Learning FC

Match report activity

Fantastic Maths and Literacy Resources

I first saw these materials in 1998 when they were in development. Over the last 5 or 6 years I have mentioned them to many teachers, but couldn’t locate them.

Here they are – these materials are Crown Copyright © 2000.

The materials were funded by the PFA

image

There are 6 pdf files in all – covering a whole raft of resources – all linked back to football.

Here’s a sample activity

maths exercise ticket prices

My related activity – find the highest finishing team in the 2011/12 season that charges those prices. You may have to look a long way.

The activities are linked to the levels from 2000 – for example,

National Curriculum References

The comprehensive teacher notes for each activity may help you make the best of the resources and adapt them to your own class requirements

teacher notes

Here are the pdf files for the 6 sections

Section 1 The Match

Section 2 The Players

Section 3 The fans

Section 4 Football as a Business

Section 5 The Stadium

Section 6 The World

Twitter in 10 minutes. Part 3

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On Twitter today

After the good reception of this approach last week – it may be a regular feature.

In future posts the full web site address will be used, rather than the shortened versions. We’ve discovered that the shortened versions sometimes can’t be accessed through school filtering systems.

10am

Good news. Physio says I am two weeks ahead of schedule. Should be allowed on bike in one more week (@nickwhittome). Nick is a fantastic, helpful technical genius based in Ireland. That’s great news.

@DavidCookAuthor The Fall of the White Rose, visit Bosworth Battlefield at a truly wonderful heritage site! http://www.bosworthbattlefield.com/ Being a Yorkshireman, I’m not sure I like this idea.

@NikPeachey Teach Yourself to Teach with Tech: The first 10 tasks http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/blogs/nikpeachey/teach-yourself-teach-tech-first-10 If it’s by Nik Peachey – the chances are that it is very, very good!

teach yourself tech

@innovativeteach Prof. Sugata Mitra was great at #saltash11. You can find out more from when he spoke at our event in Nov. – http://blogs.msdn.com/b/teachers/archive/2011/01/25/share-part-of-the-uk-innovative-education-forum-with-your-colleagues.aspx This is from the Microsoft Partners in Learning group. Some of their stuff is really useful. They often highlight fantastic free resources from Microsoft. (Yep – free and Microsoft in the same sentence – ‘tis true! I am using the free LiveWriter to make this entry).

teacher blog

11am

@tonyparkin RT @the_college: Join @mberry in our new discussion on doing more for less with ICT -https://www.nationalcollege.org.uk/session-timeout?urlParams=servid=44 Oh – I do wish people wouldn’t do this – raise our expectations then dash them! Or maybe put an entry on the tweet – requires log-in

 

sign in page

 

Two fire alarms by period two! How many more will there be today? Place your bets now! If I didn’t laugh I cry… I won’t name this teacher, but here’s a primary school teacher tweeting on her iphone – therefore completely bypassing the school proxies. When will the RBCs and the folks that set the rules realise that they are dealing with adults as well as pupils. Note to central ICT staff who think that adding radius servers to primary school networks are a good idea. They’re not. (personal view)
Update – this comment by @kernowbaird on twitter made me think – “good blog. but what is wrong with the primary teacher tweeting about fire alarms if she did it at break time?”
I agree with James – and I’ll add to it. What is wrong with adults using adult tools to support the learning and teaching. I often see tweets asking for a quick vote or for a visit to light up a blog or for an idea – these tweets are clearly during lesson times and they’re not all in PPA time. What are your thoughts?

