Saturday 10 November 2018

Grinding To A Halt

I was feeling good at the start of term, when the majority of the data was in and I felt 'on track'; but things have nearly ground to a halt now. Apparently that expression comes from the idea of an engine getting clogged up, or ship running aground, and it's apt because that is exactly how I feel.



I have uploaded most of my data to 'Dedoose' and played around with some preliminary coding, but not really in a consistent or systematic way. And apart from some half-hearted reading of loosely connected articles, I have done nothing in the last month.

I can blame: pressures of work, pressures of the part time work, other writing deadlines, my supervisor being absent for a couple of months with her own writing deadlines, doing a play last month, some extended periods of international travel....

I can console myself that this term is always difficult - after the luxury of summer to work uninterrupted for long periods. Looking back at this blog I can see that Autumn has repeatedly been a relatively unproductive time in the year.

Even so, I know that I am procrastinating, and worse, just blatantly avoiding, doing any work at all. I think my fear is that I must actually start writing, and I'm scared about doing that. I need to know what the structure is going to be, and - and this quite ridiculous - the university have just changed the website and software that we use to access materials and I haven't got my head around that yet. I'm feeling bad for not sorting something that should be relatively simple, and it's turned into a major barrier. 

This blogpost is acting as an admission of guilt. I'm just hoping it is enough to kickstart me doing something about it, and finding The Cure.

Friday 17 August 2018

The Results Are In...

Sort of.

Summer, three years in to this messy thing. All my data, bar three classroom observations, is in (or should that be 'are in' if data is a plural noun? Sounds wrong!) and transcribed. So now I approach...data analysis.

I have researched web-based qualitative data analysis software and 'Dedoose' seems to be the most similar to NVivo, so I am planning to trial it for the next few weeks. Assuming that the software is successful, my next 'jobs' are:

1. Sign up and get to know the Dedoose application
2. Upload all data collected and transcribed so far.
3. Conduct the final three observations in September and add those.
4. Complete the first level of analysis
5. Begin condensing and reducing each code ready for writing up.

I have recently returned from a rare supervision with my second, much more brutal(!) supervisor.
"So, what have you found out so far?" was the opening gambit to our meeting. Gulp.
It's a good question. Not much, it seems.


  • the transformative significance of the action seems to be related to the longitudinal nature of the research; participating teachers have been involved over two years
  • teachers report increased confidence in pedagogy surrounding reading teaching
  • teachers explicitly foreground the collaborative nature of the reading process in the classroom
  • teachers function as advocates for the primacy of narrative
  • teachers seem to have found more creative ways of conducting reading and inviting volunteers from the class to contribute to the reading process
  • teachers spend more time in lessons on reading - reported and triangulated through observation
  • teachers themselves are reading aloud more
  • teachers are finding creative ways to represent the learning/reading
  • teachers put engagement first and seem very articulate about how and why
  • teachers are consciously creating a 'safe space' for reading to happen

Straightforward, and not setting the world alight. In addition there were some unexpected and less encouraging 'hunches':

  • teachers are occasionally misinterpreting theoretical and pedagogical perspectives (but still applying these 'confidently' in the classroom)
  • teachers don't seem to be doing what they 'say' they are doing
There's one blindingly obvious problem with these crude and unsubstantiated observations though: they all relate to the teachers. I seem to be preoccupied with the nexus between teachers' reading, knowledge and understanding, and the actual 'doing' in the classroom; and also the 'snowball' design of the research: how it seems to be folding-in at each stage; e.g. as teachers use the transcripts of the student interviews to further inform their thinking and practice. Where are the students in all this? They formed approximately a third of the original research design, but I'm not in a position to say anything very much about them at all.

I need to have a much closer think about the students...


What else would I do differently, having come this far? My experience of the observation process has certainly shifted; I might conduct the student interviews differently for richer discussion; my interview technique, particularly in relation to the student focus groups and the observation through transcription that I might inadvertently be shutting down potentially fruitful avenues of dialogue, so I'd watch out for that more than I have been.

