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<strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

www.sec-ed.co.uk<br />

The only secondary-specific guide to the exhibitors,<br />

CPD and attractions of the <strong>Bett</strong> Show <strong>2016</strong><br />

Sponsored by<br />

SecEd


INTRODUCTION <br />

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<strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong>: Rea<br />

Show organiser Debbie French welcomes<br />

us to <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> with an outline of what<br />

January’s show has in store to inspire and<br />

stimulate educators’ excitement<br />

Now in its 32nd year, <strong>Bett</strong><br />

attracts around 35,000<br />

people a year – but why<br />

does the show continue to be so<br />

popular?<br />

I believe that it is very much<br />

down to the attitude of both our<br />

visitors and <strong>Bett</strong>’s exhibitors.<br />

The teachers who come to <strong>Bett</strong><br />

are professionals who constantly<br />

strive to improve the delivery of<br />

learning to their students.<br />

Wanting to keep up-to-date with<br />

the latest technologies which may<br />

be appropriate to inspire and ignite<br />

each child’s desire to learn, they<br />

visit <strong>Bett</strong> year-on-year.<br />

The range and quality of the free<br />

CPD seminar programmes tops up<br />

their knowledge, giving them new<br />

ideas and insights.<br />

It is interesting to note that each<br />

year, when we ask educators why<br />

they visit <strong>Bett</strong>, the most common<br />

response is “to learn”.<br />

Free training and CPD<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> is to offer more free<br />

training than ever before, with two<br />

bespoke CPD-accredited leadership<br />

summits – one for school leaders<br />

and one for technology leaders in<br />

higher education.<br />

In addition, there are the<br />

popular Learn Live practitioner-led<br />

sessions across all four days of<br />

<strong>Bett</strong>, designed for both primary,<br />

secondary and SEND educators<br />

(see pages 20-23 for some selected<br />

previews).<br />

There are also a number of<br />

networking and fringe events<br />

around the show, including the<br />

Microsoft Learn Live Theatre,<br />

Apple Solution Expert Village, and<br />

Intel Education.<br />

The Microsoft Learn Live<br />

Theatre, for example, will give<br />

visitors the chance to hear from<br />

a wide range of educators,<br />

headteachers and Microsoft staff<br />

about how technology can help<br />

transform the classroom, create<br />

unique learning experiences, and<br />

raise attainment. The core focus<br />

is to offer a platform for great<br />

teachers to share both their stories<br />

and best practice in order to inspire<br />

change. This is expected to be a<br />

very busy area of the show.<br />

As I mentioned above, the<br />

success of <strong>Bett</strong> can also be<br />

attributed to the exhibitors. A key<br />

focus for <strong>Bett</strong> exhibitors every<br />

year is to take the opportunity<br />

to engage with their audience,<br />

understand their changing needs,<br />

and offer them advice and<br />

guidance in getting the most from<br />

their resources.<br />

2<br />

SecEd


INTRODUCTION<br />

dy to learn?<br />

It is this training and advice,<br />

coupled with the scheduled<br />

seminars, that I believe crowns<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> as the event for teacher CPD.<br />

Tablets at <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

This year, educators will also have<br />

access to free hands-on training<br />

in a new feature called “Hands-on<br />

Learn Live Tablet Academy Take<br />

Over”.<br />

Why the focus on tablets? The<br />

British Educational Suppliers<br />

Association’s (BESA) recent<br />

Tablets and Connectivity survey<br />

showed that the adoption of mobile<br />

technology in schools is increasing,<br />

with 71 per cent of UK primary<br />

and 76 per cent of secondary<br />

schools now making use of tablets<br />

in the classroom (for more from<br />

BESA, see pages 4 and 5).<br />

Currently, there are estimated<br />

to be 721,000 tablets for use by<br />

pupils in classrooms across UK<br />

maintained schools and academies,<br />

with predictions that by the end<br />

of <strong>2016</strong> this number will have<br />

increased to more than 946,000.<br />

However, the research also<br />

shows a need for industry to<br />

work with schools to help them<br />

understand how they can utilise<br />

tablet technology to its full<br />

potential.<br />

The “Hands-on Learn Live<br />

Tablet Academy Take Over” will<br />

allow visitors to experience the<br />

latest technologies, with training<br />

and expert guidance from Tablet<br />

Academy consultants, in a<br />

dedicated area.<br />

A programme of training<br />

sessions will also give visitors the<br />

chance to use a range of products<br />

Photo: Jack Terry Photography/<strong>Bett</strong><br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Show top tips<br />

• With so much to see at <strong>Bett</strong>, it is recommended that you<br />

pre-plan your visit.<br />

• Register for the show in advance of your visit on the <strong>Bett</strong><br />

website (www.bettshow.com). It is free and gives you fasttrack<br />

entry.<br />

• Post-show planning is just as important as pre-show<br />

planning. Gather information and take the time to reflect on<br />

what you saw at the show.<br />

• Make the most of the BESA Information Point – it is there<br />

to help you get the most from your visit and can point you<br />

in the direction of the suppliers addressing your areas of<br />

interest.<br />

• Reserve a free seat for your chosen seminars in advance of<br />

the show through the website.<br />

• Take advantage of the networking opportunities that the<br />

show provides – share ideas and source advice from peers.<br />

• Last but not least, wear comfortable shoes!<br />

For more tips on how to make the most of the show, read our<br />

expert’s guide on page 6.<br />

and have one-to-one conversations<br />

in this workshop environment.<br />

The future at <strong>Bett</strong><br />

Elsewhere in the feedback from<br />

teachers, they have told us that<br />

they want to see niche resources<br />

from small start-up companies.<br />

As such, <strong>Bett</strong> 2015 saw the arrival<br />

of a new area – <strong>Bett</strong> Futures –<br />

featuring small start-up businesses<br />

with exciting innovations. The area<br />

proved popular and will return<br />

for <strong>2016</strong> with 31 start-up edtech<br />

companies (see pages 12 to 14).<br />

See you there!<br />

So once again, we invite the<br />

education community to gather<br />

at ExCeL London for this annual<br />

fix of new ideas, innovation and<br />

stimulation. Whether it is to seek<br />

out education technology solutions<br />

from almost 700 exhibitors, or hear<br />

from inspirational speakers, <strong>Bett</strong><br />

continues to provide education<br />

professionals from all over the<br />

world with a space to meet,<br />

network and share ideas.<br />

• Debbie French is portfolio<br />

director at i2i Events Group.<br />

Further information<br />

You can register for your free entry<br />

to <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> and reserve places at<br />

any of the seminars online. Visit<br />

www.bettshow.com<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Show facts and figures<br />

• The first ever <strong>Bett</strong> show was held in 1985 as the “Hi Technology and Computers in Education<br />

Exhibition” at the Barbican Centre, London. <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> will be the 32nd show.<br />

• As the use of technology in education increased, so the show grew and in 1993 it moved to<br />

London Olympia. It moved again to ExCeL in 2013.<br />

• A total of 34,711 people attended <strong>Bett</strong> in 2015, coming from 128 countries.<br />

• Almost 700 companies who market to schools, colleges and education establishments will<br />

exhibit at the show in <strong>2016</strong>.<br />

• The show floor space at ExCeL London equals that of 13 Olympic-sized swimming pools.<br />

Contents: <strong>Bett</strong> Guide <strong>2016</strong><br />

Introductions<br />

• Introduction to <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> Pages 2-3<br />

• State of the ICT nation Pages 4-5<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> highlights and advice<br />

• <strong>Bett</strong> Survival Guide Page 6<br />

• <strong>Bett</strong> Arena Page 8<br />

• The STEAM Village Page 9<br />

• The <strong>Bett</strong> Awards <strong>2016</strong> Page 10<br />

• Exhibition: <strong>Bett</strong> Futures Pages 12-14<br />

• <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> floorplan Pages 16-17<br />

• The venue: ExCeL Page 17<br />

• Exhibitor listings Pages 15 & 18<br />

Learn Live CPD previews<br />

• Lesson observation Page 20<br />

• ICT on a shoestring Page 21<br />

• Student leadership Page 22<br />

• ICT in the classroom Page 22<br />

• Global learning Page 23<br />

My <strong>Bett</strong> Exhibitor Guides<br />

• Leadership Page 24<br />

• Assessment Page 26<br />

• STEM subjects Page 28<br />

• SEN Page 29<br />

• The EBacc Page 30<br />

Cover photo: iStock<br />

SecEd 3


STATE OF THE NATION<br />

The OECD, assessment and ta<br />

From OECD research to<br />

technology trends, Caroline<br />

Wright looks back at the last<br />

year in education technology<br />

and forward to what we can<br />

expect at <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

Back in September, our first impression<br />

of the BBC report – Computers do not<br />

improve pupil results, says OECD – was<br />

naturally one of concern.<br />

However, thankfully when we read past the<br />

headlines, it appeared that the OECD study in<br />

question (Students, Computers and Learning:<br />

Making the connection, September 2015) was<br />

discussing technologies that are implemented<br />

with low quality or no training.<br />

It is certainly true that there have been<br />

funded schemes in a number of countries where<br />

money has been poorly spent on technology.<br />

In almost every case, it is overwhelmingly due<br />

to a lack of effective investment in CPD and<br />

teacher training – often resulting in hardware<br />

sitting idle or teachers having little idea of how<br />

to use it effectively.<br />

Schools that are using technology effectively<br />

in the UK are not only seeing improved results<br />

in traditional examinations but also higher levels<br />

of pupil engagement.<br />

As the education sector’s trade association,<br />

working with schools, suppliers and the<br />

government, we have always urged schools to<br />

ensure that any investment in technology comes<br />

with associated, high-quality training – it is key<br />

to ensuring technology works in the classroom.<br />

The value of CPD is something that can never<br />

be underestimated and I believe it is for this<br />

reason that <strong>Bett</strong> remains as popular as ever. The<br />

free, high-quality Learn Live programme that<br />

runs throughout the show continues to inspire<br />

educators (see pages 20 to 23).<br />

Our annual Resources in English Maintained<br />

Schools research, which involved 900 schools<br />

(597 primary and 303 secondary) recently<br />

showed that investment in ICT hardware and<br />

system software has continued to grow over the<br />

last decade. The findings have also shown an<br />

increase in the amount of time that pupils are<br />

currently exposed to ICT – from 50 per cent in<br />

2014, to 53 per cent in 2015, and a forecast of<br />

58 per cent of learning time by 2017.<br />

Our research also shows that schools are<br />

spending their budgets on technologies such<br />

as wireless networking, all types of PCs and<br />

tablets, peripherals, ISP charges, curriculum<br />

software and digital content.<br />

And this growth in investment appears to<br />

be continuing. ICT spending for this current<br />

academic year (September 2015 to July <strong>2016</strong>) is<br />

forecast to reach a total of £560 million across<br />

all maintained schools.<br />

When we break this down further, we can<br />

estimate that a typical secondary school projects<br />

a rise of £3,820 – bringing secondary schools’<br />

annual ICT investment up to £78,730.<br />

Once again we expect to see a huge and everincreasing<br />

turn-out for <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong>, as teachers<br />

continue to recognise the powerful effect<br />

technology has on children’s motivation and<br />

ability to learn.<br />

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4<br />

SecEd


STATE OF THE NATION<br />

blets on the agenda at <strong>Bett</strong><br />

Mobile technologies<br />

The use of tablet technology in schools is one<br />

of the priority areas that we are seeing for<br />

technology investment over the coming years.<br />

Our annual ICT in UK State Schools research<br />

shows that the majority of schools indicate<br />

being under-resourced with tablet computers –<br />

73 per cent of ICT leaders (across primary and<br />

secondary) say that they are under-resourced in<br />

tablet computers.<br />

However, in the case of secondary schools,<br />

the proportion has declined from 70 per cent in<br />

2014 to only 59 per cent currently being underresourced<br />

in 2015.<br />

Photo: MA Education<br />

Although secondary schools have been<br />

purchasing tablet computers in some quantity,<br />

the continued growth in laptop sales suggests<br />

that this group of schools sees value in a wider<br />

range of devices.<br />

Nonetheless, we expect to see the adoption<br />

of tablet computers continuing to grow. Their<br />

size, mobility and cost make them the ideal<br />

hardware to improve the child:device ratio. The<br />

surveyed schools also stated that the impact of<br />

improvements in ICT investment is most likely<br />

to be directed towards computers for pupils (and<br />

most likely tablets).<br />

This is backed by our more recent Tablets<br />

and Connectivity survey, which suggests that 76<br />

per cent of secondary schools (an increase from<br />

56 per cent in 2014) are making use of tablets<br />

in the classroom. Currently, there are estimated<br />

to be 721,000 tablets being used by pupils in<br />

classrooms across UK maintained schools and<br />

academies, and it is forecast that by the end<br />

of <strong>2016</strong> this number will have increased to<br />

more than 946,000. This upward trend appears<br />

to be continuing with 15 per cent of schools<br />

suggesting that they will have one-to-one access<br />

to tablet technology by <strong>2016</strong> – and 44 per cent<br />

of schools having one tablet per child by 2020.<br />

Assessment<br />

Another area attracting schools’ attention at <strong>Bett</strong><br />

<strong>2016</strong> is expected to be assessment. The removal<br />

of national curriculum levels and the demand<br />

on schools to implement new systems that meet<br />

the government’s criteria appear to be leading to<br />

increased levels of investment.<br />

We recommend reading the final report<br />

of the Commission on Assessment without<br />

Levels and the Department for Education’s<br />

response (September 2015) – these give the first<br />

indication of how life after levels will work.<br />

Teachers’ workload will continue to get worse<br />

through the teacher shortage, so minimising<br />

demands on their time through effective and<br />

appropriate assessment products and services is<br />

essential. Suppliers of such products will all be<br />

at <strong>Bett</strong> (see page 26).<br />

Conclusion<br />

While visiting <strong>Bett</strong> is a day out of the<br />

classroom, it will be an excellent investment<br />

in terms of future time savings through new<br />

efficiencies, new products to inspire and engage<br />

students, and CPD content to bring a new level<br />

of excitement to your school and your teaching.<br />

• Caroline Wright is director of the British<br />

Educational Suppliers Association (BESA). Visit<br />

www.besa.org.uk<br />

Further information<br />

BESA will be operating the <strong>Bett</strong> Show <strong>2016</strong><br />