 

@russeltarr Excellent maps re. World War Two / Origins of Cold War #historyteacher: http://tinyurl.com/6byamw2

This looks fantaastic -

origins of war

The unfortunate thing is the link to the link to the link makes it crazily stupid to copy.Look – and this isn’t even the end of it

horrible long link

@thisisleics MP quits to join race to be Leicester’s mayor http://www.thisisleicestershire.co.uk/news/MP-quits-join-race-mayor/article-3299965-detail/article.html

This is the ‘official’ twitter channel for our local paper The Leicester Mercury. Like the idea about quitting as an MP for an ‘odds on’ favourite job. I’m not a a gambler but ‘odds on’ favourites I can recall include .. (finish this sentence)

 

Noon

@The_NEN 21st Century burden: Parents are under immense pressure, writes Sophie Raworth

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-12664259

 

bbc news family

@peterford The more I see of @missionexplore , the more I wish I had been a geography teacher :-) I fully agree – so there are at least 2 closet geography folks out here in twitterland. (peter and me!). Geography and ICT were made for each other! Can someone let me know the most straightforward way to get a Geography ‘A’ level?

 

@ePaceonline At the heart of every class are 30 very different students, all coming into school to learn the same material in a wide variety of ways. This I like – Mary Blake is openly the face of her company on Twitter and sometimes drops out gems like this. Often, these are followed up later with the way their solutions can help with the conundrum. I do like this use of twitter to both provoke thought and introduce the solutions.

@SchoolDuggery Wrote detailed email to Asst Dir of Ed about a key local issue. Got a one line response referring to a different pyramid of schools #argh. So – here’s my view. As the ‘local layers of administration’ are under threat, now is their chance to shine or to keel over. Which response was this one? I suggest that @schoolduggey  sends the said ‘Asst Dir of Ed’ a copy of “Good to Great” and highlight any 2 pages. Any 2 pages would make a difference.

1pm

ZenologueBlog Sunidhi Chauhan loves photography – Times of India #photonews http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/music/news-and-interviews/Sunidhi-Chauhan-loves-photography/articleshow/7645317.cms Sadly, I was expecting more (how Twitter sets the bar high!). Good example of how NOT to construct a blog page – IMHO !!

HodderGeography Did you catch this? The World’s Most Typical Person is a 28-Year-Old Chinese Man http://ht.ly/49d91 worth seeing – but once again the link is in a link in a shortened link. I think it eventually points to a National geographic web page.

@nancyrubin New Skills for the Learning Pro? The Big Question http://performancexdesign.wordpress.com/2009/07/07/new-skills-for-the-learning-pro-the-big-question/

Well – the post is over 18 months old – but it’s still very thought provoking

 

new skills for learning pro

@thedisruptdept New Blog Post: “Disruption Department PSA #1″ http://thedisruptiondepartment.org/blog/?p=93

 

creative commons font

the disruption department is a wonderful project – their about page may sound familiar.

There is a great resource tucked away on this page – http://www.theleagueofmoveabletype.com/ – here’s their site “Here, you’ll find only the most well-made, free & open-source, @font-face ready fonts.”

These are fabulous fonts – created in Opentype format. I was so impressed with this resource that we’ve made a ‘how to’ page on our company website -

2pm

@ericorayner BBC will shoot Wimbledon finals in 3D this year. No 3D on BBC of course, but will be sold to other broadcasters. Surely a fascinating first step – also, we should be happy that the BBC is okay selling things to other broadcasters – keep the licence fee down!

would it be really unethical to send out iPlayer and drinking game rules links to my 6th formers as HW? I won’t name this teacher – but it does look like a very good idea. I’m struggling to work out ‘Homework in which subject?’

@OhLottie Having trouble embedding an SWF file in my wordpress blog. Just coming up as a link? Can you help?! I think I used an embed plugi quite happily (until I discovered Vimeo Plus!)

 

@HPTeachExchange Great site. Online task manager. http://budurl.com/lqrc – sounds good – but naff link (I think a naff link shortener!)

@cherylren Using replaynote app to explore diagrams replaynote.com/notes/MzY0 This is probably realy good – the link is to a video which will play havoc with my 10 minute rule. This app is for an ipad.

