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Tonight we've got the fantastic Alistair
Bryce Cle back with us again.
Yay. Um, and we're huge fans of Alistair.
Um, when I was working in schools I used to lose lots
of his books and we were busted to get you to come in
for training, but we never managed it.
Um, and now that I'm working on Sales Toolkit, um,
I've had a chance to get into Alistair's Talks
and to hear all
of the fantastic messages he's putting across.
Um, I love the fact that Alistair shares our ethos for play
and creativity and developing language
and he's got lots of fantastic book
definitely worth checking out.
Um, and in terms of Alistair's talks,
it's worth going along just
to hear the story about the school pig.
So yeah. Um,
but no, we're really excited
to have you here tonight, Alistair.
So I'm gonna hand over to you to talk
and then I'm gonna take some questions at the end.
Ab thank you very much Kate. Okay.
Um, it is really lovely to be here
and uh, to chat again on another Tales Toolkit webinar.
And as Kate said, you know, um, I really promote
what Kate does with Tales Toolkit, as you will know
and promote on the blog
because it is a fantastic, uh, resource.
It sounds like such a simple idea
and fundamentally it is such a simple idea,
but actually impact is quite massive.
So there are schools that I work with on a regular basis
who are using tools, tales, toolkit, as lots of you will be.
And the results they are getting, uh, are, are really,
really good, uh, results, especially
around language storytelling.
But not just that for me.
Also around things like wellbeing
and levels of confidence, which are really important.
So thrilled to be asked to come
and talk, which is one of my favorite things to do.
Um, just around early years in general
and especially around elements of tale toolkit.
So this time of the year everybody's gone back.
Of course, if you're in Scotland, you've been back ages
and you dunno what all the fuss is about with all these back
to school messages, most
of us have been back now for a couple of weeks.
So you've got all your sleepless nights,
you've got all the kind of nervous tummy
and you know, especially if you're in reception
or nurse, you might wanna be having
that staggered start going on children just
coming into your space.
It was always my favorite
and worst time of year when I was a
teacher, when I was a head teacher.
Um, 'cause the excitement of the New Year
and you can feel the weather's changing, uh,
strictly started bake off started.
So we know it's almost Christmas
and yet you've got these little vulnerable new starters
who are coming often with their little vulnerable parents
who sometimes are handing over their precious
cargo for the very first time.
And that's really hard. As just indicated
before, uh, we started the webinar,
my eldest son who's now 18 about
to be 19, is off to university.
So it's the, the first of our boys
that's actually leaving home.
And I feel far worse about that than I did when he was four
and starting school, partly
because he was starting school where I was a teacher.
So I, he was very familiar with the space
and I knew what he was coming to, but also
because you think they're vulnerable and they're four
and five, but actually when they get to be 18, 19
it's a really hard time when you're becoming an adult
and you know, beginning to find your feet
and you know, spend your own money and save
and not spend your entire life living on big beans.
So it feels like a really funny start of term
but in a very different way.
So a lot of the work that I'm doing this time
of the year is looking at people
who are creating environments for assessment.
'cause we're doing that kind of baseline where we up to lots
of schools I work with will have a lot of children
with English in additional language.
And that's an added complication
because you're then looking at trying to assess children
who can't articulate what they know
because they don't necessarily speak the language
that is in the tongue of the school
or in the tongue of the assessment that's been done.
So we've got a hard job in early years to try
and set our children in
and also get a gauge on
where they are in terms of their development.
Obviously the most important thing for us this time of year
is that sense of wellbeing.
Sometimes I've got some emails over the summer from people
saying, I'm just starting for the first time in early years
or in N QT and I've got my first class.
What sort of things do I need
to be planning for the first week?
And my kind of response to that is always,
well nothing really, as long as your space is tidy
and you've got some really nice stuff out for the children,
the first couple of weeks should just be about them thinking
that this is the best place in the world to be
and that you are a really lovely person
who they're gonna enjoy seeing on a daily basis.
'cause I remember when I started
and planning to be nth degree in activity after activity
after activity, which never got completed
because actually what children are into is just being in
that space with you.
So beginning of the year
for me in their years is all about that wellbeing bit.
Some of you will be using those luen scales
of wellbeing and involvement.
I'm sure most of you'll have come across them if you haven't
lun, L-E-U-V-E-N.
The two scales. Looking at children's levels of wellbeing
and their levels of involvement really useful
to use at this time of the year.
But also to use throughout the year
to track children's development And also,
which is hard especially if you're in
reception class in the school.
I talk a lot with staff at this time of year about trying
to create an environment for assessment as opposed
to assessing within your environment.
And I see those are two very different things.
So I will say children,
even at this early stage in the settling process,
who a lovely adult will come along
and say, if I'd come with me special job into the cloak
room, come on or wherever into the cupboard into the
intervention room, get the laptop out
and then you spend 15, 20 minutes
with an adult away from your peers in this weird
environment clicking on a laptop.
And I always question whether that gets the best kind
of outcomes for children.
A, are we assessing too early?
Uh, and I know that there are some settings I work with
where they're encouraged to assess earlier on in the process
because if you assess earlier in the settling process,
children often don't give as accurate
or as high a score as they would if you assess later on,
which gives you better progress and value added.
But I think if we can have a space where we know
what we're gonna assess, 'cause we're looking at early
as outcomes, development matters,
whatever it is you're using and you are trying to create uh,
pockets of that environment, uh,
where you give opportunities for activities
or experiences that will support your assessment,
then you can hit loads of other markers
around personal social interaction, getting
to know children, all that kind
of stuff whilst assessing at the same time.
Um, I never used to start my assessments
until I felt the children were settled.
So they're coming in, they're confident within the space
to an extent they've starting to make friends,
they're starting to feel settled.
And you know from studies of wellbeing that
if you are not feeling settled then you are kind of ache.
Brain is kicking in, it's a bit flight or fight.