Information Point on stand B138.<br />

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SecEd 5


SHOW ADVICE<br />

The <strong>Bett</strong> Show attracts<br />

thousands of visitors over its<br />

four days, with around 700<br />

exhibitors all vying to promote<br />

their wares to all-comers. As<br />

a visitor, being prepared is<br />

essential if you are to make<br />

the most of the event. Dave<br />

Smith offers some tips<br />

Thriving at <strong>Bett</strong>!<br />

For those of you who haven’t been to the<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Show before, I would like to offer<br />

you some advice to help you get the most<br />

from this hugely popular and busy show.<br />

As a computing advisor at Havering<br />

Education Services and senior vice chair of<br />

Naace, I have visited <strong>Bett</strong> every year for the<br />

past 15 years and in this time have learned how<br />

to get the most from my time there.<br />

In a word, <strong>Bett</strong> is incredible. The buzz, the<br />

excitement and the knowledge that you will<br />

leave at the end of the day full of new ideas to<br />

take back to the classroom are all incredibly<br />

positive experiences.<br />

But going prepared means that you will get<br />

so much more from your visit.<br />

So here are my top pieces of advice for both<br />

new and experienced visitors.<br />

A staff meeting<br />

Hold a staff meeting several weeks before<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> to ask your colleagues what their current<br />

needs are. Is one teacher struggling to engage<br />

their students in a certain area of science? Does<br />

you school administration team need a new<br />

parental communication system or financial<br />

management software?<br />

Consider using INSET<br />

Many schools use an INSET day to visit <strong>Bett</strong>,<br />

and send several teachers, each with their own<br />

area of focus. It is certainly a good idea to<br />

consider doing this.<br />

If you are going with colleagues make sure<br />

you all meet before hand to agree your specific<br />

objectives. From the list of requirements<br />

gathered at the whole-school staff meeting,<br />

decide who is going to take responsibility to<br />

research the various requirements.<br />

Maybe there aren’t specific requirements,<br />

but more a case of a broad need for learning<br />

support material, or is it a matter of just<br />

knowing that one subject area in particular<br />

is lacking engaging resources to inspire the<br />

students?<br />

Scout your prey<br />

Visit the product and exhibitor listing pages<br />

on the www.bettshow.com website to decide<br />

which companies offer the resources you<br />

are looking for. The “filter” feature will let<br />

you enter in the key words of what you are<br />

specifically looking for. You can then plan<br />

your route around the hall efficiently.<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> surveys have shown that more than<br />

90 per cent of visitors to <strong>Bett</strong> pre-plan which<br />

stands to visit.<br />

Make a list of the companies you want to<br />

visit. Print off a floorplan from the website<br />

and mark these on the map so you can work<br />

out your best route around the show floor.<br />

Try to work out how long you want on<br />

each stand and schedule in your seminar<br />

sessions. Make sure you also schedule in<br />

some refreshment stops along the way.<br />

The CPD<br />

Once you have considered your schools’<br />

needs from a product perspective, consider<br />

the Learn Live CPD seminar programmes.<br />

This high-quality training, delivered by<br />

inspirational leaders in their specific areas, is<br />

free of charge.<br />

I recommend you visit the What’s On<br />

section of the www.bettshow.com website<br />

and select Learn Live: Secondary, the School<br />

Leaders Summit and the <strong>Bett</strong> Arena seminar<br />

programmes.<br />

Decide which ones you’d like to attend<br />

and register your place. They do get<br />

booked up quickly so registration is highly<br />

recommended<br />

Shoes and water<br />

It goes without saying, but wear flat<br />

comfortable shoes. While refreshments are<br />

available at ExCeL, I would recommend<br />

taking a water bottle and snacks as the<br />

queues at the food and drink suppliers can be<br />

quite long at peak times.<br />

Speak up<br />

While <strong>Bett</strong> exhibitors are respected for giving<br />

advice, training and guidance on stand,<br />

many visitors say that they learn a lot from<br />

conversations with other teachers on the<br />

stands too. Open yourself up to share ideas<br />

and ask questions of others, it could give you<br />

that one important idea.<br />

Also, if you are a social media user, it is<br />

worth posting a tweet or update before the<br />

event to see whether any of your followers<br />

will be attending. It might be your only<br />

chance to have a face-to-face chat with other<br />

teachers who work in a different part of the<br />

country.<br />

Review meeting<br />

Finally, schedule a review meeting after <strong>Bett</strong><br />

so you can meet with all your colleagues<br />

to provide them with feedback and product<br />

information.<br />

• Dave Smith is from the London borough of<br />

Havering School Improvement Service.<br />

Photo: Jack Terry Photography/<strong>Bett</strong><br />

6<br />

SecEd


Student informaon automacally sent<br />

directly to the parent’s mobile phone!<br />

An exciting new service is now available allowing parents to receive and view information sent directly to their<br />

mobile phones (Apple iOS & Android smart phones with Windows mobile to follow) keeping them updated on<br />

a wide range of events in close to real time. All information is extracted directly from the school’s<br />

Management Information System (MIS) and the school decides what information parents may view but can<br />

include:<br />

• Free messages sent by the school delivered directly to the app using push notifications<br />

• Updates regarding selected partner systems, used by the school i.e. homework, catering & library systems<br />

• Attendance records and absences*<br />

• Marks and grades*<br />

• Achievement records*<br />

• Behaviour events*<br />

• Timetable*<br />

• School calendar*<br />

• Notification timeline for all of the above.<br />

Parents will be presented with information for each<br />

of their children no matter which school the child is in<br />

(assuming each of the schools involved are using the<br />

Xpressions app).<br />

*Enhanced Service for SIMS.<br />

Minimum requirements: Android version 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) + Apple iOS 7.0+<br />

See us at<br />

Be on<br />

Stand B188<br />

Groupcall Xpressions App<br />

For more information and pricing, please contact us by email to:<br />

sales@groupcall.com or call: 020 8506 6100 (option 1) quoting Xpressions<br />

BG<strong>2016</strong><br />

Tel: 020 8506 6100 Fax: 020 8506 6199 Email: sales@groupcall.com Web: www.groupcall.com


KEYNOTE ADDRESSES<br />

The <strong>Bett</strong> Arena<br />

The <strong>Bett</strong> Arena offers access<br />

to some of the highest<br />

profile speakers from<br />

the world of education<br />

technology and this year<br />

sees a particular focus on<br />

STEM. We preview some of<br />

<strong>2016</strong>’s keynote addresses<br />

Each year, the <strong>Bett</strong> Arena plays host to<br />

some of the industry’s most inspiring<br />

speakers and is usually the place to hear<br />

from our politicians and policy-makers about<br />

the latest developments in education policy.<br />

A straw poll carried out at <strong>Bett</strong> 2015, as<br />

visitors left the <strong>Bett</strong> Arena, asked them to sum<br />

up their experience in just one word. Common<br />

responses included “inspiring”, “fascinating”,<br />

“amazing” and “exciting”.<br />

Education secretary, Nicky Morgan<br />

As is traditional at <strong>Bett</strong>, the show will be<br />

opened with a morning address at 11am on the<br />

Wednesday, January 20, by Nicky Morgan, the<br />

secretary of state for education.<br />

Details of her address are not yet available,<br />

however, the initial summary of the session<br />

states: “Technology is a powerful tool in<br />

extending and creating opportunities for<br />

young people. That’s why as a ‘One Nation’<br />

government we want all children to be able to<br />

benefit from new innovations and develop the<br />

knowledge and skills they need to succeed in<br />

modern Britain. This year’s <strong>Bett</strong> Show will help<br />

teachers to identify the support and resources<br />

they need to use technology effectively in the<br />

classroom and I very much look forward to<br />

attending.”<br />

Professor Sugata Mitra<br />

The first <strong>Bett</strong> Arena session on the opening day,<br />

Wednesday, January 20, will be presented by the<br />

highly respected Professor Sugata Mitra.<br />

Prof Mitra is a professor of educational<br />

technology and director of the interdisciplinary<br />

research centre, SOLE (Self Organised Learning<br />

Environments) Central, at the University of<br />

Newcastle. In 2013, he was awarded the<br />

$1 million TED Prize in recognition of his work<br />

in helping to build a “School in the Cloud”<br />

(www.theschoolinthecloud.org).<br />

This creative online space enables children<br />

from all over the world to come together to<br />

answer “big questions”, share knowledge and<br />

benefit from guidance from educators online.<br />

The School in the Cloud brings together<br />

“SOLEs” and links in with the “Granny Cloud”,<br />

originally set up for retired teachers willing to<br />

offer a few hours a week to help teach English<br />

to Indian school children.<br />

The mentoring and encouraging role that the<br />

“grannies” play is still a vital part of the success<br />

of this educational approach today.<br />

In it together: Sir Bob Geldof addresses<br />

the <strong>Bett</strong> Arena at the 2015 <strong>Bett</strong> Show<br />

Prof Mitra’s session – Connecting global<br />

educators and learners – runs from 10:20am to<br />

10:55am. Like all <strong>Bett</strong> Arena sessions, it is free<br />

to attend, but it is strongly recommended that<br />

delegates pre-register as it will be popular.<br />

The Khan Academy<br />

At 12:20pm on the same day, Salman Khan,<br />

founder of the non-profit Khan Academy, will<br />

be explaining how he is “providing a free,<br />

world-class education for anyone, anywhere”<br />

(see www.khanacademy.org).<br />

The Khan Academy is a non-profit<br />

organisation with a learning platform comprised<br />

of practice exercises, instructional videos,<br />

dashboard analytics and teacher tools to<br />

help empower learners in and outside of the<br />

classroom to study at their own pace.<br />

Khan Academy has more than 26 million<br />

registered students and covers a broad range of<br />

subjects. It is being translated into more than 36<br />

languages and is used in 190 countries globally.<br />

For teachers in the UK, his ideas are<br />

invaluable in terms of supporting students who<br />

may need extra catch-up work or providing an<br />

education for excluded children or others.<br />

This is another session for which we<br />

recommend early registration.<br />

STEM<br />

With STEM high on the government’s agenda,<br />

there will be a number of presentations on<br />

8<br />

SecEd


KEYNOTE ADDRESSES<br />

New feature: The STEAM Village<br />

A new feature at <strong>Bett</strong> this year, the STEAM Village will focus<br />

on CPD, products and services relating to the study of these<br />

vital subjects, including the fight to close the gender gap<br />

Photo: Jack Terry Photography/<strong>Bett</strong><br />

Keynotes: Speakers at <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> will<br />

include Professor Sugata Mitra (top)<br />

and education secretary Nicky Morgan<br />

this theme in the <strong>Bett</strong> Arena at the <strong>2016</strong><br />

show. At 3:30pm on Wednesday, January 20,<br />

secondary teachers looking for ways to ignite<br />

their students’ (especially girls) interest in the<br />

STEM subjects, should listen to Belinda Parmar,<br />

founder of Lady Geek (http://ladygeek.com).<br />

Ms Parmar sits on the advisory board for the<br />

government’s Your Life campaign, which aims<br />

to encourage women into STEM. Her session is<br />

entitled Sweat the small stuff.<br />

At 2:10pm on the opening day of the<br />

show, the session How can creativity enhance<br />

learning: Inspiring girls into science will be<br />

presented by 16-year-old student, Amy O’Toole.<br />

Amy became one of the world’s youngest<br />

published scientists for her work on the<br />

Blackawton Bee Project. At <strong>Bett</strong> she will be<br />

focusing on her passion for inspiring girls to<br />

take an interest in science.<br />

The STEM theme continues on the second<br />

day of <strong>Bett</strong> (Thursday, January 21) with a<br />

presentation entitled Rewriting the script for<br />

women in STEM: closing the gender gap.<br />

This session will be held at 12:15pm and the<br />

three presenters will bring an array of ideas and<br />

experience to the arena. They are Dr Sue Black,<br />

award-winning computer scientist; Anne Marie<br />

Neatham, CEO of Ocado Technologies; and<br />

Ann-Marie Imafidon, founder of STEMettes<br />

(http://stemettes.org).<br />

Other STEM-related presentations in the <strong>Bett</strong><br />

Arena include:<br />

• Girls with a plan – Google Science Fair<br />

2014 winners Ciara Judge and Emer Hickey<br />

are supporters of getting more young people<br />

involved in STEM (4pm on January 22).<br />

The UK’s apparent skills shortage across the<br />

STEM subjects has often been blamed for<br />

hampering our economic recovery.<br />

The Confederation of British Industry<br />

recently found that nearly 40 per cent of<br />

firms looking for staff with STEM skills<br />

have had difficulties recruiting, with half of<br />

these believing that the situation with skills<br />

shortages was only going to get worse.<br />

Also of deep concern is the gender gap in<br />

STEM, with women making up just 15.5 per<br />

cent of the UK’s core STEM workforce.<br />

The demand for improved STEM<br />

education is now being broadened to include<br />

art and design. In all the STEM-related<br />

careers, art, design and creativity add huge<br />

value and influence.<br />

For this reason, the call for more students<br />

to study the STEM subjects is now often<br />

referred to as a demand for experts in<br />

STEAM (science, technology, engineering,<br />

arts and mathematics).<br />

As such, <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> sees the arrival of the<br />

STEAM Village.<br />

In stand location G458, the STEAM<br />

village will play host to a number of<br />

organisations supporting learning in the<br />

STEAM subjects.<br />

The village is aimed at creating an<br />

interactive, “learning through play” space<br />

for teachers, techies, students and parents<br />

alike – a place for visitors to have a go with<br />

STEAM solutions and products and engage<br />

with how they can be assimilated into the<br />

classroom.<br />

In the village, experts will be on hand<br />

to explore key STEAM topics, teaching<br />

methods and new technologies.<br />

Due to industry demand, many of this<br />

year’s exhibitors across the show floor will<br />

• Space Camp with NASA – Dr Ellen Stoffan,<br />

planetary geologist and chief scientist of<br />

NASA (12pm on January 23).<br />

• Flash hack on stage: festival of code in 30<br />

minutes – Emma Mulqueeny, CEO, Young<br />

Rewired State (3pm on January 23).<br />

Steve Jobs Schools<br />

On Friday, January 22, at 10:45am, Maurice de<br />

Hond, founder of the Steve Jobs Schools, will<br />

be providing us with a new concept for igniting<br />

students’ love of learning. Inspired by his<br />

daughter’s use of educational apps, he launched<br />

this new model. At a Steve Jobs School children<br />

are taught from an early age to indicate what<br />

they want to learn, to find information, to<br />

filter it according to its relevance, and then<br />

apply it. Currently more than 20 schools in the<br />

Netherlands work with this theory of education<br />

(www.stevejobsschool.nl).<br />

Other presentations<br />

• Future of edtech: is it time to give up on<br />

be showing resources and services designed<br />

for STEAM. As such, we recommend using<br />

the “filters” tab on the exhibitor listing page<br />

of the www.bettshow.com website to search<br />

for these companies.<br />

However, the STEAM Village is certainly<br />

the best place to start for those visitors<br />

interested in inspiring their students in these<br />

subject areas.<br />

Elsewhere, on the CPD front, the School<br />

Leaders’ Summit, the Learn Live theatres<br />

and the <strong>Bett</strong> Arena will have dedicated<br />

STEAM content, presentations and panel<br />

discussions.<br />

For example, on Wednesday, January<br />

20, Chris Aitken, computer science teacher<br />

at Wick High School, will talk about how<br />

the school uses creativity in computer<br />

science as a medium to encourage more<br />

girls into the subject (Creativity and code:<br />

getting more girls into STEM, Learn Live<br />

Secondary Theatre at 10:30am).<br />

And on Thursday, January 21, a debate<br />

will take place at 10am in the Learn Live<br />

FE and Skills Theatre entitled The Debate:<br />

Inspiring girls to pursue careers in STEM<br />

and involving award-winning computer<br />

scientist Dr Sue Black.<br />

The <strong>Bett</strong> Arena will also be hosting a<br />

number of STEAM-related sessions – for<br />

details on some of these see the article<br />

opposite.<br />

Remember, entry to <strong>Bett</strong> and the seminars<br />

is free of charge but it is recommended that<br />

you reserve your place as sessions can get<br />

very busy. Details of the sessions above<br />

were correct at the time of going to press<br />

but are subject to change. To search for<br />

more STEAM-related CPD sessions, visit<br />

www.bettshow.com<br />

computers? Audrey Watters, education writer<br />

who runs the HACK education blog (3:45pm<br />

on January 21).<br />

• How we help teachers and other students use<br />

#edtech effectively: Digital leaders in schools<br />

across the UK – Chris Sharples, head of ICT<br />

from Lady Lumley’s School (11:50am on<br />

January 22).<br />

• Schools of the future: breaking with<br />

traditional teaching (panel discussion –<br />

2:45pm on January 22).<br />

• A glimpse of robotics’ future – Tony Prescott,<br />

professor of cognitive neuroscience, University<br />

of Sheffield (3:15pm on January 22).<br />

• How to come up with great ideas and actually<br />

make them happen – Ewan McIntosh,<br />

founder, NoTosh (5:45pm on January 22).<br />

Further information<br />

Presentation details correct at the time of going<br />

to press but subject to change. To view the full<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Arena agenda and reserve your place at the<br />

