
Whilst on my final Professional Practice I had the opportunity to explore different methods of assessment sue to there now being no levels which the children can be marked against. This led me to being able to explore the methods of assessment used in my placement class and how it enabled the class teacher to see how each child was progressing.
This programme was very helpful when looking at how the progress children make can be monitored and logged to prove progression within different subjects and curriculum areas. It was easy to use and used colour coding to show a visual representation of how children were meeting their learning outcomes or targets, and how they could improve further.
I have found it useful to look at after not being able to use levels to monitor progress children may make, and would be a programme I may use in the future to track the progress of future classes.
How it meets the standards:
- TS1: Part B of standard 1 is met in this piece of evidence because different methods of assessment enable teachers and support staff to set goals that stretch and challenge all pupils of backgrounds, abilities and dispositions within a classroom. This programme is easy to use and enables you to see a very visual colour-coded table relating to each individual child’s performance.
- TS2: I feel as though I can show working towards part A of this standard because teachers need to be accountable for pupils’ attainment, progress and outcomes, which this programme allows.
- TS6: I feel that this piece of evidence shows that I have been working towards parts A, B and C of standard 6 because I understand how to assess relevant subject areas, including statutory assessment requirements for each year group. It also demonstrates an understanding of how formative and summative assessment can be used to secure pupils’ progress and how the use relevant data can be used to monitor progress, set targets, and plan subsequent lessons to target individual children’s needs.
On my most recent professional practice I organised and ran an after school Science Club for children between the ages of 4 and 11 to explore different exciting investigations with the other student in the school. We decided to explore fun experiments which may not necessarily link to the national curriculum to get children engaged in their learning. We catered 16 children in the club and each week looked at different activities. The science club ran for 4 weeks after school on a Thursday and we looked at experiments ranging from making slime to the Coca-Cola and mentos investigation.
In science we had been looking at plants and growing, which linked in with our topic for the term well. I decided that we would have a display where we would show the different parts of a flower as we had been looking at what they each did in recent lessons. I then also decided to pick some of the children’s cress diaries which they had completed to show what we had been learning at the beginning of the term. The flower was difficult to put onto the display due to there being an old alarm box in the middle of the display which is why there was not another option as to where the flower could go.




Whilst on a recent Professional Practice I had the challenge of helping my children to start to tell the time. At first I thought it would be an easy task as telling the time is something I now don’t even need to think about, however I was very wrong. It proved to be quite a problem as I also struggled to think of a creative way to teach it.


