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Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part five by John Woodcock MP

John Woodcock MP, Labour and Co-operative MP for Barrow and Furness, is training to be a Teaching Assistant. In the little spare time he has, John is studying for his Level 3 Teaching Assistant qualification. Why is John doing this? Because he is trying to help improve literacy and maths in local primary schools in preparation for secondary school transition, where levels of attainment are currently dropping. John is required to complete 6 hours minimum in the classroom each week, alongside his Parliamentary work, and is keeping a diary of his efforts here at TA Focus…

Diary of a trainee teaching assistant: part five

First entry in a while, must do better. Showed promise at start of school year,Trainee Teaching Assistant John Woodcock MP now being distracted by peers and under-performing.

Am not quite on a behaviour contract yet but I will try to do better.

Actually, diary updates aside, I have been pleased with my progress over the last couple of months. Whereas every session I took used to teeter on the brink of chaos as the children realised I could be ignored at will, I now run quite a tight ship without usually having to shout or resort to corporal punishment (that’s still banned, right?) Granada Reports came to film my last guided reading session at Victoria Juniors in Barrow as part of a package looking ahead to the launch of our summer school in August, you can see a snippet here.

Supporting Kinga, an excellent higher level teaching assistant at Johanna Primary in Lambeth, makes me conscious of the supreme effort good schools make to raise the attainment of those towards the bottom of the ability range. Every week, she works one-to-four (or two-to-four when I am there) on tailored literacy lessons for lower ability children who would glaze over and switch off or become disruptive in the main lesson.

But, under Kinga’s guidance, they are making progress; the kind of progress that, were it sustained through subsequent years, would see those children leaving school with decent skills and every chance of getting a job with good prospects.

Determination that not a single child will be left behind is a hallmark of both the schools I work in and what marks out every good school across the country. And from what I have seen so far, raising standards for all simply couldn’t be done without the extra capacity that teaching assistants provide. I know some schools have been criticised for apparently using TAs simply to remove more difficult children out of the classroom without properly focussing on whether they are getting sufficiently skilled teaching to bring them on, but I certainly haven’t seen that in the schools I am in. There, the TAs know their children, understand how they learn and aren’t prepared to settle for making do.

One of the things that makes the results of Johanna Primary, with 86% of pupils attaining level 4 or above in English tests, so remarkable, though, is the background of the children who are enrolled in their reception class or nursery. The school’s emblem, a rainbow, is well chosen. A large majority learn English as an additional language, the reality of which hit home when I was asked by a student what language I spoke when I was at home with my family. This is not a question that would occur to anyone in Barrow. The point is emphasised by the fervency of support for an array of teams in the World Cup now England has been knocked out.

The way many nationalities come together under one roof is a microcosm of the way the capital itself helps forge new generations of Brits. But though my class members have parents who come from many different nations, what is most striking is actually the smallness of the world many of those from the most deprived backgrounds inhabit.

For some, the world is small physically: ten-year-olds who may never or very rarely have walked along the Thames Embankment, or been on the London Eye, or visited the London aquarium, until taken on a school trip – despite the fact they live literally a stone’s throw away.

Others don’t seem to have much concept of the country beyond an all-encompassing idea of London. When I told my lower ability group that I had studied in Edinburgh, which was in Scotland, they looked at me blankly and one asked if Scotland was part of London.

I had similar experiences visiting certain schools in deprived areas in Barrow before I started my training. Barrow is a reasonably compact coastal town. Part of it, Walney Island, has beautiful sandy beaches. Yet many had not seen the sea or played on the sand until taken by their school on a day trip.

Any school, obviously, cannot do everything. As a country we need to do so much better at giving parents the help they need to be able to raise their child’s horizons. But encouraging change that makes a difference in the private, protected space of parenting is hard, many well-intentioned governments have tried and fallen short.

Which makes teachers and teaching assistants who refuse to shrug and walk away so, so important.