So you are not able to process information, you're not able
to learn as well as you would do.
And so therefore if we wait and do lots
and lots of initial work around settling confidence,
things like that, then when we come
to do the assessment you get a much more accurate picture
of where the children are.
Plus you'll find, or I always did that if you get
to know your children a little bit first it really helps
with your judgements because you know they can do some
things because you've seen it and you've experienced that.
One thing I used on a project last year at this time of year
was building on the mini me work, which I've done before.
And again, most of you I think will have mini mes.
The idea of these small photographs
of your children full size that are laminated,
you can then stick to blocks or put on little stands
or bottles, whatever it may be.
And we were working with a group of children
for English wasn't additional language initially
and they were really struggling to settle
'cause for them they've been dropped off at school.
It's a very strange place with people
who don't speak their language
and the team made with the family little mini mes
of the family of the child that was leaving at home.
And again, there were lots of questions
around the team about well surely
that's gonna be more give the child greater anxiety
because they're gonna come in, they're missing their parent
and then you're gonna be showing them photographs
of their parents or their carers or the significant others.
But what we found was having a mini of their family
that they were able to even just have put in this part
of their play talk to, given the extent of their language,
talk about, again, given the extent of their language,
massively helped with the settling process.
So that's certainly now does that for all children.
As part of their home visit they say,
can we get some photographs
of the family And we are gonna create this little set
of figures which your child will
bring into school with them.
Then they can use them for talking about
the language development.
And then later on of course in good tales toolkit, fashion
for elements of storytelling
and for children who you know, lots of you
as well if you members of Facebook groups will have seen
a lot of the posts that go around at this time of year
that say, don't ask your children
what they did over the summer because
for some children they've had a magical summer,
but for other children they maybe haven't
and experienced things like trauma
or they've just not done anything over the summer.
Uh, that's out of the ordinary.
And if they're wanting children to emote and express
and imagine then sometimes saying,
okay, what did you do this summer?
Doesn't really help with that process.
But when they're bringing in artifacts
or things from home, like members of their family
and you're asking 'em to talk about that,
then they've definitely got something to talk about.
We always used to do a thing with my reception class called,
uh, in the days before Donald Trump it would now be called
fake news but we just call it the news that never happened.
I used to say to my children that were gonna talk about
what we did at the weekend,
but you need to talk about something
that never really happened.
And when you do that kind of fake news,
you get a far higher level of language and creativity.
'cause they're not just saying, oh I had chicken nuggets
for my tea and I went around
and saw me auntie, you're suddenly getting spaceships
and aliens and footballers and trips to Disney World.
And therefore when we know when children are expressing
imaginative thought, they use a higher level
of language than they do when they are expressing their
day-to-day mundane task when they tend to fall into kind
of colloquial low level in inverted lazy language.
So anytime you can get children to try
and imagine, you are going to get
a significantly higher level of language usage
and also the creativity that can feed off each other.
And of course when you work with some children,
you just get a version of what the child next to 'em said
or in a small group.
But actually when you do lots
and lots, they get the hang of it
and you start to get this higher level language going on.
So when we are talking to children, you know,
lying is an interesting word to,
to use within the context of what we do.
And to say I am actively asking children to lie.
But actually if we ask them to just be inventive
and tell us about news that never really happened, uh,
we are actually asking them to lie in the same way
that we like them about the Tooth Fairy
and Father Christmas and Easter Bunny.
Uh, but we are getting 'em
to be far more inventive in their language.
So for me this time of year, language development,
really important, personal social
development, really important.
And those interactions between adults and children, children
and children and also adults
and adults, it's really important in early years.
We talk a lot about play
and we will talk a lot about investing in play at the
beginning of the year and
throughout for the rest of the year.
But it's also important that
it's not just play for children.
That adults have an element of play to the work that they do
'cause happy adults make
for happy children in a happy environment.
So, um, while I'm not talking about an element of play,
like let's stop everything and have a game around us,
but just this idea that you wanna be a team,
you are working together as a team,
you're gonna share your highs, you're gonna share your lows,
but you're gonna have that kind
of interaction as time goes on.
So beginning of the year, your work
and on your team in the widest sense, the tribe
that is your space, your church hall,
your preschool group, your classroom.
And within that you are beginning to make assessments of
where children are at.
Um, trying to get a sense of who they are, trying to kind
of find elements of their individual needs or interests.
So you can plot those into those
individual learning journeys.
And then the harder bits sometimes is trying to reflect
what you find out in the environment that you create.
So I would think about this time of year
that you probably haven't got
what we'd call continuous provision in place.
You've got what we kind of call basic provision in place.
So you probably don't know your children particularly well
unless they've been passed to you
by the year group below you.
And so you've put out a variety of things that you know,
children this age and stage tend to like
and enjoy to play it with.
And you are giving them lots of opportunities to allow you
to observe and assess them.
So it's often quite broad provision.
And then as you begin to get a hang whoops of your children
where they're up to, you start to uh, refine that provision
and that provision then becomes linked to uh, all the things
that you need to teach across all the areas of learning.
But also you start to find that provision
around the development of your children.
And for me, as you'll know if you've had any of my stuff
or come any of my training, I talk a lot about skill
development in the early years environment.
So we want children to be highly engaged
'cause high level engagement will link directly
to high level attainment, but we also want children
to be challenged by their play.
Now sometimes that challenge will happen spontaneously,
but often if we over theme our play spaces,
we can take away that element of challenge.
'cause if you only ever give them the farm to play with,
then it can only ever be the farm for most children.
And if you haven't got the language of farm
or an understanding of what a farm is
or what farm play is,
then you're very restricted by those resources.
Whereas if you give them more open-ended resources,
you're far more likely to get them
to interpret those in a way that's linked to their level
of imagination or their interest.
So when we talk in the characteristics
of effective learning about children, being able to play
and explore within an environment, explore
doesn't just mean putting on a backpack
and trekking out into the woods to do forest schools.
