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So I am really excited about this webinar.
Um, Julian actually did one
of our very first webinars a long time ago
now, well, a few years ago.
Um, and he's back again with us tonight
and with lots more to talk about,
and there's lots happened in the meantime.
So I'm really excited to have Julian speaking with us.
Um, and, um, we've known Julian for a long time.
I actually worked with Julian really closely when I was an
early years coordinator, a long time ago,
and Julian was the earliest lead for my borough.
So it's been a long relationship.
Um, but he's been a big supporter
of tell's Toolkit right from the start.
Um, just a little bit of information about Julian.
Um, he's the head teacher of Sheringham Nursery School
and Children's Center, which has recently been awarded the
research school status, and I'm sure Julian
will be chatting about that tonight.
And he should be very, very proud.
Um, he's an author of many books
and a contributor to many early years books.
Um, a national Leader of Education.
He's co-founder of the East London Teacher School Alliance.
Um, he's gonna be the keynote speaker at the
Nursery World Show this year.
Um, he's worked with the Department
of Education Rights for Nursery World.
Some, and I could go on.
There's endless things that Julian, we think you're great.
So I'm really excited to have you here tonight.
I think you, you have the wrong person, Kate. Good.
This guy sounds great. Good.
They're all gonna be expecting lots of good stuff now.
So I'm gonna hand over to you, Julian, in a minute.
But, um, before that,
what I'm gonna say is I'm gonna be taking lots of notes.
Um, so if you've got any questions throughout,
then just please type away in the corner down here,
and then we're gonna open it up.
And me and Julian are gonna put out some of your questions.
So I'm gonna hand over to you now, Julian.
Okay. Well, hello.
It's exciting to say hello to The Gambia. Wow.
Yeah. Uh, so Hello, Leslie in The Gambia.
That's, uh, that's
Exciting. Yeah. It's got worldwide.
So, um, tonight, one of, one of the things I really want
to, um, do tonight is not just talk my way
through kind of a massive long PowerPoint,
but actually make this as interactive as possible.
Mm-Hmm. So that, um,
it feels more like something we are joining in
and doing together, rather than just something that is,
is being kind of broadcast to you.
So, Kate and I are gonna kind of stop every few slides,
just maybe to have a quick chat about something
or, uh, whatever.
And we'd really love to hear your questions
so you can type your questions in.
Um, and, uh, and Kate will pick, pick them up
because the more, the more interactive it is,
the the better, uh, and more fun this is gonna be.
Uh, okay. Now, and I'm, I'm hoping, you know,
I'm not gonna press the wrong button and suddenly disappear
and leave you with nothing on your screens.
Um, so I'm gonna talk a bit about, uh, really, you know,
what this is about why we decided
to become a research school.
Why did we apply for it?
Why did it matter to us at sharing a nursery school?
Um, and it's because I'm really passionate about this idea
that we should bring research closer to earliest settings.
We should be about improving children's life chances.
Uh, so your feedback and thoughts
and experiences will be, uh,
really very much valued this evening.
Uh, thank you very much for being here, everyone.
Um, so you know what use is research.
And I, I do quite often ask myself this question.
I think we are all working harder and we're all doing more.
Certainly everyone I know who's a child minder, uh,
or in an early year setting
or working in a school is working phenomenally hard.
Um, and equally whereas I might have imagined myself, uh,
becoming, say, a deputy head
or a head teacher of the nursery school when I first started
working in, in education, you know,
that would've been my dream.
What I actually do day to day now is, is kind of hardly like
what that job would've been like 20 years ago.
So even though it's the same job title, it's kind
of completely different, different role.
And, and boy is it all hard work.
And I'm sure that everyone who's here tonight, uh,
feels something of the same thing.
In fact, the very fact that you are here tonight joining in
with a webinar when you could be, uh, on Netflix
or whatever, you know, is, is testament to that.
I think also, you know, when I'm in schools
and settings, something I often see is
that we're all constantly taking on new initiatives
and trying to improve practice.
And there's always something going on.
Like, someone's been to a conference
and they've heard an inspiring speaker,
or they've been to a workshop
and they kind of come back really fired up.
But if we're not careful, we're is trying
to do more and more and more stuff.
And, and do we end up just being like on a treadmill,
like a hamster on a wheel just going faster and faster
and faster, but not getting anywhere?
That's sometimes how it feels.
And that is probably the main reason we wanted
to become a research school, is to find,
uh, a different way.
And here, here's the way I like
to think of that different way.
This is from Winnie the Pooh.
Here's Edward Bear coming downstairs now, bump, bump,
bump on the back of his head behind Christopher Robin.
It is, as far as he knows, the only way
of coming downstairs, but sometimes he feels
that there really is another way
if only he could stop bumping for a moment and think of it.
And on a bad day, that's how I can sometimes feel
that it's all bump, bump bump.
When is the time to stop and to think
and to wonder is there another way?
And that's a, a, a big part of the theme, uh,
of, of tonight's webinar.
Um, so why research?
So I think what's important about research is
that we don't look to research for the definitive answers
to the questions we have, but what research can do,
and in particular what a research school like Sheringham can
do, is help us to identify the best bets.
So what is likely to be the best bet if we want
to rethink our approach to helping children's communication?
The research can give us a lot of insight into the sort
of things we should be doing,
but also some of the things we shouldn't be doing.
But it does only give us best bets.
It doesn't tell us the answers.
And we've gotta be incredibly careful not to become
consumers of research,
but critical people who talk about and think about it
and always think about the kids that we are working with.
Um, that way we can make best use of research.
Uh, and as I've said here,
it guides our professional judgment, but it cannot
and should not replace it.
The other thing it's always worth emphasizing is
that working with young children
and their families is complex.
That that's actually why I think it's a great job to have
because it's endlessly interesting.
No two days are anything like each other, but it is complex.
And of the many quotes I really like from the educational
research of Dylan William, this is one physics works
because protons and electrons don't have good days
and bad days.
They behave consistently and predictably.
