One-Liner Wednesday – Happy Birthday, Lil Man!

“God help those on the roads… Lil Man is 17 today!”

Ritu Bhathal

He won’t let me post pictures of him, but I can’t believe that my firstborn is seventeen, today!

When I think back to all the struggles of trying to conceive, it was far too much of a dream to even consider having a child on the cusp of adulthood.

And here we are, at exactly that point. I can’t quite believe it. He’s now officially old enough to drive. Eeeeek!

For Linda’s #1LinerWeds

Chai And A Chat #192 #ChaiAndAChat

Good morning, my Peeps! One week down for Term 6 and 5.4 left! (Is it bad that I am already counting the days until the summer break?) I don’t want it to go too fast, as I will miss this class, but there is also so much to do!

Right, so I have my cup of chai. You got yours?

  • If we were having chai, I’d tell you that, though I love the summer term, and all the fun we have, it also signals that our time with the children is getting shorter. This also means that we have assessments and data to get done, and class splits. On top of that, I have to ensure that the class information for next year is all up to date, too, and ready for sending to the new parents. Hectic is one word. Our academy gifted each permanent member of staff two paid days off to take in the term time, through an academic year, to help with celebrating special days that usually fall in term time, or for whatever you want to use the day for. If you don’t use it, it can’t be carried forward, so we have quite a few members of staff who haven’t used theirs, yet, and it’s been, and will be a case of balancing kids and staff so people can take their allocated days. I am becoming an expert juggler, I tell you! And I have to use my phone calendar all the time, because I can’t remember who is doing what, when!
  • If we were having chai, I’d say that Lil Princess’s exams came and went, fingers crossed they went well! Lil man had another assessment, too, which he passed, phew!
  • If we were having chai, I’d mention that I read, and read and read… Because it was the only way I could calm my mind after hectic school days and busy home time, too!
  • If we were having chai, I would have to shout out this review from the wonderful Annette… It has made me smile for days!
  • If we were having chai, I’d whisper that I have honestly forgotten anything else that was done this week. See. Perimenopause calling! That is what my phone calendar is for… and guess what? I nearly lost that, too this week, misplacing it as I hared around the school building!
  • If we were having chai, I would end, as always, with Sonu Singh. He was my reading companion on Saturday, warming my feet. It’s a good thing it was quite breezy, otherwise, I’d have been too hot, and pushed him off!

This week, we have the dreaded data submission deadline, which I think we are all prepared for. I have a meeting with all our parents, to talk about how their children will be transitioning to year one, and the start of the juggling staff out will begin in earnest! Oh, the joy! Speaking of joy, it will be Lil Man’s 17th birthday, midweek, as well as my Mum’s birthday, too, so celebrations all round!

And while you’re here, did you sign up for my mailing list? I am in the middle of writing an exclusive Chickpea Curry Lit story for my subscribers, and there will be news, tips and even recipes! You know you want to join… go on! Click the pic below to sign up!

Spidey’s Serene Sunday – Part 381 – Attainment Vs. Progress

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“What is more important? How well they do, or how far they’ve come?”

Ritu Bhathal

Thank you, Spidey, for handing the mic over to me, today, since the above quote is something that is weighing heavily on my mind right now.

It is this time of year that all teachers or at least teachers of some year groups are under a different set of pressure than the usual.

Assessment time.

Data time.

Report time.

I know secondary schools are awaiting the GCSEs and A-Level Exams to finish, they they have to wait for the grades to be announced in August, but in Primary schools it is the time for the Key Stage One and Key Stage Two attainment data to be submitted (our school’s was just the other week) and this coming week, I have to, with my colleagues, submit the first data in two years to our Local Authority, for the Early Years Foundation Stage Profile.

We have to report on Attainment, which is whether a child has reached a particular level within many areas, or GLD, a Good Level of Development. Now, after a disrupted couple of years, this cohort included, data may look lower, across the board. This class managed a whole year in school but suffered lockdowns last year in their preschool year, and some didn’t even attend a nursery, because parental fear of Covid was, naturally, high. So there are still gaps in some children’s experiences meaning we have been trying to patch holes in their development, physically, as well as emotionally, before we could really see the difference in more academic subjects.

When we first inputted the data I felt deflated. We have worked so hard with these children, and I know they have worked tremendously hard, too. I spoke with our data guru, the Deputy Head, about my disappointment.

He pointed the obvious out, with regards to what we started with, compared to where we are now. And compared to the same official data of last year’s cohort, where they experienced two lockdowns. We are definitely on an upwards trajectory, however, I hate how this could reflect on the kids and us as a whole, because, as I said, everyone has worked their behinds off to support the children, school staff, and parents alike, as well as those little mites, themselves.

Then he said, (I am ad-libbing here, but it was the jist of the conversation!) “But, what about the progress? That’s the most important thing. And remember, just because we are submitting data now, it doesn’t mean they stop learning now. They still have over four weeks with you. More progress will be made in that time, too.”

And he is right.

The difference between Attainment data and Progress data is that while Attainment looks at whether children have met expected goals, Progress sees where they started and charts the steps they have made over the year, themselves. So a child who is at expected levels may have made the age-related expected steps of progress, (in our tracking system, five steps) but a child who doesn’t appear to have met these goals, may have started considerably lower, and still made five, or even six or seven steps of progress bringing them that much closer to the expected goal.

This is why I truly despise Assessment-based judgements, as we aren’t looking at an individual child and what their unique progress is. Instead, we have to judge on these sometimes unrealistic scales, which in the Reception year, assume that all children are at the tail end of their fifth year when some of my children aren’t even five yet.

Now, I am so proud of all these children who have, as all my pupils do, wormed their way into a permanent place in my heart. Those who have hit their targets deserve a big well done, but those who haven’t, have pushed themselves, and the progress data shows how far they have come, and that almost makes me even prouder of their achievements.

So, as. I step off my soap box, what do you think is more important – how well they do or how far they’ve come?

namaste

Wishing you a wonderfully peaceful Sunday, Peeps!

#SoCS June 25, 2022 – Product/Produce

Linda’s SoCS prompt.

Your Friday prompt for Stream of Consciousness Saturday is “product/produce.” Use one, use them both, use them any way you’d like. Bonus points if you use both. Have fun!

We are a product of our upbringing, don’t you agree?

And we in turn produce those who will continue this world, long after we are gone.

So is it not our duty to ensure we are instilling good values, kindness and compassion, independence, and the ability to aacces and use common sense in our children?

Sorry. Strange, but totally SoCS!

One-Liner Wednesday – Reading Saves Lives And Minds!

“In and amongst all the craziness of life, I can always find time for a book, because within those pages, my sanity lies.”

Ritu Bhathal

For Linda’s #1LinerWeds

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