It's exploring in the sense of
has your environment got some open-ended resources
that allow children to interpret those in their own way?
Or is your space very themed around your topic so
that when I leave the carpet I can only go to activities
that are all linked to whatever it may be ourselves,
funny bones, mini beasts, journeys, whatever.
So we want this kind of idea of playing and exploring,
but we also wanna think about the fact
of when I am not working with children
or they are not with me in a group session
or ever, it may be what,
how do I perceive their attainment outside of an adult?
So when my children go to the sand tray, when my children go
to the malleable materials area, when they go
to the mark making table, whatever may it be,
what is my thought in terms of planning
around their attainment?
How does my provision support them in moving
forward in their learning?
And if we keep our provision very low level emergent
exploratory provision,
then sometimes children can get a little bit stuck in a rut
of play where they find something that they enjoy doing so
that they know they're very good at.
So they just keep returning to that again and again
and again, which is great, consolidates that good
for their sense of wellbeing,
but it doesn't help them to shift forward.
And I think sometimes as adults,
if we are facilitating group work, which a lot of us do,
then you are working with this group of six children,
everybody else is busy.
What we need to get really good at is looking at
what they're doing and asking, you know,
what are you busy doing?
Yes you're busy, but are you busy doing something
that's consolidating your learning and taking you forward?
Or are you busy doing something
where you are revisiting a skill
or a process that you have got well
embedded in your arsenal of things that you can do
and you're going back there
because A, the resources invite you back there and B,
because you find that easy.
So when you start to think about
skill development within continuous provision
and you start to look at your sand tray for example
and say, well normally I would have out if it's dry sand,
I might have some funnels and I might have some jugs
and I might have a sand wheel
and I might have some uh, buckets
and I might have some trows.
Then you start to think, well, okay,
if I look at the individual skills,
the children can develop through that play.
And I think well with the bucket
and the jugs, they could well be pouring
and pouring is a skill.
So if I think about pouring
and how a simple pouring starts with a large vessel
with a handle and a spout that's easy to fill
and easy to hold and easy to tip
and easy to pour, then if I only give children
that simple vessel, that's all my offer is for pouring.
So it's a jug. Then
whenever they come to the sand to pour,
they're always gonna be pouring at that level
where then you think, well okay, if that's simple pouring,
what would make that jug or the,
or the pouring action more complex, what would I need
to do to this container?
How could it change? What could I add?
What could I take away? How could the shape change?
How could the size change? What might that look like?
How would I make that a little more challenging?
And it's not that you ever get rid
of the emergent resources, it's not like you ban the jugs
or you ban the buckets once they get past preschool.
It's about saying, in my provision for sand play
or water play, we're talking about pouring, I'm gonna give
pouring resources
and I'm gonna give some emergent pouring resources
because children, once they get better at pouring, begin
to interpret emergent resources in a more complex way.
But the majority of my resources are going to be linked to
consolidating and taking children forward.
So what I do a lot of work on is looking at a thing
that I call common play behaviors
where once the children are in and assessed
and you're beginning to get an idea of
where their strengths are and where their areas
for development are, and you're beginning to kind of sort
that provision out, you look at each area in turn
and kind of ask the question outside
of anything else I might add to this area
or enhance this area with, if I am not here
and children come to sand, what are the things
that they commonly would do in sand?
If children come to water play,
what are the things they commonly do?
Water on the malleable materials table.
If I'm not there and there's just a lump of door
and the resources that are out,
what do children commonly do?
Well, do they pinch, do they roll, do they coil?
You know, what, what is it that they do?
And then you look at each of those as a skill
and say, okay, if we're looking at rolling
and children will roll door,
are we looking at spherical rolling?
Are we looking at cylinder rolling
or are we looking at flat rolling?
Or are we looking at all three of those things?
And if it's spherical rolling between your palms,
what can I give children to support that development?
Where would that start? Where did that go?
If we're looking at flat rolling, where you tend
to squash your door using an object
or your palm to start off
with probably the most emergent
thing, let's look at this object.
You're gonna flatten that door with what makes it easy,
what makes it harder?
Are we adding an element of pattern?
Oh, so we go, so we go, so we go.
And so you start to look at the common
play behaviors of children.
Not all of the behaviors are the exclusive behaviors
of children, but common play behaviors.
And each of those you then look at as a skill.
And then you look at your resources that are available
and think, okay, if I only ever put out
a big wide funnel and a big jug with a big handle, as soon
as a child walks into this space,
my resources are inviting a particular type of play.
If I put out other resources that are more challenging
to support those emergent resources, then I am
maximizing the potential for children to engage
with a resource that's going to challenge
that skill and take it forward.
And I'm also, if I've got that level of understanding
as an adult, really helps me if I intervene in play
to be able to support a child in developing that skill.
Of course, that's always the really difficult thing in the
job that we do in early years is
that sometimes we develop this early years Tourettes
and we end up intervening in play when actually
what we should be doing is just standing, watching
or observing or sometimes enhancing with other resources
to support what the child's actually doing.
And sometimes intervening and questioning and teaching.
But I think often, especially if you've been observed
by somebody like me, you find you can't help yourself,
but you're wandering around saying, oh that's lovely.
Oh that's lovely. Or the worst one we do
and we're all guilty of it, is the how many question.
If in doubt, ask how many. So, oh that's lovely.
How many bricks are in your tower? Ooh, that's lovely.
How many pompoms are on your picture?
And literally children get very sensitive to
how many questions very early on or stop showing you things
'cause oh, please just don't ask me how many.
Um, so sometimes how many question
is appropriate, not very often.
Um, but sometimes it's even more
appropriate just to observe.
And for me as well, observing your space is as important
as observing your children because often we're very fixated
with getting our children observed across all of the areas.
