Effective Use of Pupil Premium for Closing Achievement Gaps

Key Note Speaker
Sir John Dunford
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Raising achievement and closing gaps:
using the pupil premium effectively
Autumn Headteachers’ Conference
Warwickshire
15 November 2018
John Dunford
2
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Raising achievement and closing the gap:
the priorities
Raising achievement
and
Closing the gap
Excellence
and
Equity
3
undefined
Attainment
Time
PP pupils
Other pupils
undefined
Current strategies: maximum impact
 
5
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Gap and disadvantaged attainment at 11, 2017
 
Percentage of 11 year olds reaching expected standard (PP / Non-PP)
undefined
Gap and disadvantaged attainment at 16, 2017
pp
Average Progress 8 score (PP and Non-PP)
undefined
Missing talent
Sutton Trust report, June 2015. Key findings:
15% of highly able pupils who score in the top 10% nationally at age
11 fail to achieve in the top 25% at GCSE
Boys, and particularly pupil premium eligible boys, are most likely to
be in this missing talent group
Highly able pupil premium pupils achieve half a grade less than other
highly able pupils, on average, with a very long tail to
underachievement
Highly able pupil premium pupils are less likely to be taking GCSEs in
history, geography, triple sciences or a language
http://www.suttontrust.com/researcharchive/missing-talent/
8
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Looked-after children: some statistics
68% of looked-after children achieved level 4 in reading, compared with 89%
of others.
The gap at 11 is even larger in writing and mathematics.
12% of looked-after children achieved 5+ GCSEs at A*-CEM, compared with
53% of others.
33% of care leavers become NEET, compared with 13% of all young people.
6% of care leavers go to university, compared with 40% of others.
This is less than the percentage of care leavers who go to prison.
67% of looked-after children have SEN cf. 18% of the total population. Of
those, 29% have a statement cf. 2.8% of all children.
62% of children become looked-after as a result of abuse or neglect and they
have a much higher incidence of mental health problems.
Looked-after children especially need our additional support to achieve their
potential and improve their life chances.
9
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Focus for the pupil premium
The gap
:  Decide on comparators for PP students
PP / Non-PP in your school
PP in your school / Non-PP pupils nationally
Other forms of disadvantage
What is your ambition?
In 10% of schools nationally, FSM attainment is above the national
average for ALL pupils
Use evidence of what works
Improve transition, especially for disadvantaged
Focus relentlessly on the quality of teaching and learning
10
 
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The over-riding importance of quality
first teaching
Focus relentlessly on the quality of teaching and
learning
Improve transition, especially for disadvantaged
Spend some PP on raising the quality of teaching and
engaging disadvantaged pupils in their learning, e.g.
feedback, metacognition
Improve the impact of 1:1 and small group work
12
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Overcoming the barriers
 
13
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Identifying the barriers to learning for PP pupils
 
14
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Identifying the barriers to learning for PP pupils
through ….
Learning walks
PP student shadowing
PP student voice
Achievement and attendance analysis
Parent views
SLT, staff and governor views
15
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Turning aims into impact
Establish the school’s desired outcomes
Set success criteria for each of these
Hold yourselves to account for the impact
16
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Deciding your desired outcomes
 
17
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Choosing your school strategies
What strategies will produce these desired
outcomes and help you to achieve your
success criteria?
“Individual need, classroom rigour”
Use evidence of what works
In-depth staff training on chosen strategies
18
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Evaluating your school strategies
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A clear audit trail on the school website
 
Plus case studies of impact on (anon) individual pupils
20
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Use evidence to choose the best
strategies for your school
 
To support individuals in
overcoming barriers to learning
 
To improve the quality of teaching,
learning and assessment
21
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The opportunity
Schools should not wait for politicians to tell you
what to do with the pupil premium
The government isn’t telling schools how to close
the gap
It’s for schools to decide how to use PP
Stop looking up and start looking out
22
undefined
The evidence of what works elsewhere
Seek out excellent practice in other schools
www.pupilpremiumawards.co.uk
Study local, regional, national international evidence
Use the Education Endowment Foundation toolkit
https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/resources/te
aching-learning-toolkit
Use published reports
:
the NFER report on success and good practice
     
 
www.nfer.ac.uk/publications/PUPP01
Ofsted surveys 
http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/pupil-
premium-how-schools-are-spending-funding-successfully-
maximise-achievement
https://johndunfordconsulting.co.uk/blog/
 August 2015
23
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1.
Arts participation
2.
Aspiration interventions
3.
Behaviour interventions
4.
Block scheduling
5.
Collaborative learning
6.
Digital technology
7.
Early years intervention
8.
Extending school time
9.
Feedback
10.
Homework (Primary)
11.
Homework (Secondary)
12.
Individualised instruction
13.
Learning styles
14.
Mastery learning
15.
Mentoring
16.
Meta-cognition and self-regulation
17.
One to one tuition
18.
 