Meanwhile, you will find me buried somewhere in a software tutorial.


Saturday 30 June 2018

NVivo training

Had the first session of NVivo training this week. I can see how useful it will be, but the laptop I was given spent an hour and a half updating and that meant that I couldn't do very much that was hands on.

I conducted two more lesson observations, two more teacher interviews and two more student focus group interviews on Friday, so data collection continues apace. Two participants are very accessible and the other two proving slightly trickier. The end of term looms ahead and I suspect that I will not be done.

Still, I do at least have plenty of data to work with, currently. It feels difficult to get on with it without knowing the full capacity of the software; but time to get to know my data is here.


Wednesday 27 June 2018

Research Image Competition

I am enjoying a rare day at university, as part of the Festival of Doctoral Research where my photograph is shortlisted in the Research Image Competition - and so school have let me escape to receive the award.

My entry is entitled Fostering a Collaborative Reading Community and the accompanying text reads:
Teachers in a secondary school English department in Sussex use theoretical lenses on reading and current research with the aim of creating a long term shift in reading pedagogy in order to stop 'murdering the books' as represented here by the archway of texts. My doctoral research explores the way changes in reading teaching approaches may help foster collaborative reading practices in the classroom and enable secondary students at all levels to break through reading barriers; depicted here as smashing through the classroom ceiling.




Friday 20 April 2018

Epiphany Amongst the Tulips

This week, whilst on international duty with a school trip in the Netherlands, I am reading papers 91, 92 and 93. I wish now that I had catalogued them differently and distinguished between a book and a journal article, but it is a little late for that.

From out of nowhere, or rather from simply being next on the list, Paper 92 was Norman, J. Unrau & Matthew Quirk (2014) Reading Motivation and Reading Engagement: Clarifying Commingled Conceptions, Reading Psychology, 35:3,260-284; and, as the title suggests it focused on sorting out the tricky concepts of engagement and motivation which are fundamental to my study.

I think this would become one of my 'desert island papers' if I had to write this thing in splendid isolation, and feels like a moment of breakthrough in terms of defining these ideas. In a week where I should have been enjoying the cycling and the tulips and the stroop waffles, I was busy trying to articulate ideas in relation to the focus group interview questions and lesson observation schedules so that they could be more clearly tied to either engagement or motivation.

I enjoy these moments where writing and thinking are inescapable forces. Often, it seems, I am forcing myself to sit down and read or write something, but this paper seemed to force me, so that on my glorious morning cycling commute to work which took me along the Harderwijk waterfront, I was busy mentally composing sentences and revising questions which I had to commit to paper as soon as I arrived in school. 

Or perhaps it is simply travel broadening the mind! 


Monday 9 April 2018

Easter Promise

My Easter holiday promise to myself has been a minimum of an hour a day working on the doctorate. It is day 10, and apart from Easter Day itself, I have managed this.

For the first week of the holiday this hour was mostly spent transcribing teacher interviews. I'm still waiting to get on an NVivo course at the university, so coding is tentative at this stage. I have made preliminary narrative notes on some of the data, and have identified some potential codes. This is in addition to themes which emerged from the first round of study group research interviews. It will therefore be a hybrid process of inductive and deductive thematic analysis to interpret the raw interview data.

We have agreed that the next supervision should involve a coding comparison, so I have sent two of the interviews to my supervisor.  I am looking forward to a rich discussion as a result.

There are a mounting pile of papers waiting to be read. They seem to grow exponentially. I finished reading and making notes on Willingham's The Reading Mind this afternoon. It always feels more satisfying to have worked through an entire book rather than a paper.

But, as ever, progress seems slow. Process seems painstaking. The sheer size of the undertaking requires that I am logical and organised. No more haphazard note taking and notebook scribbles a la the MA.  Shhh. And that makes things much more laborious. It will be worth it in the end. This time round I can more or less lay my hand on the quotation or idea that I am looking for.

The annual review also looms ahead. I know it is important, but as a part-time student with limited hours to give, it seems a tedious administrative task.