And all of you working with young children know that
that's not where your work is.
Okay? What we do is really complex. It changes day by day.
It very much depends on, uh,
not just the general group of kids
and parents that we're working with,
but also what sort of a start to the day perhaps one
of our two or our three year olds had.
Did they have a good night's sleep
and get up in a pretty good mood?
Or are we picking up the pieces after a sleepless night
and a fractious morning?
Um, so, so you know, what we are doing is complex
and our professionalism and our skills
and our knowledge are really crucial.
Okay, great. Glad
to see the tech problems are getting sorted in the
background for people too.
Um, so what I'm gonna argue tonight is that one
of the things we need to do is just
to slow down the cycle of change.
We are doing way too much
and we're trying to do it too quickly.
Um, so
before we are thinking about making any sort of change
in our work, these are the
things I think we should be doing.
First of all, check the best bets.
What's worked in other places,
what hasn't worked in other places?
Um, check, check out the, the field.
Um, and that will probably give you a kind of shorter list
of promising approaches you might take.
Um, the second thing I'd say is that anything we do
must be underpinned
by high quality professional development.
And that what that isn't is someone, for example,
going off on training and then coming back
and then being expected to cascade something
to a staff team, that that is not a high quality way
for a group of people to learn together.
Um, something that has often been noticed about cycles of,
uh, change in educational
and childcare establishments is that, uh, we kind
of launch things with a lot of enthusiasm and excitement.
We go to a training event, we bring a trainer in,
everyone reads something in nursery world
and feels really fired up.
And that that's all great, that we have
that passion at the beginning.
But what we don't tend to do is
before we even start planning, implementation,
and evaluation,
so when are people gonna have the time to implement this?
When they're gonna be able to talk about it,
when they're gonna be able to reflect
and talk to each other?
When are they gonna be able to ask questions
and raise things that they're finding difficult?
At what points are we gonna evaluate how things are going?
Because one of the things I think it's really important
to do when we launch something new is have evaluation points
where we look at what's working,
but also what isn't working.
Yeah. Because either something's not working
because there's some sort of barrier to it, so
therefore we need to, uh, do some work
and overcome that barrier.
Or, um, it just isn't gonna work in our settings.
So hey, let's stop doing it and put our effort
and energy into the things that are working.
So we tend to plan the, the, the start
of things really well.
But what we don't tend to be so good at is
what are we gonna be doing in January?
How are we gonna be checking, it's all working out.
How are we gonna review this in April
and stop doing some things?
How are we gonna get everyone together
and redouble our efforts?
Um, so I think all of those things, um, are,
are, are really important.
Um, and I'm just gonna do,
take one quick look about professional development
and then have a pause for, um, some questions
and some reflection here.
So this is from the field, uh, literature review, which, uh,
em, Raj and colleagues undertook, um, in 2018.
And I think this is an incredibly useful summary of
what effective professional development, uh, what
what its features should be.
And what I'm gonna say is that the large majority
of professional development out there is well
short of this level.
A lot of it is very fatty, it's very gimmicky.
It appeals to people, uh,
and offers what I sometimes call edutainment.
So it offers a great workshop or conference
or something that gets everyone fired up,
but it's not high quality professional development.
So here's what E Zero is saying about
what high quality looks like.
Uh, it's about
how high quality interactions extend children's development.
It's about the relevance of self-regulation
to children's educational success.
The links between early language development
and later literacy.
It's about mathematical
and scientific concept development in the early years.
It's about how we use observation assessment
and planning to improve, to improve quality.
It tells us about the importance of early home learning
and connections across early childhood education
and care settings in the home and learning environment
and the relevance of leadership for learning
for children's development and ways to improve it.
So I think if you're looking at PD professional development
and you're not seeing it hit some of those bullet points,
I would say that's a good moment to say this.
This actually, this isn't what I'm looking for.
This isn't, uh, this isn't for me.
So I'm just gonna hand over now as I said, just
to have a little pause and let Kate
or other people come in here. Mm-Hmm.
Yep. Um, there's some questions coming through Julian.
Yeah. Um, so Debbie has said, how do we know
what best practice is?
I want to do the best for our children.
Quality assurance is great,
but if nurseries maybe work closer together.
Yeah. So there's a lot
of really great thoughts in there to unpick Mm-Hmm.
Um, I often tend to prefer to use the, uh,
phrase best practices rather than best practice
because I think there are different practices
that work in different places.
And I think sometimes if we talk about best practice, um,
to, in too narrower way, um, it oversimplifies, um,
the, the, the work we're doing.
So I think it's a great question, Debbie.
How do we know what it is? The, the simple answer to
that is, um, because you see your kids are really thriving
and making good progress.
Uh, and it works for you, it works for your setting,
it works for your children.
Yeah. It's, but go on.
Uh, yeah, no, I was just gonna
say that's completely right.
'cause every setting has got very different children,
very different families.
And like what you're saying,
like there isn't gonna be one thing
that fits everybody is there.
That's that's exactly right.
But I also think that once you, um, feel
that you've got systems running well
and it's working well for the kids in your setting,
that's the moment to look a bit further afield
and think, okay, what are best practices out there?
'cause we've developed this as far as we can Mm-Hmm.
Uh, within our setting and it's working.
What would leading edge practice look like? Mm-Hmm.
And one of the really powerful things zero says,
is never allow anything to be a ceiling
for your professional development.
Yeah. So you may get an outstanding from Ted
or a good from Ted,
you may do really well in someone's QA scheme.
Mm-Hmm. But that doesn't mean that the job is done
and everything is sorted.
Mm-Hmm. There's always further to to go. Yeah.
And I always think that one of the definitions
of a great earliest team, um, is that it knows it needs
to know more Yes.
And be better. Um, so again,
Debbie's question is a good one.
Quality assurance is great and it is great,
but it also can be limiting.
Yes. It, what it should do is both prompt us to reflect
and think, uh, and, and,
and check the basic quality of our processes.