Oral language interventions
19.
 
Outdoor adventure learning
20.
 
Parental involvement
21.
 
Peer tutoring
22.
 
Performance pay
23.
 
Phonics
24.
 
Physical environment
25.
 
Reading comprehension strategies
26.
 
Reducing class size
27.
 
Repeating a year
28.
 
School uniform
29.
 
Setting or streaming
30.
 
Small group tuition
31.
 
Social and emotional learning
32.
 
Sports participation
33.
 
Summer schools
34.
 
Teaching assistants
undefined
EEF Toolkit Strategies
25
EEF Toolkit
26
undefined
Using teaching assistants effectively
The DISS project: 
Deployment and Impact of Support
Staff 
www.oxfordprimary.co.uk
http://fdslive.oup.com/www.oup.com/oxed/primary/literacy/
osi_teaching_assistants_report_web.pdf?region=uk
EEF report on Making Best Use of Teaching
Assistants
http://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/uploads/pdf/T
A_Guidance_Report_Interactive.pdf
 (March 2015)
Maximising the impact of teaching assistants
website:
 
http://maximisingtas.co.uk/
What 
impact
 are your teaching assistants making?
27
undefined
Using teaching assistants effectively
EEF/TES free online course
Practical examples of good practice in TA
deployment
https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/resources/m
aking-best-use-of-teaching-assistants/ta-online-course/
Alongside the course, there is a free pack of
resources, including:
A list of six TA-led projects that have shown a marked
positive impact on pupil’s learning;
The EEF guidance report on making best use of TAs;
An online audit tool, Red Amber Green (RAG) self-
assessment, interventions ‘health-check’ and a suggested
change process.
28
undefined
Building blocks of success with PP
School culture
An ethos of attainment for all pupils
An unerring focus on high quality teaching
High aspirations and expectations
100 per cent buy-in from all staff
Evidence (especially the EEF Toolkit) is used to decide on
which strategies are likely to be most effective in overcoming
the barriers to learning of disadvantaged pupils. Particular
consideration is given to high-impact, low-cost strategies.
Able to demonstrate positive impact of all strategies
In-depth training for all staff on chosen strategies
Every effort is made to engage parents/ carers in the
education and progress of their child
29
undefined
Building blocks of success with PP
Individual support
Identification of the main barriers to learning for
disadvantaged pupils
Individualised approach to addressing barriers to learning
and emotional support
Focus on outcomes for all individual pupils
Frequent monitoring of the progress of every
disadvantaged pupil
When a pupil’s progress slows, interventions are put in
place rapidly
Teachers know which pupils are eligible for pupil premium
The needs are recognised of disadvantaged children in
specific groups, e.g. high ability pupils, looked-after
children
30
undefined
Building blocks of success with PP
School organisation
Deployment of the best staff to support disadvantaged
pupils
Excellent collection, analysis and use of data relating to
individual pupils and groups
Performance management is used to reinforce the
importance of this agenda
Effectiveness of teaching assistants is improved through
training and better deployment
Governors are trained on pupil premium
Pupil premium funding is ring-fenced to spend on the
target group
Effectiveness of interventions is evaluated frequently and
adjustments made as necessary
A senior leader has oversight of PP
31
undefined
25 low-cost high-impact strategies
1.
Create and maintain an ethos of attainment for all pupils
2.
Maintain an unerring focus on high quality teaching
3.
Have 100 per cent buy-in from all staff
4.
Identify the main barriers to learning
5.
Frequently monitor the progress of every disadvantaged pupil
6.
When a pupil’s progress slows, put interventions in place rapidly
7.
Deploy the best staff to support disadvantaged pupils
8.
Collect, analyse and use data relating to individual pupils +
groups
9.
Increase the impact of teaching assistants
10.
Replace some 1:1 support with small group work
11.
Evaluate the effectiveness of interventions and make
adjustments as necessary
12.
Provide in-depth training for all staff on chosen strategies
13.
Ensure that all teachers know which pupils are PP-eligible
32
undefined
25 low-cost high-impact strategies
14. Use evidence (especially the EEF Toolkit) to decide on optimum
strategies to address barriers to learning, including:
15. Feedback
16. Meta-cognition
17. Mastery learning
18. Reading comprehension
19. Collaborative learning
20. Oral language interventions
21. Peer tutoring
22. Agree among the staff that when they mark a set of books, they
mark the books of disadvantaged pupils first
23. Use performance management to reinforce the importance of
pupil premium impact
24. Train governors on pupil premium
25. Have a senior leader in charge of PP spending and impact
33
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Using the evidence
Consider the evidence of what works in
relation to your school, or to the group
of schools to which your school belongs
34
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Use self-review and accountability to help
achieve your school’s aims
Accountability to central government, to inspectors, to the local
authority, to governing bodies and to parents
Accountability must be for impact
Use accountability to support successful implementation
On PP impact, teachers and school leaders should be
holding themselves to account
Build your own data sets
  