And sometimes when you stand back
and you look at the space that you've created
and you take time to watch children in the space
and what you're really watching is yes,
how the children are interacting with each other,
but also how they're utilizing the space.
That's when you can sometimes make significant changes
to your space because you realize that
children aren't using it in the way
that you thought they might,
or they're actually using it in a much better way than you
thought they would, or their interest in that area is huge.
So maybe you need to diversify and extend that area
or double it up or replicate it somewhere else.
And actually in that area over there,
nobody ever goes there.
So in that respect, your space is very precious.
So maybe you don't wanna keep that area
as it is if nobody's using it.
You wanna take those resources, put them into other spaces
and use that area for something else.
The thing that really in the settings I work with,
which is very challenging
but does significantly alter their practice, is the idea
of thinking of your space as
a continuum of skills.
And that you are encouraging sometimes
through direct teaching, sometimes often just through play
children to develop a range of skills in a range of areas.
And that idea that the resources you put on the shelf
gives an invite to a child to come and play.
So if you just put pirates on your small world shelf,
you're inviting children to come
and play pirates, very few will say, ah,
it is a pirate ship,
but I'm gonna reinterpret this pirate ship
as a McDonald's restaurant.
They kind of think, oh, as a pirate I'm gonna play pirates.
Ooh, there's a farmer, I'm gonna play a farm.
Ooh, here's a jug I'm gonna pour.
So it's being aware that resources are lovely,
but also that we want them
to impact on children's development.
And I think at the moment, again, for all of us,
and it's not just about teaching, it's,
I think it's pervades all aspects of our life.
We are in teaching in the early years in all forms
that I look at becoming more and more of kind of a Pinterest
and Instagram pressured, uh, culture where, I mean,
even on the Instagram accounts that I follow, a lot of them,
you see beautiful examples of immaculate classrooms
where everything is hessian backed
and everything comes in a bowl which has fallen off
and turned by the hands of a master craftsman.
And it's all looks fabulous.
But actually what we don't share a lot of the time is,
and this sort of looked like 10 minutes later
and the children got their hands on it.
And a lot of the conversations I have are around
that is gorgeous, but why are we doing it?
So you've set up that provocation there, you've set up
that small world space, you've set up
that water play, it looks great.
But in terms of why, where is that impetus come from?
What is it about these children that you know
or have found out that made you think that this is the thing
that's gonna feed into their next steps
or take them forward in their learning?
So I think we have to just be aware that Instagram
and Pinterest, although brilliant for inspiration, uh,
and ideas is not real life.
And actually any environment I ever worked in
that looked like a page from Pinterest
would send alarm bells ringing for me.
You have to have a bit
of active mess in any early year space.
You want at least some now environmentally friendly glitter
ingrained in doormat, excuse me,
you want at least a painting,
hand print somewhere in the toilets.
And always you want that large brown stain on the carpet
that nobody ever quite knows how it got there.
But every setting's got one that shows
that children have been engaging in real
stuff as part of their learning.
'cause I don't really think you can teach
children skills without making a bit of mess.
And also the kind of idea that you've got to learn to fail
to be able to succeed.
And we want our children to be resilient.
We want 'em to show perseverance.
And you don't develop those skills
of resilience if you get it right every time.
Nor do you get those skills
of resilience if an adult comes along
and says, okay, it's um, autum time
and Halloween, so we're all gonna make a spider out
of an egg box with googly eyes and pipe cleaners.
This is what it's, we're gonna make it out of.
This is how you're gonna make it
and here's one I made earlier.
So it needs to look like this by the end.
Again, you don't get that level of creativity, you don't get
that kind of idea of resilience.
We want, again, going back to the,
you know, effective learning.
We want creative and critical thinkers
and you don't get creative
and critical thinkers in life if somebody keeps telling you
this is what you're gonna do and this is what, how,
what the outcome's gonna be
or somebody keeps telling you the answer.
Where you become a creative
and critical thinker is where you have to interpret.
And you can only interpret if you've got a bank
of experiences and resources to pull on to help you
to make those interpretations.
And you only get that bank
of resources if you've had a breadth
of experience over a range of skills
and attributes
and resources that allow you to build up that bank.
So therefore we go back to this environment that, you know,
is open-ended slightly ambiguous, where children can play
and explore and that we are planning
to take them forward in their skills, not just
to take part in an activity.
And also when you are trying to work with children
who might have English as an additional language,
who might not be able to have the language of pirate ship
or farm, when you're given something
that's a little bit more open-ended for those children
to play with it, they can interpret
even if you don't understand the language they're using,
you can see levels of involvement and levels of engagement.
And when you start to see high levels
of involvement engagement, that's telling you that
that child is feeling more settled
and comfortable within your space.
So when you're not seeing those higher levels of engagement
and involvement, it's kind of an indicator
that they're still not settled enough to be able
to forget about their anxiety
and invest themselves in what's going on around them.
So again, some things for children to be able to
recognize, things that are linked to their interest, things
that are linked to the thing that you are talking about can
be great additions to environment,
but an idea of having a space that's more open-ended
and more linked to scale, really good for
personal social development, language development,
but also just that cognitive creative development.
And all of that pulls us always nicely back to the concept
of play being the key that when,
you know, it's, again, the more I work
with school-based settings, especially, uh, receptions.
And, and for me the, the big, you know, champion thing
that I do is to try and take play into year one and beyond.
And what you get constantly as an argument against
that is there is no time to play
because we're trying to fit everything else in.
Somebody else has asked me to look at their timetable this
week before they went back, uh, in September
and uh, they had allocated 20 minutes
for continuous provision in the morning
and 20 minutes for continuous provision in the afternoon.
And their question was, do you think that's enough?
And of course the answer is, well no, it's not enough.
In 20 minutes you, you've hardly got time
to get anything out, nevermind invest in kind of
that prolonged deep level play.
