developing effective dialogue to support learning across and beyond the curriculum

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Thinking Together: Developing effective dialogue to support learning across and beyond the curriculum Neil Phillipson [email protected] @21Clearners

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Page 1: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Thinking Together: Developing effective dialogue to support learning across and beyond

the curriculum

Neil [email protected]

@21Clearners

Page 2: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Session outline…

Dialogue in the CurriculumWhat is ‘effective dialogue’ and in what contexts is it useful?

The difficulty of dialogueWhy do we need to teach for dialogue as well as through dialogue?

Frameworks to support dialogueThinking Together and the 4Cs

Dialogue beyond the curriculumThe wider applications of dialogue

Page 3: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

What comes next in this sequence?

Page 4: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Useful classroom talk?

What are the characteristics of this talk that make it effective?

In what contexts could this kind of talk be useful in the classroom?

Video of three children in Dialogue around Raven’s Reasoning tests, successfully solving the problem on the previous slide.

Page 5: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

The difficulty of dialogue…

Page 6: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Identifying with dialogue…

Professor Ruper Wegerif, ‘Mind-Expanding’

Page 7: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Perspectives…

Maurice Merleau-Ponty

Page 8: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

If only it were that simple…

Video of the three children from slide 4 in Dialogue around Raven’s Reasoning tests, before training (unsuccessful dialogue)

Page 9: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Disputational Talk: trying to ‘beat’ each other, to be the winner (identifying with the self)

Cummulative Talk: trying to agree to maintain the harmony of the group (identifying with the group)

Common ‘types’ of talk…(taken from research for the Thinking Together project, by Neil Mercer, Lyn Dawes and Rupert Wegerif)

Page 10: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

“We subject learners to group work because it ‘develops the skills needed later in life’; except it really doesn’t.”

Ros McMullen (blog – principalprivate)

“Group work: I hate the concept as I hate hell, all Montagues and thee. I bite my thumb at it… An efficient way to learn? Not so much.” Tom Bennett (The TES)

“Whenever I am asked where the group work is in my lessons, I respond with the same answer. The class have been put into a group of 30, and their group task is to listen to the teacher and to work in silence.”

Robert Peal (blog – goodbyemisterhunter)

Does group work work?(taken from a Slideshare presentation by James Mannion)

Page 11: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Frameworks to support dialogue…

Page 12: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

The Thinking Together Project…

• Focused on the importance of preparing children to talk in groups by establishing clear ground rules

• Provided exemplar ‘talk lessons’ in various curriculum contexts

• Led to measurably raised attainment when working in group situations

• Led to measurably raised attainment when working individually (internalisation of dialogic skills – of thinking skills)

Page 13: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Philosophy for Children…

• …about helping children to think philosophically

• …about children engaging in critical dialogue to reach a better shared understanding of contestable concepts that are important to them

• …about the way in which children engage with ‘the other’

• …about developing caring, collaborative, creative and critical thinking

Page 14: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Caring Critical

Collaborative Creative

The ‘4 Cs’…

Listening, valuing

Responding, supporting

Questioning, reasoning

Connecting, suggesting

Page 15: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Part 1: Caring Thinking (eliciting groundrules through dramatic exploration of a story)

A synthesis – ground rules around the 4Cs framework…

Page 16: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Caring Critical

Collaborative Creative

We all try to join in

We listen attentively to each other

We share our ideas

We are ready to give reasons for our ideas

We can challenge each other’s ideas

We treat others’ ideas with respect

We look for and discuss alternative ideas

We make decisions based on good reasons

We speak one at a time

We build on each other’s ideas

We look for evidence

We try to make connections between ideas

We care about the task

We try to understand other points of view

Help each other to express our ideas

We find examples and comparisons

Page 17: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Shape

The importance of conceptual understanding…

Form

Logic

Algorithm

Program

Design Nutrition Grammar Scale

Environment

Culture

Cause and consequence

Pattern

MeasureMelodyChemical changeForce

Edited version of video by Tim Oates, discussing the importance of key concepts to progress through the curriculum. Full version available at YouTube).

Page 18: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Three foundational concepts:

• Force• Scale• Culture

Applying the ground rules in context (circus of activities)…

Page 19: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Activities to promote talk - Concept Cartoons (S. Naylor)

Page 20: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Activities to promote talk - Odd One Out

Page 21: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Activities to promote talk - Talking Points (L. Dawes)

Always True Always False It depends

Bigger planets have longer days

Adverbs end in -ly

Page 22: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Activities to promote talk - Thinking Maps (TSI)

Page 23: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Dialogue beyond the curriculum…

Page 24: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Me You

The OtherEncounters with the other…

Page 25: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Qualification Socialisation

Subjectification

Gaining knowledge, skills, dispositions etc. needed to go on and do something.

Becoming part of society – culture and tradition.

Becoming more autonomous and independent in thinking and acting.

The purposes of education? (Gert Biesta)

Page 26: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

RhetoricRemaking Communicating

DialecticChallenging Analysing

GrammarLearning Remembering

The Trivium… (Martin Robinson)

Page 27: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

The Dissoi Logoi…

Page 28: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

The conversation of mankind…

Page 29: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Human stories…

Page 30: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

British Values…

Page 31: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

“It is hard to be cruel once you permit yourself to enter the mind of your victim. Imagining what it is like to be someone other than yourself is at the core of our humanity. It is the essence of compassion, and it is the beginning of morality.

The hijackers used fanatical certainty, misplaced religious faith, and dehumanising hatred to purge themselves of the human instinct for empathy. Among their crimes was a failure of the imagination.”

Ian, McEwan 2001

The importance of other perspectives…

Page 32: Developing Effective Dialogue to Support Learning Across and Beyond the Curriculum

Stay in touch…

e: [email protected]

t: @21Clearners

f: / 21Clearners

In: Neil Phillipson on LinkedIn