It is 3am . I am awake. Why ? I don't know. Something has woken me but what? Is it the conference I am organising for October? No. I'm meeting with the committee tomorrow.I just need to make sure I take along all of my plans. Is it the Open Day I'm organising for July ? No, that's in hand but I do need to tweet a couple of people to see if they will come along.Is it the After school provision meeting that I'm having this evening ? No. Is it the Monitoring and evaluation that I'm currently doing of the Key Stage 2 department. No. That's going to plan. Is it the Annual reviews that I'm chairing? No, changes have been made and accounted for. Is it the Curriculum Pioneer convention we are involved in . No, I've replied to the WG email. Can I go back to sleep please now that I've ticked all of those off. No.
Oh blimey ! I know what it is ! It's the 1st March and I have to sign off all the breakfast club staff and temporary staff on Eteach so that they get their wages!!
That will take an hour. I may as well get up and stay up.
Never mind. I will try and have an early night tonight.
Oh , I'm in and After School provision meeting tonight. Perhaps tomorrow night then .
Monday, 29 February 2016
Thursday, 25 February 2016
Saturday, 13 February 2016
" It was a bit like if Jacqueline Wilson had re-written the Famous Five"
Latest Book Review for http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01B554C9S-FREE on KINDLE 02/14/2016
I really liked "Seren and The Four Molly Malones". It was a bit like if Jacqueline Wilson had re-written the Famous Five. I didn't really understand how Seren met Molly for the first time but it might have been something I missed. I liked how the plot had a lot of twists . Incorporating Trinity College and the Book of Kells was interesting, especially because I went to Dublin last year and saw the Book of Kells then, but history is one of my favourite subjects anyway.
I think that the majority of the book would be suitable for 11 and 12 years old but the topics covered in the last few chapters may not be understood if read by younger girls. Overall I really liked the book and think it is a good, fun book to read.
Seren and The Molly Malones (Seren and her travels Book 2) Kindle Edition
by Angela Morgan (Author)
Vlogs ,Blogs, Apps and Pods
Another freebie chapter from my new book : Seren and the Molly Malones ( FREE on Kindle 02/14/2016)
Question: What is Skype?
Answer:
It is a form
of video conferencing. Skype allows you to chat to friends and family from any
device that has an internet connection. Two-way skype video calls are free but
you need a subscription if you want to chat to more people from different
places. Go to http://www.skype.com/en/
Question: What is Facetime?
Answer:
It is another
form of video conferencing. Facetime only allows you to chat to friends and family
who have apple devices.
Question: What is a blog?
Answer:
A blog is where you
discuss or give information postings on a site published on the World Wide Web.
Choosing where you want to
build blog is pretty much the first thing you have to do. I suggest using WordPress,
Blogger or Tumblr. They make it super easy and fast to set up with free themes
and layouts as well as a forum that you can go to for support if you get stuck. What you post can be shared, commented on,
and so on. Go to https://wordpress.com/
Tumblr is also a
microblogging platform and social networking site. You can post multimedia and other content to a
short-form blog. Go to https://www.tumblr.com/
Question: What is a vlog?
Answer.
Vlogging is a video blog.
A “Vlog” is short for “video blog.” You have an actual video of you
discussing a topic. They’ve become super-easy to make with
Flip and iPhone technology. If you vlog you are known as a vlogger. YouTube
has the biggest vlog content on the internet. You can watch vlogs free on
YouTube. If you want to vlog you will need to open a free account on YouTube.
How long should a vlog be? Shorter is better.
I think 60-90 seconds is usually enough; you may be able to go as much
as three minutes, depending on your topic. If you’re doing a how-to video, try
to keep it to three to five minutes. Go to http://www.vlognation.com/how-to-start-a-vlog/
Question: Can you name
4 of your favourite Apps and how can we find them?
Answer:
I have lots of favourite apps and some have
been mentioned in the book but ‘Pinterest is a particularly good app that has a
catalogue of ideas and all kinds of fashions. Go to https://uk.pinterest.com/
Sign up and just type in the word ‘fashion’.
Another amazing app that I use all the time
is one called ‘Pose’ which lets you see what to wear and how to wear it. Go to http://pose.com/
If you are into Cosplay as Erin from Belfast
was then this cool site will show you more
http://9gag.com/cosplay
And this app is for cosplayers and cosmakers http://cosplanner.catokusanagi.com/
Another must-have App is Instagram. Instagram is an online mobile photo-sharing, video-sharing and social
networking service that enables you to
take pictures and videos, and share them on a variety of social networking
sites. Go to https://www.instagram.com/?hl=en
Question: What is a podcast?