sessions, visit www.bettshow.com<br />

SecEd 9


BETT AWARDS<br />

The <strong>Bett</strong> Awards finalists<br />

have been announced, with<br />

the winners to be unveiled<br />

on the opening day of <strong>Bett</strong><br />

The finalists for the 18th annual <strong>Bett</strong><br />

Awards have been announced. More<br />

than 60 educational professionals judge<br />

the awards and finalists are selected based on<br />

criteria including design, cost-effectiveness,<br />

and effective learning and teaching styles.<br />

Entries to the awards are also judged on<br />

“uniqueness and diversity, their ability to<br />

meet the needs of the education sector, and<br />

the quality, accessibility and delivery of their<br />

service or solution”.<br />

Finalists are then asked to send in their<br />

products so judges may complete a full<br />

technical evaluation in line with the criteria of<br />

each award category.<br />

Caroline Wright, director of the British<br />

Educational Suppliers Association<br />

(BESA), said: “Working with teachers and<br />

educationalists to select finalists for these<br />

awards is rewarding and challenging in the<br />

best possible way. Seeing how solutions,<br />

companies and services continue to evolve in<br />

line with the demands of the sector and the<br />

pace of technological innovation is inspiring.”<br />

Debbie French, portfolio director at i2i<br />

Events Group for the <strong>Bett</strong> Awards, added:<br />

“This year’s awards have seen an incredibly<br />

competitive cohort of entries and we hear<br />

that the judging process to select the finalists<br />

was challenging in the best possible way.<br />

This is testimony to the world-class level of<br />

innovation in the education supplies industry.”<br />

Winning products and services will be<br />

announced at the ceremony on Wednesday,<br />

January 20. Listed below are some of the<br />

finalists in the secondary education-related<br />

categories – who may just be worth a visit<br />

during the show.<br />

For more information on the awards, visit<br />

http://bettawards.com/<br />

Selected <strong>Bett</strong> Awards <strong>2016</strong> Finalists<br />

Category: Secondary Digital Content<br />

IntoScience (3P Learning); Britannica<br />

Pathways: Science (Britannica Digital<br />

Learning); GCSE English Literature for AQA<br />

Frankenstein Cambridge Elevate Enhanced<br />

Edition (Cambridge University Press); GCSE<br />

Mathematics Online (Cambridge University<br />

Press); Teaching units and textbooks (PG<br />

Online); SAM Learning (SAM Learning);<br />

Show My Homework (Show My Homework)<br />

Category: ICT Tools for Learning,<br />

Teaching and Assessment (non web-based)<br />

2Build a Profile (2Simple Software);<br />

WizeFloor (Alexandra Institute); SIMS<br />

Assessment (Capita SIMS); Target Tracker<br />

(EES for Schools); i-GVS (Global Vocational<br />

Skills); NetSupport School (NetSupport);<br />

Read&Write (Texthelp Ltd)<br />

Category: ICT Tools for Learning,<br />

Teaching and Assessment (web-based,<br />

classroom aids)<br />

Purple Mash (2Simple Software); Codio<br />

And the<br />

winners are...<br />

(Codio); Creaza (Creaza AS); Maths Tutor<br />

(Daydream Education); ConquerMaths.com<br />

(GenericMaths); GoConqr (GoConqr); App<br />

Camp (SAS Apps)<br />

Category: ICT Tools for Learning,<br />

Teaching and Assessment (web-based,<br />

whole-school aids)<br />

BASE (CEM); EDLounge (Edlounge); Frog<br />

Progress (Frog Education); Progress Test<br />

Series (GL Assessment); Learning Ladders<br />

(Learning Ladders); Classroom Monitor<br />

(Prime Principle); School360 (Shoo Fly<br />

Publishing); TES Courses (TES Global)<br />

Category: Free Digital Content/Open<br />

Educational Resources (content suite)<br />

BeauchApp (Beauchamp College); QuickStart<br />

Computing (Computing At School); ArcGIS<br />

Online (Esri UK); Gojimo (Gojimo);<br />

LearnPad Tool Suite (LearnPad); My Rising<br />

Stars (Rising Stars); Heloise Spence (Twig<br />

World)<br />

Category: Free Digital Content/Open<br />

Educational Resources (single issue<br />

resource)<br />

Faith on the Frontline (CTVC/TrueTube<br />

and Breakthrough Media); iCompute Lite<br />

(iCompute); Counter-Extremism: Narratives<br />

and conversations (London Grid for Learning);<br />

National Theatre On Demand (National<br />

Theatre and Frog Education); Periodic Table<br />

app (Royal Society of Chemistry); The Tesco<br />

Eat Happy Project (Tesco); Magna Carta (The<br />

National Archives)<br />

Category: ICT SEN Solutions<br />

Clicker Communicator; SuperKeys (both<br />

from Crick Software); The Boris Games<br />

(GamelabUK); Inclusive Eye Gaze Education<br />

(Inclusive Technology); Switch4 iPad App<br />

(Mike Ayres Design); Grid 3 (Smartbox<br />

Best in Show: Winners of the <strong>Bett</strong><br />

Awards <strong>2016</strong> will be announced at a<br />

ceremony on the first evening of the<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Show – Wednesday, January 20 –<br />

at The Brewery in London<br />

Assistive Technology); Educater (The<br />

Publishing Foundry)<br />

Category: ICT Leadership and<br />

Management solutions<br />

Bluesky Education (Bluesky); eCadets<br />

(eCadets); EDLounge (EDLounge); School<br />

Effectiveness+ (EES for Schools); Groupcall<br />

Emerge (Groupcall); School Improvement<br />

Pathways (Oxford University Press);<br />

Classroom Monitor (Prime Principle); Show<br />

My Homework (Show My Homework)<br />

Category: Educational Apps<br />

LabCamera (Intellisense); Raz-Kids (Learning<br />

A-Z); LogicCity for Schools (Minds On<br />

Play LLC); Kids Sound Lab Pro (Raddlist);<br />

Colorcards Basic Sequences (Speechmark);<br />

Olive Green (SuperMemo World); Coach’s<br />

Eye (TechSmith)<br />

Category: ICT Company of the Year<br />

Less than £3m turnover: bksb Ltd; Contact<br />

Group; Just2easy; Learning Ladders & School<br />

Explained; New Era Education Ltd; Prime<br />

Principle; Think IT<br />

More than £3m turnover: 3P Learning;<br />

Avantis Systems Ltd; Firefly; Frog Education;<br />

Fujitsu UK & Ireland; Joskos Solutions;<br />

Toshiba<br />

Category: ICT Service and Support<br />

3BM Ltd; Firefly; Joskos Solutions; London<br />

Grid for Learning; Plum Innovations Ltd;<br />

Scomis; Think IT; Wolverhampton Learning<br />

Technologies Team.<br />

Photo: R3 events/<strong>Bett</strong><br />

10<br />

SecEd


FREEMembership<br />

JOIN<br />

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The Teachers’ Union<br />

The Teachers’ Union<br />

TODAY<br />

from the date you join*<br />

Online www.nasuwt.org.uk<br />

or<br />

call 03330 145550<br />

Already a member?<br />

Generous Love2shop voucher<br />

Generous Love2shop voucher<br />

rewards for all members who<br />

rewards for all members who<br />

successfully invite other teachers to<br />

successfully invite other teachers to<br />

join them in the NASUWT.<br />

join them in the NASUWT.<br />

Just give them your name and membership number<br />

Just give them your name and membership number<br />

to quote when they join.<br />

to quote when they join.<br />

*New members joining the NASUWT get the first year free when opting to pay future subscriptions by direct debit.<br />

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INVITE A FRIEND TO JOIN<br />

1511051 NASUWT Advert.qxp_Layout 1 25/11/2015 11:40 Page 1


BETT FUTURES<br />

Introducing the edtech<br />

companies of the future<br />

It is the second year of the<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures fringe initiative<br />

– a showcase of the world’s<br />

most inspiring edtech startups.<br />

We look at this year’s<br />

exhibitor and speaker line-up<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures was the third most popular<br />

area of the show for visitors to <strong>Bett</strong><br />

2015. Introduced to celebrate brave<br />

thinking, new products and education “gamechangers”,<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> has once again invited<br />

