Remote Education Provision
Remote Education Provision At St Felix
Remote education provision: information for parents
This information is intended to provide clarity and transparency to pupils and parents or carers about what to expect from remote education if local restrictions require entire cohorts (or bubbles) to remain at home.
For details of what to expect where individual pupils are self-isolating, please see the final section of this page.
The remote curriculum: what is taught to pupils at home
A pupil’s first day or two of being educated remotely might look different from our standard approach, while we take all necessary actions to prepare for a longer period of remote teaching.
What should my child expect from immediate remote education in the first day or two of pupils being sent home?
Initially the classwork for each lesson will be posted on Teams for each class (https://teams.microsoft.com/). It can be completed and returned for feedback in the same way. If you have contacted us with difficulties accessing online education, paper copies will be sent for pupils to complete at home and return to school. Teachers will be available to support learning via Teams from Day 1 on the General channel (this may not be your class teacher if they are suffering from coronavirus themselves). EYFS will use Tapestry to deliver task prompts and home resources. |
Following the first few days of remote education, will my child be taught broadly the same curriculum as they would if they were in school?
We teach the same curriculum remotely as we do in school wherever possible and appropriate. However, we have needed to make some adaptations in some subjects. For example; PE, Art, DT and Computing. Pupils in EYFS and KS1 will need parental support to access remote learning.
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Remote teaching and study time each day
How long can I expect work set by the school to take my child each day?
We expect that remote education (including remote teaching and independent work) will take pupils broadly the following number of hours each day:
Primary school-aged pupils |
3 hours a day, on average, across the school cohort. This will depend on the speed and depth with which tasks are completed by pupils. Younger pupils will need more discussion and parental input but will complete shorter tasks Pupils in EYFS will be learning through play and therefore the hours of learning will be less easy to quantify. |
Accessing remote education
How will my child access any online remote education you are providing?
https://teams.microsoft.com/ for Y1-6 Tapestry for EYFS Passwords for these have been sent home in the Autumn Term for parents to ensure they have access to home learning.
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If my child does not have digital or online access at home, how will you support them to access remote education?
We recognise that some pupils may not have suitable online access at home. We take the following approaches to support those pupils to access remote education:
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How will my child be taught remotely?
We use a combination of the following approaches to teach pupils remotely:
The timetable will follow broadly the same pattern as a normal school week. Maths and English will be taught daily and RE twice a week. Other subjects will be on a weekly basis. Short asynchronous teaching videos will be available in core subjects. This may be your class teacher or materials from White Rose Maths or Oak National Academy. Supporting materials will be posted on Teams for pupils to complete electronically and submit daily for feedback during school hours. Engagement of pupils will be monitored and the school will make welfare calls/emails where engagement is low to offer further support. Where necessary printed packs will be available as an alternate method of delivery and submission of work. Engagement will be monitored in the same way as Teams. Pupils will have access to Times Table Rock Stars and also Numbots in Ks1. Teachers can be reached during normal school hours via the Teams platform for questions, clarification or support. They will not provide 1:1 online lessons. |
Engagement and feedback
What are your expectations for my child’s engagement and the support that we as parents and carers should provide at home?
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How will you check whether my child is engaging with their work and how will I be informed if there are concerns?
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How will you assess my child’s work and progress?
Feedback can take many forms and may not always mean extensive written comments for individual children. For example, whole-class feedback or quizzes marked automatically via digital platforms are also valid and effective methods, amongst many others. Our approach to feeding back on pupil work is as follows:
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Additional support for pupils with particular needs
How will you work with me to help my child who needs additional support from adults at home to access remote education?
We recognise that some pupils, for example some pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), may not be able to access remote education without support from adults at home. We acknowledge the difficulties this may place on families, and we will work with parents and carers to support those pupils in the following ways:
We recognise that parental support is essential for effective home learning for primary age pupils and that few pupils will access and submit work unaided. If you have a child with additional needs, the teacher will provide work with alternative expectations where appropriate. If this is still a problem, please contact the class teacher for additional ideas or support. Daily 1:1 online lessons will not be possible
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Remote education for self-isolating pupils
Where individual pupils need to self-isolate but the majority of their peer group remains in school, how remote education is provided will likely differ from the approach for whole groups. This is due to the challenges of teaching pupils both at home and in school.
If my child is not in school because they are self-isolating, how will their remote education differ from the approaches described above?
Pupils who are self-isolating will still have access to the same broad and ambitious curriculum as those in school. Our school remote learning platform is Microsoft Teams and pupil passwords are available in their reading journals. Initially the school work from each lesson will be posted on Teams and can be returned in the same way for feedback. This is the platform currently used for homework so contact the school with difficulties you may be having accessing Teams at the earliest opportunity. Short teaching sequences from White Rose Maths and Oak National Academy will be available for some core lessons but others may be supported by a Powerpoint which may need parental support to deliver. Pupil engagement will be monitored in the same way.
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