Ensuring no child is left behind is not a new slogan. Some have used it without meaning what they say, others have meant it but not really understood what it would take to deliver.

But by God it is essential to our future progress. We will never reach our potential as a nation until we find a way to ensure every single part of our education system fully embraces that goal. And to do that, we must surely understand better why schools like Johanna and Victoria Juniors succeed and others find themselves held back by a myriad of constraints.

But that is for another entry.

 

Other diary entries:

Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part 1

Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part 2

Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part 3

Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part 4


Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part four by John Woodcock MP

John Woodcock MP, Labour and Co-operative MP for Barrow and Furness, is training to be a Teaching Assistant. In the little spare time he has, John is studying for his Level 3 Teaching Assistant qualification. Why is John doing this? Because he is trying to help improve literacy and maths in local primary schools in preparation for secondary school transition, where levels of attainment are currently dropping. John is required to complete 6 hours minimum in the classroom each week, alongside his Parliamentary work, and is keeping a diary of his efforts here at TA Focus…

 

Diary of a trainee teaching assistant: part four

I am determined that my day job as an MP should impact on my trainingDiary of a trainee Teaching Assistant as little as possible, but inevitably there are moments when it does.

There was an early unexpected vote which brought a session at Johanna primary to a hurried end. Then there was the morning I had to turn up to school shamefacedly admitting I had only just realised it was budget day and needed to go to the commons.

In London I am anonymous, but I like to think I am a bit better known in Barrow. So, in my second week in Victoria Juniors, I am quietly pleased when one of the girls approaches and conspiratorially whispers, “I know who you are.”

She gets out the newspaper cuttings from her project and has highlighted a quote from me. I tell her I am undercover so she is not allowed to tell anyone.

Obviously this is meant as a joke as the children surely must recognise their member of parliament and are simply keeping quiet as a pre-agreed mark of respect. After all, I feature in the Evening Mail nearly every single week. Often with a picture.

This hubris results in my ego being crushed during Mrs Gillett’s session on phonic endings. Words ending in ‘cian’ are often job titles, she explains. Magician, electrician, politician. Does anyone know a politician? Determined shakes of the head from all the children. Sob.

I can readily accept that my tutor, local children’s author Gill Jepson, will create far more of a stir than a boring old MP, but total anonymity?! Unless I can make more of an impact them by the time they reach voting age, I will be toast.

But the children do realise something is afoot when a tv crew from BBC North West Tonight arrives the following Friday to do a feature on how I am getting on. The potential for havoc and excitement makes me feel rather guilty, but the children take it all in their stride. In fact the only difference seems to be in the staffroom where I detect higher levels of lippy than usual.

All in all, I am deeply indebted to the teachers I am working with for just letting me muck in despite the disruption of an unpredictable parliamentary schedule.

And while MP life can occasionally get in the way of the teacher training, the benefit going the other way is enormous. We MPs spend a lot of our time visiting local schools, but it is hard to describe how much greater is the insight into the profession from actually spending sustained amounts of time in the classroom and staffroom as a co-worker. Work experience should be mandatory for new ministers appointed without prior experience of the sector. Such a practice could be a money-spinner for cash-strapped schools too: there would surely be many who would pay good money for fly-on-the-wall access to Michael Gove’s stint in the classroom.

So I am hopeful this will work out, provided I can catch up with my coursework over the Easter recess. Managing the workload of doing this while a full time MP has been the biggest challenge – and one I am failing dismally so far.

But I am determined to get up-to-date, not least because I just can’t face another telling off like the one Mrs Ward gave me last week. Mrs Ward is the kind of teacher I would have idolised as a child. Her class love her to bits and are devastated when she disapproves of them.

Thus I am instantly reduced to their level when she realises how behind and disorganised I am. I’m sorry Mrs Ward, I won’t let you down again – please like me!

 

Other diary entries:

Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part 1

Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part 2

Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part 3

Diary of a trainee Teaching Assistant: part 5