner speaker tells funny stories and holds the floor; a
10 politician who is a good speaker may read a speech prepared by someone else.
1 Neither would qualify as a good speaker in the context of a whole-class discus-
2 sion, which requires listening and thoughtful, relevant contributions. Bring out
3222 what makes a good speaker in your classroom, which is to do with learning
4 and helping others to learn.
5
6 Ideas will vary, but a good speaker in class is able to speak:
7
8 clearly
9
adding detail or elaborating ideas
20
1 with enthusiasm
2
in a well-informed way
3
4 thoughtfully
5
by building on what others have said
6
7 giving reasons for ideas and opinions
8
offering helpful or probing questions
9
30 giving sensible answers that lead to further questions
1
in a way that shows they have been listening.
2
3
Explain the purpose of subsequent speaking activities:
4
5
to make sure that everyone understands how and why to speak in class;
6
7 to help everyone in the class to become a good speaker.
8
9 Reinforce this idea that it is no use if only a few people in your class are
40 wonderful speakers. We all need to learn to speak and listen effectively,
1 otherwise those who do not may stop themselves and others learning. Also,
2 everyone has a different combination of the skills that make a good speaker
3 and this is what each person can offer their classmates. For whole-class
4 learning, each child has to make sure that everyone else knows how to speak
52222 clearly and confidently. Its a whole-class venture.
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Speaking
Highlight, date and initial when these speaking skills have been used.
tell a story with props explain facts explain ideas given topic
Describing speaking
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Speaking
2 way of ensuring that everyone is given supportive feedback on how they are
3 getting on.
4
5 6.4 Speaking record provides a format for recording contexts and the details
6 of progression which can be completed over time by the child, yourself and
7 your teaching assistants.
8
9
10 A context for speaking activities: Honister Slate
1 Mine
2
3222 The next section provides examples of how a range of speaking and listening
4 activities can be generated from one cross-curricular topic.
5
6 Honister Slate Mine provides a context for a range of activities focused on
7 developing speaking skills and understanding. The Honister Slate Mine,
8 between Buttermere and Borrowdale, is a remote and magical place in the Lake
9 District fells.
20
1 For each session, share learning intentions with a focus on speaking. Use the
2 PNS Speaking framework and resources 6.3 and 6.4 to help you to do this.
3 Use plenary sessions to help children see their progress in speaking, ensuring
4 that every child is encouraged to contribute and provide positive feedback for
5 others. Record progress and experience using 6.4 Speaking record.
6
7 6.5 Information: Honister Slate Mine provides notes for children about the
8 mine, its history and the work done there. This is taken from the Honister Slate
9 Mine web pages a mine of wonderful resources! all of which can support
30 the teaching of speaking and listening, as well as study of history, science and
1 geography. The site provides high quality educational material for use with
2 and by children.
3
4 Provide each group with a different paragraph. Use the information for
5 speaking activities:
6
7
Ask the group to prepare their text to read aloud.
8
9 Ask groups to create a freeze frame with narrators, or a one-minute play
40 to bring the text to life. Perform for the class and answer questions.
1
Ask groups to make a brief PowerPoint or other presentation which
2
emphasises key facts and vocabulary. Share with the class.
3
4 Ask groups to create an annotated drawing which illustrates the text and
52222 includes all the information. Share this with the class.
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Speaking
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1222
Speaking
2 6.5 Information: Honister Slate Mine (continued)
3
4 Mining the slate
5 Once the slate is sawn out of the seam, miners today carry out the same tasks as
6 people have done for hundreds of years. These are:
7 Docking: Miners divide the large, sawn pieces (clogs) to a thickness of four slates
8 (about 32 mm) ready to be rived. This docking, or cutting, is achieved with the use
9 of a small chisel and a 21 lb mallet, cutting with the grain.
10 Riving: Once docked, the slate can be rived, by splitting the sections, again by
1 hand, with a mallet and broad-bladed chisel, into four slices each. This produces
2 slates which are a suitable thickness. (The width of the chisel equals the total
3222 thickness of eight finished slates.) Riving is carried out along the grain.
4 Dressing: Having made the slates the correct thickness, dressing is the process that
5 cuts them into the precise shape required. A series of blades revolve and chop off
6 the edges and corners of the material, leaving a completed slate, ready for use.
7 Slates are inspected, stacked in size order and packed for transport.
8
9 Saving the mine!
20 The Honister Slate Mine has always offered work for local people and produced
1 slate probably the hardest in the world to be proud of. During the 1900s, the
2 mine became run down and by 1986 it could no longer stay open. Many people
3 were dismayed by its closure. But the mine re-opened eleven years later; if it had
been derelict for another two years or so, it would have been too dangerous to
4
ever re-open. The mine was saved thanks to the efforts of dedicated people whose
5 ancestors had worked in the mine. They overcame many obstacles to keep the mine
6 open, making sure that it did not damage the environment either for the wildlife
7 or the many tourists who visit the Lake District National Park. They brought in
8 new machinery, originally used to quarry marble in Italy. The mine now uses a
9 combination of new expertise and the traditional methods to quarry and work the
slate. Today, the mine sends slate all over the world. The motto of the mine owner
30
who saved the mine is: Its better to have tried and failed than to have failed to
1 try. Luckily, and with much hard work, he succeeded.