@PfS162 Sunshine much needed to lift spirits after another disappointing funding notification – PfS fights on to continue to benefit young people Not good news – this is from Rex hall Associates who have been behind the Playing for Success centres across the UK. We’ve been lucky enough to work with quite a few of these centres over the last 12 years. Their loss will be sadly felt by a lot of schools.

3:40pm (3pm and 4pm) – lets try 15 minutes.

@unmarketing See what apps have permission to your account http://twitter.com/account/connections remove ones you don’t know This is worth knowing – how many 3rd party apps. have you given access to your twitter account over the months?

This is a small selection of mine I’d forgotten about – time for some action.

twitter links

@deerwood Technology scheme to transform education in Kenya http://afrinnovator.com/innovation/intel-corporation-in-kenyan-education-initiative

 

kenyan initiative

 

@ZoeRoss19 RT @MrsThorne: New blog: next steps with Google Maps http://sallythorne.com/2011/03/07/more-work-with-googlemaps/

What a brilliant, thorough blog post – this is merely a snippet!

google battlefields

@terryfreedman is anyone aware of a later version of Shift Happens than 4.0, preferably a UK version? Thanks

I’m sure the copy shown at Naace was UK based – hey – I’ve just found a copy called ShiftHappens UK. I’ll try to get it to Terry – or better still… here’s a copy on Vimeo that you can download. http://www.vimeo.com/20746877 Now if anyone at Microsoft wants me to remove it – no problems – please can I have a link?

@thisisleics Should primary pupils be paid to do extra lessons? http://www.thisisleicestershire.co.uk/news/Children-paid-extra-lessons/article-3299465-detail/article.html

Leicester mercury -  fascinating article. Surprised that the education correspondent didn’t tweet it though. Maybe she hasn’t twigged twitter in education. Maybe we need a chat.

 

4:45pm

@ZenologueBlog Photobucket Wins MediaPost’s 2011 Appy Awards for “Best Photography App” – Business Wire (press release) #photonews http://tiny.ly/oM3s http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20110307005956/en/Photobucket-Wins-MediaPost%E2%80%99s-2011-Appy-Awards-%E2%80%9CBest Probably really fascinating. But – a press release about a photo app – and it’s all in text. Come on folks.

@idletim New blog post – Stunned by Storybird http://challengeclc.primaryblogger.co.uk/2011/03/06/stunned-by-storybird/

storybird

Storybird looks like a fascinating facility, and I have seen lots of reference to it on Twitter recently.

 

@Ideas_Factory Bringing art and design into science education – article in SEED by John Maeda of RISD

http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/on_meaningful_observation1/

RISD is the Rhode Island School of Design and they do have some intersting facilities – not quite matched by the typical primary!

 

not a primary school

John Wycliffe, his Bible and his church

This 800-year-old church stands in the centre of the town of Lutterworth, St Mary’s is on the site of a Saxon place of Christian worship.

St Marys Lutterworth - Wycliffe Bible

This church is home to some incredible history. John Wycliffe was the rector between 1374 and 1384, and it is believed that it was during this time that he was most involved with the first complete translation of the Bible into English. This original Bible is no longer around – it would now be over 600 years old! – but a “Modern” version, presented to the Church in 1876, is on show as a memorial to John Wycliffe.

Wycliffe Bible modern copy

Wycliffe Bible in case

There are many other artefacts around the church related to John Wycliffe. These include:

 

memorial showing Wycliffe preaching in Lutterworth

The Wycliffe Memorial – a monument depicting Wycliffe preaching to villagers despite the objection of church seniors, above an inscription about his life.

John Wycliffe pulpit, St marys Lutterworth

Wycliffe’s Pulpit – the furnishing most likely to have been used by John Wycliffe himself. Although nobody can be sure of its age, it is clear that some parts of this pulpit are much older than others.

Font St Marys Lutterworth

The font – this font is definitely ancient, but nobody can be sure of whether or not it was standing during Wycliffe’s time at the church.

all photos (C) www.sarahmcsharry.co.uk

The Hallaton Hoard

Many thanks to Leicestershire Museums and the staff at Harborough for the following information.

