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Naace

The Byron Review: response from Naace

Naace has already responded to questions in Chapter 3 of the DCSF Staying Safe consultation. In that response we stated: While we recognise that vulnerable children and young people need to be protected and need to learn how they can protect themselves, it is our view that good practice in the safe use of communication technologies should apply to all children in all educational settings. In the context of the Byron Review, we would extend this statement to include the home and other places where children use technology. In our submission to the Byron Review we have focussed on specific questions which most closely match the experience and expertise of our members.
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Micros and Primary Education (MAPE)

The merger of NAACE, MAPE and CEG provided an opportunity for reflection on what the individual organisations had achieved and what might be aspired to together. This article looks back over the history of the use of information technology in the primary school, reviews the work of MAPE over its 23-year lifespan and offers some proposals for the future. It was first published in Computer Education, February 2004.
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Infant School Internet Café

photograph of Dorothy Wood - click for full size image
An ICT Co-ordinator in an infant school decsribes how she has set up an after-school Internet Café for children and their parents.
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Primary Focus: Teaching through topics Spring 2007

Primary Focus: Teaching through topics Spring 2007 - click for full size image
Within these pages you'll find many ways in which you can deliver a rich curriculum through a range of topics. We have chosen to focus on just five. For younger children there are some exciting ways to learn about Food. Margaret Allen highlights the versatility of IWBs and Susie Arnott and Marie Hindmarch suggest ways of using stories as a starting point. Andy Pierson brings inspiration and help when teaching music in a Seaside topic. Photographs of beach huts, taken by Roger Keeling, provide a stimulus for mathematical activities.
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Free Wild Things!

Wild things logo - click for full size image
Wild things logo
In this article we are looking at a piece of software that has the potential to be very helpful in textiles activities at Key Stages 2 and 3. We believe that this piece of software is in the public domain and available for educational, non-commercial use. Even so, we advise you to carefully read any restrictions or conditions of use before installing it.
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The Elizabethan School: Using surveys effectively

Neil Oldbury at The Elizabethan School has a real interest in questionnaires and analysing data to improve systems throughout the school. He wanted to know which subject areas and teachers were using the computer suites throughout the school and whether the use of computers was impacting on raising standards.
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Websites for additional and special educational needs

Fortunately, many organisations offer support to teachers and other professionals working in education, through their websites. Jim Merrett reviews some useful ones.
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Just how much knowledge should a teacher have?

A fascinating question and one that teachers would probably answer with 'more knowledge than we have now!' That alone is reason to share this vast wealth of understanding in the world, and really begin to learn from each other. Knowledge and understanding are not learned in isolation for in collaboration we can achieve much more. Teachers cannot possibly know all the answers to the questions children ask but it is their responsibility to equip learners with the thirst, skills and opportunities to be able to find out - and not simply through a Google search either.

This article explores this approach with Key Stage 1 pupils in a Hampshire infant school.
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NOUS PARLONS FRANÇAIS – ET VOUS?

NOUS PARLONS FRANÇAIS - ET VOUS?

As the Primary languages entitlement creeps ever closer, Roz Mays, a teacher of French at one of Cambridgeshire's smallest primary schools with approximately 80 pupils, shares her experiences of Modern Foreign Languages (MFL) teaching and talks about how technology can relieve the pressure on teachers.
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NAACE keynote speech - Fiona Aubrey-Smith

Fina Aubrey-Smith - click for full size image
Fina Aubrey-Smith
At the NAACE Autumn Conference held in Coventry on Saturday 4 October, Fiona Aubrey-Smith, former teacher and current head of education at UniServity was invited to give a keynote speech on 'extending learning opportunities'. Discussing new ways of viewing learning and how to bring it into the 21st century, Fiona offers Sharing Success a glimpse into her speech for all who missed it.
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