Fluid Learning.pres
Last week was my long-awaited, first presentation of Fluid Learning (FL) to teachers. My presentation concluded a Personalised Learning Inset session that had been arranged by trainee headteachers at Barham Primary School in Wembley, Jayshree Thakore and Baljinder Barum.
I’d met with Jayshree and Baljinder prior to the Inset to discuss what they intended to deliver to the teachers - an interactive session exploring personalisation, retention, application and mastery opportunities (PRAM) for each individual child. The personal element of this tied in nicely with my concept of FL which I then explained. It was heartening to receive such an enthusiastic response from experienced members of the field, and even more so to find that I’d inspired them to model the Inset around the FL structure.
The Inset session was a great display of the versatility of FL. Jayshree and Baljinder implemented it well, with the teachers discussing the given areas of PRAM and really engaging in the response stage where they had a range of materials to create physical representations of their thoughts. One group even scripting a short role play.
We ended with my presentation of FL; I explained what had driven me to develop the concept and how one would facilitate a FL session, it was essentially a call to volunteers to trial it with their class. I’d left it open for any teachers to get in touch with me if they needed any assistance with the facilitation in their own time, however the teacher of the EAL class approached me at the end of session. Being a school based in the most multicultural borough of London, if not the UK, there are a large number of learners of English as an additional language (EAL); Laura Alexander teaches the EAL class at Barham and considered FL to be a good learning format for these children. She explained that the current FL topics may be too advanced for them however this could be adjusted with some foundational topics instead. I agreed, FL should be adapted to cater to the participants. I’ll be going back to Barham in the new year to work with Laura on facilitating these sessions with her class.
My presentation of Fluid Learning didn’t receive immediate responses of teachers keen to start using it the next day, probably due to the Inset being held at the end of a long day of teaching. Despite this, we garnered some pleasing feedback left on post-its: some mentioned the emphasis on ownership of learning and fluidity in learning; others mentioned the autonomy in individual research styles and presentation or response mediums; and finally, that FL had been thought-provoking and inspiring. This final point is key to me, being able to create a spark in the regular thinking processes of these teachers is what I ultimately intended. Setting in motion a shift in the approach to learning for the future of digital natives.
I’ll be checking in at Barham further through the year to see what kinds of changes the teachers have been implementing in relation to FL. And for now, I’ll pick up my research into physical movement and it’s involvement in schools and learning.