In 2000, Ken Wallace of the Hallaton Field Group discovered a collection of Roman pottery in a field just outside the village of Hallaton. The site was excavated with the help of the University of Leicester Archaeological Services, and the discoveries made were astounding.

The Roman finds

333 Roman coins (including the oldest ever excavated in Britain), an ornately decorated cavalry parade helmet,some glass eyes and a few brooches.

Oldest Roman Coin in Britain

This is the oldest Roman coin ever excavated in Britain – believed to date to 211 BC.

 

Roman Parade Helmet

This is the cheekpiece of the parade helmet. It shows an emperor on horseback with a winged goddess of Victory on his shoulder holding a laurel wreath over his head. Beneath the horse’s hooves a barbarian is crouching. It would have been a very high status item, worn by a cavalry officer (so therefore potentially not a Roman), silver gilt and all highly decorated.

 

The other finds include more than 5000 silver and gold Iron Age coins, pictured below. All of these items are available to view at the Harborough Museum.

Iron Age coins from Hallaton

All photographs © Leicestershire Museums

In Leicestershire Parishes this week ..

Things you see when you’re walking

A group of us are walking the Leicestershire Round – bit by bit – and there are some very strange things to see.

How about this odd tree? Does anyone know what sort it is?

Look carefully on the left hand side of the first picture – 2 seperate branches have grown together -

odd tree odd tree bigger picture

And this? (Funny – I thought the lottery was quite a new thing).

lottery piccie

This was in a field near West Langton, fairly close to Market Harborough.

What’s it all about?

Thanks to Leicestershire Museums for this link http://ow.ly/1qImk0 - the post commemorates Lottery – one of the first winners of the Grand National!

Slightly wonky picture is due to slightly wonky photographer – me!

Local Owls – fabulous new born pictures

A Great Local Resource

I’ve noticed in a few schools this week that Owls are currently being sketched, drawn, written about etc.

From Leicestershire Museums.

Continue Reading

Generating Full User Report in SUMS

This page has been moved to http://www.systemed.co.uk/how_to/quick-tips/using-sums-with-embc/

Which is best – Google Maps or BING?

Or sit on the fence and use both? 

Here’s the scenario –  You’ve persuaded your daughter that yes – she can run a half marathon, and yes she can run the Rainbows Hospice Equinox* run in 7 weeks from now. You’ve even gone out for a 10.5 mile local run with her on a Sunday morning. 

So, how do you answer the question ‘How does that run compare with the actual run?’ That should be quite easy until you see the route notes supplied include descriptions like the following 

We’ll turn left out of the farm drive… up the dirt track and over Gravel Hill… might spot a trig point… turn left down a narrow lane… 

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Oldest Roman Coin in Britain – in Hallaton?

A wonderful story today on the Leicestershire Museums Blog

Oldest Roman Coin in Britain?

 

What is believed to be the oldest Roman coin ever found in Britain makes its museum debut, 2220 years after it was made. The silver denarius coin is now on display at Harborough Museum, Market Harborough alongside other coins that were excavated with it. It is 4 years older than the coin previously thought to be the oldest surviving example.

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School Resource from Leicestershire Museums

I think it’s free – no price is mentioned on their blog – one can hope.

The ‘Held in the Hand’ box looks like a lot of fun, and the museum service have a very positive quote back from the first school to use it.

The objects include some unusual items such as a tooth fairy calculator, an alien seed pod, a suit of armour for a small bird and a beach comb. Other sculptures are untitled leaving their interpretation open to whoever handles them.
Held in the Hand Box

Michelle at the museum service sent me this ..

There is a small charge for borrowing the artworks, see: http://www.leics.gov.uk/artworks.htm for full details of costs and insurance.

But the small charge is definitely worth it!