Thursday 4 June 2020

How I will use the data

TAI 2020 WFRC #6: How I will use the data...

Explain how some of the data you have used to build a profile of the students’ learning will be used as baseline data at the end of the year.

In my data gathering process, the pieces of data which gave me greatest insight to student learning and behaviours around mathematics was the analysis of blog posts. Although it didn't give me precise levels in terms of data, it did leave a gap as to where all their learning for the term/year goes. The lack of blog posts followed up by the student survey as to why there were so few blogs about their maths learning revealed these things:
  • Students did not feel the same expectation (flow, cycle of learning - Learn, Create, Share) that they felt in literacy. Therefore this resulted in maths work left sitting in their drive.
  • Similar to this, students felt maths did not follow a certain routine everyday. Some days you had hands on learning with materials, some you worked independently on slides and some you were with the teacher a lot of the time doing group work on modelling paper. 
So how do I plan on using the data I've collected?

1. Analysing students PAT test scores will help target certain questions/areas in maths majority of students are getting wrong. 11 students from my target got less than 10 of the 41 questions in the PAT test. This can attended to looking at the common areas to focus teaching.

2. Student voice surveys keep me informed about the changes taking place and also how students feel about the learning and changes taking place. This is given anonymously so students feel more confident sharing their true feelings about maths.

3. Blog post analysis. This data has definitely been an eye opener for me as a teacher and will structure my maths program to allow time at the end to talk about and share their learning for the day/week. 

At the end of the year, it will be great to see if there is shift in the number of questions students are getting correct, therefore their scale scores and stanines will also increase. For our student voice surveys, what I'll be looking for is that students are becoming more aware of just what they are learning about in maths and also have an opinion/preference for the style of learning which will enable them to learn better. My hope is that this will come out in the student voice surveys carried out throughout the year. Blog posts should see a climb in the number of maths blog posts going up. From here, we can then focus on the quality of blog posts and the task description explaining their learning for the week.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Latini

    So much of this post resonated with me. I had exactly the same disconnects last year between maths and blogging that you have found. Like you I had to actively plan for time for talking about the learning and blogging in the maths sessions. I found with my more able learners that writing on the board, 'The LI for you blog post is on slide XXX' along with a selection of content vocabulary words seemed to motivate them to post their DLOs and share their learning rather than simply leaving it filed in their Maths folders. One strategy that has worked for my learners who struggle with this is to co-construct the explanation of the learning then leaving a sentence starter for them to complete to show their individual learning. I'm looking forward to following your journey with this challenge and getting some new ideas.

    Robyn

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    1. Hi Robyn - Thank you so much for these useful tips. The use of sentence starters is another example of how my teaching practice differs from reading to maths. For my struggling learners in literacy I've used the ESOL practices of writing and speaking frames. Unfortunately, I did not see that my maths practice was not following that same structure of scaffolding. A great reminder and reflection for me and also a great tip that I can put into practice straight away. So thank you Robyn!

      Latini

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