31 of the most exciting edtech start-ups from<br />

around the world to <strong>Bett</strong> Futures.<br />

Due to the nature of <strong>Bett</strong> Futures, some of<br />

the 2015 companies are back again, with their<br />

“a year on” stories to tell.<br />

The two <strong>Bett</strong> Futures packages are the<br />

Seed Level package, aimed at emerging startups,<br />

and the Grow package, designed for<br />

businesses that are already gaining exposure<br />

and developing their networks.<br />

Below is an overview of this year’s <strong>Bett</strong><br />

Futures exhibitors, starting with the 16 Seed<br />

edtech start-ups and followed by the 15 Grow<br />

companies.<br />

Also, on page 14, you can find details of<br />

some of the CPD and discussion sessions<br />

taking place in the <strong>Bett</strong> Futures Theatre<br />

during the show.<br />

Big Brain Maths<br />

The first of the Seed exhibitors is Big Brain<br />

Maths. Their lessons have been designed to<br />

guide students through a range of topics, with<br />

the challenge becoming progressively harder.<br />

The practical worksheets provide the students<br />

with GCSE and Higher GCSE common exam<br />

questions. Visit: www.bigbrainmaths.com<br />

Brix Learning<br />

The second Seed exhibitor is another mathsrelated<br />

exhibitor. Brix Learning has created<br />

interactive maths homework for A level<br />

coursework. Replacing the maths textbook,<br />

Brix provides a simple structure with which<br />

students can master new mathematical<br />

concepts. The syllabus is broken down into<br />

the individual pieces of information (the<br />

Bricks) that need to be understood. Visit:<br />

http://brixlearning.com/<br />

Nano Simbox<br />

Nano Simbox turns the science laboratory<br />

digital. Designed for all ages, the resource<br />

helps students to understand the complex<br />

concepts of molecules and atoms by inviting<br />

them to play, grab and manipulate the system.<br />

Physical gestures and dynamic graphics<br />

respond to their input in real-time, making it<br />

an entertaining way to discover chemistry and<br />

physics. Visit: http://nanosimbox.com/<br />

Lumici Slate<br />

Lumici is an educational technologies<br />

company whose flagship product is Lumici<br />

Slate, which – among other functions – allows<br />

teachers to create, store and share lesson plans<br />

that can be accessed anytime, anywhere or<br />

shared with students and other teachers. Visit:<br />

www.lumici.co.uk<br />

TeachPitch<br />

This online resource for teachers helps them<br />

gather knowledge of their subject, develop the<br />

pedagogy of teaching it, learn about student<br />

assessment practice and get support for their<br />

classroom management. It is a cloud-based<br />

learning platform that helps teachers and<br />

schools identify the best online resources<br />

available. Visit: www.teachpitch.com<br />

VEO<br />

VEO App is another new exhibitor whose<br />

video-tagging tool combines the power of<br />

video and data to maximise the impact of<br />

self/peer review and dialogue. Tagging key<br />

moments in peer-observed lessons for later<br />

reflection helps teachers to improve their<br />

practice. Visit: www.veo-group.com<br />

Diagnostic Questions<br />

Diagnostic Questions is a formative<br />

assessment platform designed to help<br />

teachers enhance the quality and relevance<br />

of their teaching. Teachers choose and assign<br />

quizzes from a bank of diagnostic questions.<br />

Students then answer the questions and<br />

provide explanations as to how they made<br />

their choices. The quizzes are automatically<br />

marked. Visit: www.diagnosticquestions.com<br />

EduCake<br />

Science-related exhibitor is EduCake is<br />

used by schools to set regular homework to<br />

improve their students’ scientific knowledge<br />

and understanding. This online application<br />

offers more than 6,000 science questions<br />

and has coverage of AQA, Edexcel, OCR<br />

Gateway and Cambridge iGCSE. The<br />

questions take less than a minute to set up and<br />

the answers are automatically marked. Visit:<br />

www.educake.co.uk<br />

Photo: iStock<br />

12<br />

SecEd


BETT FUTURES<br />

Pixie<br />

All the way from Madrid, Pixie Learn to<br />

Code offers teachers of students aged 10 to<br />

16, a support system to teach programming.<br />

Created from a standard system based on<br />

visual blocks of code (Blockly) and inspired<br />

by Scratch, this new coding language uses a<br />

logic and problem-solving strategy, to design<br />

projects and communicate new ideas. Visit:<br />

www.pixie.es<br />

Ada Core<br />

Another programming resource comes from<br />

Ada Core, which provides software solutions<br />

for Ada, a programming language designed<br />

for large, long-lived applications where safety,<br />

security and reliability are critical. Visit:<br />

www.thisisada.com<br />

Mathscraft<br />

A primary product, Mathscraft is a multiplayer<br />

maths game aligned with the national<br />

curriculum objectives for key stage 2<br />

students. Visit: www.mathscraft.com<br />

Domoscio<br />

Domoscio’s solution is based on the belief<br />

that after just one month, 80 per cent of what<br />

we learn is forgotten. Domoscio offers an<br />

adaptive memory solution. An interesting<br />

concept for key stage 4 is CV Plus, a tool to<br />

help students build a CV, with guidance and<br />

tips at each stage. Visit: www.domoscio.com<br />

One Globe Kids<br />

One Globe Kids is an app that focuses on<br />

global learning and aims to bring pupils as<br />

close as possible to real peers around the<br />

globe. The app was developed to help pupils<br />

draw connections between their life and the<br />

lives of children in other countries. Visit:<br />

www.oneglobekids.com<br />

Pelican Connect<br />

Pelican Connect gives you control over your<br />

alumni data. The software lets you connect<br />

with your school’s old students, launch<br />

professional networks, coordinate fundraising<br />

and leverage careers support from former<br />

students. Visit: www.pelicanconnect.com<br />

CV Plus<br />

CV Plus helps students to build a CV, with<br />

guidance and tips at each step. It also allows<br />

students to record skills, achievements and<br />

interests online using video, files, weblinks,<br />

testimonials, text and image. Students can<br />

share portfolio posts by weblink, or print<br />

them out as articles. Visit: www.cvplus.co<br />

Class App<br />

Schools wanting to enhance their<br />

communication between parents and students<br />

can visit Class App, a school communication<br />

app which enables schools to communicate<br />

directly and instantly with parents and/or<br />

students. Visit: https://classapp.com.br/<br />

Berkfield<br />

The first of the 15 Grow exhibitors this year<br />

is Berkfield. With more than 72 per cent<br />

of adults having a SmartPhone, Berkfield<br />

has built hundreds of iPhone and Android<br />

education mobile apps for primary and<br />

secondary schools. The company asks schools<br />

to imagine what their own mobile app would<br />

do for them. Visit: http://berkfield.co.uk/edu/<br />

Alphabet Babies<br />

Alphabet Babies offers language, literacy<br />

and communication programmes for the<br />

early years, for both professional settings and<br />

parents. Visit: www.alphabetbabies.com<br />

Cerebriti<br />

Squizr is a cultural games portal with<br />

hundreds of games to test students’<br />

knowledge. The portal has been designed so<br />

that students can search for the educationally<br />

aligned game they want. Students can<br />

compete with their friends and class mates to<br />

determine who is the most knowledgeable.<br />

Visit: www.cerebriti.com<br />

Klaxoon<br />

Klaxoon is a collection of ideas that facilitate<br />

interactivity within a group. Based on your<br />

content, you can propose simple and effective<br />

educational activities, such as tests and<br />

quizzes, surveys, challenges, brain-storming<br />

activities, live messaging and so on. Visit:<br />

https://klaxoon.com<br />

Pobble<br />

Bringing together more than 34,000 stories<br />

and counting by pupils from right across the<br />

world, Pobble allows teachers to showcase<br />

children’s work on an “online classroom<br />

wall”, extending its reach beyond the<br />

Continued on page 14<br />

SecEdOnline<br />

www.sec-ed.co.uk<br />

Offering the latest secondary education news,<br />

best practice guidance and leading commentary.<br />

Access all of SecEd’s news, best practice,<br />

expert blogs, and analysis online.<br />

Receive regular SecEd e-bulletin updates<br />

free of charge.<br />

“SecEd provides an invaluable contribution<br />

to my leadership role. It is informed,<br />

balanced and really gets to the bottom of<br />

the current educational issues.”<br />

Jonathan de Sausmarez, Executive<br />

Headteacher, The Romsey School<br />

Join the thousands following us on twitter @SecEd_Education<br />

SecEd 13


BETT FUTURES<br />

Continued from page 13<br />

individual school. The aim is to motivate<br />

children, while connecting teachers and<br />

classrooms and building a global library of<br />

ideas and resources. Visit: https://pobble.com<br />

Explain Everything<br />

Explain Everything is an interactive<br />

screencasting whiteboard app being used by<br />

more than two million students and teachers<br />

around the world. The app allows you to<br />

watch other people’s explanations, videos<br />

and projects that have been made in Explain<br />

Everything and selected by its expert staff.<br />

Visit: http://explaineverything.com/<br />

Lumio<br />

Lumio is made up of structured sequences<br />

of mathematical problems that get more<br />

challenging as your learners progress. Using<br />

problem-solving and visual models, learners<br />

build on their understanding of important<br />

mathematical ideas and concepts. Visit:<br />

www.lumioeducation.com<br />

EDUCATION4SIGHT<br />

EDUCATION4SIGHT is focused on making<br />

the most of IT, big data, analytics and mobile<br />

technologies in education. Its software<br />

helps stakeholders to address educational<br />

challenges by analysing real-time data<br />

against your range of performance indicators.<br />

Visit: http://education4sight.com/<br />

Loopy Computy<br />

Loopy Computy is an educational consultancy<br />

set up to help schools teach computing. It<br />

offers robotics, programming and blogging<br />

courses for primary children and training for<br />

school staff. Visit: www.loopycomputy.com<br />

LearnerVerse<br />

LearnerVerse, an e-learning resource that was<br />

developed in collaboration with the University<br />

of Chester, sees itself as an “education<br />

satnav”, allowing for learning from anywhere,<br />

at any time, through short skill-based lessons.<br />

Visit: http://learnerverse.uk/<br />

BRAINGO<br />

Based on Bingo, BRAINGO allows teachers<br />

to create games, choosing from thousands<br />

of questions written by teachers. Teachers<br />

can adapt the questions to suit their audience<br />

or students and create year group, subjectspecific<br />

games to be played at any time. Visit:<br />

www.braingogame.com<br />

TechnologyWillSaveUs<br />

Aimed at learners of all ages, Technology<br />

Will Save Us creates do-it-yourself gadget<br />

kits, online resources, activities and more<br />

to encourage students to make, play,<br />

code, invent – and ultimately learn – with<br />

technology. Visit: www.techwillsaveus.com<br />

Now>press>play<br />

Now>press>play is an educational resource<br />

that uses sound, story and technology<br />

to engage children. A now>press>play<br />

experience aims to be active and stimulating<br />

and involves putting on wireless headphones<br />

and being immersed in sound. The children<br />

become a character in a story, meeting people,<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures: Programme and presentations<br />

As well as showcasing the 31 companies listed here, the <strong>Bett</strong> Futures area has its own<br />

seminar theatre and will feature relevant CPD and discussion sessions, innovation<br />

showcases, product pitch sessions, and other presentations. Highlights include:<br />

• From STEM To STEAM: combining STEM and the arts world to drive<br />

innovation Alice Lacey, CEO and co-founder of Now>press>play; Bethany Koby,<br />

CEO and co-founder of Technology Will Save Us; Nick Corston, CEO of Steam Co<br />

(1:30pm on Wednesday, January 20).<br />

• The rise of the ‘Teacherpreneur’: innovative education technology needs<br />

innovative teachers Panel discussion at 4pm on Wednesday, January 20.<br />

• Why doesn’t Batman recycle? Edtech for social change Sophie Deen, founder,<br />

Bright Little Labs (11:45am on Thursday, January 21).<br />

• What we really want from edtech! Kate Broadribb, senior leader of learning,<br />

Wildern Academy (at 11:15am on Friday, January 22).<br />

• Gamification: adding the concept of play to your lessons Panel discussion at<br />

12:20pm on Friday, January 22.<br />

• Getting impact: successful use of technology to bring measurable impact<br />

to learners Mark Anderson, speaker, author and education consultant (2:15pm on<br />

Friday, January 22).<br />

• Founders4Schools show you how to set up your own role-model event in<br />

15 minutes Workshop event at 3pm on Friday, January 22.<br />

• Tech playground hosted by Ready Salted Code Genevieve Smith-Nunes, founder<br />

Ready Salted Code (11:30am on Saturday, January 23).<br />

Details correct at the time of going to press but subject to change. For full details of<br />

the <strong>Bett</strong> Futures zone, visit www.bettshow.com/content/bett-futures-<strong>2016</strong><br />

discovering places and solving problems.<br />

Visit: http://nowpressplay.co.uk/<br />

ParentHub<br />

ParentHub is a SmartPhone app developed by<br />

teachers and has been awarded for its school<br />

communication capability. It makes school<br />

communication accessible and is designed<br />

to improve parental engagement, increase<br />

teacher efficiency and reduce admin costs.<br />

Visit: www.parenthub.co.uk<br />

Future-gazing: Delegates in the Futures<br />

area at the <strong>Bett</strong> Show 2015<br />

Sparkjar<br />

Sparkjar is a specialist in mobile software<br />

development that is working closely with<br />

teachers to address the challenges associated<br />

with one-to-one tablet deployment in UK<br />

schools. The company designs apps to help<br />

make teachers’ lives easier and reduce admin.<br />

Visit: http://sparkjarapp.com/<br />

Photo: Jack Terry Photography/<strong>Bett</strong><br />

14<br />

SecEd


EXHIBITOR LIST: A TO K<br />

Listings correct at the time of going to press, but subject to change. Visit www.bettshow.com for latest listings<br />

Listed here and on page<br />

18 are selected suppliers<br />

relevant to secondary<br />

education. For a full list of<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> exhibitors, visit<br />