Mm-Hmm. But it should also encourage us then to go
beyond the quality level in that scheme.
Uh, yes. And, and, and to look for leading edge practice.
Um, I think there are some really good tools
to check your process quality out there.
So we use, uh, it is three and ECAs three mm-Hmm.
A great deal at sharing them. Yeah. Uh, you can Google them.
Um, we use something called the inclusive classroom profile
to check how well we're working with kids with SEMD.
So those kind of process quality tools are really,
really, uh, important.
Um, and then the final point,
which Debbie makes really well, there is Yeah.
Nurseries should work closer together. Of course we should.
Yeah. So in, in our bit of Newham in Manor Park,
we all banded together with the support
of funding from the Education Endowment Foundation
and launched a year long program to support, uh,
children's early communication.
Now, any one of us as individual settings
or child minders couldn't have afforded the amount
of professional development reflection Yes.
Thinking time coaching work with external academics.
But because we all banded together,
'cause there was like nearly 20 of us Yes.
We could have a fantastic, um, quality
of professional development running over a whole year.
Yes. None of us could have done that on our own. Yes.
So I, I completely agree with what Debbie's,
uh, Debbie's saying.
So I think connect, uh, be ambitious
and use professional reflection as some
of the key key messages for me now.
Okay. Cool. Um, I've got a question from Leslie. Yeah.
She said, how can we benefit the widest community?
Are we connected sufficiently well in England at the moment?
Yeah. So, um, I think that
we could do a lot more to be more connected,
but I also really understand why we are not,
because in a lot of settings,
and if you're a child minder particularly Yeah.
Uh, you work really long hours. Yeah.
Um, you also probably have other caring
responsibilities in your life.
Maybe your own kids, maybe your parents, maybe both.
And it can be very, very difficult to find that time
for professional learning and reflection.
Yes. And one of, you know, very high up on my wishlist
for improved quality in early years would be a lot more
support for practitioner professional development.
Yes. But using the sort of, um, lens
that is on our slide at the moment.
Not, not the, not the gimmicky stuff,
not the short term stuff.
Yes. The, the sort of professional development
that will really support, uh, practitioners
and settings, uh, in, in, in the long term.
Yes. Um, so I would say probably in my ideal world,
I would have probably quite a lot less courses
and conferences and professional development going on.
But what I would have going on would be longer duration, um,
and higher and higher quality.
Yes. Um, and it's not just
because I'm your guest tonight that I'm saying this case,
but I think the fact that Tales toolkit provides
that year round support Mm-Hmm.
The online training, the model that all the staff have got
to train in this, not just one or two enthusiasts.
That's, I think one, one of the reasons this is proving
to be such a, uh, a successful, um, so successful.
Um, okay.
And, and I'm seeing some really
important comments coming through.
Yes. We're gonna have to move on in a moment, but, Mm-Hmm.
Um, so it's, Tracy's asked about inclusive setting profile.
It's inclusive. It's if you Google inclusive classroom
profile Mm-Hmm.
Uh, you'll find some info on that online.
And our research school is running a free seminar
in February on that.
So if you go to East London Research School Mm-Hmm.
Again, just, just search online
for East London Research School, you can come to a free, uh,
introduction to the inclusive classroom profile.
Um, and, and you are very welcome to come along to
that Tracy or anyone else who can make it,
if you can't make it to Stratford and East London.
There is quite a bit of information online about the ICP.
Cool. And Honey has said here
that child minders often feel disconnected.
Mm-Hmm. Um, and I agree.
Uh, now of course, honey is, uh, someone I know
and is, is, uh, a, a, a fantastic childminder
who shows amazing, um, commitment both to the kids
and to our own professional development and learning.
But it is very, very difficult.
And I would again, uh, up there in my kind of top five
or top 10 would be that just like everyone else,
child minders would get those paid days Mm-Hmm.
Three to five paid days every year
for their professional development.
Yeah. And that parents would really understand
that just like you might rock up to m and s one morning
and see on the door that it's not opening
till 10:00 AM that day.
Mm-Hmm. Because of staff training, that if we want quality,
then we have to support professional learning
and professional development.
Mm-Hmm. Um, and I'd really like
to see child minders have a lot more, uh,
support than they get at the moment.
Yeah. Yep. Yeah.
Do you want, okay, so, so I'm gonna move us, uh,
I'm gonna move us on now.
Yep. Um,
and I think that sometimes something
that can be quite difficult in the early years is,
is also something that is great about the early years.
And that's the role of tradition in our sector.
And the person that really prompted me
to have this thought was, uh,
ya de Beal recently at the new early years conference.
Um, so I think part
of what's great about the early years comes from our roots,
uh, and from our, from our traditions.
Um, so there's some photos there of Susan Isaacs
who I still read Susan Isaacs and,
and find her a kind of inspiring, um, educator,
uh, and thinker, Margaret McMillan, uh, Montessori,
all really, really important, um, people.
But, um, I think sometimes the tradition as Jan was arguing,
and I agree with him, is problematic
because I think we can end up rather,
in a rather unthinking way, following traditional practices
or approaches because it's
what we learned when we were training, or
because they carry with them the weight of tradition.
And actually we should be stopping and thinking it's 2020.
Is this still the best approach
to helping children's learning?
So Susan Isaacs, for example, who I admire hugely,
but she didn't have at her fingertips all
of the research we have now about
how important children's early language
development is to their thinking.
So sh so that aspect of practice, um, is, is,
is is not as strong in her writing as it needs to be.
Um, one, one of the ways I sometimes put this is, um,
you know, think, think, think about Florence Nightingale.
Now, Florence Nightingale is an incredible person,
groundbreaking, not just in terms of, uh,
inventing the modern idea of nursing,
but also in her understanding of data analysis.
You know, she's the inventor of the pie chart.
You know, what a woman, but would you like
to be on the Florence Nightingale ward in 2020?
No, you wouldn't, because she didn't accept
that germs caused diseases.