35
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What inspectors are looking for
Before the inspection, RAISE Online and the school website are
studied for evidence on attainment and on gaps
Attendance, exclusions, behaviour, well-being
Schools can add additional evidence, including case studies
PP pupil tracked by inspector
Discussions with PP pupils, parents, staff and governors
Study of effectiveness of PP spending strategies
Study of effectiveness of leadership in monitoring and evaluation
Governor involvement
Impact, impact, impact
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What inspectors are looking for
During the inspection, lines of enquiry by inspectors will
focus on: 
what barriers school leaders have identified 
what the pupil premium is spent on to improve outcomes for
eligible pupils 
what difference this has made 
how school leaders know this 
where the evidence of impact is.  
Impact, impact, impact
undefined
What inspectors are looking for
See TES blog on 28 March 2017 by 
Lorna Fitzjohn HMI at
https://www.tes.com/blogs/ofsted/ofsteds-blog-lorna-fitzjohn-
regional-director-west-midlands-her-presentation-ofsted-and
;
Lorna’s slides at
https://www.slideshare.net/Ofstednews/pupilpremiumwhatofst
edlooksfor
; the TES blog by Sean Harford HMI at
https://www.tes.com/blogs/ofsted/ofsted-blog-sean-harford-
tells-teachers-primaryrocks-event-what-ofsted-really-looks
; and,
for Early Years information, the TES blog by Gill Jones HMI at
https://www.tes.com/blogs/ofsted/ofsted-blog-gill-jones-
ofsteds-myth-busting-guide-early-years
Impact, impact, impact
undefined
Accountability to parents
New regulations
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/what-maintained-schools-must-publish-online
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/what-academies-free-schools-and-colleges-
should-publish-online
Obligation to report to parents on barriers to learning, PP policies
and impact
Publish an online account of PP amount and plans to spend it
For previous year, publish what you spent it on and the impact
39
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Using curriculum freedoms
to help close the gap
The school curriculum is everything that
The school curriculum is everything that
happens to a learner in school
happens to a learner in school
It is much bigger than the National Curriculum
It is much bigger than the National Curriculum
It includes the co-curriculum
It includes the co-curriculum
40
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41
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Addressing the critical
curriculum questions
What curriculum does a C21 young person need?
What curriculum does most for the disadvantaged?
Entitlement:
Give all young people a fully rounded education
– a ‘whole education’
Develop knowledge, skills and personal qualities
This curriculum can help to ‘close the gap’
42
Social Mobility and Child Poverty Commission
in England
The Social Mobility
Commission states that
schools need to focus on
developing wider skills
alongside improving their
academic attainment and
highlights the importance
of, in their words
Preparing students for all
aspects of life, not just exams –
supporting the development of
character and other non-
cognitive aspects of personality
that underpin learning
It is
not a question of either/or.
Schools need to be doing both”
 