the BESA Information Point<br />

on Stand B138. A full list of<br />

exhibitors can be found at<br />

www.bettshow.com<br />

Selected exhibitors<br />

1st Technologies<br />

3P Learning<br />

4Matrix<br />

b68<br />

c280<br />

D448<br />

A C Leigh<br />

F380<br />

AB Tutor<br />

g352<br />

Academia<br />

F270<br />

Acer UK<br />

b109<br />

Achieve3000<br />

b461<br />

acronis<br />

c425<br />

ADA CORE<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

Advanced CCTV (Prime Digital) C428<br />

aerohive networks C268<br />

AIPTEK<br />

tb104<br />

AIRHEAD EDUCATION C300<br />

AirWatch<br />

c269<br />

AISOY<br />

c78<br />

Albion Computers C270<br />

Alice Innovation<br />

H450<br />

AlumnForce<br />

c88<br />

Amazing Interactives H230<br />

Apple Service Centre G98<br />

Apple Solution<br />

Expert Village<br />

c180<br />

AspiraclouD<br />

c300<br />

Assistive solutions SN28<br />

Asus Global<br />

F220<br />

atea<br />

c180<br />

Atomwide<br />

g160<br />

AVCOM<br />

h225<br />

avermedia<br />

e260<br />

Babcock 4s<br />

F360<br />

Barco nv<br />

D445<br />

Beijing Moly Technology Co g369<br />

belkin uk<br />

g372<br />

BenQ<br />

h300/h310<br />

BERKFIELD<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

bfc networks<br />

c300<br />

BIG BRAIN MATHS <strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

BI-bright<br />

b121<br />

Biostore<br />

c168<br />

bksb<br />

b228<br />

Bligear<br />

h285<br />

Blinklearning<br />

c78<br />

Bloxx<br />

F330<br />

Blue Ocean Robotics G90<br />

blue sky systems<br />

D415<br />

BlueSky Education B219<br />

Boardworks<br />

a140<br />

bodet<br />

c335<br />

BoniO<br />

h340<br />

braingo<br />

bett Futures<br />

Brainpop UK<br />

e114<br />

BrainstorM<br />

c78<br />

Breckland Scientific G355<br />

Brenthaven<br />

F88<br />

Bridgeu<br />

F48<br />

BRIX LEARNING <strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

bsquareD<br />

b245<br />

BT Business<br />

Bullet Solutions<br />

c278<br />

e406<br />

Cambridge University Press b250<br />

canvas<br />

b110<br />

Cap Digital<br />

c88<br />

Capita SIMs<br />

b190<br />

Capstone<br />

c50/C55<br />

CB Info Systems<br />

c391<br />

CEREBRITI<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

CC communications B480<br />

cem centre for evaluation<br />

and monitoring<br />

g240<br />

CENSornet<br />

e130<br />

champs21<br />

D70<br />

Chen-Source<br />

e110<br />

CHQ Group<br />

e40<br />

circle it<br />

F369<br />

Cisco Meraki<br />

e90<br />

Clarity in Sound Light<br />

and Vision<br />

a240<br />

Claro Software<br />

h410<br />

CLASS APP<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

class dojo<br />

F70A<br />

Classroom Monitor B238<br />

CLEAPSS<br />

g88<br />

Clevertouch<br />

c288<br />

ClickView<br />

b300<br />

Clyde Broadcast Products g96<br />

Code College<br />

g449<br />

computers unlimited F120<br />

Connevans<br />

a340<br />

Constellations<br />

c163<br />

Contact GrouP<br />

a180<br />

Conversor<br />

g83<br />

Coomber Electronic<br />

Equipment<br />

c431<br />

copilot partners<br />

c88<br />

Counterpoint MTC H330<br />

Crambo<br />

b408<br />

CRB Cunninghams<br />

F81<br />

Crick Software<br />

D240<br />

Cristie<br />

c433<br />

Crown House Publishing tb40<br />

CSE Education Systems b248<br />

ctouch<br />

D400<br />

CV Plus<br />

bett Futures<br />

dalton ellis<br />

g93<br />

Data Harvest Group G260/h246<br />

DAYDREAM EDUCATION E440<br />

Dell Corporation Limited f180<br />

Designmate<br />

c259<br />

DIAGNOSTIC<br />

QUESTIONS <strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

DigitalAir Wireless b430<br />

Discendum<br />

e75<br />

Discovery Business<br />

Solutions<br />

c399<br />

DOMOSCIO <strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

DoodleMaths<br />

F41<br />

Dosli<br />

g95<br />

Double First<br />

e120<br />

Double Robotics<br />

sn2<br />

e2bn Think it<br />

e-Arete vle<br />

edlio<br />

EDLounge<br />

EDUCAKe<br />

EDUCATER<br />

EDUCATION4SIGHT<br />

EDUCATIONCITY<br />

Education Support<br />

Professionals<br />

D100<br />

D359<br />

b340<br />

e280<br />

bett Futures<br />

F75<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

D360<br />

a150<br />

EDUCLEVER<br />

c88<br />

Edukey / ClassCharts A215<br />

edutech<br />

b235<br />

ees for schools<br />

D110<br />

ELMO Europe<br />

sn16<br />

Encyclopaedia Britannica b230<br />

EPAFOS INFORMATION<br />

TECHNOLOGY SYSTEMS g439<br />

epraise<br />

D352<br />

Epson (UK)<br />

D270<br />

ERA<br />

c457<br />

Ergo Computing<br />

c261<br />

ERGOTRON EUROPE<br />

F105<br />

eteach<br />

g351a<br />

estudent tracker<br />

A440<br />

European Electronique c240<br />

EuroTalK<br />

F388<br />

Eventmap<br />

g428<br />

Exa Education<br />

b160<br />

EXPLAIN EVERYTHING <strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

exakt<br />

sn51<br />

Exponential-e<br />

c66<br />

express publishing sn10<br />

Extron Electronics b419<br />

Eye2eye Software a402<br />

eyeTeach<br />

a170<br />

Festo Didactic<br />

b79<br />

Fiction Express<br />

a406<br />

FileWave<br />

g280<br />

Firefly Learning<br />

c130<br />

Fischertechnik<br />

tb29<br />

Focus Educational<br />

Software<br />

F440<br />

Folio Dual Purpose<br />

Computer Desks<br />

e410<br />

fortinet<br />

c241<br />

Fourier Education D105<br />

Frog Education<br />

D140<br />

Fujitsu Services<br />

c128<br />

fsp holdings<br />

g448<br />

Furlong<br />

c400<br />

GBM<br />

c180<br />

genee world<br />

b123<br />

GET offshore Global<br />

education & Technology b463<br />

GL Assessment<br />

b149<br />

global vocational skills g420<br />

Globisens<br />

a110<br />

Google for Education c230<br />

gpm wheatfield<br />

c432<br />

gratnells<br />

a390<br />

griffin technology g120<br />

Groupcall<br />

b188<br />

Gumdrop Cases f378/g87<br />

GYration<br />

D421<br />

Habook Information<br />

TechnologY<br />

F115<br />

Hanshin International b70<br />

Hapara<br />

F288<br />

HardSoft Computers g71<br />

hewlett packard<br />

enterprise<br />

g180A<br />

highlights international d442<br />

Hills Components c426<br />

hitachi europe<br />

g270<br />

Hodder Education c116<br />

Hotboards by Ward-Hendry f78<br />

HP EDUCATION D160/D180<br />

hpc laser<br />

a408<br />

Huawei Technologies f351<br />

hue<br />

b236<br />

Hyperspheric Solutions F310<br />

i3-Technologies Holding<br />

IAM Cloud<br />

iBoardTouch<br />

f230<br />

sn18<br />

b180<br />

Iboss Network Security E240<br />

ICEX Spanish Pavillion<br />

iCT4<br />

I-desk Solutions<br />

Idxtra<br />

ikt-norge<br />

Imagen<br />

IMMANENS<br />

Impero Solutions<br />

implix<br />

incerts<br />

Info Technology Supply<br />

InfoMentor<br />

Infourok<br />

Ink Options<br />

Inkjets and Toners IJT<br />

Integral A Level<br />

Maths Resources<br />

Integrex<br />

Intel<br />

Intellisense Co<br />

Interactive Achievement<br />

Interactive Education<br />

Solutions<br />

International<br />

Baccalaureate (IB)<br />

internet matters<br />

into film<br />

InVentrY<br />

Inwood Industries Co<br />

Ip Performance<br />

IRIS Connect<br />

iSAMS Independent<br />

Isis Concepts<br />

isograd<br />

IST International<br />

i-staY<br />

iStorage<br />

itn edu<br />

ITOP éducation<br />

itslearning<br />

ITWORX Education<br />

JAMF Software<br />

JELLYJAMes<br />

Jiangsu SWR S&T Co<br />

Jigsaw School Apps<br />

Joskos Solutions<br />

JTRS<br />

JULONG EDUCATIONAL<br />

TECHNOLOGY CO<br />

c78<br />

b449<br />

c158<br />

a230<br />

b390<br />

e380<br />

c88<br />

d350<br />

D71<br />

a210<br />

e350<br />

b200<br />

c390<br />

c442<br />

f319<br />

F61<br />

sn30<br />

c210<br />

g431<br />

g130<br />

b150<br />

b439<br />

h160<br />

b225<br />

F260<br />

h104<br />

c394<br />

c392<br />

e160<br />

c120<br />

c88<br />

c438<br />

c68<br />

a350<br />

sn4<br />

c88<br />

b98<br />

d300<br />

e230<br />

sn65<br />

A410<br />

TB13<br />

b288<br />

c180<br />

b113<br />

kahoot<br />

F70c<br />

Kallysta<br />

sn50<br />

Keep I.T. Easy (Flowol.com) A195<br />

Keytracker<br />

a430<br />

KIC InnoEnergy<br />

g440<br />

KLAXOON<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

kickteK<br />

F40<br />

K’NEX UK<br />

e65<br />

Knowl’ge Ap(p)S<br />

g82<br />

Korea Scientific Instruments<br />

Industry Cooperative (KSIIC) e220<br />

Continued on page 18<br />

SecEd 15


Cloud Web Security<br />

and integrated MDM<br />

Protection for your students and<br />

your network<br />

Meet the Buyers &<br />

Experts Business<br />

Theatre & Lounge<br />

Café<br />

sponsored by<br />

L<br />

T<br />

S<br />

The exponential growth of<br />

mobile in the workplace has<br />

spawned a wide-range of<br />

devices, platforms and<br />

applications, creating new<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures<br />

They’re start-ups now,<br />

but they’re the future<br />

of ed tech<br />

E<br />

challenges to securing the<br />

network. iboss MobileEther<br />

mobile device management<br />

(MDM) increases Internet<br />

security and protects your<br />

schools mobile devices and<br />

data with full-featured<br />

capabilities.<br />

MobileEther secures all users, on<br />

any devices or platforms, on or off<br />

premises with granular built-in<br />

BYOD and optional mobile device<br />

management (MDM).<br />

MobileEther offers easy-to-use<br />

centralized management across<br />

mixed-mobile deployments and<br />

prevents unapproved apps with<br />

granular application management.<br />

CUSTOM HOUSE<br />

*NEW*<br />

Trade@<strong>Bett</strong><br />

Calling all resellers<br />

and distributors<br />

Schools Learn Live:<br />

Primary<br />

Innovative ideas for<br />

primary educators<br />

Exhibitor Listings<br />

MobileEther<br />

Cloud Web Security<br />

Web / App<br />

Security<br />

FireSphere<br />

APT Defence<br />

www.iboss.com<br />

This free guide has<br />

been supported by<br />

iboss, which offers webfiltering,<br />

collaboration,<br />

security, and network<br />

management for schools.<br />

You can visit iboss on<br />

Stand E240, as marked<br />

on the map above. For<br />

information on the stand<br />

numbers of a selection<br />

of secondary exhibitors,<br />

turn to pages 15 and 18.


FLOORPLAN: BETT <strong>2016</strong><br />

*NEW*<br />

Hands-on<br />

earn Live with<br />

Worldwide Partner<br />

he best way to learn is<br />

to try things yourself!<br />

chool Leaders<br />

Summit<br />

Schools Learn<br />

Live: Secondary<br />

Innovative ideas for<br />

secondary educators<br />

Technology in<br />

Higher Education<br />

Summit<br />

Exclusive conference for<br />

higher education leaders<br />

*NEW*<br />

STEM<br />

Village<br />

xclusive conference<br />

for school leaders<br />

PRINCE REGENT<br />

Press<br />

Microsoft<br />

Partner Village<br />

brought to you by<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Arena<br />

For anyone who is up for<br />

being inspired, fascinated,<br />

amazed and excited<br />

Stand E240<br />

Learn Live: SEN<br />

Innovative ideas for<br />

SEN professionals<br />

*NEW*<br />

FE@<strong>Bett</strong><br />

Bridging the gap<br />

between education and<br />

the working world<br />

Learn Live: HE<br />

Innovative ideas for higher<br />

education professionals<br />

ExCeL London<br />

The relocation of <strong>Bett</strong> to ExCeL in 2013 was the<br />

result of out-growing the previous venue. The<br />

increasing demand for exhibition stand space and the<br />

expanding seminar and conference programme drove<br />

the need for a larger location.<br />

Situated in the heart of London’s Royal Docks,<br />

within reach of central London, the ExCeL venue is<br />

part of a 100-acre campus.<br />

Within the campus there are three Docklands Light<br />

Railway (DLR) stations, access to the Jubilee London<br />

Underground line and London City Airport, parking<br />

for 3,700 cars, six hotels, and numerous bars and<br />

restaurants.<br />

For international visitors,<br />

ExCeL is situated close<br />

to London City Airport,<br />

which has 350 flights a<br />

day from more than 40<br />

international destinations.<br />

For those wanting to embark on the<br />

full experience, the Emirates Air Line (cable car)<br />

connects ExCeL and the O2. It is also now possible<br />

to travel by Thames Clipper between central London<br />

and the O2 and then by cable car across the Thames<br />

to ExCeL.<br />

Visit: http://excel.london/


EXHIBITOR LIST: K TO Z<br />

Listings correct at the time of going to press, but subject to change. Visit www.bettshow.com for latest listings<br />

Continued from page 15 next thing education e48 SAM Learning<br />

h88 Techsoft UK a160<br />

Nicesmile<br />

g359 SAS APPs<br />

a300 Telefónica Educación Digital C78<br />

Kramer Electronics UK c418 Nimble Storage & Cristie Data Sayegh<br />

F318 Televic Education<br />

H80<br />

KRCS<br />

c180<br />

c440 Scanning Pens<br />

a220 TestWe<br />

c88<br />

kurzweil education b364 Nosco E-Learning<br />

h62 Schappit<br />

sn72 TexthelP<br />

c141<br />

Novatia<br />

g61 School CLOUd systems A200 The Hira Company<br />

g69<br />

LapCabby<br />

b120 NOWPRESSPLAY <strong>Bett</strong> Futures School Radio<br />

g350 The School Planner Company f368<br />

LapSafe Products<br />

f160 Numbergym Software c461 Schoolcomms<br />

b221 therapy box<br />

sn52<br />

laserlife<br />

c438 nureva<br />

b409 Schoolmanagement.eu<br />

ThiemeMeulenhoff e361<br />

Learnerverse <strong>Bett</strong> Futures NutKase<br />

c444 – Vertitech D353 Timstar Laboratory Suppliers G260<br />

Learnetic<br />

D61 Nuwco<br />

g419 SchoologY<br />

c250 top hat monocle<br />

g389<br />

Learning Data<br />

F49<br />

SchoolPoD<br />

e368 Top Systems<br />

h228<br />

Learning Labs – FlashSticks d440 Oakford Internet Services b400 Schools Broadband c80 TOPdesk UK<br />

e378<br />

LearnPad<br />

c100 one-2-ten<br />

g351b Schools’ Intelligence D72 TOP-TEC<br />

c408<br />

Leba Innovation<br />

F130 ONE GLOBE KIDS <strong>Bett</strong> Futures Schoolwebsite.co.uk C419 Toshiba Information<br />

LEGO Education<br />

e141 optimusic<br />

D420 Science Bits<br />

h418 Systems uk<br />

c118<br />

lenovo<br />

c200 Osborne Technologies SN11/e100 Scientific & Chemical Supplies b158 TP-LINK<br />

c140<br />

lexia reading<br />

a330 outside classroom boards c450 SEINET GROUP<br />

c78 TRACEBoarD<br />

D370<br />

LG Networks<br />

a280 Oxford University Press c110 selectamark security systems f80 Trams<br />

c180<br />

libcast<br />

e280A<br />

sensavis<br />

h130 Triangle Music Games tb56<br />

Lightspeed Systems d220 PanzerGlass<br />

g370 Sentio Media<br />

a320 Trifibre<br />

D51<br />

Lightspeed Technologies e379 Parat<br />

b168 SES (Scientific<br />

TRINITY MATHS – ESTARTERS g388<br />

Literacy Planet<br />

h350 PARENTHUB <strong>Bett</strong> Futures Educational Systems) sn91 trotec laser<br />

g411<br />

Little Dreams<br />

h180 ParentPay<br />

b280 Shanghai Easi Computer<br />

trusol<br />

F338<br />

Live Register<br />

F280 Paritor<br />

g357 Technology Co<br />

D427 trustnet<br />

g160<br />

Lock n Charge<br />

F120 Parotec Solutions b141 ShenZhen iBoard<br />

TutorTap<br />

a442<br />

london grid for learning g160 Pasco Scientific<br />

b158 Technology<br />

b240 Twenty One Learning f338<br />

london knowledge lab A450 PELICAN CONNECT <strong>Bett</strong> Futures SHENZHEN ELOAM TECHNOLOGY A404 Twig World<br />

b108<br />

Loop Teaching<br />

e50 pearson<br />

F300 ShenZhen Zmezme<br />

Loopy Computy bett futures Penstripe<br />

F90 Technology<br />

b213 UZBL / ThinkWrite<br />

b427<br />

loxit limited<br />

c258 personal projector c440 shoo fly publishing c437<br />

Lumens Digital Optics b205 PG Online<br />

D450 Show My Homework c449 Valiant Technology g379<br />

LUMICI STATE <strong>Bett</strong> Futures philips/mmd monitors/<br />

Showbie Inc.<br />

c150 veo<br />

bett Futures<br />

LUMio<br />

bett Futures displays<br />

e180 SiSo/Online Resource<br />

Vernier Software / Ids B210<br />

Lynda.com<br />

g225 pipplet<br />

c88 Booking<br />

e42 Vestel<br />

b90<br />

lynx networks<br />

a115 Piron Corporation c358 SISRA LimiteD<br />

D390 Videk LtD<br />

a270<br />

Pi-Top<br />

F60 SMART Technologies d80 VII Networks<br />

D380<br />

Macmillan Education b112 PIXIE CODE BETT FUTURES smarttek bilisiM<br />

F439 Virgin Media Business G160<br />

Magic Whiteboard g377 Planet eStreaM<br />

D108 Smoothwall<br />

e300 ViviteK<br />

c160<br />

Makeblock<br />

b242 PlasQ<br />

D428 Solar ReaDY<br />

D131 VS<br />

e370<br />

maskott<br />

c88 POPPle<br />

bett Futures Sonocent<br />

b140<br />

Matchware<br />

c148 powerschool<br />

c436 solutors<br />

b218 Wanin Educational<br />

Mathematics.com.eu Pty b89 Precedence Technologies b426 SonY<br />

F240 Multimedia<br />

F370<br />

Max Cases<br />

h240 Projector Lamp Source e74 sound innovations c62 Wave Print<br />

g78<br />

MCC<br />

c180 Promethean<br />

b99 SoundBEAM<br />

sn102 WCBS<br />

g230<br />

Medhurst IT<br />

e131 Protechnic<br />

b445 Soundtrap<br />

h416 Webanywhere<br />

F350<br />

Media-X Systems<br />

c456 Prowise<br />

b208 Spaceoasis Ltd<br />

g100 webbased<br />

b222<br />

Medical Tracker Limited g97 Pupil Asset<br />

g135 Sparkjar<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> Futures Weduc<br />

c70<br />

Micro Librarian Systems b190<br />

specktron<br />

g380 Welsh Government D354<br />

microsoft<br />

e310 QNAP Systems<br />

F82 Squirrels LLC<br />

c399 westermann group C395<br />

Mike Ayres Design sn86 Quadam<br />

c78 stanson education c435 whizz education<br />

tb50<br />

Milk Student Planner System c401 QuizzBox<br />

tb59 Steljes<br />

c410 Widgit Software<br />

sn74<br />

mindcet<br />

g220<br />

Sterling Pixels Private d60 WIRIS Math<br />

c78<br />

MINTclass<br />

F62 RADECAL<br />

h90 Stone Computers<br />

c90 WisePay<br />

a120<br />

Misco UK<br />

e70 Radix<br />

b148 Stop Motion Pro<br />

a90 Wishtrac House<br />

sn70<br />

Motorola two way radio g79 Rapid Education/VEX<br />

stormfront retail f110 witigo – profil technology c88<br />

MOZAIK Education b130 Robotics<br />

b420 Student Folder<br />

D429 wizefloor<br />

c420<br />

Multicharge<br />

e360 Readspeaker<br />

b428 studica and pitsco e140 Wizkids A/S<br />

b232<br />

MV-Nordic<br />

c274 Realizeit<br />

F422 Succeedin Limited<br />

g99 Wolfvision UK<br />

g410<br />

My Learning (UK)<br />

F410 Realsmart<br />

c260 Sun-Tech I.T. Solutions a80 Wordshark<br />

b258<br />

MyCognition<br />

sn5 Redstor<br />

a40 Switchshop Limited h270 wordwall<br />

a190<br />

MyDOCUMENTA<br />

c78 refurb that<br />

F83 symbaloo<br />

c330 worldstrides international<br />

MyScript<br />

b87 Renaissance Learning B50 Synel Industries (UK) h120 discovery<br />

c459<br />

Returnstar Interactive e351 Syntax Consultancy h360<br />

NANO SIMBOX <strong>Bett</strong> Futures rich source precision b281 SZ REACH TECH CO.<br />

sn89 Xirrus<br />

b88<br />

National STEM Centre C454 RISING stars<br />

c116<br />

XMA<br />

e180<br />

Nationwide Retail Systems A255 RM Education<br />

c190 TACTEASY TECHNOLOGY CO d398 Xnoova<br />

tb81<br />

Nautilus<br />

b142 Rm spacekraft<br />

sn3 TAP-it<br />

sn90<br />

Net-ctrl<br />

c63 Robotel<br />

g89 tasc software solutions d120 Yellow Dot<br />

b223<br />

Netex Innovative Learning<br />

route2education technology b220 TEACH PITCH <strong>Bett</strong> Futures Young Digital Planet b118<br />

