Star Wars Quotes for Teachers: Wisdom, Mentorship & Classroom Inspiration

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Yoda: Much wisdom to be gained from Star Wars Quotes there is for teachers. Much wisdom there is to be gained from Star Wars quotes for teachers! If you’re looking for inspiration, motivation, or just a bit of fun for your classroom, you’ve come to the right place. This article offers a curated selection of … Read more

Excellent SEN Blogs to follow: Part 2.

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This is a follow up to part 1 there are a huge number of great SEN blogs with ideas, resources, and inspiration  for you to read and engage with. These are just some I have enjoyed reading and wanted to share them with you. Tracey Lawrence – Tweets as @behaviourteach Assistant head, and host of … Read more

Autism, Structured Teaching and the TEACCH Approach

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The TEACCH Approach: Personalisation not Normalisation One of the main issues I have with labels is the group children with a huge array of skills, interests, and talents together and that leads to approaches to their education that try to suggest it will work with anyone who has that label. I have used the TEACCH … Read more

Excellent SEN Blogs to follow: Part 1.

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These blogs are those that I have visited often and found great ideas, positivity or inspiration for my own writing from. Due to the nature of the blogosphere there are likely to be many great blogs I have missed, some great bloggers are reticent to promote their writing. If you know of a great blog please add it to the comments I will be doing a second post later this month.

Teacher autonomy in the classroom

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Autonomy in Teaching

The issue of teacher autonomy in schools is once again in the news thanks to this TES piece from Mary Bousted. I don’t think we discuss this issue enough. As a profession teachers have the accountability and responsibility for the education of many many children. Teachers are often subject to oversight by a whole range of people and regulatory bodies i.e OFSTED. There are many reasons to celebrate being a teacher. Autonomy to teach how you want should be one of those reasons.

What is Teacher Autonomy?

Teacher autonomy refers to the degree of independence and discretion that teachers have in their profession and classrooms. It encompasses aspects like:

  • Curriculum development – The ability of teachers to help design curricula and choose resources.
  • Pedagogical methods – Flexibility to determine teaching approaches and lesson styles based on student needs.
  • Assessment strategies – Authority over assessing students and evaluating their own effectiveness.
  • Classroom management – Self-governance over organisation, rules, timetabling within the classroom.
  • Professional development – Independence in deciding areas for self-improvement and conference/workshop participation.
  • Budgeting – Influence over funding allocation for classroom supplies and activities.

Higher teacher autonomy indicates more trust in educators’ professional judgements and empowerment over their own practices. It has been linked to greater job satisfaction and better student outcomes. However, increased standardised testing and accountability measures have reduced autonomy in some systems. The appropriate balance remains an ongoing topic of discussion. This post is my thoughts based on my experience of teacher autonomy only. Included below is this post as a mini-podcast on teacher autonomy.

How do Autonomous Teachers thrive?

I believe an autonomous teacher can only exist in a school with confident leadership. Maybe I should add a caveat. Autonomous teachers can only thrive in a school with confident leadership.

Teacher Autonomy can only thrive in a school with confident leadership

By autonomous teacher I mean, an independent teacher. One who is happy (and supported) to not need to ask for permission when they have an idea. Not necessarily a maverick pushing boundaries, but a trusted professional. A teachers who is free to develop their pedagogical practice in a way that is best for their learners.

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An autonomous classroom cannot be micromanaged. Why? Once you as a teacher are forced to defend, and support every decision, you start to lose the motivation required to be successfully autonomous. You will probably doubt yourself. If you work in a school where every idea that counts comes from above. A School where leaders do not listen to your voice you will not be able to thrive. You will not develop a classroom ethos that reflects you. Ultimately this will reduce the enjoyment you get from teaching. It will stifle your innovation and ability to be the best teacher you can be.

One of the reasons I went for my first leadership position was to regain the autonomy that had been eroded from me as a teacher under a previous manager. Really my motivation was not to have someone telling me what to do on a day to day (even hour to hour) basis.

Teacher Autonomy and Confidence

As I work in SEN it is essential that I and the teachers in my department have the confidence to act autonomously in all areas of classroom management. Unless you are in a challenging class for extended periods, and know the students in depth why do you have the right to dictate strategies?

I will suggest ideas, support and ensure that teams follow procedures but I will never control teaching style, lesson content, or timings. I will be visible and the teacher (as I am as a teaching member of the leadership team) will be accountable for the safety care and education of their children. As an autonomous teacher I need my staff team to be confident and happy that they know I trust them to make informed professional decisions in the best interests of their students. My students have taught me a lot and I have the confidence to learn from them.

teacher autonomy require resilient teachers and learners

Part of this is ensuring the teaching staff are confident. I believe the best way to do this is to model expectations and support, support, support my staff at all times. Autonomy requires resilience. Because not everything will go right. A classroom is a dynamic environment, constantly reacting and adapting to challenges. I need teachers and leaders who will acknowledge mistakes, but also see them as an opportunity to develop further. Often it can be  tempting to use an error to impose more and more control over your team. It is not it is an opportunity to step up and work together to learn from these issues.

