End of Half Term Blog

We’ve made it – almost!

If you’re reading this then I’ve decided to upload this ‘end of term blog’, a piece I’ve been adding to for a few days but didn’t know when to send. Normally this would go out on Friday of course, but with the ever changing situation every time I wrote something it ended up being out of date. As we have now miraculously managed five days without notification of a case it seemed as good a time as any (I know, I’ll regret that sentence I’m sure!) Aside from a quick mention at the start about the current Coivd situation, the majority of what I write below is about the half term in general rather than the latest update on how we’re getting on coping with the virus.

We’re in the eighth week of term and so far we have had seven confirmed cases within the school community, five of which have led to some wider level of student and/or staff isolation. We hope and believe that all affected students or staff are recovering well. I remain amazed how quite how low this figure is for such a big school, and of course I’m pleased that by adapting to new advice we are able to keep disruption to a minimum. I am sorry for all those students and staff who have had to isolate for even just one day but believe that we have a good plan in place, bolstered now with a developing offer of hybrid lessons, and hope that it will see us through to Christmas. Our response to receiving news of a positive case is now well practiced and we can manage the necessary steps promptly and with confidence. This will continue over the half term, and so if notifications of positive cases are received by families please continue to report them.

However, moving on – the half term in general:

  1. We have been very impressed with the attendance, attitude and behaviour of our students. Well done to them all. They have coped well with the changes put in place in September and the vast majority are following all of the rules all of the time. Hand sanitiser, masks, one way system, ventilation, specific canteens, social distancing for all staff, teachers in ‘boxes’ at the front of rooms – all the protocols are strange but they appear to be working, and that is 100% down to the behaviour of students and staff on site. Restrictions are only as good as the level of compliance, and I have been really encouraged by what I have seen in school. I shouldn’t be surprised of course, as if lockdown taught us anything it is that pretty much all adults and students absolutely hated being off school and therefore have returned enthusiastically.
  1. Students have in the main returned to school with showing more independence than usual. They are taking more responsibility for their own learning and communicating better with adults, who in turn are able to pass more responsibility to students and make use of technology to keep in touch with learners more effectively. We are determined not to lose this as a school and have plans to build on it in future months and terms.
  1. I am full of pride and admiration for each and every one of my colleagues. This term has been tiring and challenging in many ways, but I am greeted every day with positive energy and smiles (when I can see them) from every member of the team. Staff are following the rules themselves, taking the virus very seriously, isolating when they need to and returning as soon as they can. Tempting fate I know, but so far staff attendance has been amazing for a school our size. I know that it is mainly random, but some schools in the borough have been hugely affected by staff absence with cover lessons taking place perhaps 3 or 4 times a day for some students. That simply hasn’t happened here yet and the students are benefitting a great deal from it, and so I say an enormous thank you to the entire team.
  1. This term may have been dominated by the impact of the worldwide pandemic, but we are not letting Covid ‘win’ every day. Our school is determined to keep to what we believe in and just ‘getting through it’ is not good enough for us. That is why we have had our first Trial Exams for Year 11 this week, why we have followed the full curriculum from day one, why we are tentatively planning a return to limited extra-curricular activities after half term and why certain events have still taken place. For example, Dan Wilkinson and his fellow student leaders, supported by Mrs Wilson and the network team, were able to host a Q+A session with local MP William Wragg on Friday last week. Around 40 students from across Year 10 and Year 11 quizzed Mr Wragg for over an hour on a full range of topics, thanks to the magic of video conferencing. The students grilled Mr Wragg on the environment, Covid responses, actions on drug use, the Rose Hill train line…and what he had for dinner. Well done to Dan and my colleagues on setting this up, thank you to the students who took part and of course a big thank you to Mr Wragg for taking part.
  1. I have been humbled and very grateful for all the messages of support that we have received from parents, especially in the hardest of moments. Sending the dreaded late night text about students not being in school the next day, we are always incredibly conscious of the chaos we may be putting some families into with very little notice. At these times, and others beside, parents and carers have taken the time to thank us for the efforts we are taking and I cannot tell you how motivating that is. Therefore my final ‘thank you’ today goes to all the parents, carers, grandparents and family members who support our school and our students so well every day. Thank you.

Overall this has been a challenging term for everyone in so many ways. But – it is a million times better than not being open, and I know I speak for the whole team when I say we have a determination to keep our school fully open for as long as possible. We can do this, the students can do this and given the chance we will crack on for as long as we can.

Wishing you all a great week when it comes,

Joe Barker

Ps…cue the next positive case…

MHS Update 15-10-2020

MHS Update 15-10-2020

I am sorry to inform parents and carers that we must ask Year 8 students and any student who caught the Y18 (either direction) on Monday 12th October to stay off school on Friday 16th October due to a positive Covid case. We were informed of this on Thursday evening and will aim to complete all contact tracing on Friday morning, in the hopes that we can invite a number of Year 8s back into school from Monday 19th onwards. Please look out for further communication during the day on the 16th.