And I think that it is important for all
of us in early years not to get, um,
over influenced by tradition
or by things that we saw when we were training
and that we just replicate.
And I would say, like, always ask yourself the question why,
you know, why water play?
Why sand play? Why the dressing up corner?
Always ask yourself those questions.
Um, and don't just kind of follow through, uh, what
what we've always learned
and what we've always, uh, what we've always done.
And that makes me come onto my next point, which is that,
um, some things aren't going
so well in early years at the moment.
You know, we, you just have to look around
and see that a lot of young children aren't developing
as well as we'd like them to think about some
of the kids you see every day
and think about maybe their physical development and health
or their communication,
and consider how damaging, uh,
that can be to those children.
Um, and of course there are many complex factors coming into
play here, but one of the areas
that we can influence is early education and childcare.
And despite all of the effort that a lot of us have made
and all of the passion we put into this, we haven't
yet done enough to make sure
that every child gets a good start to their education.
The gap between disadvantaged kids
and others by the end of the EYFS hasn't moved for years.
So we haven't got any better at this.
Uh, I think it's in the last six years, many factors
come into play there.
But one of them is, uh, what we do in early years
to support children's early learning and development.
Um, so you can see there's the E-Y-F-S-P outcomes.
It's, it's, it's, it's hardly moving.
That gap between disadvantaged children
and the rest is something that we as a system seem
to be stuck on at the moment.
Um, and, um, it's been estimated that, uh,
the current trend, it'll take around 50 years
for the disadvantage gap to close
by the time kids take their GCSEs.
Um, you know, so, so I won't be around to see
that day if it ever comes.
Uh, if we don't do better than we are doing at the moment,
why does this particularly matter?
So let's think about literacy.
So the OECD, the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development, a a few, I was thinking I might forget one
of those letters, uh, comments around 15%
of the adult population can't fully understand the
instructions on a bottle of aspirin
and the OECD reports
that these literacy problems are especially serious in
England, where younger adults perform no better than older
ones, although there is a bit
of change happening in that space at the moment.
But doesn't that feel like a very minimal thing for kids
to have achieved by the time they've had all those years
of compulsory education, that they should be able
to get the hang of something as basic
as the safety instructions on the back
of a bottle of aspirin?
Um, we know that, um, poor
skills in early communication,
difficulties in your social emotional development, uh,
can cause long-term
and adverse effects for kids as they go, uh,
as they go through school.
It's really, really important
and it's so important for us to remember that
what we do is really important.
So, um, as Ted Mellish
and others reported in, in the, the Care impact review
with regard to provision for three years onwards,
disadvantaged children benefit,
particularly from high quality preschool provision.
So that's why the best bets that I was talking about earlier
and high quality professional development really matters
with reference to everything I've just been talking about,
because it's disadvantaged kids who will benefit the most
when we get all of this.
Right. So, in a moment,
I'm gonna look a bit more closely at a couple
of important areas, but I'm gonna again pause just for Kate
to bring in a few questions
and to, to make a few comments here. Mm-Hmm.
Um, Leslie was asking Julian, um,
is the East London Research School looking at ACEs
or doing anything with the ACE scores?
Okay. So at first childhood experiences, uh, ACEs, uh,
are, uh, really an important thing for us to think about.
Uh, the research is showing that ACEs are, uh,
experiences that kids can have both in their early years
and later in their childhood.
Yeah. So it is quite important that we think about this
as something that covers the, the whole age phase
of early years, primary and secondary,
and fe um, not, not just early years education.
Um, so for, for, for us, uh, at the moment,
the, the hold we tend to have on that is just, is more
to think that lots of kids we come into contact
with have had some sort of difficult early experience.
Um, sometimes we know about it. Yes. Sometimes we don't.
What the evidence tells us is that, um, how we respond to
that is really important.
And I'm just gonna kind of pick up two, uh,
of many things I could say about that.
Mm-Hmm. One is that, um,
where children have what's sometimes called high
levels of reactivity.
Yeah. So a kid who's had difficult early experiences
is exactly the sort of kid that if something goes wrong,
they're highly reactive.
Mm-Hmm. So if the jigsaw isn't going their way,
they might kind of throw it up in the air or stamp on it,
or hit hit somebody because they're feeling so mad about it.
Uh, that that sort of thing might well happen.
Or if you, uh, ask them to do something
that they don't immediately want to do,
they might respond in a very angry way
to an earliest practitioner.
So those highly reactive children are very difficult to work
with, but we know that if we respond
to those kids in kind Mm-Hmm.
So in other words, if we respond angrily and harshly Yes.
Um, it makes things much worse for them. Yes.
But we also know, and this is the exciting bit,
that if we respond calmly
and we're sympathetic whilst maintaining firm boundaries
and we are consistent.
Yes. And that if the routines of our settings are very clear
and sensible and understood by the children,
that you can actually give kids who've had those difficult
early experiences, a a different sort of pathway.
And over time, one of the reasons that early education is
so important for children who've not had the best early
experiences is it gives them another road to follow.
Um, yes. And, and that can be really life changing
for those kids, whereas if we don't get it right,
we reinforce Mm-Hmm.
The difficulties they, they had. Yes.
So, harsh responses to highly reactive children
make things much worse.
Yes. On the other hand,
a well implemented key person approach calm mm-Hmm.
Empathetic. Yes. Uh, supportive, good routines,
sensible boundaries.
A actually that makes a really
big positive difference for children.
Yes. Um, and people might also be interested to know
that in, um, the, uh, review of Tools of the Mind,
which is an American program, uh,
where there's a very strong focus on play-based learning
and supporting children's emotional development.
Mm-Hmm. A key component of tools of the mind is
what we in England might call supervision
or what we at showing them call work discussion
where a trained, uh, in our case, a trained, uh, child
and adolescent mental health specialist
with a psychoanalytic background
and an expertise in naught fives, works
with our staff team regularly.
Yes. Uh, to create a reflective space to talk about, uh,
some of the emotional experiences we have when
we're working with the children.