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And that brings us to the main requirement for autonomy – seeing yourself as a professional, capable learner.

What is special education teaching?

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Audio version below. What is Special Education Teaching? Special education teaching is very different in ethos from mainstream education. In terms of pedagogical approaches it is highly specialised but not different. In terms of knowledge of the child and your teaching approach it gets to the root of why education is so beneficial a career. … Read more

Differentiation in Discipline: Behaviour and Connection

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Challenging Behaviour: Differentiation in Discipline Updated September 2024. This discussion on Differentiation in Discipline may be one of the more contentious blog posts, School discipline is a constant concern in the press and for teachers. I am the lead for behaviour, mental health and pastoral care in a UK special school for autism and children … Read more

29 Reasons to celebrate being a teacher.

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Reasons to Be a Teacher. Why we should celebrate being a teacher. More importantly what are the reasons to be a teacher? Shamelessly inspired by this post by Liz Allton Too often teaching is not recognised for the fantastic career it is. When you find a position where you can grow and learn there is … Read more

Children’s Mental Health: Infographic

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Children’s Mental Health Infographic Anyone who works with young people in the UK today will recognise the challenges faced supporting our students in terms of mental health and wellbeing. There are a myriad of challenges that face them growing up with the impact of Lockdowns and cost of living. Schools are often the front line, … Read more

Autism: Environmental Barriers to Transition

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Getting Stuck: How the School Environment can Prevent Pupils Transition Autism can create barriers to inclusive education, we as teachers can also unwittingly create barriers to including pupils and making their education as effective as possible. We must take a moment to consider our actions and decisions in terms of how they may create issues … Read more

The Wellbeing Curriculum: Online Safety & Pupil Wellbeing

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Ideas and Values for Developing a Wellbeing Focussed Curriculum. Links to the original Wellbeing Curriculum posts: Part 1 Part 2: Teaching the wellbeing curriculum It is our job as teachers to remove barriers to learning, in online safety it is often the curriculum that forms a barrier to meaningful learning. The fact that online safety … Read more

The Essentials of SEND Education

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Three essential components to SEND education. Special education is a fantastic career option. I am always urging NQTs to consider SEND education as an option for their careers. It is different from mainstream education in a number of key ways. However, that intrinsic desire to provide the best outcomes for the children you teach is … Read more

Teaching the Teacher: What my Students have taught me.

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Teaching The Teacher Teaching and learning is the root of education. The two words go very well together. However, we often employ the phrase to suggest that we as teachers are doing the teaching and that it is only the students who are doing the learning. I dread to suggest it but I can imagine … Read more

15 Key Skills For SEN Teachers

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Key Skills for Effective Special Education Teaching Teaching students with Special Educational Needs (SEN) requires a robust set of competencies. While these skills benefit all teachers, they are especially critical for those in specialised settings. Here is an expanded version of the article with a passionate tone about supporting students in special education: Special Education … Read more

Online Safety: Why We Need to Stop Saying “In Real Life’

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In Real Life: Devaluing Online Identity. This idea formed part of my presentation for the Wellbeing curriculum at the BETT show. I am going to say that the phrase “In Real Life”. Often used to distinguish between online activity and activity in our tangible immediate physical surroundings. Should be retired. The audio version below. Please … Read more

7 Times New Girl Summed up being a Teacher

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What Teachers Can Learn from New Girl’s Jessica Day Just a quick lighthearted blog post with lessons teachers can learn from the TV show New Girl: The quirky TV show New Girl stars a plucky, optimistic teacher named Jessica Day, played by Zooey Deschanel. While the sitcom often veers into zany antics, teachers can actually … Read more

15 Top Tips for Delivering Engaging Behaviour Management Training for Teachers

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Effective Behaviour Training I am a principal instructor for a behaviour support training network. This gives me the opportunity to visit and train in a lot of special schools. The best part of our network is that it is not a hierarchy. It is truly a collaborative team approach to delivering behaviour training. There are … Read more

A Discussion on Inclusion (SEND)

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Why Discuss Inclusion? This article is an account of a professional discussion on inclusion between teachers, SLT, parents and carers. It is essential that inclusion is a subject that we discuss regularly. Inclusive education is an issue has an impact on every school and every classroom. It is an area close to many people’s hearts … Read more