Answer:
An audio blog; can include music; can
be music; the equivalent of a radio show; something downloadable that you
listen to. Easy to make. Stored online. If you’re
podcasting, you can go on for longer because people are likely downloading it
and listening while driving, cleaning, relaxing, etc. Some podcasts are 15 minutes;
some are 30 minutes. Some are an hour. They are easy to
share. You can interview other people and make podcasts — or “interview”
yourself. Podcasts are often made in episodes and you can get automatic updates
on your device telling you when a new one has been made.You can listen to them
any time and anywhere as long as you have a device and earphones. A lot of
podcasts are free.
Mysogynists exposed!
Extract from my new book ,which is FREE to download from Kindle tomorrow for 1 day only!Link: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01B554C9S
3.
He
makes promises to you that he won’t keep but he never lets his friends down.
4.
He
always turns up late for a date but is never late for his mates.
5.
Your
friends think he is controlling and self-centred and he is.
6.
He
doesn’t like girls being better at things than he is.
7.
He
is critical of your girlfriends but can’t see any faults in his friends.
8.
He
thinks nothing of making you feel miserable and may even make jokes about you
or put you down in front of others.
9.
He
will enjoy doing the opposite of what you want.
10.
He
borrows money from you and doesn’t give it back.
12.
He
will use you and drop you and use you and drop you ad infinitum.
All over the world men are taking a stand for
gender equality. Join them in the solidarity movement. It takes one voice to
make a difference.
Go to
or join them on Twitter
Well- being and People with Learning Difficulties
Since Aristotle in his Nicomachean ethics (350BC) used the term eudemonia, which today we refer to as well-being, academics continue to debate its definition often using objective measures that include social and economic conditions such as income, educational resources and health status whilst others have used subjective indicators including life satisfaction, anxiety and emotional well-being. Two of the most basic human needs are health and education and if we look at the UN Convention on the Rights of a Child we see that the right to be educated and the right to be healthy are two of the key principles. Education and health are underlying basic and intermediate needs.
Morrison, Gutman and Vorhaus’s study (2012) demonstrates the importance of well-being for children and adolescents throughout their primary and secondary school education. For academic progression, better emotional well-being is a key factor and studies indicate that activity and attention problems are associated with lower educational outcomes for children with SEN.
It is obvious that early intervention strategies are needed to identify and support children in their emotional well-being when they have difficulty learning. Children who exhibit signs of troublesome behaviour may even be prevented from taking a downward spiral of disengagement. Therapeutic intervention can enable effective learning which in turn supports positive health and well-being, and good levels of health and well-being support effective learning.
Across Great Britain governments are mindful of the capability approach of equality and they all strive to try to balance things out and promote well-being in schools to ensure pupils realises their potential and schools are inspected on how they manage pupils well –being. In May 2014 the National Assembly for Wales brought out an act to reform social services law; to make provision about improving the well-being outcomes for people who need care and support and carers who need support and has implications once again for the use of special schools in extended well-being provision for adults with learning disabilities.
The act specifies that in relation to a child, “well-being” also includes physical, intellectual, emotional, social and behavioural development. It is a school’s duty to create a nurturing and stimulating learning environment and to promote and enhance health and well-being. It is essential that staff recognise when and what kind of support is needed to ensure the mental, emotional and social needs of pupils are met. Dr Anthony Seldon, founder of Action for Happiness and Head of Wellington College, claims that the education system now ‘focuses too heavily on academic learning and attainment and not enough on education for life.’
It can be difficult to measure well-being accurately. Measuring objective well-being usually consists of collecting data. If we try to measure subjective well-being we come across the problem that feelings, like happiness, anger or enjoyment, are actually difficult to measure. In a special school where pupils have difficulty communicating all that we can do is study the behaviour of a person to gauge their well-being.
Pupils in a special school often have health difficulties as well as learning difficulties and sometimes they have emotional difficulties. Before they can actually access an education they have to feel able to access it. Special schools throughout Great Britain provide various therapies to aid pupils’ access to education and improve their well-being. The way we interact with our most vulnerable members of society teaches them about their perceived value and place in society.
Do these therapies have any impact on the pupils’ educational progress and their health? Do these therapies have an impact on their well-being? In the data driven society that we have become evidence is needed to show whether any therapeutic intervention has any impact.