So we know play is good for a million different things for,
you know, helping children to learn a language
for switching their brains on, for uh, forming new synapses
for ability to make links, to apply what they know
to new situations, to develop opportunities for mark making
to do real maths, et cetera,
et So there are a million reasons why we would want to play
because they support what all
of the things we're gonna then move on
to in our later school career.
But to underpin that effective play,
you need a really effective environment
that contains the resources that are gonna allow children
to explore and consolidate
and be challenged by all of those concepts.
So it's a lovely kind of heady mix between
adult instruction, the creation of an environment that is
open-ended and skill linked with various enhancements
that adults provide linked to children's interests
or the things that you're talking about.
And then time for children to be able to explore
that environment whilst being supported by adults.
You sometimes support just by observing
'cause by observing you, I can make a judgment about
where I could support you in moving to next, which means
that I can enhance the space
or have an interaction with you
that will help you on that journey.
So time to play is really important.
Time to watch is really important and I know,
and it's easy for me to say, especially in the laptop,
that if you invest in that in the early stages
of child development, then
that will pay you great dividends.
Far more than the nurse I was working with the other day
who have started to do a phonics program now
with some of the children who are literally just
through the door and bums on the carpet.
And the idea being that if you start it now, then
that gives them lots and lots and lots of time to learn it.
I think again, a phrase
that I overuse far too much is this idea
of a developmentally appropriate curriculum
and a developmentally appropriate environment.
I think when you look in children
who are 3, 4, 5, 6 years old
and looking at how their brains develop, regardless of
how articulate they are,
you've gotta look at their levels of maturity.
You've gotta look at their levels of interest and try
and create a space that supports that.
Because when you hit that nail on the head
and you really get the engagement from those children,
they get a passion for learning.
They're massively on board with what you are talking about.
And then there's other elements
of more formal learning come in, they're far more ready
to take those on board
because it's developmentally appropriate.
But I also appreciate there is a huge amount
of pressure from all sorts of places.
Parents, other members of staff, uh, parallel teachers,
senior leadership school, next door league, table SATs,
all sorts of things that filters down eventually.
And you feel a huge pressure that your children have
to start doing X, Y
and z uh, to enable them to get to where they need to be.
I would still argue that effective play that really
does support children's learning
and development is that best foundation for children.
And that then moving forward you will see even
stronger outcomes, uh,
than you would've done if you start the inverter formal
process earlier.
But I know it's easy for me to sit here
and preach in my, uh, dining room, not so simple.
If you are the person who's
actually gonna do that within the space.
Um, the, I recently had the great, uh,
uh, honor,
I was gonna say this was, it wasn't honor this year.
Some of you will have seen, um, last year, this time
of year, there was a program on channel four called Old
People's Home for four year Olds where they put, uh,
ten four year olds and 10 old people together for six weeks.
And they looked at the outcomes on the older people
of being in that environment.
So this year, channel four commissioned a second series,
it's about to uh, um, end
of this month, beginning of next month.
And they asked me to come along
and work with them as the early years expert, uh,
on the program expert in massive inverted, um,
looking at the impact
of the children on the interactions with the adults.
And we did it for double the time.
So it was a 12 week experiment.
Um, I observed the children, uh,
the interactions with the adults.
I watched the films. We had parent diaries going on,
we did various forms of assessment.
Imperial College London came
and did some facial uh, recognition assessments on,
on the children facial movement assessments.
And we were looking at whether there was a significant
impact on the children or just a
significant impact on the adults.
So you won't be surprised to learn as like series one,
the impact on the adults is quite phenomenal
and makes for great watching to see how these adults
who literally were in the twilight of their life start
to reverse a lot
of the physical cognitive issues that they having.
But what we found, which was really fascinating, was
that the impact on the children was equally
as impressive just in a different way.
So what our older adults were doing was relearning some
of those early skills
and what our children were doing through their interactions
with the adults was acquiring the skills sometimes
for the first time, sometimes just building on skills
that they already had.
But the thing that made the biggest difference
because apart from the fact the older adults haven't got a
job, they haven't got another child to pick up from school,
they're not making the tea, they haven't lost a pump bag,
obviously they've got their issues within their lives,
but they've got a lot of time to spend.
And so the children with the adults from first in the
morning till the end
of the nursery day even ate their lunch with the adults.
And so what they got was long periods of time
where adults literally devoted their listening,
their interactions, their conversation,
so their sustained shared thinking
and their sustained shared talk to these children.
And what we saw was in a 12 week period,
these children made significantly greater progress in things
like imagination, language development, confidence,
wellbeing, involvement, empathy than
an average group of four year olds would've made if they
were just at home and then perhaps going to school
because they were getting to interact with their peers.
But they were also getting this really
focused concentrated time.
And walking away from the experiment, I was often asked,
you know, once, the one thing is somebody who works a lot
with early years that you will take away from this.
And I think the thing that really impacted on me was this,
the aspect of time, the fact that children were given time
to play, time to talk,
but also time to be talked to and time to listen.
And that and the bonds that obviously made with the people
that they were with on a daily basis had a huge impact
on their learning and their ability to learn.
And when I know it's very difficult when you've got
10 old people and 10 children
when now you're suddenly thinking, well I've got 30 children
and there's two of us, I've got
52 children and there were three of us.
Um, but I reflected on
how much time I built in to my work as a consultant
and also thinking back to when I was a classroom teacher for
that kind of sustained shared thought
and sustained shared talk.
And when I looked on it, it was actually very little
and a lot of the time that we talked it was about adults,
adults talking or children talking collectively in a large
group where one talks and 29 listen.
And so I think I would, well I do think differently about
that and I've reflected a lot on how you could bring,
not necessarily bring old people in,
but how you can take that element of um,
time and prolonged periods of interaction
between individuals or groups
because the outcomes
that we saw from those prolonged interactions were great.
Also, I would say, well you've got old people, more
and more old people every year who are an untapped resource
and we have hundreds
and thousands of four year olds
who are an untapped resource.
