Remote Education Information
This is a guide for parents and students when learning needs to take place remotely, for when it is not possible, or is contrary to government guidance, for some or all pupils to attend school.
Remote education is only ever considered as a last resort where a decision has already been made that attendance at school is not possible, but pupils are able to continue learning.
The Remote Curriculum
A student’s first day or two of being educated remotely might look different from our standard approach, while we take all necessary actions to prepare for a longer period of remote teaching.
As a minimum, teachers will set work in the ‘Working from Home’ folders on SharePoint and this work will be broadly the same as what would have been taught in school. However, in some subjects, adaptations have to be made. For example, Drama group work may be replaced with monologues, Dance and PE will be adapted to students working alone, Science practical work may comprise of a video clip to watch, etc.
When online live lessons begin, the remote curriculum will again be similar to the curriculum that is followed in school. Adjustments will be made to ensure that the curriculum is suitable for online learning.
Remote teaching and study time each day
There will be a minimum of 4 hours and usually 5 hours of remote teaching provided per day. Wherever possible, live lessons will be delivered but, for some subjects such as Personal Development and RE, work is being set via SharePoint. A typical day may look like this:
|
Time |
Period |
Remote Provision |
|
08:40-09:10 |
Tutor |
Live tutor period (unless tutor is in school supporting students of Key Workers) |
|
09:10-10:00 |
P1 |
Live double lesson of GCSE option subject, such as Geography, Drama, etc… with the student’s teacher |
|
10:00-10:50 |
P2 |
|
|
10:50-11:10 |
Break |
- |
|
11:10-12:00 |
P3 |
Live double lesson of English with that student’s English teacher |
|
12:00-12:50 |
P4 |
|
|
12:50-13:30 |
Lunch |
- |
|
13:30-14:20 |
P5 |
Live Science lesson with that student’s Science teacher |
|
14:20-15:10 |
P6 |
Students should follow their normal school timetable, unless instructed otherwise. Students need to log on to Teams for tutor time at 8:40am and stay logged on to Teams for live lessons. Teachers will be taking registers and parents of students who are not attending lessons will be contacted.
We use a combination of the following approaches to teach students remotely:
- live teaching via MS Teams (online lessons)
- recorded teaching (e.g. Oak National Academy lessons, video/audio recordings made by teachers)
- online work (set using SharePoint, in folders called ‘Working From Home’ in each subject
- textbooks and reading books students have at home
- commercially available websites and software packages supporting the teaching of specific subjects or areas, including video clips or sequences
- printed paper packs produced by teachers (e.g. workbooks, worksheets) where students may not have adequate internet access.
Accessing remote education
Students will access all the live lessons using Teams and the resources for home learning using SharePoint https://testbourne.sharepoint.com/sites/students. Students have used Teams and SharePoint in school and are familiar with the approach.
We recognise that some students may not have suitable online access at home. During a period of remote education, if parents or carers have persisting or newly developing issues with equipment and resources for online provision, they should email admin@testbourne.school or telephone the main school number, 01256 892061.
Engagement
We have high expectations for students’ engagement with remote education and for parental support.
Every day, students will:
- be registered as part of their morning tutor time.
- be registered in every live lesson.
In addition, live lesson participant registers will be downloaded from MS Teams.
Where we have concerns about a child’s engagement with their learning we will take a series of escalating steps to ensure the child is able to make progress:
- For single or infrequent incidents, we will text, email or telephone parents to discuss the matter.
- For multiple incidents or persistent lack of engagement, we will telephone parents to ensure that they are aware, investigate and resolve any barriers (such as lack of equipment) and offer support.
- Where persistent lack of engagement poses serious concerns about learning and safeguarding, we will designate the student as vulnerable and ask that they attend school in person for a fixed period of time.
Feedback and assessment
Feedback can take many forms and it is most effective when given at the time that work is being completed or soon afterwards. For example, whole-class feedback or quizzes marked automatically via digital platforms are also valid and effective methods, amongst many others. Our approach to feeding back on student work is as follows:
- As far as is possible, teachers will continue to teach responsively, using feedback from students and their answers to all manner of questions and assessments to plan the next steps in their teaching. An example of this includes where teachers will change the activities they complete in a live lesson as students need more support.
- Teachers will ask questions in live lessons and breakout rooms may be used for discussion and group work, and this will help teachers gauge the understanding from individuals as well as more generally across the class. This may involve asking students to put their answers in the chat.
- Teachers will set Assignments using Teams and these will link to the learning. These may take the form of more traditional homework tasks, or they may be an extension of the learning covered in class. These assignments may be automatically marked and may be hosted on an external website.
- MS Forms, Quizzes and other methods of formative assessment may be used in lessons and as Exit Tickets at the end of lessons.
- Internal assessments will take place according to individual subject programmes of study. Students will be given advance notice of assessments so they can prepare. These will be set online.
- Students may submit work using the Class Notebook in Teams (which is a OneNote Notebook). This feature also allows teachers to respond to individuals (in the same way a teacher can respond to submissions on the Assignments in Teams).
Online Lessons via Microsoft Teams
Remote learning by live lessons via Microsoft Teams is the preferable delivery method as it allows the teacher to expertly structure the learning, provide activities, explanations, direction, and live feedback. In some cases, however, live lessons will not be possible. These include:
- When a member of staff is absent work will be set online using the “Working from Home folders.”
- When a member of staff is on rotation to assist with the Key Worker and Vulnerable provision or the vaccination programme. Work will also be set online using the “Working from Home folders.”
Most subjects will be delivered using live lessons but there are exceptions. PSHCE and Core RE will be set as online work in the “Working from Home” folder during this lockdown, rather than a live lesson.
Students should expect the vast majority of their lessons to be live but they will be notified via a message in Teams if a lesson is not running.
Joining an Online Lesson
Students need to follow the instructions below to join an online lesson.
- A few minutes before the lesson is due to start, log onto Microsoft Teams and go to the relevant Teams for your timetabled lesson
- On the “General” channel in Posts tab, you will see the lesson notification as below when your teacher is ready to start the lesson.
- Click “Join” to attend the lesson .
If students have any issues accessing Teams or online lessons, they should contact ithelp@testbourne.school from their school email account. Parents need to email admin@testbourne.school
Problems
If a student is having any problems accessing online lessons, joining Teams, or any other IT problem, they should email ithelp@testbourne.school from their school email address. If they are struggling with aspects of remote learning, they should email their class teacher. If they have general worries, they can contact their tutor. Please reassure students that we are here to help.
Students should email their class teacher or tutor for help with specific lessons and learning.
Students with specific IT queries can email ithelp@testbourne.school
Our SEND department are contacting students with SEND who needed help in the March lockdown. If you and your child have not been contacted by the SEND department and you need help, please get in touch by emailing admin@testbourne.school
Testbourne Community School