2
3
Visiting the mine
4
Perhaps you might want to stay at Honister Hause Youth Hostel, the only other
5 building near the mine at the top of the mountain pass. The Youth Hostel is a
6 former quarry workers building in a spectacular setting at the summit of Honister
7 Pass, a high-level route connecting the valleys of Borrowdale and Buttermere.
8 From here you can walk up the famous high peaks of Central Lakeland Scafell,
9 Great Gable, Pillar, Red Pike and Dale Head. You can visit the mine and watch the
clogs of slate being sawn by huge machines. You can go on a tour of inside the
40
workings. If you have an empty car boot, you can fill it with slate chippings for just
1 10. There are many slate items to look at and perhaps buy in the mine shop, and a
2 caf if you need refreshment. If you are very brave and adventurous, you can book
3 to walk along the dangerous Via Ferrata or iron rope road to the top of Fleetwith
4 Pike, a mountain 648 m (2,126 ft) high. Make it your ambition!
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Slate Mine
New words
Find new words about the slate mine (metamorphosis; rive; seam). Create a
whole-class talking dictionary; groups find out what one word means. In
a whole-class session, explain the words in turn. Create a display of the new
vocabulary, alphabetically on cards containing the vocabulary word and the
group names, e.g. RIVE: Casey and James. Children can refer to these
experts for a definition at any time.
Describe
Ask groups in turn to describe the life of a slate miner, in Victorian times and
today; how slate was formed; how slate was and is quarried, transported and
used.
Read aloud
For example, using the Honister Mine web pages, read Transporting the slate
and use the discussion ideas suggested.
Choral speaking
Tell a story
Prepare and orally tell the story of the life of Richard Brownrigg, 14-year-old
miner; the story of the history of the mine; the story of a slate from volcano
to roof; the story of a day on the mountain.
Explain
Prepare and explain how slate is formed as a rock, its properties and uses.
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Speaking
2
3 Collect and orally present (with PowerPoint/IWB) information about what slate
4 can be used for; the colours of slate; a comparison of slate from different
5 sources, e.g. Honister, Wales, Cornwall.
6
7
8 Perform
9
10 Mining, splitting and dressing the slate; building and living in a bothy in a rain
1 storm; being a mine guide and showing a group of visitors around; debating
2 whether to re-open the mine using 6.7 Who needs a slate mine?
3222
4
5 Sustain a conversation
6
7 Ask groups to discuss ideas about the slate mine and the lives of miners.
8
9 Discuss information presented on the mines web site.
20
Plan a journey to the Lake District and to Honister Pass.
1
2 Look at and discuss information about the Via Ferrata and Richard
3 Brownrigg.
4
5 Discuss own experience of exciting and adventurous places.
6
Prepare and share Talking Points about the mine.
7
8
9
Present a spoken argument
30
1
Use 6.7: Who needs a slate mine?
2
3
4
5 Ask and answer questions
6
7 Ask groups to specialise in an aspect of the mine: its history, about slate, the
8 miners lives, the work of the miners, the shop and the mine today, the Via
9 Ferrata, transporting slate, the landscape and weather in the Lake District. Find
40 out what they can and create an information sheet or page. Devise an oral
1 presentation. Organise opportunities for all groups to consider the work of
2 other groups. While watching and listening, ask groups to think about what
3 questions they can ask. Organise a question-and-answer session with each
4 group taking a turn to answer their classmates queries.
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Ideas
a set of cartoons depicting the work of the miners
designing a house using slate
designing other items using slate (lamp stand, clock, barometer, paper
weight, chopping board)
an adventure story based on visiting the mine.
Topics
tourism in the Lake District.
Issues
children at work, historically and present day
money values and wages.
Interviews
Create and role play interviews with the mine owner who re-opened the mine
after eleven years of closure; with the person who runs the shop; with a mine
tour guide; with a Roman miner; with Richard Brownrigg; and with someone
who has actually visited the mine or used the Via Ferrata to find out how they
felt.
