Description
Book SynopsisThe market leading text for beginning teachers on all undergraduate, postgraduate and school-based routes to QTS, this is an essential introduction to the key skills and knowledge needed to become a successful teacher. Offering advice on all aspects of teaching and learning, this ninth edition has been thoroughly updated to reflect changes in the field and covers key new topics, including the science of learning, online pedagogies and working with your mentor. There are also expanded units on diversity and inclusion and teacher wellbeing.
The text includes a wealth of examples and tasks to support you in successfully applying theory to practice, and in critically reflecting on and analysing your practice to maximise pupil learning. The wide range of pedagogical features supports both school- and university-based work up to Masters level. Written by experts in the field, the 41 concise units are underpinned by evidence-informed practice and focus on what you need to know to thr
Table of Contents
1. BECOMING A TEACHER, 1.1. What do teachers do?, 1.2. Beginning teachers' roles and responsibilities, 1.3. Developing your resilience: Managing stress, workload and time, 1.4. Using digital technologies for professional practice, 2. BEGINNING TO TEACH, 2.1. Reading classrooms: How to maximise learning from classroom observation, 2.2. Schemes of learning, units of learning and lesson planning, 2.3. Taking responsibility for the whole class, 2.4. Working effectively with your mentor, 3. CLASSROOM INTERACTIONS AND MANAGING PUPILS, 3.1. Communicating with pupils, 3.2. Motivating pupils, 3.3. Managing classroom behaviour: Adopting a positive approach, 3.4. Conceptualising and theorising primary-secondary transitions, 4. MEETING INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 4.1. Pupil grouping, progression and adaptive teaching, 4.2. Adolescence, health and wellbeing, 4.3. Cognitive development, 4.4. Responding to diversity, 4.5. Values education – discussion and deliberation, 4.6. An introduction to inclusion, special educational needs and disability, 5. HELPING PUPILS LEARN, 5.1. Ways pupils learn, 5.2. Active learning, 5.3 Teaching styles, 5.4. Improving your teaching: An introduction to practitioner research, reflective practice and evidence-informed practice, 5.5. Closing the achievement gap: Self-regulation and personalising learning, 5.6. Educational neuroscience: Classroom practice and the brain, 5.7. Developing critical thinking, 5.8. Creating a language-rich classroom, 5.9. Pedagogy – the science, craft and performance of teaching, 6. ASSESSMENT, 6.1. Developing formative assessment practice for high-impact teaching, 6.2. External assessment and examinations, 6.3. Using assessment data effectively: making better decisions for teaching and learning, 7. THE SCHOOL, CURRICULUM AND SOCIETY, 7.1. Aims of education, 7.2. The secondary school curriculum, 7.3. Secondary schools in England: governance, policy and curriculum, 7.4. Secondary schools in Northern Ireland: governance, policy and curriculum, 7.5. Secondary schools in Scotland: the policy landscape and drivers of school reform, 7.6. Secondary schools in Wales: governance, policy and curriculum. 8. YOUR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT, 8.1. Getting your first post, 8.2. Developing further as a teacher, 8.3. Accountability, 9. AND FINALLY