Alex Ford Profile picture
13 Jul, 14 tweets, 6 min read
A few things to take issue with @StuartLock (and choosing to ignore the use of "histrionics")
1) On what metric is ITT quality too low, or curriculum poor? What would be an acceptable measure of quality + what % of the sector should be meeting this? Recent inspections are v pos
2) Heresy normally involves challenging an orthodoxy. The orthodoxy in the DfE has been that ITT is poor ever since Michael Gove took on the role of Secretary of State. This is also the orthodoxy of a vocal portion of Twitter.
3) Let's unpick the issues with the suggestions beyond the evidnece base:
a) ITT should indeed have evidence-led curricula but following the CCF (a static document) takes us away from that. You cannot follow an explicit plan AND be led by unfolding evidnece.
b) There is no costing model for the subject specific mentor training.
c) There is no sense of how 'lead mentors' will be subject specialists nor how NPQs will support development of subject communities and therefore the authority of such mentors.
c) cont... there is no clear model for the use of 'lead mentors', no studies to show their efficacy. They appear to be lifted from the Teach First approach.
d) It is not clear how the 38 weeks will be funded or what difference those extra 4 weeks on most courses will make.
d) cont... Despite now asking for 38 weeks there is no clear steer on how much subejct/phase input trainees shoudl get as an entitlement. This varies massively across the sector from 40 days to 5 (or fewer).
e) There is no clear sense of what impact the 'intensive placement' will have - the studies it is based on - how it might be used - nor how students would be protected from the potential risks of being guinnea pigs for behavioural training or similar.
e) cont.. the 'intensive placement' seems to run againts established models of training which show how input->practise approaches do not lead to meaningful changes in teacher behaviour or feelings of efficacy.
e) cont... the intensive placment element would be again expensive to run and difficult to put in place without having ITT lead providers as schools only. This therefore pushes HEIs to the side.
It is perfectly possible to believe in the need for systemic improvements without a full reaccreditation process. Ofsted recently found schools' curricular thinking is weak. Are we therefore scrapping all Outstanding grades? Are we asking all academies to reapply for status?
Linking sensible discussion and caution to being an "enemy of progress" is a trope so sadly familiar. If you've lost the argument on evidence, then portray those with legitimate concerns as wedded to the past, or defending the indefensible.
The consultation runs to 23 pages of utterly inane questions. The time required to respond will be too much for most individuals - hence institutional responses being necessary. It is notable that one of the report's four expert authors has also been sounding notes of caution.
On the issue of how people have managed to read a report so quickly: I am sure @StuartLock will know that with plenty of practise we can all improve our reading speed, especially when the report poses a direct existential threat to the sector and is release before the holidays
This report is another squandered opportunity for the DfE to engage proprtly with the sector, research the issues fully, and set out menaingful plans for reform. This article does little to support meaningful dialogue.

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More from @apf102

13 Jul
Some thoughts on ITT/ITE: a thread on changing my mind based on evidence.

When I first completed my teacher training, I felt I felt woefully unprepared for the first school I worked in. I was leading a department of one with little guidance and the behaviour was awful /1
For many years I held my training responsible. In some ways it was. I had little subject specific input and was asked to do like very little subject specific reading. This was highlighted in my 3rd year when I joined a highly trained dept. /2
There was also definitely an emphasis on learning styles and other edu fads so common in the mid 00s. Sometimes these were critically evaluated, other times not. /3
Read 13 tweets
6 Jul
Right. Back to the ITT Market Review. What delights does Part 2 hold?

First on reorganisation it is interesting that HEIs are presumably lumped under this category of "other" desspite HEIs accounting for 75% of all training and being the most effeciently organsied already /1
Let's talk efficiency for a moment. 70 accredited (!!) HEIs already train an average of 443 trainees each. The average SCITT trains just 59. It feels like there may be an obvious instrastructure advantage to one model here... /2
This seems like a major push to TS hubs being central to ITT delivery and monitoring the design and delivery of curriculum. This is a strange choice if we are to believe that research evidence is menat to drive practice. Will schools be defacto unis? /3
Read 23 tweets
6 Jul
A few years back I surveyed 253 people on experiences of ITE. Here's what I found:
1) Quality of training was seen to generally be good or better and improved after a dip in the 2000s
2) Secondary teachers (213) were even more positive about their training (not in all routes)
These findings seem to challegne much of the discourse in the recent ITT Market Review Report, and a good deal of the discussion I have seen flying about today. But there is more...
3) Subejct input is identified as key in the ITT Report. Quality of subject specific input seems to decline over time
4) Yet to unpack, subejct specifc was still strong in HEIs followed by SD-uni partnerships
5) Still true when controlling for recent trainees
Read 7 tweets
5 Jul
Stuck waiting on a wakeful baby so time to read the ITT Review. Immediate flaws in premise. First that CCF is hardly ambitious when compared to most decent ITE programmes and is narrow and not subject specific. Second that ITE already needs to show they have met demands of CCF /1
The reason that we have an inefficient ITE market is largely down to the DfE deciding to widen the pool of providers hugely. Surely the survival of multiple providers supports free market principles which were supposed to drive this reform. Now DfE wants central control again /2
I am assuming this is the DfE admitting it’s own accreditation is inadequate and has been for the last 10 years? If not then we already have a system of accreditation and Ofsted check the aspects listed here. Does the DfE have no faith in the inspectorate? /3
Read 19 tweets
28 Feb
So I spent a good hour today being amazed by the fascinating @MyHeritage tech which brings old photos to life (see the Alan Turing example below). It was seemingly miraculous. All of this got me to musing on the nature of history because...Sunday. (A thread)
As you will note, the way in which the pictures are brought to life by the tech is uncanny. Almost immediately I felt a sense of connection with people being shown, despite their remoteness in time. Others expressed a similar feelings of connection.
The way in which the people depicted suddenly seem more human when they move naturally is similar to the effect created in films like “They Shall Not Grow Old” or these computer enhanced films from 1901, where AI fills in the gaps to create lifelike motion
Read 17 tweets
22 Feb
So @OliverDowden seems to think contextualising our heritage more fully is leading to "misunderstanding". Presumably there was some golden age where heritage and history was represented "fairly" in the past? Let's see shall we? [Thread]
Let's take a journey back in time to 2010. If you wanted to explore the roots of Harewood House (built using profits from the slave trade) this is what you would have found online. Hmmmm.... maybe heritage orgs weren't that good at presenting a rounded history at all...
@katiehall1979 developed a great unit for KS4 (c.2006) exploring how Harewood presented (or failed to present) its historic roots - especially in materials expressly created for this purpose. Here you can see Harewood paying lip service to engagement in some materials from 2007.
Read 8 tweets

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