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1222
Speaking
2 6.6 Ways into choral speaking: Honister Slate Mine
3
4 Refrain: Confident child or teacher speaks the solo; children say the refrain.
5
Fleetwith Pike Rainstorm
6
7 Solo: We are up near the sky and the rain hurtles down
8 Refrain: We are up near the sky in the rain
9 Solo: We are up near the sky and its grey all around
10 Refrain: We are up near the sky in the rain
1 Solo: We are watching the water fly back to the ground
2 Refrain: We are up near the sky in the rain
3222 Solo: We are miles from the shelter of village or town
4 Refrain: We are up near the sky in the rain
5 Solo: (quietly, getting louder) The waterfall drops past the cliff made
6 of slate
7 We are going to work and we must not be late
8 We must get through the cloud to the sunlight again
9 Refrain: (enthusiastically) We are up near the sky in the rain!
20
1 Antiphonal: Class in two groups (A and B) who speak alternately.
2
Working in the slate mine
3
4 A What did you do at the slate mine today?
5 B I sawed blocks of slate from the Kimberley Vein.
6 A What did you do with the big clogs of slate?
7 B With my mallet and chisel I docked on the grain.
8 A What did you do with the docking complete?
9 B With my broad bladed chisel Ive riven the slate.
30 A What did you do with the thin slabs of slate?
1 B I dressed the stone ready to ship in a crate.
2
3 Line share: An individual child, a pair or a group speak a line. All say the last
two lines in unison. Ask children to write a second verse.
4
5
Slate mine
6
7 Even now, theres a place too remote to be found
8 Where the light never reaches the rock underground
9 Up by Haystacks and Fleetwith, over Honister Hause,
40 Where the frost cracks the cliff and the peregrine calls,
1 In the mountain the veins forty million years old,
2 Made of Buttermere slate, coloured deep sea-green gold.
3 Clock! Go the water drops, measuring time
4 On the scale of the mountains, in Honister mine.
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Speaking
Splitting slates
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1222
Speaking
2 6.7 Who needs a slate mine?
3
4 Group and whole-class discussion
5 Introduction: read the context for the discussion. Now divide the class into
6 two: mine openers and mine closers. Provide groups with the relevant
7 information paragraph. Ask children to read and discuss the information,
8 and prepare to present it to the class. Everyone must speak; ensure that
9 individual children think about what strong points they would like to
10 make.
1
2 Context
3222 It is 1990. Years of neglect and falling prices for slate have caused Honister
4 Slate Mine to close down. Some people think this is a good idea. Others
5 want to try to re-open it. Consider the arguments and reasons for both
6 points of view.
7 (If possible, allow time and resources for further research into ideas and
8 facts.)
9
The aim of the discussion is to persuade others in the group to see your
20
point of view.
1
2
Mine closers
3
4 The mine is not making any money. No one lives nearby so it is impossible
to find workers to do the mining. No one really knows how to dock and
5
rive the slates any more. Young people dont want to be miners. It is a
6
hard, dirty, dangerous job. There is no money in it. The slate is too
7
expensive compared to modern building materials. Honister is not near any
8
big railways or roads to move the slate. The slate has been taken from the
9 easiest veins of slate, leaving only hard-to-get, expensive slate. No one is
30 really interested in re-opening the mine. We could build a hotel and
1 shopping centre here instead. Welsh slate is easier to quarry. The mine has
2 been left so long that it is dangerous.
3
4 Mine openers
5
There are grants from the government that we can get because this is a
6 heritage and tourist area, in the Lake District National Park. The mine will
7 employ local people. Slate has been mined here for thousands of years and
8 we must keep on this tradition. If we dont re-open the mine soon it will be
9 so unsafe it will never open again. We can find people in Germany to show
40 us how to mine and dress the slate. Honister Slate is the hardest and most
1 attractive slate in the UK. Cumbrians are proud of their slate mine and
2 want it open. People can travel to work here much more easily than they
3 used to be able to. High quality buildings need our wonderful slate and
4 some people can afford it.
52222
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We expect children to speak out with their classmates listening; they may not
want to, or may not know how to overcome their fear of doing so. They may
refuse to speak if asked directly. We do ask children to share their most
hypothetical and tentative ideas, sometimes with little or no preparation for
what is in effect public speaking. The surprise is that when teachers ask ques-
tions, most children will have a go at answering, and are able to inform, explain
or make their best guess clearly and confidently. But this leaves the less
confident in an increasingly difficult position. They can tell that others are
more capable when it comes to speaking. Their reluctance means that they
may lose chances to practise their speaking skills and, having started off being
a little quiet, they may feel self-conscious about what they say and how they
say it if they do finally pluck up courage.
Children benefit from direct input about speaking in class. Terms which we
use to describe how we speak, such as audibly, clearly or with expression,
can be better understood when examples are provided. Developing speaking
skills becomes more relevant and motivating when reasons are given for the
importance of clarity, articulate speech, expressive reading, and so on.
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Speaking
2 tions for each lesson during a whole week, then discuss the impact children
3 feel this has had on their learning, their confidence, and their understand-
4 ing of the importance of how and why they should speak clearly and
5 confidently.
6
6 Teach children how to use external supports for speaking. Provide a
7
PowerPoint presentation with picture slides on your topic. Ask groups to
8
talk together to decide what they would say to accompany each slide. Each
9
child is responsible for a slide, but the group helps to decide what to say.
10
Practise by reading what will be said. Move on to talking with notes, then
1
talking with no support but the slide. Talk about the transition from one
2
slide to the next, from one speaker to the next. What phrases will help to
3222
hand over the talk, or to pick up from the previous speaker?