And to think more about the children's, um,
emotional development and how we can support that.
So that's the, that's the, the, the first thing I would say.
Mm-Hmm. The second thing I would say is that, um,
really interesting research from UCL Institute of Education
through their supporting spoken language in classrooms
project shows that one of the biggest ways
to make a difference to young children's emotional wellbeing
is to improve their early communication.
Yes. So, rather than maybe have a whole load
of interventions around PSED Mm-Hmm.
What we should really be doing is at a whole school,
whole nursery as child minders throughout the day,
doing everything we can
to help children's early communication.
Because if children can talk about
how they're feeling Mm-Hmm.
And can deal with the ups and downs of life through language
and through negotiation Yes.
That actually makes them emotionally, uh, healthier. Yes.
They're much less likely to become stressed
and anxious as they get older.
Mm-Hmm. And it also then that means that schools, instead
of being faced with a lot of kids who look like they need,
um, support, uh, for their emotional development, will see
that the large majority of kids are helped by sound.
Earliest practice well implemented key person approach.
Yeah. Strong focus on communication all the way
through the school, not just in early years.
Key stage one, key stage two.
And then that makes it easier for the school to realize,
which are those small numbers of children who are going
to need that intensive help.
From cams Yes. From, from from other agencies.
Um, so play, yes. Supporting children's only communication.
Mm-Hmm. Personal approach, work discussion for staff.
These, these are kind of all really important things.
Um, yes. In, in, in my opinion.
Yes. That's good. Yeah.
And it fits in, 'cause when we started tell's toolkit, a lot
of people would say to us, what do you impact?
And, uh, there was a lot of stuff in terms of literacy
and language and social skills,
but really everything
that we did was about those interactions
and giving children a voice and having that kind of back
and forth conversation and time to do that.
And that impacts everything. Yeah.
And yeah, that's
where all the difference is made, isn't it? Yeah.
And I think that the child who is
communicating confidently, making up stories,
maybe working stuff out through, uh, small world play,
uh, is a child who's very likely
to have sound emotional development
and to develop the sort of resilience Yes.
That will help them through, uh, any difficult experiences
that, that, that they've had earlier.
Yes. So, for the large majority of kids,
the best thing we can do for them is do
what we do really well.
Yes. Not try and wear every single hat out there. Yes.
So not try to be early as educator One minute Yes.
Psychologist the next minute Yeah. Et cetera, et cetera.
Actually, uh, the best thing we can do Yeah.
Is, is be great key people to children. Yes.
Support their play, support their communication,
have sensible routines and boundaries.
Yes. Uh, that, that, that, that is a really,
really good environment
for young children who've had difficult early experiences.
Yes. Um, and it also helps us to see the small number
of kids Mm-Hmm.
For whom that actually isn't, isn't enough.
Yes, that's true. Um, Debbie's got a question here. Yeah.
Do you think the knowledge and experience
that we offer children become crucial?
Do you,
Yeah. Um,
absolutely.
So, um, I think that, um,
yeah, so that's such a big question to ask,
and I'm kind of gonna try
and think of a sensible way to answer it without,
without kind of waffling too much.
Mm-Hmm. Um, Mm-Hmm.
So I do, I do think that, um,
knowledge is really important for young children
because, uh, once you know some things, it's a lot easier
to learn more things.
Mm-Hmm. Um, so a lot of you, for example, might have
that image of the, um, the kid who's really into dinosaurs.
So we know that if you know three dinosaurs as a kid Mm-Hmm.
You can know the names of 10 and 20 and 30 quite easily.
Yes. And, and then, you know, you get this brilliant effect
where this kind of 4-year-old is, you know,
giving you chapter and verse about pterodactyls
or something, which is, which is, you know,
what it's all about, uh, for me.
So I think that sometimes we underestimate the importance
of, um, helping children know the names
of more things and know more about stuff.
Mm-Hmm. Because we focus more on sort of what,
what they're choosing to do, how, how long they do it for,
uh, tho those sorts of things.
So characteristics of effective teaching
and learning, I think is a really important part of the UFS.
Yes. But it has to go hand in hand
with actually learning something.
Mm-Hmm. It can't just be this sense that children direct
that, uh, all themselves.
So, again, for me, one of the things
that's really good about Tale's toolkit is
that it gives you that scaffolding.
Mm-Hmm. So if you are not the sort of child who is used
to making up and telling stories through small world play
or whatever, it gives you the kind of footholds to be able
to do that, to understand the sort of ways
that stories are put together.
And that's an important thing for, for children to know.
Yeah. But I think what can be really disappointing is that,
um, when you are in an early years setting
or you're in a school and, um, you see for example,
that there's hardly any time given to conversation
between children and adults.
Everyone is super busy all of the time. Yeah.
Some children might go through a whole session,
not have a conversation with an adult at all,
and those children are really missing out on
important stuff.
They might be playing, they might be
happy, they might be busy.
Mm-Hmm. But conversation extended turn,
taking conversation is really important for those children.
And to go back to sort of the theme from earlier,
what I would then say is that those kids,
they are not gonna talk to anyone
unless they feel really well loved
and cherished and cared for.
So unless you've got your key person approach Right.
And all of your personal social emotional development Right.
You're not gonna get your communication right.
Because no kid is gonna say something
unless they think that the adult is interested in them Yes.
As an individual. Um, so when,
when early years works really well, it's
because everything holds together, uh, in, in that sort of,
uh, in that sort of way.
Okay. So I've got a very kind
of tricky question there is remembering crucial,
but missing from characteristics
of effective teaching and learning.
Um, and I'd have to go back
and read it to, to answer that very good question.
But I would say in terms of what's at our fingertips,
we probably don't think about it as as much
as, as much as we might do.
But I'd encourage everyone to think
of remembering very broadly.
So if you are a 3-year-old who can
get on a trike balance on that seat pedal
and steer and go round obstacles, that's
because you've remembered a lot of stuff you've laid down
that's schema for Mm-Hmm.