Technologies<br />

c78 ruler<br />

c300 teacher created materials d50<br />

NETGEAR<br />

g330<br />

Teacher Dashboard 365 c396 Zammer<br />

h70<br />

netoP<br />

F379 Saak Digital – Weeras Tools c78 tecbook<br />

b446 ZuLogic<br />

c149<br />

NetSupport Software d118 SafeGuard Software g70 TECHNOLOGY WILL<br />

ZuluDesk<br />

h384<br />

Netsweeper Inc<br />

g160 Salamander Soft<br />

c300 SAVE us<br />

bett Futures Zumos<br />

D431<br />

18<br />

SecEd


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GCSEPod user.”<br />

The increase in<br />

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our A-A*grades.<br />

“Our students<br />

love Podding.”<br />

“GCSEPod<br />

is an absolute<br />

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I highly<br />

recommend it”<br />

“Highly impressive<br />

mapping of core<br />

knowledge!”<br />

“So impressed<br />

with GCSEPod -<br />

sector leading!”<br />

“GCSEPod<br />

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WHAT IS GCSEPOD?<br />

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That’s what students and teachers are tweeting about us.<br />

Students say they survive and thrive with our on-demand learning at their fingertips: 21 subjects,<br />

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LEARN LIVE CPD<br />

Lesson observations:<br />

Judging or developing?<br />

The next four pages preview<br />

selected Learn Live CPD<br />

sessions at <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong>. To<br />

kick us off, Gary King looks<br />

at what makes effective<br />

CPD and the role of lesson<br />

observations in setting<br />

development goals<br />

In isolation, disconnected from CPD<br />

and used simply for “performance<br />

management” purposes, what is the point<br />

of a lesson observation at all?<br />

In this context it becomes a very poor tool to<br />

judge a teacher on a 30 or 60-minute snapshot<br />

in time. So, why grade a lesson on a scale from<br />

“inadequate” (4) through to “outstanding” (1)<br />

if the answer is simply so school leaders can<br />

easily put a “number” on whole-school teaching<br />

and learning?<br />

I believe that in order to become truly<br />

outstanding, schools need to develop a culture<br />

where all staff embrace the lesson observation<br />

as a supportive and developmental way to<br />

reflect upon and improve their own practice.<br />

I would also argue that the longer schools<br />

continue to put a number on individual lesson<br />

observations, a genuine, open, honest and<br />

supportive culture will carry on slipping away.<br />

It will take time for teachers to shake off the<br />

need to be graded and the associated negative<br />

accountability culture that inevitably comes with<br />

it – we are only human after all.<br />

If, however, there is an emerging culture<br />

or indeed one that already exists where<br />

lesson observations are used effectively as<br />

developmental tools, teachers will value the<br />

way in which they support their on-going<br />

professional development needs and<br />

therefore grow a school culture of trust and<br />

reflective practice.<br />

The power of change needs to be firmly<br />

in the hands of our teachers and not solely a<br />

top-down approach. Teachers need to become<br />

the driving force of a schools strategy using<br />

lesson observations as one element of a wider<br />

collection of highly effective tools that inform<br />

subsequent professional development.<br />

Ofsted’s new approach, including the<br />

removal of lesson grades from its inspections,<br />

has emphasised the importance of one crucial<br />

element – the quality of dialogue and feedback<br />

following the observation.<br />

For the teacher observed, this focuses heavily,<br />

perhaps, on the “one big thing” that will move<br />

their teaching forwards, making it a target to<br />

focus on without getting lost in an array of<br />

“woolly” comments or targets, which can all too<br />

often be the case.<br />

This can only be achieved if the observer<br />

understands what real learning and progress<br />

looks like and the realisation that there isn’t a<br />

preferred style of teaching that will achieve this<br />

by itself.<br />

It is important that lesson observation is<br />

explicitly linked to the whole school CPD<br />

programme and, of course, bespoke CPD for<br />

individual staff.<br />

Whether it be part of the whole school<br />

evaluation cycle, triad-based work or simply<br />

informal sharing of practice, teachers will have<br />

a vehicle to embrace innovation, take risks<br />

and not feel threatened by the “observation”<br />

(certainly not staying up all night planning and<br />

placing unnecessary stress upon themselves).<br />

As a leader of teaching, learning and CPD, I<br />

always feel pressure and a big responsibility in<br />

the sense that I question whether I am offering a<br />

model that will meet the needs of all staff within<br />

our school.<br />

Our new approach to professional<br />

development is built on staff voice, alongside<br />

an acute awareness of teaching and learning<br />

through rigorous triangulation of learning walks,<br />

work scrutiny, student voice and data analysis.<br />

Of course, it is inevitable that throughout<br />

the year this approach will need to be tweaked<br />

and modified, after all if we stand still we are<br />

already going backwards. The key is to have a<br />

professional development model that is fluid,<br />

and can quickly change with the rhythm of the<br />

school and not become a rigid one that is set for<br />

the whole year.<br />

It is crucial that any professional learning/<br />

CPD model supports the on-going professional<br />

development needs of all staff, while<br />

representing value for money – this is simply<br />

common sense.<br />

However, the bigger question is how can<br />

this model truly support the ever-changing<br />

professional learning needs day-by-day, weekby-week<br />

and term-by-term to further sustain<br />

improvement?<br />

A three-point approach, encompassing wholeschool,<br />

faculty/subject-specific and individual<br />

needs (which are not mutually exclusive) can<br />

support all strands of a school’s development.<br />

Understanding and identifying development<br />

needs are fundamental to maintaining a<br />

sustained model of improvement.<br />

• Gary King is an assistant principal and former<br />

head of technology. He is director of teaching<br />

and learning and leads CPD at Tavistock<br />

College in Devon. He also leads teaching and<br />

learning-focused whole-school projects on<br />

ICT innovation, real-world learning across the<br />

curriculum and entrepreneurial learning projects<br />

with schools across Europe.<br />

Further information<br />

Innovative approaches to teaching and learning<br />

takes place at 1:30pm on Friday, January 22, in<br />

the Learn Live Secondary Theatre.<br />

Photo: iStock<br />

20<br />

SecEd


LEARN LIVE CPD<br />

A state secondary school<br />

with an ICT budget of £3.50<br />

per-pupil, per-year? What<br />

can anyone learn from that?<br />

One word: creativity. Andy<br />

Chaplin explains how to<br />

create a modern learning<br />

environment in a school where<br />

an interactive whiteboard<br />

equals three years’ budget<br />

I<br />

am a consultant coordinator at a German<br />

Hauptschule. My main responsibility<br />

is to manage the English department’s<br />

implementation of a system whereby the<br />

children are taught according to ability, rather<br />

than the standard German way (in classes, or<br />

years).<br />

My other responsibility is to work with<br />

the head of IT to maximise the benefit of our<br />

computer and media systems.<br />

Frankly, school technology in Germany<br />

isn’t a big subject. Chalk is still king and<br />

blackboards still reign.<br />

Budgets are based on the number of pupils<br />

you have but are also linked to the overall<br />

attainment of the students in the school,<br />

which causes some real issues.<br />

The system here is broadly based on the<br />

comprehensive system, made up of what I’d<br />

term the high-flying schools, those in the<br />

middle then the more vocational category.<br />

Our school falls into the last category, which<br />

unfortunately means a very limited budget<br />

of around 1,200€ over the year for 250<br />

students, working out to be around 5€ each.<br />

And that includes things like buying ink<br />

and toner! How do we get around this? A lot<br />

of creativity, for one thing. And we repair<br />

things a lot.<br />

Not long ago, I was taking capacitors<br />

out of motherboards and fixing them with<br />

a soldering iron. It forces you to be very<br />

hands-on.<br />

The chalk and talk system that we have<br />

to use means Germany isn’t producing the<br />

generation of innovators and tech-savvy<br />

people that the country’s tech giants need.<br />

We want to change that, and when you<br />

believe in technology in education but<br />

you are limited to a budget like ours, <strong>Bett</strong><br />

is crucial.<br />

The first time I attended <strong>Bett</strong> was about<br />

seven or eight years ago and I remember<br />

thinking “this is the way forward”. I now<br />

come with a colleague and spend two<br />

days there looking at all the wonderful<br />

technologies and trying to figure out how to<br />

make it all work back in our school.<br />

The session I am delivering focuses on<br />

what can improve the learner experience.<br />

When you have got a very small budget,<br />

you become obsessed with researching<br />

things – the internet becomes your most<br />

important tool.<br />

Open source is another phrase that must<br />

It’s not what<br />

you spend, but<br />

how you spend it<br />

be used every day in our school. One of the<br />

very best parts of the job, apart from helping<br />

a student get better results than expected,<br />

is getting a low-cost improvement up and<br />

running.<br />

My favourite teacher from my school<br />

days was René Filho, my French teacher. He<br />

taught me that the teacher isn’t the solution<br />

to a student’s learning, he is the facilitator. As<br />

a pupil I didn’t get it, but it was a valuable<br />

lesson in later life.<br />

The success of what you do with<br />

technology comes down to teachers wanting<br />

to do something good and being prepared to<br />

give up their free time.<br />

It is one of the reasons why I like<br />

TeachMeets – people want to improve, share<br />

knowledge and learn from each other.<br />

“Transform” and “improve” become the<br />

key drivers – and transformation is needed<br />

here in Germany.<br />

We want edtech to be seen as important<br />

here. Good teaching materials and equipment<br />

don’t have to cost the earth and we have<br />

found that we can make purchases stretch.<br />

We are also very aware that creating things<br />

and building your own equipment has<br />

advantages – you can teach a lot by doing<br />

that and that learning curve is great for<br />

students.<br />

The talk that I am doing isn’t negative.<br />

There would be no point in me standing there<br />

for half an hour talking about our relative<br />

“poverty”. Ultimately, the message for me<br />

is that you can achieve a heck of a lot by<br />

thinking differently, and that is where the<br />

collaborations, networks and inspiration of an<br />

event like <strong>Bett</strong> that brings everyone together<br />

is just so essential.<br />

• Andy Chaplin is the English coordinator at<br />

the Hauptschule Am Fredenberg in Germany.<br />

Further information<br />

Introducing classroom technology on a zero<br />

budget takes place at 10:30am on Thursday,<br />

January 21, in the Learn Live Secondary<br />

Theatre.<br />

Photo: iStock<br />

SecEd 21


LEARN LIVE CPD<br />

The Learn Live Secondary<br />

theatre brings together<br />

educators from a diverse<br />

range of backgrounds to<br />

offer 30-minute CPD sessions<br />

throughout the show. We find<br />

out more about some of the<br />

presenters and sessions<br />

Secondary CPD:<br />

More Learn Live<br />

highlights<br />

Speaker: Metin Ferhatoglu<br />

Position: Director of technology, American<br />

Robert College, Istanbul<br />

Learn Live session: Students becoming<br />

leaders: inspiring your students<br />

When: Wednesday, January 20, at 3pm<br />

What are your day-to-day responsibilities?<br />

“My main responsibility with my team is to<br />

make sure that technology-related services<br />

in the school run smoothly and meet the<br />

academic needs of the students. Half of my<br />

team are specialised in teacher training. We<br />

have a one-to-one BYOD programme and<br />

teacher and student support are crucial.”<br />

What are you speaking about at <strong>Bett</strong> and<br />

why? “I am speaking about the Student<br />

Tech Crew (STC) – a student leadership<br />

programme that we initiated with the oneto-one<br />

BYOD programme. I am a strong<br />

believer of including students in every<br />

project going on in the school. STC members<br />

are our ambassadors inside and outside the<br />

school. These students are not ‘geeks’, they<br />

are willing to learn and share with their<br />

friends, teachers, parents and the community<br />

around them. STC is one of the key points in<br />

the success of our one-to-one programme.”<br />

What started your interest in technology?<br />

“I believe that technology can enhance<br />

learning if used appropriately. Teachers are<br />

the key players so CPD is very important. I<br />

try to spend time with teachers and students<br />

inside and outside the classroom, observe<br />

them and get their feedback to set training<br />

and address their questions and concerns.”<br />

Who was your favourite teacher and why?<br />

“My primary school teacher. I decided to<br />

make a drone (actually a flying object with<br />

batteries) and she helped me to find the<br />

resources, materials and encouraged me to<br />

build it with a friend. It never worked, but I<br />

learned a lot. It is why I started the Makers<br />

Club in my school.”<br />

Where do you think education should be in<br />

5 to 10 years’ time?<br />

“In five years’ time students should take<br />

ownership of their learning, as Alan<br />

November says in his speeches and books.<br />

The schools will exist but transform.<br />

Individualised and differentiated learning<br />

will be the key factors. Fifty to 60 per cent of<br />

learning will be online.”<br />

Speaker: Mike Guerena<br />

Position: Director, educational technology,<br />

Encinitas Union School District, San Diego<br />

Learn Live session: Are we over digitising<br />

education?<br />

When: Wednesday, January 20, at 1:30pm<br />

What are your day-to-day responsibilities?<br />

“My main responsibility is to ensure that<br />

all students and teachers have access to<br />

digital technology that enhances the learning<br />

environment seamlessly.<br />

“To do this, I provide professional learning<br />

opportunities for teachers, lead groups<br />

of educators to curate digital curriculum<br />

for students, and act as a coach for my<br />

staff to support the teachers in the district<br />

to implement a student-centred learning<br />

environment.”<br />

What are you speaking about at <strong>Bett</strong> and<br />

why? “I am going to be speaking on the topic<br />

of finding balance in how we use digital<br />

technologies in schools. There are a lot of<br />

conflicting points of view about the benefits<br />

and perils of using digital technologies in<br />

education.<br />

“These include concerns about the amount<br />

of screen time that students are faced with<br />

on a daily basis, reading in digital formats<br />

versus paper formats, and equity of access.<br />

“During the session, I will be addressing<br />

these topics with research evidence,<br />

anecdotal examples and survey data from<br />

parents and students.”<br />

What started your interest in technology?<br />

“Getting an Atari 2600 game system when I<br />

was 10-years-old.”<br />

Who was your favourite teacher and why?<br />

“A history teacher that had us question where<br />

the source of history came from and if it was<br />

shaped by a specific point of view.<br />

Where do you think education should be in<br />

5 to 10 years’ time?<br />

“I hope that we will have teachers that<br />

were part of the new learning environments<br />

that we are creating. This will be the first<br />

group that was not taught completely in a<br />

predominately traditional stand-and-deliver<br />

format.<br />

“They will help solidify a student-centred<br />

learning approach that focuses on both the<br />

required learning and the desired learning of<br />

students.”<br />

Speaker: Jennifer Hart (@Miss_J_Hart)<br />

Position: Assistant head, Ashmole<br />

Academy, London<br />

Learn Live session: Flipping the learning,<br />

classroom and role<br />

When: Friday, January 22, at 4:30pm<br />

What are your day-to-day responsibilities?<br />

“I’m a chemistry teacher and a member of<br />

the school’s senior leadership team. I’m<br />

responsible for the science faculty, CPD and<br />

teaching and learning.”<br />

What are you speaking about at <strong>Bett</strong> and<br />

why? “We have had to develop new ways<br />

of teaching the students, so I have had to<br />

work with staff of varying technological<br />

abilities to ensure they are fully trained and<br />

confident using the technology; which is<br />