4
5 7 Ask children to think about speaking in different contexts the classroom,
6 assembly, with the head teacher, in the playground, at home, on the phone.
7 What are the differences? Who gets nervous or anxious? Why, and what
8 does it feel like? What strategies can help to get round such feelings? Bring
9 out examples such as good preparation, making a list, rehearsal, taking a
20 deep breath, a receptive audience.
1
8 Think about the physics of sound. Help children to understand the idea
2
that sound begins at a source and is caused by vibration; that it travels
3
through the air to reach our ears. Consider the physical aspects of sound
4
using instruments to help children achieve an understanding of relevant
5
vocabulary such as pitch, volume, tone, modulate, note, audible, clarity.
6
7 9 Help children to study the biology of how voices are produced. Draw and
8 look at models of the vocal cords and describe their vibration, and the
9 changes necessary to create different volumes and pitches. Relate this to
30 the way the lungs provide air to move over the vocal cords, and the use
1 of the diaphragm and intercostal muscles in breathing and speaking. Con-
2 sider the effect of the jaw, teeth, tongue and soft palate on how sounds
3 are formed. Can we use this knowledge to help us speak more clearly?
4 Consider how the nervous system influences voice production. Think about
5 singing. Look at how other animals whales, cats, parrots produce sound,
6 and discuss the range of sounds that humans produce compared to other
7 creatures.
8
10 Ask individuals to spend ten minutes not speaking and describe the effects
9
on thinking and relating to others.
40
1 11 Help children to think about how sound is received in the ears and
2 understood in the brain. Draw and describe how sound vibrates a gas air,
3 then solid bone, then fluid the inner ear to create the conditions for
4 hearing. Think how we look after our hearing and find out about what loud
52222 sounds do to ears over time.
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12 Ask individuals to spend ten minutes wearing ear muffs and describe the
Speaking
Help the children to use such vocabulary in appropriate contexts and find
opportunities to encourage them to use this developing understanding to
describe, explain and analyse speech.
17 Speaking poetry.
Poems gain from being spoken aloud; learning proceeds from the process
of preparing and performing a given poem, and listening to others do so.
To move on to writing poems to be shared aloud is another benefit. As a
way in to appreciating what poetry offers, groups or partners can prepare
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1222 to read or speak from memory. This is also a chance to practise speaking
Speaking
2 before an audience and to listen to others, learning how to evaluate and
3 provide constructive feedback.
4 You could start by getting out all your poetry books and asking every child
5 to find a poem they like. The alternative is to provide poems, but this may
6 not be quite as motivating or surprising. Children can work with a partner
7 to say what they like about their poem, then practise reading aloud to one
8 another. Pairs join another group and listen to all of the poems in turn. They
9 can prepare for whole-class work by deciding whether to read separate
10 poems or share by taking stanzas of the same poem; deciding whether poems
1 need sound effects, music or an introduction, and thinking how to say indi-
2 vidual words, phrases and lines to create the best effect. Groups can read
3222 into a tape recorder or make an MP3 file, replay, evaluate and try again.
4
5 With the whole class as audience, perform the poems. Encourage children
6 to say why they were chosen and be prepared to answer questions after
7 the performance. Decide on another audience younger children, parents,
8 assembly, a parallel class and organise a further performance, live or
9 recorded.
20 Perhaps the children might go on to write their own poems for oral
1 performance.
2
For another approach, see National Literacy Strategy Unit, Poetry Year 5,
3
Term 3, Choral and performance poems.
4
5 18 Teach children how body language influences communication. For
6 example, people are more likely to agree with you if you nod as you are
7 speaking! Nodding does not really generate reasoned consensus or
8 dialogue, but it has its uses as a way of helping someone to keep thinking
9 through a problem, elaborate on an idea or recall difficult information.
30 Similarly, arms folded across the chest, eye contact, yawning, looking at
1 the floor or ceiling, tilting the head, all carry their own messages. It can
2 be helpful to make some aspects of body language a little more explicit.
3 However, children focusing their minds on this may find it hard to keep
4 thinking about the subject under discussion, so there is a balance to be
5 found between having never considered body language and being overly
6 self-conscious about it.
7 19 Teach children how to give formative oral feedback about speaking, perhaps
8 in the context of a story, poem, drama or reading. Ask children to listen to
9 others and prepare to give them positive feedback. Display opening phrases
40 and ask children to choose one which they would like to use to support a
1 classmates learning. Stress that children are to concentrate on pointing out
2 how one of their classmates has achieved the learning intention or qualifies
3 to be considered a good speaker. Children should be aware that it is not
4 their job to flag up problems. In this situation, criticism does much, but
52222 encouragement does more.