Ysgol Pen Coch is currently researching the effectiveness of its therapeutic intervention. The school uses B Squared assessment software to assess pupil’s progress in the curriculum. The school provides a number of therapies- physiotherapy, speech and language therapy, dark room therapy, hydrotherapy, reflexology, therapeutic music, Tacpac, Sherborne therapy, Rebound therapy, Wii therapy, play therapy, therapeutic music, therapeutic art, therapeutic riding and vibroacoustic therapy.
The therapies have also been linked to B Squared curriculum targets and well-being targets. A target has to be met three times before it can be assessed as being achieved. The class teacher is informed by the therapist once the target has been achieved and a new target has to be selected before the therapy can continue. The attainment of the target is added to B Squared. At the end of each school year the B Squared GAP analysis software uses the data recorded by teachers throughout the year and produces reports and graphs and allows progress tracking week by week, month by month or year by year.
To measure the impact that the therapy has had on the pupil the therapist gives the class teacher an evaluation sheet to complete at the end of each therapy session. The most recent set of questionnaires on the use of therapies went out in November 2014 to all parents/carers and staff who were asked to comment through a different questionnaire. Pupils’ views were sought.
Neuroscientists claim that what people say about how they feel corresponds closely to actual levels of activity in different areas of the brain and that therefore you can measure subjective well-being or happiness simply by asking people or their carers how the person feels. That is what we have done. All of this information is analysed and a report produced. (p.106 The Future of Special Schools and Therapeutic Intervention :Amazon:2015)
There is a need for a systematic study across special schools to focus on how they promote access to the curriculum for children with profound and multiple learning difficulties and children with severe learning difficulties and how this can improve their well-being. There is also a need to provide data analysis to show how effective this is.
What happens when our pupils become adults? How is their well-being catered for? When the government says people should have access to lifelong learning opportunities are they including adults with learning disabilities? Surely they must be or else they could be accused of discrimination. Therefore they have a right to access whatever is available in special schools today.
A gentleman with learning disabilities, who is in his fifties, attends our hydrotherapy pool once a week after school with a group of adults also with learning disabilities and their carers. His mother, who is in her eighties, comes along every week to watch him enjoying the experience. Not only is his sense of well-being improved, which is obvious to all onlookers as he enters the water and visibly relaxes but surely you would agree that his mother’s sense of well-being has also improved..
I believe it is the duty of county councils to work closely with special schools to ensure adults with learning disabilities have the opportunity to access lifelong learning opportunities which in turn improves their well-being.
Visit https://twitter.com/ImpactTherapies to see photos of adults and pupils experiencing well-being opportunites.
Equity and Inclusion Outside the School Walls
Abstract ( full paper published by Wiley in JORSEN and presented at the 8th ISEC congress in Lisbon ,Portugal on 28th July )
ABSTRACT
Over the last 30 years controversy has reigned over the rights of children with learning disabilities to be educated alongside their peers in a mainstream classroom. Whether this is called integration or inclusion has been another hotly debated discussion amongst professionals. There have been calls for the abolition of special schools. (D)
This paper does not look at the rights of children with learning disabilities to an education in an inclusive setting but the rights of adults with severe or profound learning disabilities to lifelong education and well-being. This paper does not seek for the abolition of special schools but for the extension of their use by their local communities.
In 2014 a landmark report on the future of services for people with learning disabilities was launched by Sir Stephen Bubb for NHS England. This was in direct response to the Winterbourne scandal in 2011 and the ensuing years in between with the failure to move people out of inappropriate institutional care.
Only by the use of already available community provision can we achieve a move from institution to community. There is no pot of money available to build necessary centres and facilities. The health service , social services and education as well as local councils need to work together to achieve a dramatic turn-around for local communities where everybody is treated equally.
In tackling this challenge we need people to grasp the true meaning of community delivery and the empowerment of people with severe or profound and multiple learning disabilities and their families.
Reinders argues for a paradigm shift in our relation to people with profound and multiple disabilities and their parents. (Reinders 2008). Whilst I agree wholeheartedly with him I also believe there needs to be a paradigm shift in how we view and use special schools.
Art in Nature Nature in Fashion
Seren the fashionista recommends the page below to see inspiring fashion.
Nature usually puts great effort into ruining spectacular dresses. But this Russian artist is putting them side by side in her series 'Fashion & Nature'.
DEMILKED.COM
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