CBI and OECD
Thinking, creativity and problem solving
John Cridland 
CBI 
Director-
General shares this view:
“Employers sought school
leavers who did not just possess
a clutch of examination passes
but were rounded and
grounded. Emphasis on exams
and league tables has produced
a conveyor belt rather than
what I would want education
to be - an escalator.”
Are we encouraging and enabling
our students to develop these skills?
Andreas Schliecher of 
OECD
argues:
“Today, schooling needs
to be much more about
ways of thinking,
involving creativity,
critical thinking,
problem-solving and
decision-making.”
The warp and the weft of the curriculum
 
undefined
Measuring the impact of a broader curriculum
How do we measure what we value,
and not be led into valuing only
what we can measure?
46
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The moral purpose
Our data shows that it doesn’t matter if you go to a school in
Britain, Finland or Japan, students from a privileged background
tend to do well everywhere
. What really distinguishes education
systems is their capacity to deploy resources where they can make
the biggest difference.
“Your effect as a teacher is a lot bigger for a student who doesn’t
have a privileged background than for a student who has lots of
educational resources”
Andreas Schleicher, 
Times Educational Supplement
, 2013
47
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jd@johndunfordconsulting.co.uk
www.johndunfordconsulting.co.uk
Twitter: @johndunford
Blog: 
http://johndunfordconsulting.wordpress.com/
http://www.johncattbookshop.com/the-school-leadership-journey
48
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Action planning
What are the two most important things you have taken from
today’s session?
What can you and your school do immediately to make a
difference for PP learners?
How can you improve classroom practice to increase the
progress and attainment of PP learners?
How can you use accountability to pursue your school’s aims?
How can you develop your school curriculum to give every
disadvantaged learner a better curriculum?
Which pieces of evidence of what works elsewhere are most
useful for PP learners in your school?
- 
from the Education Endowment Foundation Toolkit?
- from the Building Blocks of Success?
49
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Addressing the effective utilization of pupil premium to enhance academic achievement and bridge disparities, the content highlights strategies, statistics, and key findings regarding the impact on both highly able and disadvantaged students. Insights from Sir John Dunford's keynote speech at the Autumn Headteachers Conference in Warwickshire offer valuable guidance in maximizing the potential of pupil premium investments to promote excellence and equity in education.

  • Education
  • Pupil Premium
  • Achievement Gaps
  • Keynote Speaker
  • Sir John Dunford

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  1. Key Note Speaker Sir John Dunford

  2. Raising achievement and closing gaps: using the pupil premium effectively Autumn Headteachers Conference Warwickshire 15 November 2018 John Dunford 2

  3. Raising achievement and closing the gap: the priorities Raising achievement and Closing the gap Excellence and Equity 3

  4. Attainment PP pupils Other pupils Time

  5. Current strategies: maximum impact What PP strategies are making the greatest impact in your school? 5

  6. Gap and disadvantaged attainment at 11, 2017 Gap at 11 PP/NPP Gap at 11 PP/NPP Birmngham 16 49 / 65 Stoke 15 48 / 63 Coventry 17 48 / 65 Walsall 25 39 / 64 Dudley 27 38 / 63 Warwks 26 42 / 68 Sandwell 15 49 / 64 Wolvhmpton 18 50 / 68 Solihull 21 49 / 70 Worcester 26 38 / 64 Staffs 21 48 / 69 National 20 48 / 68 Percentage of 11 year olds reaching expected standard (PP / Non-PP)

  7. Gap and disadvantaged attainment at 16, 2017 pp Gap at 16 PP/NPP Gap at 16 PP/NPP Birmngham -0.33 -0.18 / 0.15 Stoke -0.45 -0.38 / 0.07 Coventry -0.45 -0.43 / 0.02 Walsall -0.61 -0.62 / -0.01 Dudley -0.54 -0.51 / 0.03 Warwks -0.62 -0.45 / 0.17 Sandwell -0.37 -0.39 / -0.02 Wolvhmpton -0.48 -0.34 / 0.14 Solihull -0.56 -0.55 / 0.01 Worcester -0.62 -0.52 / 0.10 Staffs -0.51 -0.53 / -0.02 National -0.51 -0.40 / 0.11 Average Progress 8 score (PP and Non-PP)

  8. Missing talent Sutton Trust report, June 2015. Key findings: 15% of highly able pupils who score in the top 10% nationally at age 11 fail to achieve in the top 25% at GCSE Boys, and particularly pupil premium eligible boys, are most likely to be in this missing talent group Highly able pupil premium pupils achieve half a grade less than other highly able pupils, on average, with a very long tail to underachievement Highly able pupil premium pupils are less likely to be taking GCSEs in history, geography, triple sciences or a language http://www.suttontrust.com/researcharchive/missing-talent/ 8