If we can bring them together in any way, shape
or form, it's gotta be a benefit.
What we found again, which was interesting,
was when I was ahead I would send my reception down at
Harvest and Christmas and Easter to sing our assembly songs
and give out a basket of, you know,
just slightly past their best vegetables
and a tin of Campbell soup to the old people.
And the the old people loved it
and the children used to like to go
and that's lovely in terms of a brief interaction.
But where we saw a real difference is where you get
that consistent regular interaction.
The more regular the better.
But even once a week is better than kind
of three times a year
and once a day is even better than that.
So if you can facilitate something like
that within your setting, I would absolutely say do it.
If I had a setting, I'd be doing it tomorrow.
But I think also within the environment you are creating
this idea of creating time to think
and creating time to talk as a group
or as individuals will have significant impact on
how your children feel about the space,
how well you know them and they know each other
and how you can take 'em forward in their learn.
I've got a few questions here
that have come up kind of like you've been talking.
One of them is, is planning based on skills.
Like when you do this, how do you link to interest
and how do you plan ahead making
that link to the curriculums?
There's a few questions in that one
There. So
I would say for me,
you've got your development matters early as outcomes
as your kind of broad curriculum.
So you know, you're heading towards
those early learning goals.
Mm-Hmm. And so I think that topic
for me tends to sit with the adults.
So I'm not the topic police.
I know I do work with some settings
that don't have any topic at all.
It's purely, um, children's interests and seasons.
So this time of the year they would be looking at autumn
and anything that walked through the door.
So there wouldn't be same which I would've done right in the
autumn, it's ourselves followed by celebrations
'cause that also comes as Halloween and then Christmas
and then you know, blah blah blah
and then we go into blah blah.
So they would just not do that.
But if you are gonna have a topic like ourselves,
what again in my early teaching days,
we'd have planned it all out.
It would be a different body part a week.
You know, one week would be elbows and ankles
and one week would be we'd sing head, shoulders, knees
and toes, then we'd read funny bones,
then we'd all stick art straws onto black sugar paper
and sit with a TA for a week doing that.
And that would make a every funny bones display
and it becomes very, very narrow.
So what I would say is that you look at
your children's needs that are driven by assessment.
So you end up looking across all of the areas of learning
and thinking where your children are strong
or where they need to develop.
And you use that as a basic map for your learning space.
Yep. And when you've created areas of provision, you start
to look at the, the idea of common play behaviors
and skill development, which is not exclusive, it's just a,
a support within that space.
And then once you've got a space where, you know,
in our sand area for example,
we've looked at common play behaviors, we've tried
to resource to support children's development in that,
then often settings will then enhance
and you can't say enhance on a weekly basis
'cause some enhancements last a day
and some enhancements last forever.
Some enhancements become part of your provision
where you tend to enhance around children's interests.
You tend to enhance around
topical theme that you're talking about.
People enhance around basic skills
or other areas of learning.
So they might put something in that's linked to grouping
or counting or they might put something
in that's linked to personal social.
Sometimes people enhance around a specific skill.
So they might say, well I really wanna look at the skill
of pouring, joining, stretching,
rolling, whatever it may be.
And sometimes people will enhance
around an element of challenge.
So I am looking at children's ability to count and group.
So in my sand I'm gonna add in lots
and lots of resources that are, oh, they might make patterns
with them, they might play armies with them.
They also might be able to sabotage the word
that we've all got to use now
or they might be able to count on groups.
So they're the kind of five main areas
that people tend to enhance around.
So I would look at my development matters.
I would think, here are my children, this is
what is pertinent to what's going on at the moment.
So put elements of that down, look at my environment, try
and make it more skills based and activity focused.
And then I would enhance link to that kind of five areas
and I would just evaluate as I go.
So it makes quite an organic planning process,
but you're always going back to your early years outcomes
and development matters is your overarching scheme
as it were, or your long-term plan? Yeah,
Yeah. When I was in school
we used to do, um, we used
to plan a lot like this, so it used to be quite open
and we used to have like a, a big start to something
where you'd get in lots of things
that would stimulate the children
thinking about certain things.
Yeah. And then you would just see where it flowed.
For example, we did um, a term
where we started off talking about feelings
and we did lots of arts, different types of music
and it ended up being a pajama party.
Yeah. Because it turns out the things
that made the children most happy was
buying pajamas from Mazda.
So this was like,
That's the joy of it. And
I think for me, if I go into a space
that has got an element of random about it,
so we started here but we ended up over there.
That's when that is great for me to see that
because it shows you going children's interest.
I did a talk the other day, um, called Spider in the sink,
massive spider in the sink.
It was about a setting I was working with
that were doing a topic
and they found a massive house spider in the sink
and that sent the children mad.
They were just, they couldn't believe it.
And then all this interesting spiders
and suddenly we had started with something like ourselves
and ended up looking at tropical spiders
and jungles and all sorts.
And not all children were mad about spiders. Yeah.
But um, it was just lovely to see it go
with the children's interest as opposed to say,
well there's a spider in the sink,
but actually we're talking about autumn at the moment.
So if we could just put the spider outside
and get back to conquers, then life would be good.
Yeah. So I think also in early years we are given permission
by the, the curriculum that we've got to be able, you know,
I talk about playful adults and playful learning.
Part of that is about saying, do you know what?
If that's where it takes you, let's run with it.
See what, see what happens for us,
It's way more for us
because I know working with adults like that where they knew
that they could run with ideas and go with stuff
and they have a lot more freedom, that's when you start
to get excited as an adult. I think
You do. You've gotta think
as long
as you're covering development matters,
which is our current kind of curriculum,
what's the worst thing that can happen?
All good. It's Um, yeah.
Um, right. So I've got another question here.
Um, how do you think we should make observations?