Balance, ride steer, and it's in your long term memory,
and you can just do it automatically.
Yes. So we mustn't think of remembering in a narrow way.
The, you, you know, children show us, uh, that,
that they've laid down things, uh,
in their long term memory in
lots and lots of different ways.
It's not all about vocabulary and skill
and skills in the more obvious, uh, ways
that we might think about. Mm-Hmm.
Yep. Um, and Debbie's saying there,
once strong relationships have been established,
we use serve, return recall and question
and sustain shared thinking a lot.
Yeah. We, which, which, which, which sounds fantastic.
Yes. Um, but sadly
too many kids are in, uh, provision
where that's not the case.
Yes. And, uh,
I'm gonna talk about that in a moment, actually.
Let's, let's look at some specifics here. Yeah.
So, um, one of the main things
that the Research School Network offers is support
with implementation when it comes
to these guidance reports from the Education
Endowment Foundation.
And I thought I'd used the last bit of tonight
to just pick out a few things from two recent ones.
One is preparing for literacy, uh,
and the other is the report on early maths, which is, uh,
just being released, um, this week, end of last week.
So, uh, these,
if you go on the Education Endowment Foundation's website,
you will find lots of information, uh,
about the best bets.
So preferring for literacy tells us a lot about
what the highest quality research
is saying about children's early literacy.
Uh, what research schools do is connect
earliest practitioners, settings, child minders schools
together to support with the implementation,
because we all know
that if someone could just publish a report
and that would sort it out, you know,
that person would now be a kind
of billionaire, wouldn't they?
And we wouldn't have half the problems we've got.
So we know it's one thing to know about the research
and the evidence, but it's quite a different thing, um,
to be able to put that into practice.
And that's what research schools are here for.
And that's what we really want to do, uh,
as a research school, is to help connect people, create
that community of learners, um, so that we all get smarter
at implementing, uh, the, the, the research and evidence.
So, uh, preparing for literacy, um, begins with
the kind of seven, top 10, uh,
things that we should all be doing
to support children's early literacy, uh, in the EYFS.
Um, so you, you get a really useful summary there,
and I'm just gonna zero in, uh, on number one,
which is prioritize the development of communication,
uh, and language.
And I've already sort of touched on some of these things
before, but let's, let's just think a bit about
what early years provision might look like
if we prioritize the development
of communication and language.
Um, so the eef summarizes the evidence here is telling us
that language provides the foundation of thinking
and learning and should be prioritized.
So I think we quite commonly see
that go a little bit wrong, uh, in, in two different ways.
The first way is that sometimes as kids move into reception,
the focus on some aspects of early literacy,
like early reading and early writing, drowns out
the focus that's needed on language and communication.
You have to have them hand in hand because
unless children through their reception year
and through key stage one are getting a lot of support
with their spoken language, with their understanding
funding, they're gonna hit a brick wall when it comes
to their early reading and writing.
And you've seen those children who, uh, are asked
to write something, but actually in their com,
in their spoken language, they struggle even to think
of something to say, okay, so how are we expecting them
to write interesting things if they're not yet saying them
or thinking them?
So we must prioritize, uh, communication
for children for that reason.
I'm not saying that we should
not introduce any early literacy until
children have reached a certain level of communication.
I am saying that those two things should go hand in hand.
And where you see schools, um,
having put a lot more thought
and planning into some aspects of early literacy,
but not this aspect, I think they've gone wrong.
And I think they're missing something, um, that is, uh,
really, uh, very important for them to think about.
Um, we know that, uh,
children really benefit from
what is called dialogic reading or shared reading.
So that's where instead of kids being largely expected
to sit and be good
and listen to stories, they have regular opportunities,
often one-to-one
or in small groups to look at a picture book
and talk about what's going on
and raise their questions, link
what they see to their own ideas.
And that's where a lot of vocabulary learning can
happen for young children.
So it's really important that we are not just sort
of performing picture books to children aged 2, 3, 4, 5,
but we're actually in small groups with them,
and we are talking about the story and the book, uh,
and we're encouraging children to share their, their,
their ideas, um, to,
so there's some really important messages, um, in there.
Um, and there's, there's, there's an interesting in, uh,
piece of work that's being done by, uh,
Nuffield at the moment around, uh, talking, talking time.
And that's about giving children, uh, making sure
that children regularly, I at least twice a week,
get a short amount of time when they're in a small group
and they're just in conversation around a picture book
or a set of pictures.
And I really think that, uh, if in a kind of free flow
play-based early years environment, you can't be confident
that children are getting at least 20 minutes of
conversation with an adult around a book
or around something of interest.
You have to really look and review what you are doing.
And I really think if you're in a reception class
and you've got really well planned phonics teaching,
but you haven't got really well planned approaches
to supporting children's communication
and language, uh, again, you are, you are missing something
that's, uh, that's really important.
But what I'm not saying is that we should kind of wait
until all of that is established.
Before we start on early literacy, uh, experiences
with children, I'm just saying that we must make sure that
that the, that these things go hand in hand, um,
and together, um, I'm just gonna quickly say a couple
of things about, uh, early maths as well.
Uh, and then we'll, we'll have a, a block
of time at the end, uh, to talk.
So here are the five key recommendations of the EF report,
uh, around early maths, which you can, uh,
search out online and have a look at.
And I'm just gonna zero in, uh, on this one here,
which is about dedicate time for children
to learn mathematics
and integrate mathematics, um, throughout the day.
So a lot of us,
and absolutely me included for a long time,
I think worked on the assumption
that if we had a high quality, uh, environment with lots
of rich mathematical opportunities for children, uh,
well-trained practitioners,
that we'd be picking up on children's mathematical thinking
and extending their learning all of the time.
That that's somewhat true,
but not as true as I would've once, uh, believed.
And I'm really interested in this, um, piece of research,
uh, by Jolene Dal, which is, uh, published, uh,
with her co-writer Sue Gifford in 2015.
And she talks about
how she investigated this in her nursery class.