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Summary
Speaking
Further reading
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1222 CHAPTER 7
2
3
4 Assessment
5
6
7
A straightforward assessment
8 format for recording experience
9
10 and progress
1
2
3222
4
5 Speaking and listening Headline Objectives from
6 the Literacy Framework for Years 3, 4, 5 and 6
7
8 1 Speaking
9
20 Most children learn to:
1
2 speak competently and creatively for different purposes and audiences,
3 reflecting on impact and response;
4
explore, develop and sustain ideas through talk.
5
6
7
2 Listening and responding
8
9
Most children learn to:
30
1
understand, recall and respond to speakers implicit and explicit meanings;
2
3 explain and comment on speakers use of language, including vocabulary,
4 grammar and non-verbal features.
5
6
7 3 Group discussion and interaction
8
9 Most children learn to:
40
1 take different roles in groups to develop thinking and complete tasks;
2
3 participate in conversations, making appropriate contributions building on
4 others suggestions and responses.
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4 Drama
Assessment
use dramatic techniques, including work in role to explore ideas and texts;
create, share and evaluate ideas and understanding through drama.
7.1 Speaking and listening assessment record provides a basic resource for
recording childrens experience and attainment.
Copy a sheet for each child. The boxes labelled 16 are for each half-term
of a school year.
Either tick, date, or colour (red, amber, green) to indicate attainment at the
end of each half-term or when suitable.
Add a note of the context or a reference to planning or any other record
of the speaking and listening activity.
The summary can be completed with the child and can include targets.
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1222
Assessment
2 7.1 Speaking and listening assessment record
3
4 Name ______________________________________ Start date ____________ End date ____________
5
6 1 Speaking contexts
7 Objective 1 2 3 4 5 6 Summary
8 Speak competently and
9 creatively for different
10 purposes and audiences,
reflecting on impact
1 and response
2
Explore, develop and
3222 sustain ideas through
4 talk
5
6
2 Listening and responding contexts
7
8 Objective 1 2 3 4 5 6 Summary
9 Understand, recall and
20 respond to speakers
implicit and explicit
1 meanings
2
Explain and comment on
3 speakers use of language,
4 including vocabulary,
grammar and non-verbal
5
features
6
7
8 3 Group discussion and interaction contexts
9
Objective 1 2 3 4 5 6 Summary
30
1 Take different roles in
groups to develop thinking
2 and complete tasks
3 Participate in conversations,
4 making appropriate
5 contributions building on
others suggestions and
6 responses
7
8
4 Drama contexts
9
40 Objective 1 2 3 4 5 6 Summary
1 Use dramatic techniques,
2 including work in role
to explore ideas and
3 texts
4
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CHAPTER 8
Summary
Teaching speaking and listening
enables the child to make the
most of their education
Children are taught through the medium of speaking and listening, but they
also need to learn about the medium itself, if they are to use it well. Inattentive
children distracted by one anothers chatter may not know how and why to
learn through speaking and listening; children required to be silent or to take
part in question-and-answer guessing games may not realise the importance
of active listening or the power of the spoken word. Making the skills of
speaking and listening explicit, and discussing the thinking and learning that
arises through talk, helps all children to become better involved in their own
learning.
Children learn from day one what is required of them as they turn into pupils.
They learn to sit in a certain way, to be quiet, to raise a hand when asked, and
that there are certain ways to behave during particular sessions when teachers
talk with them such as during whole-class work. Some children respond by
lively interaction and open contribution. Some go quiet. Some drift off into a
world of their own; some initiate distractions. But every child can be taught
to understand the point and purpose of whole-class work, and their crucial role
in it. They can recognise times when learning can take place through chances
to generate common knowledge, and learn both how to take part and what the
outcomes will be. Children can reflect on their contribution to what the class
thinks, knows and understands, and begin to recognise that it is whole-class
talk that helps to establish meanings. They can grow in understanding by being
taught the skills they need to speak and listen in whole-class sessions. Motiva-
tion rises as they find satisfaction in thinking and learning with others.
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1222 Listening
Summary
2
3 Active listening is particularly important for learning before reading and
4 writing are established and fluent, but its easy to expect too much of young
5 listeners. Children in class can seem to be learning because they are very
6 amenable and quiet. But they listen only while they are interested and the
7 rest of the time they simply appear to listen. Superficially interactive question-
8 ing divides the class into those who will guess the answer and those who wont.
9 Brevity, clarity and genuine questions are what teachers can aim for to ensure
10 that childrens attentiveness and curiosity are developed and put to good use.
1 Teaching children how and why to listen to us and to each other provides them
2 with insight into classroom life that helps them to make informed choices about
3222 behaviour. Children like to learn. Teaching them to reflect on the importance
4 of listening generates interest in learning through the spoken word. The links
5 between listening, thinking and speaking should be clear to every child.
6
7
8 Dialogic teaching
9
20 During dialogic teaching teachers and children think together, listening to each
1 other, sharing ideas and bringing out a range of opinions and reasons. Children
2 are confident enough to express emergent thoughts, aware that open sharing
3 of ideas can generate joint understandings. Ideas are linked and examined, and
4 give rise to further questions. Dialogic teaching is a way to talk about particular
5 topics, but it also helps teachers and children to analyse and evaluate the
6 effectiveness of discussion, making recommendations for future sessions.