Financially, I am struggling a bit. Going part-time and relinquishing my responsibility means that the termly fees are harder than ever to find. I have applied for a small bursary externally. If successful then I will be required to deliver some related CPD in return. But since I seem to be doing this regularly that will be no great burden. Fingers crossed.

Friday 23 March 2018

Research Recognition

Yesterday was a bit of a moment. Firstly there was receiving a highly commended award from Michael Rosen, courtesy of the OU, UKLA and Egmont Publishing in the Reading for Pleasure Experienced Teacher category.



From the Reading for Pleasure Symposium I had to dash to Worthing for the NATE South East Teach Meet, where I was presenting a kind of research in progress summary which I have summarised below:

Stop Murdering the Books was my rather fanciful, emotive imperative, and a kind of working title for the research. I explained the way the project started to take shape in 2014 with planning for the new National curriculum. Substantial pressures on English teachers to combine motivation of readers with attainment of high scores in public examinations along with the limiting factors of the National Literacy Strategy (NLS; 2001-2009) and reductive reading strands of the Assessing Pupil Progress framework (DCSF, 2008)had maneuvered the department that I was at the time Head of,  into a position of declining reading engagement. I had a suspicion that there was something wrong with the way we were teaching and prioritising reading, but at that stage it was a misgiving and quite unformed.  We considered that a possible reason for students’ reluctance to read might be literature teaching itself, ‘especially if novels are viewed as set texts instead of narratives written to be read for pleasure’ (Cliff-Hodges, 2015: 93). Literature texts tend to be read in very particular, constrained ways and ‘as part of a highly complex process of cultural induction, social stratification and occupational qualification’ and I was keen to unpick that a little as part of our general thinking as we built a new curriculum.

Our English curriculum had also been built on the assumption that children arriving at secondary school are already able to read independently: which invites the question of what exactly is being taught in terms of reading skills and comprehension at KS3, and translates into a reading paper at GCSE, where 50% of all current GCSE papers in presented as a test of ‘reading’. As Cliff Hodges puts it, ‘‘many schools not appear to treat the middle years as simply a waiting room for examinations, not a living room in which to grow up’ (Cliff Hodges, 2017, 46).

At the same time I was researching and heavily involved with NWP (this was a significant link as Simon Wrigley was presenting on exactly that just before me!) and I was absolutely convinced that the reason we didn’t teach writing very well was, in part, to do with not identifying as writers. I think the converse might be true of English teachers in relation to reading. I haven’t met many English teachers who don’t identify as readers. We all get really excited about books. And I wondered if there was something inherently problematic in that. Perhaps the whole knowing about reading might be blinding us to some theoretical and pedagogical realities about teaching reading. I referenced Make It Stick: ‘The better you know something, the more difficult it becomes to teach it’ (119)

But there is another, perhaps more important side to the project which considers the relationship between theory and practice in relation to the teaching of English. Robert Scholes in Textual Power articulates this clearly when he says, ‘I know that many teachers feel the concerns of theory are beyond them, or irrelevant to their problems’ (x) argues that ‘practice is never natural or neutral; there is always a theory in place, so that the first job of any teacher of criticism is to bring the assumptions that are in place out in the open for scrutiny’ (x-xi). This notion became one of the central ideas of the research and one of the core components of what ended up becoming a kind of reading manifesto for participants. Scholes, back in 1985 was arguing for an overhaul of English itself, suggesting that ‘We must begin our efforts at rebuilding by asking what we mean when we proclaim ourselves teachers of literature’ (11).

Gibbons, in 2017, asks the same question, following what he identifies as twenty years of political deprofessionalisation in education which has threatened to obscure any requirement for a personal philosophy, ‘to be a genuinely effective teacher of English...one needs to have a clear sense of what English is, what its purpose in the education of children should be, and the ways in which this is best effected in a given classroom, at a given time, with a particular group of pupils’ (3) … without such a foundation...it is someone else’s philosophy or ideology which is ‘merely enacted rather than understood, and in the worst cases it is confused, incoherent and damaging for both teachers and learners’ (4)

Shortly afterwards we were invited to participate in the pilot study for Jo Westbrook and Julia Southerland - the faster read project, the results of which were quite astonishing. Part of the deal of the research was that teachers got some reading CPD and it had a profound impact on those who were involved. Like me, they were asking themselves why they didn’t know certain things about reading processes. 

