No Pens Day

09 January 2018


At Whalley Range, students are already given many opportunities to develop ‘presentational talk’, but this year we have focused on developing what Voice 21 have coined ‘exploratory talk’. Through the development of oracy in the curriculum, students have been engaging critically and constructively with others’ ideas in group discussion with an emphasis on replacing more informal language with standard English.

This Autumn we launched ‘a year of oracy’, so to get students and staff in the mood for this, ‘No Pens Day Wednesday’ was our summer kick-off event, inspired by the national initiative from The Communication Trust.

It has to be Wednesday – No Pens Day Thursday doesn’t have the same ring to it, does it?!

A creative and divergent mix of activities and lessons took place on a bright July day, showcasing fantastic teaching and learning to get everyone talking:

  • Year 10 gathered around a campfire (imaginary of course – great use of the iPhone torch) to create and tell their own Gothic ghost story
  • Year 9 historians developed their acting, technological and communication skills as they devised movie trailers based on the Manchurian Crisis (you may have to google it), while Year 7s created an oral Torah on Project Day

A ‘No Pens Day’ activity involving a smart board activity and group discussion

No Pens Day Wednesday (I know it just rolls off the tongue!) was a triumph of voice, creativity, communication and collaboration. It was prepped for with a twilight, sharing ideas that teachers could choose to use or adapt for their own subject focus, and an introduction of our oracy strategies to be launched with students in the Autumn.

Now it’s the end of term one, and we are teaching our three ‘talk protocols’ (Say it Again, Think and Ink and Talk it Out) and working across faculties to develop ways of using talk to explore, rehearse, repeat, revise. But our first ever No Pens Day lives on our shared memory and gives teachers and students confidence that they can put their pens down!

Comments


 

Disclaimer and Legal Information

Our blog (The Answer in the Room) is a collection of articles written by past and present members of staff within the Education and Leadership Trust. The blog aims to share educational ideas and best practice with our internal staff and the wider world. We are an educational institution. Learn more About this Blog and/or learn more About the Education and Leadership Trust.

This blog and its authors will not be held responsible for any misuse, reuse, recycled and cited/uncited copies of content from this website by others.

The views and opinions expressed in this blog are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the position or opinion of any other agency, organisation, employer or company.

Comments are moderated but we do not take any responsibility for any libel or litigation that results from something written in a comment. We reserve the right to reject or delete any comment for any reason whatsoever (abusive, profane, rude etc). Please keep your comments polite and relevant.

We are happy for you to quote and share our content in any reasonable manner, e.g. post links to our blogs on social media, but not in any way that suggests that we, or our authors, endorse you, your use or your views.

We appreciate attributions, e.g. a link to our website (eltclone.eltrust.org) or twitter handle: @Trust_ELT.

If you have a query/issue about any of the above please Contact Us.

 

Quality Marks, Awards & Affiliations

Cyber Essentials Certificate logo Real World Learning Awards Winner 2021 logo Confederation of School Trusts logo The East Manchester Academy logo Levenshulme High School logo Whalley Range 11-18 High School logo Whalley Range Sixth Form College logo