She says, during a four day week, we flooded our environment
with activities that could potentially lend themselves
to number and calculating ideas in order to identify when,
where, and how often children engaged with friends
and mathematical ideas.
We agreed to keep an event sample
of mathematical incidents both inside the classroom
and outside in our garden area.
Despite this huge input, we noted a total of just 57
incidents relating to the mathematics area
of the EYFS 37 of which held possible reference to number
and calculation ideas.
These represented just 17 children out
of the 52 in the class.
This activity highlighted how few incidents took place,
how inconsistent they were between children,
and how fleeting mathematical involvement was
without adult intervention.
Um, Sue Gifford, um, comments, uh,
about exactly that point in, in another piece
where she says, children were unlikely to learn about number
through independent play, a laissez fair approach
to children learning maths in the secret garden
of play doesn't work.
Opportunities may be there,
but children will not necessarily take advantage of them.
And we are gonna put a blog out, um, later this week
or maybe early next week, um,
about this from our research school
and talk a bit about what we've learned about early maths
at sharing them.
But it's definitely telling us that we need to have
explicit structures
and points in the day when children are focused on
mathematical learning, as well as lots of opportunities
through play.
And we've got to sometimes be really clever about
how we funnel the play-based provision so
that it's mathematical.
So that, just to give you a really basic example,
in our graphics areas, we only have now like five pens,
five colored pencils, five rulers.
Um, and there's a massive emphasis at tidying uptime
on finding the, the five and counting them
and getting it right and knowing when you've finished.
So instead of just having a kind of random pot, it's five.
And children know when they've finished that tidying up task
because they've counted the five pens
and put them, um, in the pot.
So you can do kind of clever structuring
of your basic routines, snack time, tidying up time
arrivals, parking bikes, all of those sorts of things
you can really structure to focus on mathematical learning.
But what you can't do,
and where I've gone wrong, is to assume that just
because you have the resources and just
because staff are really high quality,
that the mathematical learning is going to happen.
That's not true. That's not how things are looking. Okay.
So I'm gonna have another, uh, pause now
and let Kate, Kate come in.
Oh, it's, um, so I've got a question here,
Julian from Leslie, and she said,
does the research school have a role in influencing parents
in supporting their children's early literacy and maths?
Um, well, I don't,
I guess like everyone has a role in influencing that and,
and, and, and I guess we would like
to play our part as much as possible.
So, um, I'd say a few things about, uh, parents that
to me are really important.
Mm-Hmm. The first one is that we've, we've, we've kind
of got to really think about two things at the same time
when we are thinking about, say, families, uh,
disadvantaged children, which is,
on the one hand we've gotta have that big picture
that our system doesn't work well
for disadvantaged kids and families.
But we've also gotta remember that under that headline,
every family and every child is unique Mm-Hmm.
They bring their own important skills and competencies
and joy into, into our world,
and we have to really treasure them
and value them and build on that.
And we've gotta be very careful
that we don't just talk about deficits
and what's, what's missing.
Yes. Um, something I learned
that was really important from um,
Kathy Nut Brown in Sheffield many years ago was, uh,
when I was kind of slightly cross
because a parent had come to me
and said, you know, you don't teach a BC here,
and I've taught my daughter all the A, b, C at home
and you haven't done anything for it.
And, and in a slightly kind of idiotic way, I kind of said,
well, you know, that isn't actually
how children learn their early liter, you know,
learn the kind of early stages of literacy.
Um, and what, what Kathy taught me,
and she was very nice about this, so I didn't
cry on the spot, I just Kind of thought about it
for a long time, was that, um, that that's kind of a bit
of an abuse of my power as an educator over the parent.
Yes. And what would've been much more helpful would've been
to say to that parent, you know, what's great that you are
teaching your child the alphabet song?
Mm-Hmm. So it's fantastic that you sit down
and show your child how to write letters.
That's really good. Yes.
Here's a few other things that you could be doing Yes.
That will now help them learn some
of the other things they need to do Yes.
To become a writer. Yes.
And I've always tried to keep that as my rule of thumb,
which is to value what families do,
but then maybe to suggest some things, uh,
that will help them Mm-Hmm.
Take take their child further Yes.
To explain why we do what we do in early years,
rather than just assume
that all families are gonna be on board
with play-based learning.
Mm-Hmm. And, and really to learn from families, um, as much
as we've got things to teach them as early as educators.
Yeah. They've got things to teach us about their kids. Yes.
And it's only gonna work if it's a two way street like that.
Yeah. Yeah. Um, no, that's a really good piece of advice.
'cause I think for parents, a lot of it's about knowledge
and confidence and at all costs.
You don't wanna knock their confidence.
So that, I think, and you can very, very easily do that.
'cause a lot of parents are quite scared of school
and see it very differently to us.
Yeah. And,
and, um, not all parents had a brilliant experience
of being at school themselves.
No. So we have to be really the ambassadors for education
and to say, learning can be great for you, for your child.
Yes. And you can only do
that if you establish the rapport, rapport with the parent.
Mm-Hmm. Uh, and that involves a lot of listening. Yes.
And a, and a and a lot of understanding.
And I think that's why Kathy nut brand's suggestion
of always saying, yeah, that's really great.
And also think about something else Yes.
Uh, is really powerful.
Yes. That's it. Yeah.
Debbie's saying, knowing the positives
of individual culture capital is vital
and giving them the knowledge too.
So
Yeah. Yeah, I agree
with that.
And um, some of that, uh, is
you, you, you know, when,
when we look at our core books at Sheringham, for example,
you know, one of them is Lima's Red Hot Chili.
Yes. Now our kids who come largely from Pakistani,
Bangladeshi, Indian Heritage families,
they know far more than me about what it's like
to eat something that's too hot.
Yes. And their response to
that story has taught me a lot about Yeah.
How a small child experiences, uh, that type
of, that type of cooking.
So we need to know about what cultural capital
the kids are coming in with.