 

Work will be provided for all isolating students on Show My Homework (Satchel One) for Friday’s lessons. If the whole year group or whole classes have to isolate then live lessons will begin as per the plan on Monday 19th.

Best wishes,

Joe Barker

MHS Update 12-10-2020

MHS Update 12-10-2020

I am sorry to inform parents and carers that we have had to ask Year 7 students to stay off school on Monday 12th October due to a positive Covid case in the year group. We were informed of this on Sunday evening and will aim to complete all contact tracing on Monday morning, in the hopes that we can invite a number of Year 7s back into school from Tuesday onwards. Please look out for further communication during the day on the 12th.

Work will be provided for all Year 7 students on Show My Homework (Satchel One) for Monday’s lessons, with more details to follow regarding Tuesday onwards. If the whole year group or whole classes have to isolate then live lessons will begin as per the plan on Tuesday.

Best wishes,

Joe Barker

 

MHS Update 9-10-2020

MHS Update 9-10-2020

I’m sure that parents and carers have heard quite enough from me this week after my double blog on Wednesday. I planned/hoped to simply say that it had been an uneventful week since then…but then an episode of The Bill played out on the fields next to school yesterday afternoon. I was busy teaching Year 11 at the time while my colleagues dealt with the situation superbly, and by the time the final lesson had ended the drama was all over. Those students moving around outside before period 5 were fantastic, following instructions quickly and moving inside promptly – so quickly in fact that the police officer in the helicopter felt the need to call us to say how impressive it looked from the air!

This week there has been a group of Year 7s and, from Wednesday, thirty Year 11s having to isolate as a result of being contacts in school with positive cases. The Year 7s, who often formed a whole class, have had a range of live lessons over the past two weeks. The Year 11s, who are spread across several classes, have had a diet of work on Show My Homework and some experimental ‘hybrid’ lessons whereby those at home can join their classmates in real time. These first hybrid lessons have gone pretty well as we discover how the technology works in practice and what it means for teaching and learning. I think there is a way to go to make these lessons a ‘standard solution’, and we may hit some insurmountable obstacles that we are not yet aware of, but the early signs have been good and I’m grateful to the IT team and the teachers who have ‘given it a go’. Thanks also to the 30 Year 11 students at home who have logged on and joined in enthusiastically.

Another week therefore goes by and we continue to make the best of the situation we find ourselves in, which is all any of us can do at the moment.

I wish you all a restful weekend,

Joe Barker

MHS Update 7-10-2020 Number Two

MHS Update 7-10-2020 Number Two

Earlier today I blogged that Year 11 have been asked to stay at home today after a positive case of Covid-19. This was a sensible precaution and one that we were happy to take, in the hope that we would then be able to welcome some of Year 11 back into school tomorrow.

Having taken further advice this morning the decision has been made that around thirty Year 11 students must self-isolate for the next 14 days. These students and their families were informed at around midday today via an emailed letter. However, the majority of Year 11 can now return to school on Thursday 8th October. All Year 11 students whose parents/carers have not recieved notice of 14 day self-isolation TODAY (not last night) can and should return to school on the 8th October. Siblings of the self-isolating students can also attend school as normal. If parents are not sure whether their child is part of the thirty can check by calling the school. 

As I said in my previous blog I would like to thank the family of the student concerned for sharing the news of the positive test so promptly. In doing so we were able to save a great deal of disruption this morning and take action that helped us to avoid a full year group closure. Of course we are worried about the thirty students who will be at home for the next two weeks. Work will be set every day on Show my Homework to replicate the learning taking place in lessons, but we are also keen to experiment with a small number of ‘hybrid’ lessons whereby those students at home can take part in the lessons as they occur in school, in real time.

I’ll be honest with you in that this is a challenge for us. If we run ‘hybrid’ lessons then we need to ensure that the experience for the student at home is worthwhile (ie, better than working on Show My Homework based tasks), whilst at the same time not reducing the quality of lessons inside school just to fit with the technology available. The student at home needs to be able to see and hear what is going on, and that can be complicated where teachers are moving around and changing lessons plans in real time depending on what happens in the lesson. There is also a workload issue too as staff may have to greatly adapt their resources in unfamiliar ways and get used to new ways of teaching, and there are some potential safeguarding issues that we need to iron out. However…we are keen to experiment with various solutions to these problems, and self-isolating Year 11s can expect to take part in some hybrid lessons over this coming fortnight.

We’ve known all along that this term (year?) would be hit by these kind of disruptions, but we are determined to do all that we can to enable students to keep learning no matter what. I have a great deal of faith in our staff and our Year 11 cohort to make the best of this situation, and as we experience these closures our internal staff mantra of ‘Better Never Stops’ has rarely been more apt!

Many thanks

Joe Barker

Year 11 positive case

MHS Update 7-10-2020

Good morning everyone. 