So what's your kind of top observations? Well,
What I don't think we should be doing,
which I do come across lots of people doing
where they say I've gotta observe every child in every area,
every half term and I've gotta have three points.
And that becomes ridiculous.
I think what we've gotta ask ourselves is why do we have
observations in the first place?
Mm-Hmm. There are so many different sorts
of observations in the classroom.
Observation. There are contextual observations
where you're trying to give a contextual picture
of a child from start to finish.
Um, they are individual observations that are linked
to next steps for children.
There are observations within areas of learning.
There are personal social interaction observations.
So there are millions and I think you should be
observing for a purpose.
So an observation should tell you something about a child
and where you are to move to next.
There is a lovely book called Learning Stories
and one of the authors is a lady called Wendy Lee
who I spoke with when I was working out in Australia.
She's from New Zealand. And she talks about how the,
their culture of creating a contextual learning story.
Now what she does is write, writes letters
to children that she works with.
So say I had a group of children, I've got a key group
and in my key group I have many 7, 8, 9 children.
Over the course of a half term I would write a letter
to each of those children.
And, and it was just a really lovely, I mean she made lots
of examples out, but the idea that would,
rather than saying today Harry was in the playdo,
he used a pencil grip using his thumb
and forefinger and managed.
It's not that. It's saying, dear Harry,
we've had such a good time this week.
I particularly enjoyed working with you in the construction.
You told me that when you grew up
you want to be a superhero.
And I said, and what you got was loads of elements
of documentation of actual learning threaded
through a really personal contextual letter from an adult
to a child, which I wish I had them or my children had them
'cause I have them now would just be glorious.
So they got about six of those a year
and they were part of the learning journey.
So sometimes he had some actual how he pinched the door
and also mixed into that was this, this is my picture
of Harry things that he said, things that you did,
interactions that we had.
And also what you've got was a really warm feeling from the
adult about how much I enjoy spending time with you.
Um, so there are loads
of books out there about observation assessment
for early observation assessment.
Um, Kathy Brody has done a fairly recent past couple
of years book, which is really good
and worth having a look at,
which just explains it in very simple terms.
Give lots and lots of examples.
Observation should be for a reason.
And if you are mindlessly observing children just
for the sake of ticking a box in the back of a grade,
then you're not doing the right thing. Yeah.
Um, when I was working as nearly as coordinator, I said
to my staff, if you make an observation,
you have to do something with it.
Yeah. Yeah. It's stopped a lot
of the random useless ones.
You get loads of post-it notes and plastic wallets. Yeah.
And you see the plastic wallet getting
fatter and fatter and fatter.
If it's sitting in the plastic wallet,
then it's not doing anything. Not doing
Anything. And you get lots
of pictures of children on bikes. Yes.
Like what is that?
The other thing is you end up with like, you know,
if you're using tapestry or too simple
and you've got your iPad
because of the like observation observation,
people just either see the whole world
through an iPad screen or you get picture crazy.
Yeah. So like, and you get a million pictures
of children doing mundane tasks.
And again, it's about revisiting that
and saying, okay, why did I take that picture?
What does it tell me? If it tells me nothing,
then I need to delete it.
If it tells me something, then I need to act on it. Yeah.
And so yeah, it's, it again, I it's external pressure
that a lot of people are under,
but actually you've always gotta come back to you.
If it doesn't tell you something, then don't do it. Tell
You. One of the other things I liked that
you were saying
as well, Alistair was about, um, about lying.
Yes. Because you were saying the stuff about lying
and it's quite interesting 'cause we've been working
with Goldsmiths and the lady
that's done the study on tell's toolkit, she's looking
to do a study on lying in children.
Yeah. And she was saying, uh, the, at the beginning, like,
children can't distinguish what a lie is.
So if it is something that's not true, so she'll say
to her child something like, um, it's bedtime.
And they'll be like, no, that's a lie.
So if it's something they don't like the sound of, it's,
it's a lie and they find it really hard to distinguish. But
My eldest son, when he was about four,
was an accomplished liar.
Yes. Really? And quite complex in his lying.
And I remember once discussing that
with an educational psychologist who came to school
and just said, I have a real issue
with my eldest at the moment, these lies,
but these lies are quite complex.
And she said, oh, it's a massive sign of a,
it's a, it's a bright child.
You know, the fact that you'll be able to create a lie
and also deliver a lie
and think about the consequences of that lying, try
and mask those consequences.
That's showing me all skill.
I was like, yeah, that doesn't help me at home when I'm
saying like, when he write his name in fell tip on the,
our whole wall massive in fell tip.
His brother was two. And I said to him, who has done that?
Not me. So it's your name in Black Fell tip
and your brother was two, but it wasn't you.
No, no. It wasn't
Me. It's
this story practitioners about saying, you know,
the fake news idea.
Yeah. They say we just, we're really, really uncomfortable
with asking children to tell lies.
'cause we go through our whole life saying
it's not a good thing to lie.
Yeah. But actually in terms of storytelling,
It's great.
It's great. And the and the language level you get is
so much more complex when you are telling an
untruth than when you're telling the truth.
Yeah. So, and then you always come back with the classic,
well what about Father Christmas in the Tooth Fairy?
But it's about that the children learning the difference
between a story and a lie
and they are maybe slightly different.
Yeah. And they start to pick that up
because I remember, um, we were teaching reception,
we had a little girl and every time we'd do things
where we'd get dressed up or we'd do stuff, she'd be like,
no, I know that's you Miss, I know it's you.
And she was very kind of like literal, wouldn't kind
of go down that route of telling stories in that way.
And towards the end of the year we did a whole
big thing about giants.
And this one day she managed
to get into the key stage one yard.
And she stood on the other side and she shouted through
and she said, um, she said, miss Kate, she said,
A giant came and he put me over the fence
and was like, yes, we've got a lion.
Yes. It, it's happening. Tell stories.
