Purpose:This paper reports the evaluation of an ongoing intervention,the GROW Programme,aimed at meeting the needs of 15-18-year-old pupils who were unable to attend school in England for periods during 2020-2021.The ...Purpose:This paper reports the evaluation of an ongoing intervention,the GROW Programme,aimed at meeting the needs of 15-18-year-old pupils who were unable to attend school in England for periods during 2020-2021.The aim of the paper is to theorize the underlying basis of practice in such a lockdown context to inform future responses.Design/Approach/Methods:Thematic analysis of a mixed-method evaluation,using surveys and interviews of teachers and mentors,and pupil focus groups,of the remote mentoring of pupils and their learning during lockdown,is further analyzed by means of Bernstein's knowledge codes and concept of open schools,to identify the form of knowledge inherent in online mentoring.Findings:The analysis offers a framework for open schooling valuable to schools in uncertain times and identifies the shift to metacognition and self-regulated learning as holding particular benefits for learning underdisruption.Originality/Value:The paper takes a novel view of the disruption brought about by the partial closure of schools and offers a methodology for evaluating its effects by means of a unique intervention.It makes visible the characteristics and the potential benefits of alternative approaches in order that schools can make informed choices.展开更多
文摘Purpose:This paper reports the evaluation of an ongoing intervention,the GROW Programme,aimed at meeting the needs of 15-18-year-old pupils who were unable to attend school in England for periods during 2020-2021.The aim of the paper is to theorize the underlying basis of practice in such a lockdown context to inform future responses.Design/Approach/Methods:Thematic analysis of a mixed-method evaluation,using surveys and interviews of teachers and mentors,and pupil focus groups,of the remote mentoring of pupils and their learning during lockdown,is further analyzed by means of Bernstein's knowledge codes and concept of open schools,to identify the form of knowledge inherent in online mentoring.Findings:The analysis offers a framework for open schooling valuable to schools in uncertain times and identifies the shift to metacognition and self-regulated learning as holding particular benefits for learning underdisruption.Originality/Value:The paper takes a novel view of the disruption brought about by the partial closure of schools and offers a methodology for evaluating its effects by means of a unique intervention.It makes visible the characteristics and the potential benefits of alternative approaches in order that schools can make informed choices.