The final ingredient in my thinking was my students’ reaction to my lovely book arch.


Although I kind of find an excuse to put this into any presentation that I do, it’s actually really important to this one, because I spent my half term making it, my children sorting the books in to the right piles, husband and me drilling holes through them and threading them on a specially engineered steel frame, and actually when my Year 11s walked in on the morning they said, ‘Miss, you’ve murdered the books!’. Now, they were joking but it got me thinking about all the implicit messages about reading that are present in our school, and even within curriculum decisions.

We conducted a little bit of an audit and found all sorts of ways that reading was being unintentionally marginalised. I’ll happily talk to anyone over coffee about some of those findings. But to cut a long story short we were in a mess and I wanted to do something systematic to sort it out. I was over the quick fix.

So, with my incredibly dedicated department team of 14, I invited them to join me in a piece of collaborative research that would actually involve all of their school based CPD for the duration of a year - six twilight sessions, in effect, and half of them decided to join in. In simple terms we talked a lot about our reading histories, experiences and identities, and then we read a lot about reading theories and current reading research.

The study considers the theoretical and pedagogical reading knowledge of secondary English teachers teachers and how this might connect both to reading strategies used and habits developed in the classroom at Key Stage Three (KS3) and Key Stage Four (KS4), as well as to students’ volition for wider reading for their own interests and pleasure. 

It invites teachers to explore and investigate their own practice explicitly, and,  in collaboration with colleagues, to consolidate classroom approaches rooted in the evaluation of their own experiences.

But - It is a relatively small scale study involving seven teachers based within a single institution, over the course of two years of investigation. 

As part of that reconnaissance phase we investigated library loans from the school library. Now I am well aware that it is impossible to draw clear conclusions from that kind of measure, but the drop is horrible! (Here I had a slide which showed, for example, over a four year period how Year 7 loans had dropped from nearly 1000 to around 300! And we also surveyed students about their reading habits and attitudes towards reading and  got some horrible answers there, too.

And it all came in the middle of stark headlines about declines in reading for pleasure that we are so familiar with. So there was some tiny consolation in the fact that it wasn't just us, but not much.

So, these were the research questions that we came up with. Our aim was to generate a secure methodology for the teaching of literature, underpinned by application of reading theory, in order to increase motivation, develop good wider reading habits and thereby increase reading for pleasure amongst our students. 

1. Can instructional contexts and pedagogy in the secondary English classroom and across the Department be developed to improve students’ engagement in reading through teacher engagement with theory and research?

2. What changes in reading habits can be observed as a result of improved teacher knowledge and practice in the English classroom?

After reconnaissance, we moved into the 'manifesto' phase. Having done all this reading and discussing and thinking it was time to implement in the classroom. 

All teachers in the study reported that their strategies for teaching reading changed significantly. One noticed, ‘greater emphasis on whole class reading creating an atmosphere where books are talked about’.  Another revealed greater confidence and ‘being open with students about my own emotional response to what I am reading them. I have used this as a way of opening out a wider discussion around male emotional literacy! I am also more conscious of talking to students about why I have chosen the texts that they are reading. While engaged in the rapid reading of texts, my conversations with students are more focused on their own responses to the texts, how they are making meaning, how they are predicting future events and "reaching back" to earlier parts of the novels’.

Changes for a third teacher included, ‘extensive use of reading journals and reading jars, more sustained periods of independent reading, discussion to make reading processes explicit, rapid-reading, greater use of visual organisers, digging down into reading histories, consciously valuing reading, more choice about texts, a focus on personal understanding and engagement, and greater use of text as springboard for writing such as found poetry and recreative tasks’.