Even getting a child to lie, like
To getting your children to lie.
So yeah, it's a good skill.
It's no, it really is.
And it's just that whole, you know, element of creativity
that comes from that space.
Yeah. But that idea that you are born with the potential
for an imagination, but you're not born with an imagination.
And the fact that your imagination has to be fed.
So the more you feed it, the fatter it gets,
the fat it gets, the healthier it is.
And so for a lot of us
and the children that we work with,
they're not being fed in the same way
that we necessarily were through story
and experience and language.
And that's sustained shared
torque and sustained shared thinking.
So there's a bigger on, I think on us these days
as practitioners to feed that imagination.
And it's sometimes it's really hard
and when you've got a lot of children
with English additional language so they don't understand
what on earth you're talking about.
Again, difficult to be able to do that but essential.
So I don't think our job is getting any easier.
If anything it's slightly changes.
The early years job gets harder. Fascinating.
Rewarding knackering. Yes. But harder.
Yeah. Um, in terms of kind of just any ideas
that you've got for people that are struggling
that they want to do all the creativity
and the skills-based learning
and like lots of play-based learning,
if they're putting their heads with a management that's
a lot more formal and wants them
to have like a set time table that doesn't maybe allow
to do those kind of things, what's your advice
For that? It's a really,
it is a really tough one.
I think there is more and more evidence out there around
how play-based learning cognitively has a
really positive impact on children.
There's also a really fine line
between play-based learning and free play.
And I think that the two things are not mutually
exclusive, but no, are they the same?
So in an environment where you just open the door every day
and send to the children right in, you come get
what you like out, I play away all
day, I'll get the kettle on.
My job here is done. That's not the
same as play-based learning.
And I think lots of senior leaders I work with
who are resistant to play are frightened that
that's what that's gonna become.
Yeah. So I think if you are going to investigate it more,
there are things, I mean not just me,
there are blogs like mine, books like mine
that are out there with loads of information on them.
You'll see if you look at my blog, I work with lots
of schools and on my blog, Instagram, Facebook,
I always name check places I've been
'cause they're not my ideas, they're their
ideas that I'm just sharing.
And 99% of those settings, um,
are more than happy for other settings to get in touch.
So we with setting a lot in Olford
and uh, they've done some brilliant work in turning a team
around and I was working with another school
and the head was really quite reticent.
And I said, why don't you just give Pat from Alford a ring?
She was where you are four years ago.
Just let her talk you through her journey and spoke to her
and she basically said, this is
where we were, this is where we are now.
This is what we did. And
that con one conversation was enough for that, that head
to say, okay, I get what you're talking about now as long
as these measures are in place, off you go.
And that score is really flourishing.
So sometimes it's about finding somebody who can
'cause with me, I'm an early years consultant so they don't,
they know I've got an early years agenda.
Early years teachers can be annoying
'cause they're fighting the fight for play when everybody
else is fighting the fight for attainment
and they don't see that the two things come together.
Mm-Hmm. So finding somebody
who comes from a similar standpoint
but can talk about a journey
that was successful in the end can be a really useful thing.
Yeah. Um, Ron has just asked, have you got any names
of research that supports play beta learning
Nos? Um, one
really good site to have a look at. Yes.
Um, if you are on Twitter
or not on on uh, the internet,
have a look at Upstart Scotland.
Obviously it's Scotland,
but Upstart Scotland are campaigning for the start date
for children to be moved to seven years old.
But also what they've got on their site is a huge research
bank that's all linked to current research.
A lot done by Aberdeen University
into developmentally appropriate curriculum.
The impact of play-based learning.
And there is loads there to get your teeth sunk into.
Also a lot
of their published papers then have references
at the bottom, which they will.
So what I've done has got lost in a paper
and then gone through the references
and then got completely lost in just the
references from one paper.
So there is loads and if you get stuck or you can't find it
or there's something specific you are looking at,
then if you email me
and you can just do that through my website,
the contact me button comes direct me.
I will be able to point you in the right direction
of something I've seen or read or somewhere to look.
So there is lots,
but I think if anything, if you're gonna go anywhere
with an argument, you just have to be prepared.
Yeah. With a bit of research.
And then last question, um, a good,
and you can give a shout out to your book here, Alistair,
A good skill-based book to read
and support play-based learning.
Okay. So for me, I wrote this,
I got two skill-based books.
See if I was a bit more organized, a bit more ruthless,
I'd have them all here to hold up
and say his book I wrote earlier.
Um, I wrote a book called, uh,
continuous Provision in the early Years
and that looks at using observation
and assessment to create an environment
and that begins to dip into skill-based provision.
And then there's an accompanying book called Continuous
Provision the Skills, which is purple. And that's,
Yeah, Claire just given a shout out to that one.
So yay.
That delves a little more into how you do the skills on
my blog while we're shouting out on abc.com, the blog bit.
Mm-Hmm. If you search common play behaviors,
if you search skill-based learning, you'll get a number
of blog costs Yeah.
That have examples of planning formats, all sorts of stuff,
but also links to other bits and pieces.
And again, if you're still stuck
or you want any more information, please
by all means drop me an email if I can, I'll help you out.
Mm-Hmm. Lovely. Fantastic. Thank you Alistair. Oh
You are welcome. Like
Getting around the right time now.
So it's just gone past nine o'clock,
so we'll let you go and have an evening.
How did that happen? This
Is my evening. This is a highlight.
I live with three teenage boys.
This is the highlight of my evening.
Apart from, this is my lovely wife isn't it?
Yeah. If you wanna keep the door shut
and pretend you're still on the webinar. Yeah,
I should thought about that. I
could've had a bottle of wine over there.
I could've just talking to myself.
It's true. Really, really big. Thank you Alistair.
And thanks everybody for tuning in.
It's been good to have chat. Everyone's coming along,
So Yeah. And we'll chat soon.
Alright. Thanks everybody. Bye.