  9. Looked-after children: some statistics 68% of looked-after children achieved level 4 in reading, compared with 89% of others. The gap at 11 is even larger in writing and mathematics. 12% of looked-after children achieved 5+ GCSEs at A*-CEM, compared with 53% of others. 33% of care leavers become NEET, compared with 13% of all young people. 6% of care leavers go to university, compared with 40% of others. This is less than the percentage of care leavers who go to prison. 67% of looked-after children have SEN cf. 18% of the total population. Of those, 29% have a statement cf. 2.8% of all children. 62% of children become looked-after as a result of abuse or neglect and they have a much higher incidence of mental health problems. Looked-after children especially need our additional support to achieve their potential and improve their life chances. 9

  10. Focus for the pupil premium The gap: Decide on comparators for PP students PP / Non-PP in your school PP in your school / Non-PP pupils nationally Other forms of disadvantage What is your ambition? In 10% of schools nationally, FSM attainment is above the national average for ALL pupils Use evidence of what works Improve transition, especially for disadvantaged Focus relentlessly on the quality of teaching and learning 10

  11. The over-riding importance of quality first teaching Focus relentlessly on the quality of teaching and learning Improve transition, especially for disadvantaged Spend some PP on raising the quality of teaching and engaging disadvantaged pupils in their learning, e.g. feedback, metacognition Improve the impact of 1:1 and small group work 12

  12. Overcoming the barriers Identify barriers to learning for PP pupils Decide your desired outcomes Identify success criteria for each outcome Choose your PP strategies Implement strategies with in-depth training Evaluate strategies regularly Tell the story: create an audit trail 13

  13. Identifying the barriers to learning for PP pupils What are the barriers to learning for your PP pupils? 14

  14. Identifying the barriers to learning for PP pupils through . Learning walks PP student shadowing PP student voice Achievement and attendance analysis Parent views SLT, staff and governor views 15

  15. Turning aims into impact Establish the school s desired outcomes Set success criteria for each of these Hold yourselves to account for the impact 16

  16. Deciding your desired outcomes Desired outcomes Improving FSM attainment Reducing gaps Improving attendance Accelerating progress Reducing exclusions Improving behaviour Improving engagement of families Developing skills and personal qualities Extending opportunities Improving transition Good destination data Success criteria 17

  17. Choosing your school strategies What strategies will produce these desired outcomes and help you to achieve your success criteria? Individual need, classroom rigour Use evidence of what works In-depth staff training on chosen strategies 18

  18. Evaluating your school strategies External review and school self-review are both important Evaluate impact of strategies http://tscouncil.org.uk/guide-effective-pupil-premium-reviews/ Compare your school s PP performance with like schools http://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/toolkit/families-of- schools/ 19

  19. A clear audit trail on the school website Person responsible Cost Evaluation Impact Improve feedback 1:1 tuition Attendance officer Peer tutoring etc Plus case studies of impact on (anon) individual pupils How good is the PP audit trail in your school? 20

  20. Use evidence to choose the best strategies for your school To support individuals in overcoming barriers to learning To improve the quality of teaching, learning and assessment 21

  21. The opportunity Schools should not wait for politicians to tell you what to do with the pupil premium The government isn t telling schools how to close the gap It s for schools to decide how to use PP Stop looking up and start looking out 22

  22. The evidence of what works elsewhere Seek out excellent practice in other schools www.pupilpremiumawards.co.uk Study local, regional, national international evidence Use the Education Endowment Foundation toolkit https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/resources/te aching-learning-toolkit Use published reports: the NFER report on success and good practice www.nfer.ac.uk/publications/PUPP01 Ofsted surveys http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/pupil- premium-how-schools-are-spending-funding-successfully- maximise-achievement https://johndunfordconsulting.co.uk/blog/ August 2015 23

  23. EEF Toolkit Strategies 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Homework (Primary) 11. Homework (Secondary) 12. Individualised instruction 13. Learning styles 14. Mastery learning 15. Mentoring 16. Meta-cognition and self-regulation 17. One to one tuition Arts participation Aspiration interventions Behaviour interventions Block scheduling Collaborative learning Digital technology Early years intervention Extending school time Feedback 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. Oral language interventions Outdoor adventure learning Parental involvement Peer tutoring Performance pay Phonics Physical environment Reading comprehension strategies Reducing class size Repeating a year School uniform Setting or streaming Small group tuition Social and emotional learning Sports participation Summer schools Teaching assistants