7 Classroom dialogue needs the teacher, with their clear vision and purposes for
8 learning, as orchestrator. Teachers can provide children with excellent models
9 for speaking and listening during dialogic whole-class sessions, generating
30 whole-class exploratory talk. Dialogic teaching is the responsibility of the
1 teacher for the benefit of the class.
2
3
4 Group work
5
6 Groups sharing a work space may work competitively or in parallel. At best,
7 group work means that ideas are shared through talk. The difficulty for children
8 is that their talk with others is dominated by social concerns. Group work puts
9 relationships at stake; everyone is on thin ice. Other children are dominant,
40 shy, unfriendly, off task or placidly agreeable; they shout, argue, ignore, rage,
1 sulk or say nothing. However, every child can learn to transcend social effects
2 by understanding why and how to take part in group discussion. This is not
3 a set of innate skills and unless directly taught may never be part of a childs
4 speaking and listening repertoire much to their disadvantage in educational
52222 terms.
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The educational importance of group talk only really becomes clear once the
Summary
child has experience of exploratory talk and interthinking. How to discuss things
can be taught by reasoning through the processes required to have a good
discussion, and explaining the necessary skills and understanding. Being part
of a working group that can use exploratory talk unaided by an adult is an
intrinsically interesting learning situation, whatever the context for discus-
sion. Children are supported in their efforts to achieve a good discussion by
deciding on mutual ground rules. The chance to analyse and evaluate the
effectiveness of group talk, and its impact on joint understanding and learning,
is also invaluable.
Speaking
Speaking aloud in class is such a problem for many children that they very
rarely do it. Children who start off quiet when they arrive in school may get
into a loop where their voice is never heard. If a quiet child speaks, it attracts
attention; whether negative or positive, the child shrinks from it and resolves
to be even quieter. Confident children may speak without a care for others.
Disturbed children may share their anger and fear by speaking as they have
been spoken to. Children need to know exactly what speaking is expected of
them in a classroom. They must learn and experience the sort of speaking that
helps everyone to learn. Crucially, they need to feel an atmosphere of trust and
respect generated by all their classmates, a kind of amnesty that operates to
ensure that all voices are heard without prejudice. We teachers can create the
right environment by providing security, being a role model for children who
have experienced little respect and trust, teaching explicit structures and
language tools, and highlighting the small steps of progress as they happen.
Speaking is a whole-class venture in which individual contributions reflect
everyones success in fostering an effective forum for thinking aloud.
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1222 political capital in them. It is children and teachers who become driven. Now
Summary
2 that the rise in standards has peaked as teachers and children have become
3 accustomed to a rigid learning and testing regime, how shall we respond?
4 Is it time for another push on phonics, more summer schools for seven-year-
5 olds, breakfast club top-ups and after-school SATs practice classes? Perhaps
6 we can stop and take stock. What do we think education is for? What should
7 it do for children? Teachers generally want to help children fulfil their
8 potential, and work to raise the achievement of individuals and the attain-
9 ment of the class. If we want children to become well socialised, make better
10 sense of what happens around them, and contribute positively to their own
1 lives and those of others, we must acknowledge that education has to pursue
2 some immeasurable outcomes.
3222
4 One aim of education for all teachers is to see children using talk to collaborate
5 fully with others. This is because teachers have an overview of how children
6 benefit when this happens. However, using talk to think together effectively
7 needs constant input and practice. Luckily in school we have the right
8 conditions lots of children with lots to talk about so we need not fail them
9 by assuming that experience of a good discussion will just happen as they
20 go about their lives. We can and must make it happen in our classrooms.
1
2 The speaking and listening sections of the Literacy Framework offer a well
3 structured and timely way forward, stressing how teaching and learning
4 throughout the curriculum depends on spoken language. To make it work, we
5 can provide children with direct tuition of speaking and listening; we can
6 generate customised activities that support every child through inclusive
7 discussion. We can utilise the power of dialogic teaching. Children can learn
8 that talk is their best and most powerful tool for learning and for getting things
9 done. This facility the knowledge and understanding of how and why to
30 engage in exploratory talk is something that teachers can take great pride in
1 helping young people to achieve. It offers children a way in to becoming
2 literate, numerate, socially adept and truly educated.
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
40
1
2
3
4
52222
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Further reading
148
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1222 EMASS (2004) Supporting Pupils with English as an Additional Language. Milton
Further reading
2 Keynes: Milton Keynes Council, 1 Saxon Gate East, MK9 3HG.
3 Fernandez Cardenas, J. M. (2004) The Appropriation and Mastery of Cultural Tools in
Computer-Supported Literacy Practices, Ph.D. thesis, Open University, Milton
4
Keynes.