still a work in progress. At <strong>Bett</strong>, I am going<br />

to be talking about what we have done and<br />

how it has changed existing practice. For<br />

example, a year ago we introduced iPads to<br />

our sixth form students. I am also going to<br />

talk about where we are going next with the<br />

technology.”<br />

What started your interest in technology?<br />

“My general interest in technology stems<br />

from my dad. I used to help him build<br />

computers and would fall asleep to the<br />

sounds of dial-up internet as a child. My<br />

interest in technology in education began<br />

when I was an NQT and was the first teacher<br />

in the school to be given an interactive<br />

whiteboard.”<br />

Who was your favourite teacher and why?<br />

“Mr Davis, my science teacher. It’s because<br />

of him that I chose A level chemistry and I’m<br />

now teaching the subject. He was incredibly<br />

engaging and really brought the subject to<br />

life.”<br />

Where do you think education should be in<br />

5 to 10 years’ time?<br />

“Still improving. Education changes so<br />

rapidly, which sometimes causes a lot of<br />

issues and anxiety for teachers. However, I<br />

do like the fact that it continually evolves.”<br />

Learn Live Secondary<br />

Details correct at time of going to press.<br />

There are six Learn Live Theatres at <strong>Bett</strong>,<br />

including the Secondary Theatre and the SEN<br />

Theatre. To see the full programme, visit<br />

www.bettshow.com/content/learn-live-theatres<br />

22<br />

SecEd


LEARN LIVE CPD<br />

The global classroom<br />

Photo: iStock<br />

At <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong>, teacher Ann<br />

Sorum Michaelsen, from<br />

Norway, will be sharing her<br />

school’s approach to teaching<br />

in today’s knowledge society<br />

using technology as an enabler.<br />

She previews her session<br />

Teaching for today’s knowledge society<br />

is technically more complex and wideranging<br />

than teaching has ever been.<br />

It draws on a base of research and experience<br />

about effective teaching that is always changing<br />

and expanding. Today’s teachers therefore need<br />

to be committed to (and continually engaged<br />

in) pursuing, upgrading, self-monitoring and<br />

reviewing their own professional learning.<br />

This includes participating in face-to-face<br />

and virtual professional learning networks and<br />

adopting CPD (see Teaching in the Knowledge<br />

Society by Andy Hargreaves).<br />

In my workshop, we will explore different<br />

approaches to establishing a personal learning<br />

network. We will discuss how this can help<br />

teachers, while at the same time benefit<br />

students in their learning.<br />

When teachers trust the students to ask<br />

questions and explore topics from the<br />

curriculum, we are changing the classroom to<br />

meet the requirements of 21st century learning.<br />

This move towards a student-centred learning<br />

environment gained my school – Sandvika<br />

School in Norway – worldwide attention after<br />

the BBC published an article about our use of<br />

technology in the classroom, and BBC school<br />

reporters Olivia and Mary, students from<br />

Burntwood School in London, travelled all the<br />

way to Norway to report for BBC Click (see<br />

www.bbc.com/news/technology-25888737 and<br />

www.bbc.co.uk/schoolreport/26689320).<br />

Our school’s goal is to prepare students for<br />

future jobs and to change the classroom to<br />

make it more relevant and interesting.<br />

In the workshop, we will share how we use<br />

technology to get in contact with students and<br />

teachers in different parts of the world, using<br />

Skype, Twitter and by writing blogs. We will<br />

share examples that teachers can use as an easy<br />

guide to model in their own classrooms.<br />

At Sandvika School, we use block<br />

scheduling, which means that students for<br />

the most part only have one subject each day.<br />

My students do not have textbooks, they use<br />

e-books on their PCs, Macs or tablets.<br />

This way they have all their notes, videos<br />

and instructions, neatly stored in the same place<br />

online. Wherever they log on, they can find<br />

their books and notes from class.<br />

When discussing topics like the Scottish<br />

referendum, or environmental issues connected<br />

to the curriculum, we contact our network and<br />

invite students and experts into the classroom<br />

(for example, see my website for more on<br />

how we approached the Scottish referendum<br />

discussions: http://bit.ly/1O8EFg8).<br />

When you stream the conversations to<br />

YouTube, students can go back and listen to the<br />

conversations as many times as they need, take<br />

notes and write about the topics on their blogs.<br />

Twitter in class provides easy and quick<br />

access to information and answers to questions<br />

you or the students might have. Writing blogs<br />

gives students the opportunity to enjoy a wider<br />

audience for their writing and to engage in<br />

interesting conversations concerning the topics<br />

they are studying.<br />

This autumn, my first year students have been<br />

discussing “technology in school” with students<br />

in South Africa, Australia, Greece and Alaska<br />

(for more, see http://bit.ly/1MIGjpG).<br />

The result is that the students are more<br />

engaged in their writing and eager to correct<br />

mistakes if they have any. It is also highly<br />

motivating for the students to monitor the site<br />

statistics and connect the dots – each dot on the<br />

map represents a visitor from different countries!<br />

I invite you all to participate in this workshop<br />

and join in the conversation about how<br />

technology is helping us learn – take part in my<br />

global survey at http://bit.ly/1WYuPzR<br />

• Ann Sorum Michaelsen is a teacher and<br />

administrator at Sandvika High School near<br />

Oslo in Norway. She is the author of the blog<br />

“Teaching using web tools for educators”,<br />

where she shares lesson plans and articles about<br />

learning with technology. In 2013 her book,<br />

Connected Learners: A step-by-step guide to<br />

creating a global classroom, was published, with<br />

contributions from many students. Visit<br />

http://annmichaelsen.com/<br />

Sandvika High School<br />

Named as Norway’s 2009 Pathfinder school<br />

in the global Microsoft Partners in Learning<br />

Innovative Education Forums, Sandvika High<br />

School operates a one-to-one policy where<br />

every student is provided with a tablet and wi-fi<br />

operates throughout the school. The school uses<br />

Skype to link-up with other schools overseas to<br />

continue to innovate and improve practice.<br />

Further information<br />

The global classroom – engaging the students<br />

– exploring the possibilities takes place at<br />

3pm on Friday, January 22, in the Learn Live<br />

Secondary Theatre.<br />

SecEd 23


MY BETT<br />

Leadership<br />

Our ‘My <strong>Bett</strong>’ pages take a look at some of the exhibitors<br />

related to key areas of the curriculum and secondary school<br />

education. We start with leadership – and with the School<br />

Leaders Summit and the exhibition, there is a lot on offer<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> offers senior leaders the opportunity<br />

to learn, share best practice and discuss<br />

the current issues facing the sector.<br />

School Leaders Summit<br />

With key themes including evidencing the<br />

impact of technology in education, meeting<br />

SEND requirements and navigating major<br />

disruptions in education, the School Leaders<br />

Summit is a good place to start.<br />

Some of the highlights of the programme<br />

include:<br />

Ofsted and computing<br />

In his session, The common inspection<br />

framework and shorter inspections, David<br />

Brown HMI, the national lead for computing<br />

at Ofsted, will look at the changes to school<br />

inspection since September 2015 and how they<br />

will affect your school (Wednesday, January<br />

20, at 3:45pm).<br />

The future?<br />

The session The storm ahead is to focus on<br />

navigating education’s “next 10 years of<br />

disruption” and will be led by education expert<br />

and author Will Richardson. The web poses a<br />

difficult challenge to the fundamental premises<br />

on which our concepts of school and education<br />

are based. The session will “discuss current<br />

best practices in schools who are moving<br />

swiftly into the modern world, and frame out<br />

a road-map for creating long-term, sustainable<br />

change that best serves our students moving<br />

forward” (Thursday, January 21, at 4:55pm).<br />

Impact of technology<br />

In his session – entitled The evidence-based<br />

approach for measuring the impact of<br />

technology in education – Professor Steven<br />

Higgins, from the School of Education at<br />

Durham University, will be discussing ways<br />

in which the impact of technology can be<br />

measured (Friday, January 22, at 1:25pm).<br />

School case study<br />

José Picardo, assistant principal at Surbiton<br />

High School, will be looking at the strategies<br />

implemented at his successful school, focusing<br />

on how certain platforms have been integral<br />

to achieving outstanding status. The session is<br />

entitled Case study in success – Surbiton High<br />

School (Friday, January 22, at 4:25pm).<br />

The exhibition<br />

School leaders will also have the opportunity<br />

to try out the latest products and services<br />

from hundreds of exhibitors, and speak to the<br />

experts about the benefits these technologies<br />

offer. Here’s a taster of what you can expect:<br />

Virgin Media Business<br />

Virgin Media Business and its partners will be<br />

demonstrating how its designed-for-schools<br />

Photo : Jack Terry Photography/<strong>Bett</strong><br />

ICT service, TRUSTnet, is being used by more<br />

than 2,500 schools nationwide. TRUSTnet is<br />

a solution that combines e-learning content,<br />

pupil safeguarding and dedicated support, with<br />

access to a range of premium teaching and<br />

learning resources (stand G160).<br />

BlueSky Education<br />

BlueSky will be showcasing its online staff<br />

development, professional learning and selfevaluation<br />

software, now featuring enhanced<br />

modules for school self-evaluation and<br />

collaboration (stand B219).<br />

iboss<br />

The American web security solution is now<br />

available in the UK. iboss is built around a fast<br />

Layer 2 bridge that will not slow down your<br />

network like proxy-based filters. It includes<br />

layer 7 app control, selective SSL inspection<br />

and decryption, MDM and bandwidth<br />

management (stand E240).<br />

SchoolPod<br />

SchoolPod is a web-based MIS and among its<br />

offerings is BehaviourWatch, a system which<br />

allows teachers to log behaviour incidents<br />

online and eliminate the need for paper-based<br />

reports (stand E368).<br />

Groupcall<br />

Groupcall will be unveiling its new app for<br />

parents, Xpressions, a personalised student<br />

timeline where parents can view their child’s<br />

progress including: achievement, attendance,<br />

assessment, timetables and the school<br />

calendar, facilitating lesson preparation and<br />

homework (stand B188).<br />

HP Education<br />

Visitors can experience HP Education’s<br />

“Classroom of the Future” and try-out the<br />

solutions themselves (stand D160-D180).<br />

E2BN Think-IT<br />

The Think-IT service provides an EU-tendered<br />

framework for IT products and services<br />

in education. It provides cloud-based<br />

solutions covering 18 categories, including<br />

connectivity, VoIP, single sign-on, virtual<br />

desktop, classroom management, hardware,<br />

MIS, safeguarding, e-safety, mobile device<br />

management, and learning content (stand<br />

D100).<br />

Schoolcomms<br />

Schoolcomms is showcasing its SIMS<br />

integrated system, which includes School<br />

Gateway, the app that enables parents to keep<br />

up-to-date with their child’s education and life<br />

at school. Schoolcomms also includes Clubs<br />

and Payments to help with management of<br />

breakfast and after-school clubs, as well as<br />

payments and management of everything from<br />

trips to lunch money (stand B221).<br />

Further information<br />

• Details correct at the time of going to press.<br />

For the full programme of speakers at the<br />

School Leaders Summit <strong>2016</strong>, visit www.<br />

bettshow.com/content/school-leaders-summit<br />

• The exhibitors listed here are just a few of<br />

the around 700 that can be found at <strong>Bett</strong><br />

<strong>2016</strong>. For a full list of exhibitors, visit<br />

www.bettshow.com<br />

24<br />

SecEd


Advertisement feature<br />

Focussing teachers on improvement with<br />

collaborative professional development<br />

Angie Dabbs, Assistant Headteacher, Moulton School and Science College<br />

Northants secondary school<br />

achieves measurable impact<br />

on its improvement plans<br />

Having always prided itself on<br />

delivering high-quality collaborative<br />

professional development,<br />

Moulton School and Science College<br />

in Northamptonshire recently boosted<br />

teachers’ progress still further by using<br />

BlueSky Projects – a product shortlisted<br />

in the BETT <strong>2016</strong> Awards ICT Leadership<br />

and Management Solutions category - to<br />

design and manage a programme of crossschool<br />

collaboration. Assistant headteacher<br />

Angie Dabbs explains how the work has<br />

made a measurable impact on the school’s<br />

improvement priorities.<br />

About the school<br />

Moulton School and Science College is<br />

a high-achieving academy set in rural<br />

Northamptonshire with 87 teaching staff<br />

and 1,342 pupils. In 2011 it was graded<br />

‘Good’ by Ofsted, with teaching rated<br />

‘good and improving’.<br />

The challenges faced<br />

We wanted our collaborative professional<br />

development (CPD) programme to have a<br />

measurable impact on our school improvement<br />

priorities (SIP) which are currently;<br />

• to promote independent learning,<br />

• to close the gap between pupil premium<br />

students and other students, and<br />

• to close the gap between boys and girls.<br />

However, with 87 teachers and only two<br />

days and four 90-minute after-school training<br />

‘sessions’ available, this has traditionally been<br />

difficult to achieve.<br />

I therefore designed a programme of crossschool<br />

research projects called ‘Collaborative<br />

Triples’ which involved our teachers working<br />

in groups of three, carefully selected to balance<br />

interest and experience.<br />

These ‘Triples’ have four aims, to;<br />

• enable colleagues to meet several of the<br />

Teacher Standards,<br />

• provide an opportunity for them to develop<br />

their skills through observation and discussion,<br />

• encourage outstanding practice through<br />

sharing expertise, and<br />

• enable colleagues to focus and make an<br />

impact on the SIP.<br />

The first year we managed the ‘Triples’<br />

using emails and the school’s shared drive.<br />

Though popular, it was difficult for staff to<br />

share resources, bring the projects together and<br />

evaluate their success.<br />

The solution<br />

The real transformation came when we began<br />

using the Projects area within our BlueSky<br />

Education (www.blueskyeducation.co.uk ) online<br />

staff performance and development solution.<br />

Here individual, departmental or whole<br />

school expertise can be shared with others –<br />

within one school or across a group of schools.<br />

It’s much more sophisticated and targeted<br />

than Facebook, but that’s a good analogy – a<br />

forum with threads where project members<br />

can lead discussions and share documents<br />

securely. We can also use it to upload teaching<br />

resources, links to YouTube videos, lesson<br />

plans, questionnaires, other professional ideas<br />

and photographs. As soon as a new discussion<br />

thread or resource is added to a project,<br />

everyone working on that project is informed.<br />

Projects in action<br />

Projects our teams have run included;<br />

• an investigation into the barriers to learning<br />

for pupil premium children,<br />

• identification and implementation of strategies<br />

for raising achievement among pupil premium<br />

children,<br />

• engaging boys with homework to improve<br />

their GCSE results,<br />

• an investigation into whether the gender of<br />

the teacher and the perceived gender of the<br />

subject affects pupil outcomes at KS3,<br />

• the impact of independent learning on pupil<br />

attainment overall, and<br />

• identifying students in need of intervention<br />

and well-targeted and well-timed<br />

interventions.<br />

The benefits<br />

The number one benefit has to be that we<br />

have made a measurable impact on our school<br />

improvement priorities by keeping them<br />

‘live’ and in people’s minds. Our last Ofsted<br />

inspection noted that, ‘....the headteacher has<br />

focused successfully on improving the quality<br />

of teaching. Improvements have been made<br />

because of an effective system for managing<br />

teachers’ performance.’<br />

As a result, we are helping students achieve<br />

their target grades. Our GCSE 5 A*-C figures for<br />

2014 were above the national average at 63%.