  24. EEF Toolkit Strategies HIGH IMPACT HIGH COST LOW IMPACT HIGH COST LOW IMPACT LOW COST HIGH IMPACT LOW COST 25

  25. EEF Toolkit 26

  26. Using teaching assistants effectively The DISS project: Deployment and Impact of Support Staff www.oxfordprimary.co.uk http://fdslive.oup.com/www.oup.com/oxed/primary/literacy/ osi_teaching_assistants_report_web.pdf?region=uk EEF report on Making Best Use of Teaching Assistants http://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/uploads/pdf/T A_Guidance_Report_Interactive.pdf (March 2015) Maximising the impact of teaching assistants website: http://maximisingtas.co.uk/ What impact are your teaching assistants making? 27

  27. Using teaching assistants effectively EEF/TES free online course Practical examples of good practice in TA deployment https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/resources/m aking-best-use-of-teaching-assistants/ta-online-course/ Alongside the course, there is a free pack of resources, including: A list of six TA-led projects that have shown a marked positive impact on pupil s learning; The EEF guidance report on making best use of TAs; An online audit tool, Red Amber Green (RAG) self- assessment, interventions health-check and a suggested change process. 28

  28. Building blocks of success with PP School culture An ethos of attainment for all pupils An unerring focus on high quality teaching High aspirations and expectations 100 per cent buy-in from all staff Evidence (especially the EEF Toolkit) is used to decide on which strategies are likely to be most effective in overcoming the barriers to learning of disadvantaged pupils. Particular consideration is given to high-impact, low-cost strategies. Able to demonstrate positive impact of all strategies In-depth training for all staff on chosen strategies Every effort is made to engage parents/ carers in the education and progress of their child 29

  29. Building blocks of success with PP Individual support Identification of the main barriers to learning for disadvantaged pupils Individualised approach to addressing barriers to learning and emotional support Focus on outcomes for all individual pupils Frequent monitoring of the progress of every disadvantaged pupil When a pupil s progress slows, interventions are put in place rapidly Teachers know which pupils are eligible for pupil premium The needs are recognised of disadvantaged children in specific groups, e.g. high ability pupils, looked-after children 30

  30. Building blocks of success with PP School organisation Deployment of the best staff to support disadvantaged pupils Excellent collection, analysis and use of data relating to individual pupils and groups Performance management is used to reinforce the importance of this agenda Effectiveness of teaching assistants is improved through training and better deployment Governors are trained on pupil premium Pupil premium funding is ring-fenced to spend on the target group Effectiveness of interventions is evaluated frequently and adjustments made as necessary A senior leader has oversight of PP 31

  31. 25 low-cost high-impact strategies 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Create and maintain an ethos of attainment for all pupils Maintain an unerring focus on high quality teaching Have 100 per cent buy-in from all staff Identify the main barriers to learning Frequently monitor the progress of every disadvantaged pupil When a pupil s progress slows, put interventions in place rapidly Deploy the best staff to support disadvantaged pupils Collect, analyse and use data relating to individual pupils + groups Increase the impact of teaching assistants 10. Replace some 1:1 support with small group work 11. Evaluate the effectiveness of interventions and make adjustments as necessary 12. Provide in-depth training for all staff on chosen strategies 13. Ensure that all teachers know which pupils are PP-eligible 9. 32

  32. 25 low-cost high-impact strategies 14. Use evidence (especially the EEF Toolkit) to decide on optimum strategies to address barriers to learning, including: 15. Feedback 16. Meta-cognition 17. Mastery learning 18. Reading comprehension 19. Collaborative learning 20. Oral language interventions 21. Peer tutoring 22. Agree among the staff that when they mark a set of books, they mark the books of disadvantaged pupils first 23. Use performance management to reinforce the importance of pupil premium impact 24. Train governors on pupil premium 25. Have a senior leader in charge of PP spending and impact 33

  33. Using the evidence Consider the evidence of what works in relation to your school, or to the group of schools to which your school belongs 34

  34. Use self-review and accountability to help achieve your school s aims Accountability to central government, to inspectors, to the local authority, to governing bodies and to parents Accountability must be for impact Use accountability to support successful implementation On PP impact, teachers and school leaders should be holding themselves to account Build your own data sets Is the school meeting its own success criteria? 35