5
Fullan, M. (1982) The Meaning of Educational Change. London: Teachers College Press.
6
Galton, M. (2007) Learning and Teaching in the Primary Classroom. London: Sage.
7
Goodwin, P. (2001) The Articulate Classroom. London: David Fulton Press.
8
Grugeon, E., Hubbard, L., Smith, C. and Dawes, L. (2001) Teaching Speaking and Listen-
9 ing in the Primary School, 2nd edition. London: David Fulton Press.
10 Hadfield, J. and Hadfield, C. (2006) Simple Listening Activities. Oxford: Oxford Univer-
1 sity Press.
2 Howe, C. and Tolmie, A. (2003) Group Work in Primary School Science: Discussion,
3222 Consensus and Guidance from Experts. International Journal of Educational
4 Research, 39(12): 5172.
5 Mercer, N. (1995) The Guided Construction of Knowledge. Clevedon: Multilingual
Matters.
6
Mercer, N. (2000) Words and Minds. London: Routledge.
7
Mercer, N. and Littleton, K. (2007) Dialogue and the Development of Childrens Thinking.
8
London: Routledge.
9
Mercer, N. Wegerif, R. and Dawes, L. (1999) Childrens Talk and the Development of
20 Reasoning in the Classroom. British Educational Research Journal, 25(1):
1 95111.
2 NCC (1991) Thinking, Talking and Learning in Key Stage Two. York: National Curriculum
3 Council.
4 Naylor, S. and Keogh, B. (2000) Concept Cartoons in Science Education. London:
5 Millgate House Publishers.
6 OKeefe, V. P. (1999) Developing Critical Thinking: The Speaking and Listening Connec-
tion. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
7
Orme, D. and Andrew, M. (1997) Speaking and Listening Curriculum Bank. Leamington
8
Spa: Scholastic.
9
Rockett, M. and Percival, S. (2002) Thinking for Learning. Stafford: Network Educational
30 Press.
1 Rose, J. (2006) Independent Teaching of Early Reading. Nottingham: DfES.
2 Sljo, R. (1979) Learning in the Learners Perspective: Some Common Sense Concep-
3 tions. Report from Department of Education, University of Groteborg, 76.
4 Sams, C., Wegerif, R., Dawes, L. and Mercer, N. (2004) Thinking Together with ICT &
5 Primary Mathematics. London: Smile Mathematics.
6 Vygotsky, L. S. (1994) Extracts from Thought and Language and Mind in Society. In
7 B. Stierer and J. Maybin (eds), Language, Literacy and Learning in Educational
8 Practice. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters/Open University.
Wallace, B. and Bentley, R. (2002) Teaching Thinking Skills Across the Middle Years.
9
London: David Fulton Press.
40
Warren, C. (2004) New Bright Ideas: Speaking and Listening Games. Leamington Spa:
1 Scholastic.
2 Wertsch, J. V. (2002) Voices of Collective Remembering. Cambridge: Cambridge Univer-
3 sity Press.
4 Whitebread, D. (ed.) (2000) The Psychology of Teaching and Learning in the Primary
52222 School. London: Routledge.
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Web links
Futher reading
Authors: Videos of authors talking about their books; resources about childrens fiction.
www.randomhouse.co.uk/childrens/home.htm
Behaviour 4 learning: Resources for classroom management. www.behaviour4learning.
ac.uk/
British Library Sound Archive (Click listen.) www.bl.uk/collections/sound-archive/
nsa.html
British Telecom: BTs Education programme based on communication. www.bteducation.
org/
Concept Cartoons: Thought-provoking resources for discussion. www.conceptcartoons.
com/index_flash.html
DfES: Inclusion guided speaking and listening to support language development. www.
standards.dfes.gov.uk/primary/publications/inclusion/bi_children/pri_pubs_bichd_
214006_09.pdf
DfES: Speaking, Listening, Learning. www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/primary/publications/
literacy/818497/
DfES: Papers for Learning and Teaching. www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/primaryframeworks/
literacy/Papers/learningandteaching/
DfES: Planning for children learning English as an Additional Language. www.standards.
dfes.gov.uk/primaryframeworks/downloads/PDF/EAL_Planning.pdf
DfES: Primary Framework for Literacy and Mathematics. www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/
primaryframeworks/
DfES: SEAL Social and emotional aspects of learning. www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/
primary/publications/banda/seal/
Dialogic Teaching: Dialogic teaching is an approach to teaching that, in a highly
disciplined fashion, harnesses the power of talk to stimulate and extend pupils
thinking and advance their learning and understanding. www.robinalexander.org.
uk/dialogicteaching.htm
Dialogic Teaching and Childrens Talk: ICT resources to stimulate group discussion.
www.dialogbox.org.uk/ICT.htm
Honister Slate Mine: A mine of useful resources! www.honister-slate-mine.co.uk/
honister_slate_mine.asp
Learning and Teaching: Comprehensive information on theory and practice. www.
