
Carousel
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Carousel
@Carousel_Learn
Carousel Learning is a platform that helps students to embed knowledge in long-term memory; Carousel Teaching is a CPD resource that helps make teachers better.


NEW EPISODE This week, we we're back and joined by friend of the show @jon_hutchinson_ to discuss the curriculum and assessment review, whether anybody should care anymore, social media, discourse polarisation AND MORE Tune in and share if you can! open.spotify.com/episode/2PnW6c…



We talk a lot about parental and community low expectations and lack of ambition. Often, those attitudes aren't malicious or deliberate. @thelizenglish captures them beautifully here 👇👇👇👇 open.spotify.com/episode/3Atpkb…


ICYMI: I have restarted blogging I think the blogs I've written are at least as good as anything I wrote on the old blog, but have a fraction of the hits (unsurprisingly). If you're interested, please do subscribe and share 🙏🙏 carouselteachlearnlead.substack.com







Expert teachers do not simply “notice more”; they have routinised ways of scanning the class, briefly zoom in on the disruption, then rapidly re engage with everyone else. Novices, by contrast, show more scattered, exploratory gaze behaviour and are more easily pulled off their routine. sciencedirect.com/science/articl…





I loved this post from Carl when I read it, and went into our footage to find examples. Check out the video here, and note the way the teachers try to keep their heads up and looking around the room. There's two aspects to that in these videos: 1. A general dispositions of looking around constantly 2. An increased emphasis on it immediately after responding to disruption (of any kind) A lot of the research focuses on teachers who have been doing this for years. It observes them, sees what they are doing, and describes it. But often the vibe is that they do it naturally, that their experience has just sort of led them to acting in a certain way. I think for many that might be right, but we mustn't lose sight of the fact that strategies like this can be taught and assimilated rapidly. For example, in this video Abi was in her ECT year, but has the "gaze" of a teacher with 10 years more experience than her. Great teaching isn't a mystery or a secret. It can be noticed, disassembled, communicated and implemented.