  35. What inspectors are looking for Before the inspection, RAISE Online and the school website are studied for evidence on attainment and on gaps Attendance, exclusions, behaviour, well-being Schools can add additional evidence, including case studies PP pupil tracked by inspector Discussions with PP pupils, parents, staff and governors Study of effectiveness of PP spending strategies Study of effectiveness of leadership in monitoring and evaluation Governor involvement Impact, impact, impact

  36. What inspectors are looking for During the inspection, lines of enquiry by inspectors will focus on: what barriers school leaders have identified what the pupil premium is spent on to improve outcomes for eligible pupils what difference this has made how school leaders know this where the evidence of impact is. Impact, impact, impact

  37. What inspectors are looking for See TES blog on 28 March 2017 by Lorna Fitzjohn HMI at https://www.tes.com/blogs/ofsted/ofsteds-blog-lorna-fitzjohn- regional-director-west-midlands-her-presentation-ofsted-and; Lorna s slides at https://www.slideshare.net/Ofstednews/pupilpremiumwhatofst edlooksfor; the TES blog by Sean Harford HMI at https://www.tes.com/blogs/ofsted/ofsted-blog-sean-harford- tells-teachers-primaryrocks-event-what-ofsted-really-looks; and, for Early Years information, the TES blog by Gill Jones HMI at https://www.tes.com/blogs/ofsted/ofsted-blog-gill-jones- ofsteds-myth-busting-guide-early-years Impact, impact, impact

  38. Accountability to parents New regulations https://www.gov.uk/guidance/what-maintained-schools-must-publish-online https://www.gov.uk/guidance/what-academies-free-schools-and-colleges- should-publish-online Obligation to report to parents on barriers to learning, PP policies and impact Publish an online account of PP amount and plans to spend it For previous year, publish what you spent it on and the impact 39

  39. Using curriculum freedoms to help close the gap The school curriculum is everything that happens to a learner in school It is much bigger than the National Curriculum It includes the co-curriculum SCHOOL CURRICULUM NATIONAL CURRICULUM 40

  40. Work ready Ready for further study Life ready 41

  41. Addressing the critical curriculum questions What curriculum does a C21 young person need? What curriculum does most for the disadvantaged? Entitlement: Give all young people a fully rounded education a whole education Develop knowledge, skills and personal qualities This curriculum can help to close the gap 42

  42. Social Mobility and Child Poverty Commission in England The Social Mobility Commission states that schools need to focus on developing wider skills alongside improving their academic attainment and highlights the importance of, in their words Preparing students for all aspects of life, not just exams supporting the development of character and other non- cognitive aspects of personality that underpin learning It is not a question of either/or. Schools need to be doing both

  43. CBI and OECD Thinking, creativity and problem solving Andreas Schliecher of OECD argues: John Cridland CBI Director- General shares this view: Employers sought school leavers who did not just possess a clutch of examination passes but were rounded and grounded. Emphasis on exams and league tables has produced a conveyor belt rather than what I would want education to be - an escalator. Today, schooling needs to be much more about ways of thinking, involving creativity, critical thinking, problem-solving and decision-making. Are we encouraging and enabling our students to develop these skills?

  44. The warp and the weft of the curriculum Skills Knowledge Personal qualities

  45. Measuring the impact of a broader curriculum How do we measure what we value, and not be led into valuing only what we can measure? 46

  46. The moral purpose Our data shows that it doesn t matter if you go to a school in Britain, Finland or Japan, students from a privileged background tend to do well everywhere. What really distinguishes education systems is their capacity to deploy resources where they can make the biggest difference. Your effect as a teacher is a lot bigger for a student who doesn t have a privileged background than for a student who has lots of educational resources Andreas Schleicher, Times Educational Supplement, 2013 47

  47. Contact John Dunford at jd@johndunfordconsulting.co.uk www.johndunfordconsulting.co.uk Twitter: @johndunford Blog: http://johndunfordconsulting.wordpress.com/ http://www.johncattbookshop.com/the-school-leadership-journey 48

  48. Action planning What are the two most important things you have taken from today s session? What can you and your school do immediately to make a difference for PP learners? How can you improve classroom practice to increase the progress and attainment of PP learners? How can you use accountability to pursue your school s aims? How can you develop your school curriculum to give every disadvantaged learner a better curriculum? Which pieces of evidence of what works elsewhere are most useful for PP learners in your school? - from the Education Endowment Foundation Toolkit? - from the Building Blocks of Success? 49

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