1st Edition

Consulting Pupils What's In It For Schools?

By Julia Flutter, Jean Rudduck Copyright 2004

    Consulting Pupils considers the potential benefits and implications of talking to students about teaching and learning in school, exploring its impact at different levels. Key issues included are:

    * the importance of engaging young learners in a focused dialogue about learning
    * the role of pupil consultation in helping schools to develop new directions for improvement
    * the wider implications of pupil consultation and participation in teaching the principles of citizenship and democracy.

    Through examples of pupil consultation initiatives in primary and secondary schools, the authors demonstrate how an agenda for change based on pupils' perspectives on teaching and learning can be used to improve classroom practice.

    Part of the What's In It For Schools series aimed at making educational policy issues relevant to practitioners, this book will be a valuable resource for practitioners, students and researchers interested in exploring pupils' perspectives on teaching and learning.

    Introduction 1. Pupil Consultation as a Key to Improving Teaching and Learning 2. Consulting Pupils: Principles and Approaches 3. Pupils' Perspectives on Teaching and Learning 4. Pupil Consultation - What's in it for Schools?

    Biography

    Julia Flutter is Research Associate and Jean Rudduck is Professor of Education, both at the School of Education, University of Cambridge.

    'What is best about this book is that they quickly get into issues of learning, showing how students' feedback can help us to improve our practice as teachers and, more intangibly, increase students' sense of belonging to a learning community ... In an era when school self-evaluation will be central to the Ofsted process, schools ignore advice like this at their peril.' - Times Educational Supplement

    'For any school that is examining its practice of consulting pupils, this book will provide a wealth of guidance. For those schools that have not yet considered consulting pupils then this book makes essential reading.' - Special Children