learningandteaching.info/index.htm
Literacy Trust: Supporting the improvement of literacy skills. www.literacytrust.org.uk/
index.html
Mind Friendly Learning: All about thinking for learning (Custom Pages). www.school-
portal.co.uk/GroupHomepage.asp?GroupID=91541
Playing Out: The Good Childhood Survey asks for childrens opinions. http://sites.
childrenssociety.org.uk/mylife/home.aspx
Quiet Child: Ways to help the 1 in 5 with communication apprehension. www.jamesc
mccroskey.com/publications/92.htm
Thinking Together: A talk-focused approach to thinking and learning. www.thinking
together.org
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1222
2
3
4 Index
5
6
7
8
9
10
1
2
3222 agreement see consensus Collections activity 1719
4 Alexander, Robin 612, 63, 64, 76 Collective remembering activity 846
analysis, as a form of higher order concept maps 67
5
thinking 3 conclusions to lessons 66
6 argument, present a spoken (speaking consensus 93, 95; activity 95, 96
7 skill) 119, 131 constructivism 7
8 ask and answer questions (speaking skill) conversation (speaking skill) 119, 131
9 119, 131 creative thinking, as a form of higher
20 assessment: headline objectives from order thinking 3
1 Literacy Framework 1413; use of
speaking and listening for 71 Daniels, Harry 65
2
deafness see hearing impairment
3 background outcomes 9 deep learning 34, 8, 117
4 Barnes, Douglas 7, 10, 32, 61, 78, 118 describe (speaking skill) 119, 130
5 Bartlett, Linda 44 Deserted House, The activity 70
6 bilingual children see EAL learners dialogic teaching 613, 76, 116, 145;
7 biology of sounds 137 barriers to 745; indicators of 634;
Bloom, B.S. 3 strategies for 6673, 756
8
body language 59, 139 dialogue 13, 756
9 Break research activity 95, 96 discuss ideas, topics, issues (speaking
30 skill) 119, 132
1 Challenges! activity 97100 discussions, good 105; activity 867, 912
2 challenging, as a language tool 5 drama, headline objectives from Literacy
3 children: awareness of talk for learning Framework 142, 143
4 76; creation of Talking Points
exercises 389; motivation 73; EAL (English as an additional language)
5
perceptions about talk in class 1112; learners 8, 42, 44, 137
6 quiet 1212, 146 Elaborate! activity 1005
7 Choose-it! activity 8791 elaboration, as a language tool 5
8 choral speaking (speaking skill) 119, 130, English as an additional language see
9 1334; see also poetry EAL learners
40 City wildlife activity 1516 evaluation, as a form of higher order
clarity in speaking 136 thinking 3
1
class talk skills 1013, 301, 144; examination questions 71
2 activities 13, 1530 explain (speaking skill) 119, 130
3 classroom organisation 75 exploratory talk 7, 8, 812, 11617;
4 Climate change activity 97100 activities 83104; ground rules 80,
52222 Coleridge, Mary 70 10510, 116
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1222 questions: ask and answer (speaking skill) sustain a conversation (speaking skill)
Index
2 119, 131; examination 71; exercise 119, 131
3 234; as a language tool 5 synthesis, as a form of higher order
quiet children 1212, 146 thinking 3
4
5 read aloud (speaking skill) 119, 130 talk circles 13, 15, 16
6 reading, review of teaching 12 talk for learning see speaking for learning
7 records, speaking 126, 127 Talk works activities 834, 1223
8 Rose, Jim 12 Talking Points 324, 40; activities 247,
9 369, 6870, 945, 979, 1089,
Sljo, Roger 3 1245
10
Sams, Claire 35 Taxonomy of Thinking (Bloom) 3
1 sounds: biology of 137; physics of teachers 2; role in teaching speaking and
2 137; use in developing listening skills listening 35, 65, 79
3222 589 teaching, dialogic see dialogic teaching
4 speakers, good 1245, 127 tell a story (speaking skill) 119, 130
5 speaking: childrens perceptions of thinking time 73
6 1112; in groups see group work; Thinking Together 6, 8, 78, 802, 11617;
headline objectives from the Literacy activities 83104
7 Framework 1413; for learning 4, A trip to the shop activity 94
8 14, 412; learning intentions 136;
9 Primary National Strategy 121; The Vikings activity 11115
20 skills 11840, 146; teaching of Vygotsky, Lev 1, 4
1 23, 6, 8, 35, 79, 132, 13640
2 speaking records 126, 127 Wegerif, Rupert 14
Speak up! activity 1245 Wertsch, James 84
3
speculation, as a language tool 56 What do you think? activity 237
4 standards in schools 1467 Whats important about talk? activity
5 stop! signals 13, 16, 33, 43, 80 834
6 storytelling: in the classroom 120; as a whole-class talk see class talk
7 speaking skill 119, 130 woodlice activity 3940
8 surface learning 34 Word list activity 87, 88, 89
9
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
40
1
2
3
4
52222
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