Yes. But we also have a responsibility that if they aren't
from families that are confident to go to the park
or take a bus ride
or go to the museum that's free Yes.
Uh, via the tube that's free for under fives,
that's something we can really offer those families, um,
and, and give those children those wider experiences.
Yes. Um, that, that often really set their learning on fire,
those firsthand experiences.
Yeah, that's true. Um, I was gonna to ask you, Julian,
because you are actually,
this kind of leads in a little bit.
You're gonna be one of our schools that works
with us on developing our parent training.
Yeah. Which is, um,
and you've been supporting us right from the start,
and I think you've talked a little bit about the research,
but I think what you do really well in your school is
that you have a balance of trying new things
and kind of looking for new things out there in the market,
but also then going with, well-known research
and well kind of tried out methods too.
Like how do you have those balances
and what's your recommendations for other schools with that?
Yeah. I think I just think do, don't, don't do as much,
but, but try and do what you do as well as you can.
Mm-Hmm. And, and also we, we get this wrong
and I certainly get it wrong all of the time,
so I'm always over emphasizing how much we can get through
and how fast we can develop.
Yes. And the risk then is that you don't get people
as confident or as Sure.
Or as able to raise questions or whatever.
So I think that's really important.
Um, and um, you know, a long time ago,
I think I read something about how the development
of any organization is as fast Mm-Hmm.
As the slowest person in the organization. Yes.
You don't want a load of hairs running ahead doing all these
innovative and exciting things and,
and other people not being involved.
And again, we do get that wrong all of the time,
but we try at least to be conscious of it
and think about how we can keep our whole team together.
And I'm honest, this is honestly true.
Every single day something will happen at Sheringham
and I'll think, gosh, that practitioner is just
so insightful.
Yes. Or handles that
so much better than I ever could or Yes.
You know, has has something at their fingertips
that I wish I had.
So the staff teams bring
an enormous richness.
They all, they always do. Yes. Yes.
Um, but we have to hold that alongside the fact that many
of our staff didn't get the initial training that was
of the quality it should have been.
Mm-Hmm. And they've not, they've probably been let down,
if they got a level three, they probably didn't get
what they should have had from their college.
Yes. So we're always trying to, uh, recognize that,
uh, you know, we should be providing stuff to help
or, you know, our whole team.
Yes. Uh, keep up and, and stay interested, um, yes.
In in what's happening in the field.
Yeah. Um, I've got to say,
and I've told this to lots of people,
but I was, I was lucky enough
to be in Julian's school the day when he got the offset call
and um, and he came into the classroom
and I've never seen anything like it.
Julian, all the other schools are like, right,
we've got the school open
till midnight, we're all having pizza.
But Julian came in and you were just very calm
and you said, everybody go home on time
and just, you know, take a deep breath
and come back in tomorrow and show us your best
self and we'll be great.
We've got this, it's fine.
And I think a lot of that comes from the fact
that you do back things at research
and that you do have all this knowledge that comes
behind all of the practice
that you put into place in your school.
And I think I, I'm, I think your school's great Julian, so
I dunno, I'm, I'm gonna hand over now,
but I think it leads in really nicely to the next part.
'cause there's lots of people asking how they engage
with the research school. Great.
And I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm quite honestly really moved
by you saying that, Kate.
Mm-Hmm. So, thank, thank you. And, um,
Yeah, it's true.
Um, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm really touched
that you feel that Mm-Hmm.
About, about working with us. Yeah. Um, okay.
So, um, research schools.
So just, just search online for East London Research School.
Um, you can sign up for our newsletter.
So we do a monthly newsletter. Um, we also blog about stuff.
Well, we will blog about stuff.
'cause you see, we're a new research school,
so we're still getting kind of this,
but, um, Fliss James, who's one of our specialist leaders
of education and I are kind of working together on a,
on a blog about the early maths report at the moment.
Mm-Hmm. So we really want the, uh, research school
to become a hub for lots
and lots of, uh, stuff that's really interesting.
Um, we are covering the full spectrum
of education from early years through to secondary, so
that's also exciting.
But we know that one of our first areas
of expertise is early years
and we want people, uh, to join in
because it's very early days for our research school.
And the research school is only what it becomes
by people joining in and making it.
It's not something that I can do
or that we can push out there or that we can broadcast.
It's about a community of people joining in together.
Together. Mm-Hmm. And learning together
and doing something together.
So, um, we'd love it if you searched online for us.
Sign up to our newsletter, follow us on Twitter,
check out our blog on Early Years Maths.
As I said, it is very early days for our research school.
We're just getting going, so this is a great time to join it
and, and to drive it forward.
Um, you can join in with lots of our activities
and as you get more in the swing of working
with the Research School Network, the, uh,
education Endowment Foundation offers both the opportunity
for you to apply to be a research school in your own right.
Or to be an associate research school.
So for people that would like to see that sort
of golden sight, uh, there it is.
So that's how it was for us a few years ago.
We thought we'd really like, uh, to do this.
Um, so we'd love you to join everyone out there. Follow us.
Mm-Hmm. Take part, shape it all. Mm-Hmm.
Um, get involved in what we're doing.
Um, and, um, you know,
one day become an associate research school
or a research school in your own Right.
Yeah. That's good. And I think you've answered the
question there about how do you become a research
school so it's all covered.
Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Okay. And, um, Tracy? Yep.
10 pencils and pens have a go at.
Have a go at what, what happens if you go down to five.
I think it's, uh, it's kind of interesting doing that piece
of work to, uh, really make number real
for children. Mm-Hmm.
Yep. So I'm gonna, I'm gonna kind of put an into it there
and let everybody go off and have an evening.
So just want to say a thank you to Julian for talking
with us tonight and giving up his time.
Um, and also a massive thank you for all of you
that have come out and spent the
evening chatting with us as well. Yeah,
Absolutely. A second that. Thank
you so much Kate and everyone.
Yeah, no, lovely, lovely to chat with you.
Okay. Have a good evening. Everyone. Have a good.