This is my favourite comment so far. ‘It was nice for it to be recognised in, I suppose a formal or even kind of official way that what you would consider I suppose to be  enjoyable classroom practice, gaining some credibility. You know, justifying having a good time in your classroom reading, rather than feeling as though, that something concrete has to be shown for all of this. You know, it’s nice to have what you feel to be right...endorsed.’ I was interested in this legitimacy and agency to do the things that you feel you need to do in the classroom, that make sense and feel right and the idea that research and theory actually supports this. The problem that we always encounter though is the exam at the end of it. No longer burdened by SATS at KS3 but still that dichotomy between reading for pleasure and reading for study. And it is a dichotomy, so this is what our manifesto set out to address.

At its core were two things that we all felt were supremely important. That teachers would move towards being conscious of the theories and ideas that were informing their reading teaching and cultivate the ability to articulate them. Also that discrete time would be created for both reading for pleasure and reading for study, 

Then participants were free to choose from three areas - things that they were effectively signing up to do under the broad banners of reading 'more', reading 'better' and reading 'writer'.

Reading MORE is underpinned by Julia Sutherland and Jo Westbrook and the rapid reading team. It isn’t rocket science. If students are going to get better at reading then they need to do more of it. Of both kinds. 

Read BETTER includes modelling, teaching strategies explicitly, using guided reading groups and shared talk, but also making access visible, perhaps by: Not keeping an ‘obvious’ record of book distribution for class readers; giving away ‘old’ departmental books for students to keep


Read WRITER involves making reading and writing links continually, teaching one through the other, and going 'meta' whenever possible: Encouraging students to actively identify the moment of ‘entry’ into fictional world in different texts, for example, or to become familiar with some of the theories themselves. 

I did begin to go into some other findings, but I shall save those for another blogpost.



Friday 9 March 2018

In The Field

Dear me. Can it really be six months since I have posted here? That is an unpleasant side effect of doctoral study: how quickly time seems to pass. And now I have had half a year of being 'part-time' and 'in the field' (though the reality is that I have had to be paid to be working in school for at least one Friday a month, if not more) and having relinquished the head of department role but exchanged it for an international one.

A quick sketch of where I have got to, then, in terms of the shape of my research and the state of my data collection:

The academic year 2016-2017 was spent in collecting data from six twilight sessions, or 'Study Group Research Interviews' as I termed them for the Qualitative Methods paper I had to write.

From September I was really down to four teachers (and me) in the collaborative research group: one left the school entirely and another has such a reduced timetable as to make it impractical to include her.

The Autumn Term is really the reading-teaching term, and this is where the bulk of the intervention will have taken place; it certainly did for my own practice. Near the start of the term, participating classes should have undertaken an Attitudes Towards Reading survey. At the end of December, then, I began individual semi-structured interviews with the remaining teachers. The last of them took place at Entebbe airport, on the way home from a school trip to Uganda at half term, so I have four of those, three now transcribed, to add to the six transcriptions of the Study Group Research Interviews from the previous academic year. 

Next steps are that I need to conduct three observations of each teacher in the next six weeks, and select three case study students per class. Following this there needs to be a follow-up interview with each teacher, and the final student survey. My data sets should then be completed by July. Exciting!

This afternoon I attended a Qualitative Data Analysis seminar. Scary to think that I will really need this stuff in the very near future. In fact, for next month's supervision my main supervisor and I will blind-code two of the round one interviews for a compare and contrast exercise. It will be good to have a practical session for a change. The day finished with a supervision with both supervisors which lasted for nearly two hours, but I have come home with both their sketches and visualisations of the research which is always helpful.

I'm yet to have 'NVivo' training, and it seems that this is going to be crucial for managing my data. Courses at the university seem to be infrequent and over-subscribed. One of our number has resorted to paying for an external course.

One thing that has buoyed me in the last few weeks is receiving 'highly commended' in a Reading for Pleasure Research award. I was spurred to submit to the award after participating in Women in Leadership training at school and feeling somehow 'guilty' that I was no longer in leadership! I'm also putting together an application for a research grant for a different but connected piece of research, so some interesting things are happening as a result of my studies to date.