We received news of a positive case of Covid-19 within Year 11 on the evening of 6th October, and I would like to thank the family for sharing the outcome of the test so quickly. After taking the necessary advice we were been asked to keep Year 11 off school on Wednesday 7th October as a precaution, and decided to let parents know asap even though it meant a text fairly late last night. We felt it better to let everyone know straight away and avoid both the risk and the disruption of the whole year group travelling into school and then home again.

If Year 11 parents and carers have missed the message, then this is to confirm that the whole of Year 11 should not attend school today, Wednesday 7th October, and self isolate as a precaution. 

At the time of writing it is not clear whether we will have to ask the year group to isolate for longer, or whether some students will be able to return on Thursday 8th. We will of course aim to clarify this as soon as we can today.

In the meantime staff have been asked to set work on Show My Homework for all timetabled lessons. If classes are still off school on Thursday onwards, then the full suite of live lessons will commence on that day with form time at 8.20am onwards. Year 11 know how highly we regard them as a group and I have every faith that they will complete all the work set, and if necessary engage with the live lessons well.

Naturally I am very sorry that we have had to take this action today and I sincerely hope that this does not become the norm. Up until now we have been spared the level of cases seen in other large schools, but that doesn’t really make up for not having the class of 2021 with us today.

Siblings of Year 11 can and should attend school as normal.

Best wishes,

Joe Barker

MHS Update 2-10-2020

MHS Update 2-10-2020

Disclaimer – I’m posting this in the morning and as yet we haven’t had a confirmed positive case since Tuesday…I hope that this doesn’t change today!

We’re well passed half way through the first half term now; it’s been full-on but absolutely fantastic compared to the dark days of national lockdown. I know I say it every week but it’s so heartening to see the school thriving again. We were of course really sad to not have Year Eight with us for 4 days recently and it’s been great to have them back, although that was of course tempered by the fact that 17 Year Seven students and a number of colleagues are now also in self isolation. I know that we have fared better than some schools and that we should in many ways count our blessings, but I’m only truly happy when the school is fully open.

The experience of two positive cases have enabled us to learn a great deal about what to do. As you can imagine contact tracing and, if necessary, arranging the early departure of students can be a complex and pressured task. Beyond that, we have now fully tested the remote learning platform and we are really pleased with it. Year Eight received over 140 live lessons across two days, and teachers reported brilliant behaviour from all students. I sat in on a few lessons; the level of engagement was strong and it seemed so natural. Attendance was around the 90% mark which is phenomenal and we know that some families had technical issues whilst others don’t have regular access to devices, issues that we are keen to support with for next time. All students will see another narrated assembly on Monday where we will share what we have learned from remote lessons, ready for any further closures. We’ll upload the video to the website too so that parents and carers can hear the same message.

One big focus at the start of the term was to promote wellbeing amongst staff and students, and our main vehicle for doing this for students has been through an extended form time every morning except Monday. 40 minutes four times a week with form tutors, taking part in a carefully planned wellbeing programme (designed by Pastoral Director for KS3, Bryony Cook) that is so good it’s now being used in many schools across Stockport and Greater Manchester. The sessions have covered exploring students’ experience of lockdown, self-care, self-belief, where and how to seek help when needed, looking to the future, coping with the uncertainty of the current climate, the amazing teenage brain, an introduction to mindfulness and the impact of sleep, gaming, food and social media on wellbeing. Also included were sessions on support groups running in school, Seasons for Growth for grief and loss, Signpost Young Carers and mindfulness as well as opportunities to join the student Wellbeing Leaders group. In addition, the Year Eights had a specific wellbeing session to check in with them on their return after self-isolating which will also be used for any future self-isolating students. We committed a great deal of time to this programme and I know it’s been really useful, particularly for the younger students in school. However, the time is right for us to revert to the usual school timetable and gain back an hour a week of lesson time spread across Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday (Thursday is the regular form time slot and that is going to stay). If I can get the blog to behave then you’ll see an image of the new timings below!

As we look to the final three weeks of the half term I am increasingly confident that our covid-precautions are embedded and becoming habitual, earlier than I had thought would be the case. Of course we will be subject to further positive cases and lock downs – that’s inevitable – but I see no reason why we cannot keep learning moving forwards and (I hope) start to consider reintroducing some extra-curricular activities soon. In the meantime a reminder that as of Monday we will be raising the bar in terms of face coverings for all those who are not exempt. If students don’t have a covering then we will give one out but, at the same time, a uniform sanction will be issued. The same will be the case if a student isn’t wearing one inside the building. 99% of the students are absolutely on top of this 99% of the time…but we are aiming for perfection!

Best wishes

Joe Barker

FIND US
Marple Hall School
Hill Top Drive
Marple
Stockport SK6 6LB Headteacher: Mr Joe Barker
CONTACT US
Tel: 0161 427 7966
Fax: 0161 426 0931
Email: info@marplehall.stockport.sch.uk
Safeguarding: safeguarding@marplehall.stockport.sch.uk