The way we have designed and set up the classrooms at Newland College has three inspirations. The first is the family dinner table, where I learned so much as a child growing up. The second is my observations of the methodology at some of the most successful schools in the world. Third is the findings of the most comprehensive summary into education research we have at our disposal.
Growing up, our dinner table was a place where I felt I was learning most of what I would need to know. My parents, both teachers, and my older sister would share what was happening in the international schools that they ran, how world events were likely to affect enrolments, and other issues that would affect our family business. I was immersed in this from a very early age and began to see how everything was connected. It was our job growing up to figure out how all the world’s moving parts went together. This is something that is essential to all young learners.
Later, when I took over running the schools my parents started, I found myself spending quite a bit of time in meetings. I came across the ‘Harkness’ method of teaching, a round-table set-up in a classroom pioneered in the 1930s by the Philip’s Exeter Academy in New England, USA. It resonated with me. I felt that their method of teaching - around an oval table for 12 students - was an important configuration for how we could develop our approach to teaching the International Baccalaureate (IB).
A round table discussion has many rules that allow the students in the class to teach and learn from one another. The first is that the teacher sets expectations and advocates certain behaviours so that they become habitualised among students. These habits include learning how to listen actively; learning how to interject in a way that builds the conversation in a way similar to the techniques used by improvisation theatre; learning how to monitor the amount you talk in a session; and most importantly of all, learning how to prepare well for the forthcoming discussion. The teacher turns seated conductor, and the students make the music, much like a very good dinner party.
The 'central console' makes content easy for all to see
The third inspiration for our round-table set-up is the insight that an important way to make learning happen is to make it visible to the learner. It is estimated that our visual and spatial cortex represents two thirds of our brain’s sensory processing power. Visible learning takes many forms. John Hattie’s now seminal evaluation of education research on teaching strategies named, appropriately enough, Visible Learning, can give clues to schools, teachers, and interested parents on how to employ the most effective ones.
This idea is translated in the Newland College classroom to give students and teachers as many surfaces as possible to make that learning visible. We have up to five surfaces: a wall to wall magnetic white-board, enough mini-whiteboards and laptops for each student, a smart TV, and finally, a central-console screen sitting in the centre of the round table and visible to all students and the teacher.
As lessons unfold, the teacher chooses which surface will be used for each part of the lesson:
Teachers who have used the central-console have reported that student engagement is higher. The round-table ‘Harkness’ discussions have been welcomed by both teacher and student as another type of format well suited to certain parts of lessons or topics.
Ben Toettcher is Director of SKOLA group and founder of Newland College, an IB secondary school in Chalfont St Giles, Bucks.
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