MY BETT<br />

Assessment products and<br />

services can be found in<br />

abundance at <strong>Bett</strong>, with<br />

systems to help schools replace<br />

national curriculum levels<br />

among those on offer<br />

Assessment<br />

BESA’s annual ICT in UK State Schools<br />

research, carried out in September<br />

2015, showed that the impact of<br />

improvements in ICT investment is most likely<br />

to be directed towards assessment systems and<br />

networking across schools. As such, we expect<br />

to see many visitors to <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> looking<br />

for solutions to accurately measure student<br />

progress in the post-national curriculum levels<br />

world in which we now operate.<br />

GL Assessment<br />

GL Assessment has developed the Progress<br />

Test in Science. Available digitally, it helps<br />

teachers understand their pupils’ current levels<br />

of attainment in science for ages eight to 14<br />

against pupils across the country, monitoring<br />

their progress over time. Gaps in learning<br />

are automatically highlighted so teachers can<br />

prepare lessons that address any weak areas,<br />

and the pupil reports created provide ideas for<br />

teachers and parents for moving a child forward<br />

(stand B149).<br />

Capita SIMS<br />

The new Programme of Study solution within<br />

SIMS Assessment enables secondary schools<br />

to monitor student progress without levels.<br />

Teachers and school leaders can analyse the<br />

attainment and progress data for an individual,<br />

class or group against the new curriculum to<br />

spot any gaps in knowledge. SIMS schools can<br />

readily compare outcomes to help benchmark<br />

their success against other schools nationally<br />

(stand B190).<br />

Frog Education<br />

FrogProgress enables teachers to assess<br />

the progress of every pupil, setting them<br />

personal targets mapped against their expected<br />

attainment progress. The tool enables teachers<br />

to inform student feedback by including<br />

evidence of “what good looks like”. By<br />

referencing assessment examples, student<br />

understanding increases and the evidence can<br />

be used to promote best practice in assessment<br />

across the whole school (stand D140).<br />

TestWe<br />

TestWe is an “e-exam” solution which<br />

pledges a 100 per cent secure e-exam. It gives<br />

educational institutions the opportunity to<br />

design their own exams and assessments on<br />

digital support. Examiners can create any type<br />

of exams or assessments they want and students<br />

can take the exam on their own device in a<br />

secure environment (stand C88).<br />

Hyperspheric Solutions<br />

Among its products, GO 4 Schools is offering<br />

a schools-based Assessment Scheme ready<br />

to set up for life after levels. Schools can set<br />

up customised grading schemes and link to<br />

average points scores and the new numeric<br />

points system to build an internal grading<br />

scheme (stand F310).<br />

bksb<br />

bksb develops e-learning solutions to improve<br />

English, maths and ICT skills. Its products offer<br />

data to evidence learner progress in line with<br />

Ofsted requirements and are designed in line<br />

with GCSE and Functional Skills criteria (stand<br />

B228).<br />

MyCognition<br />

MyCQ is an assessment tool that can be<br />

self-administered. It measures five domains<br />

of cognition: attention, processing speed,<br />

calculating and problem-solving, memory,<br />

and planning and strategy. This insight is<br />

intended to give teachers and parents a better<br />

understanding of a child’s cognitive strengths<br />

and any weaknesses that may impede learning<br />

(stand SN5).<br />

Renaissance Learning<br />

Renaissance Learning provides cloud-based<br />

assessments to primary and secondary<br />

schools. Its Accelerated Reader programme<br />

is used in more than 4,000 schools across the<br />

UK and Ireland to motivate children of all<br />

ages and abilities to read for pleasure, while<br />

STAR Assessments incorporate Learning<br />

Progressions developed in collaboration with<br />

the National Foundation for Educational<br />

Research (stand B50).<br />

ClassroomMonitor<br />

Classroom Monitor was designed to<br />

streamline the way schools record, track and<br />

manage pupil assessment data. It provides<br />

in-depth analysis on pupil and wholeschool<br />

performance. It includes the Online<br />

Formative Assessment Markbooks and new<br />

this year is the Classroom Monitor Teacher<br />

App (stand B238).<br />

Televic Education<br />

Among Televic’s products is the Edumatic<br />

Platform, a web-based authoring tool to create<br />

structure, and deliver online assessments<br />

(stand H80).<br />

Learn Live CPD<br />

Assessment will also form a part of the Learn<br />

Live CPD sessions on offer at <strong>Bett</strong>.<br />

Just one example is the session entitled<br />

Closing the achievement gap: linking<br />

formative assessment and instruction, which<br />

will be presented by director of professional<br />

development Sally L’Anson and Lorrain<br />

Lange, chief academic officer for interactive<br />

achievement – both from Hollins University<br />

in America. They will focus on assessment<br />

reports, offering insight into how we can<br />

identify which areas of the curriculum<br />

children are secure in and where the gaps are.<br />

Learn how US schools are approaching the<br />

integration of curriculum-aligned formative<br />

assessment into their classrooms and the<br />

results they are seeing. This session will take<br />

place in the Learn Live Secondary Theatre on<br />

Friday, January 22, at 12:45pm.<br />

Further information<br />

The exhibitors listed here are just a few of the<br />

around 700 that can be found at <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong>. For<br />

a full list of exhibitors and Learn Live listings,<br />

visit www.bettshow.com<br />

Photo: Jack Terry Photography/<strong>Bett</strong><br />

26<br />

SecEd


iboss web security<br />

designed to enable learning,<br />

not block it.<br />

Today’s schools face opportunities and challenges that were<br />

never imagined by previous generations. The Internet has opened<br />

a new world of learning resources, while the growth of mobile<br />

technology has put these resources into the hands of students<br />

and teachers both in and out of the classroom.<br />

The iboss Secure Web Gateway Platform Protects<br />

Students and the School Network<br />

The iboss Secure Web Gateway Platform enables modern learning<br />

with next-generation features that protect student data, maintain<br />

regulatory compliance and defend the school network against<br />

advanced threats and malware.<br />

Intelligent Bandwidth Shaping<br />

The increasing volume of mobile devices in schools puts demands<br />

on bandwidth that can impede network availability for critical<br />

tasks such as testing. iboss Intelligent Bandwidth Throttling<br />

delivers granular control of bandwidth during peak usage hours<br />

so network availability is never jeopardised.<br />

FireSphere<br />

APT Defence<br />

Web / App<br />

Security<br />

MobileEther<br />

Cloud Web Security<br />

MobileEther DEP support<br />

School IT departments that must deal with<br />

school-owned iPads are burdened by having to<br />

manually enroll devices each year. iboss<br />

MobileEther lessens that burden by providing<br />

automated DEP support allowing you to easily<br />

enroll devices without having to handle them<br />

individually.<br />

• Web Security & Control<br />

• Fast and highly scalable web filtering<br />

• Firesphere APT Defence<br />

• Mobile Device Management<br />

• Integrated & detailed reporting<br />

• Cloud, on-premise and hybrid<br />

www.iboss.com


MY BETT<br />

Products and services to<br />

support the STEM subjects<br />

will be a key theme<br />

throughout <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

K’NEX<br />

K’NEX will be showcasing its range of<br />

construction products developed with<br />

teachers to enhance the teaching of key<br />

STEM concepts. Dynamic K’NEX models<br />

offer hands-on learning opportunities that<br />

encourage scientific inquiry, investigation and<br />

experimentation. Each set in the K’NEX range<br />

comes with teacher guides, lesson ideas and<br />

student guides (stand E65).<br />

National STEM Centre<br />

The National STEM Centre works with partner<br />

organisations to improve and support STEM<br />

education. The centre houses the UK’s largest<br />

collection of STEM teaching and learning<br />

resources. Freely available physical and<br />

eLibrary collections contain more than 8,000<br />

teaching resources and feature contemporary<br />

materials, including print, multimedia and<br />

practical activities, and archive resources from<br />

recent decades (Stand C454).<br />

Daydream Education<br />

Daydream Education will unveil Maths Tutor,<br />

a multi-platform app, which features a national<br />

curriculum alignment section, a variety of<br />

tutorials, interactive features, real-life scenarios<br />

and assessments to facilitate learning and<br />

improve pupils’ understanding of key maths<br />

skills and topics (stand E440).<br />

LEGO Education<br />

LEGO Education provides core science sets<br />

that enable a hands-on creative learning<br />

approach. The LEGO Mindstorms EV3<br />

programme challenges secondary students to<br />

apply their knowledge of physics, mathematics<br />

and engineering to design robotic systems that<br />

perform particular functions in context (stand<br />

E141).<br />

3P Learning<br />

IntoScience is a digital resource for use at<br />

school and at home, accessible via PCs or a<br />

variety of tablet devices. Through engaging<br />

3D environments, virtual experiments and<br />

deep contextual activities, all fields of science<br />

are brought to life. Learners can expand<br />

their learning through inquiry, knowledge,<br />

application and reasoning (stand C280).<br />

PIXIE Code<br />

First time exhibitor, PIXIE Code, will be<br />

demonstrating its new approach to teaching<br />

programming concepts. Pixie, inspired by<br />

Scratch and based on Blockly, develops a<br />

whole “ecosystem” of academic management,<br />

courses, classes and teaching materials, all<br />

organised around an integrated programming<br />

environment (<strong>Bett</strong> Futures zone).<br />

Science Bits<br />

Science Bits is a repository of multimedia<br />

science lessons that promote a constructivist<br />

educational model, based on inquiry, critical<br />

STEM<br />

thinking, discovery and learning-by-doing<br />

(stand H418).<br />

Vernier Software and Technology<br />

Vernier’s Go Wireless family of sensors allow<br />

students to engage in remote data-logging both<br />

in the classroom and in the field. Students can<br />

use the collection of general-purpose wireless<br />

sensors to remotely monitor, collect and<br />

analyse data with their mobile devices (stand<br />

B210).<br />

Fourier Education<br />

In 2013, Fourier launched the einstein world<br />

learning platform, which begins with their<br />

einsteinTablet+. The Tablet+ is an interactive<br />

science education device, incorporating<br />

built-in sensors, external sensors, interactive<br />

multimedia and hands-on experiment and<br />

data analysis software. Its sister product,<br />

einsteinLabMate+, with its six built-in sensors,<br />

turns any computer or tablet into a wireless,<br />

digital science lab (stand D105).<br />

TechSoft UK<br />

TechSoft supplies the latest CAD/CAM<br />

systems to schools, colleges and universities.<br />

It also offers a range of Computer Aided<br />

Manufacturing solutions from knife cutters and<br />

laser cutters to 3D printers. All the products<br />

are backed with training and support (stand:<br />

A160).<br />

Timstar Laboratory Suppliers<br />

Established in 1970, Timstar is a provider<br />

of science equipment and resources for the<br />

effective teaching of biology, chemistry and<br />

physics. Its offer includes advice, support,<br />

training and CPD workshops (stand G260).<br />

Pi-Top<br />

Pi-Top makes it fun to teach computing and<br />

STEM with Raspberry Pi. It is a DIY laptop or<br />

13.3 inch screen all-in-one desktop (stand F60).<br />

Intellisense<br />

Intellisense has been working with universities<br />

and teachers for years to develop STEM<br />

applications for primary and secondary<br />

education. Its leading product, the LabCamera,<br />

is a natural science exploration and datalogging<br />

laboratory, which allows students and<br />

teachers to carry out scientific observations and<br />

measurements. Fizika, meanwhile, is a physics<br />

simulator, which helps students to understand<br />

the physics beyond the theory and classic<br />

laboratory experiments (stand G431).<br />

Data Harvest Group<br />

Data Harvest is a manufacturer and supplier of<br />

specialist educational science and technology<br />

equipment, ranging from data-logging<br />

and control systems to standalone science<br />

products and construction sets for primary and<br />

secondary education. New for BETT <strong>2016</strong> is<br />

its K’NEX Robotics Set (stand G260).<br />

HUE<br />

HUE’s products include the HUE HD camera,<br />

used in schools as a multipurpose camera<br />

and visualiser, which has also been combined<br />

with stop motion animation software in the<br />

HUE Animation Studio kit. At <strong>Bett</strong> is the new<br />

HUE HD Pro camera, which can capture a<br />

full A4 sheet, has built-in lights and includes<br />

presentation software called HUE Intuition<br />

(stand B236).<br />

Further information<br />

For exhibitors related to the subjects of the<br />

English Baccalaureate, including maths,<br />

science and computing, see page 30. For a full<br />

list of exhibitors, visit www.bettshow.com<br />

Photos: Jack Terry Photography/<strong>Bett</strong><br />

28<br />

SecEd


MY BETT<br />

<strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong> will once again host<br />

an SEN zone and a dedicated<br />

SEN information point. We look<br />

at some of the exhibitors<br />

Nasen Information Point<br />

Special needs association nasen will host the<br />

SEN Information Point at <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong>, providing<br />

visitors with advice and guidance on SEN topics,<br />

resources and seminars at the show.<br />

Key among the discussions will be the free<br />

online training which is being launched by nasen<br />

in February <strong>2016</strong> in order to help embed the<br />

wide-ranging reforms contained within the new<br />

SEND Code of Practice. The free training is being<br />

created by nasen, who are the providers of the<br />

National Award for SEN Coordination.<br />

Texthelp<br />

Texthelp’s user-friendly literacy and learning<br />

solutions provide students with support through<br />

reading, writing and research features. They<br />

can be used when children are learning to read,<br />

studying at home or preparing for further/higher<br />

education (stand C141).<br />

Crick Software<br />

Crick produces inclusive literacy software and<br />

apps aimed at allowing all pupils to access the<br />

curriculum and demonstrate knowledge. Among<br />

its products, the Clicker Apps give learners access<br />

to literacy support tools, while for those working<br />

with struggling writers in secondary or further<br />

Special needs<br />

education, WriteOnline is Crick’s talking word<br />

processor (stand D240).<br />

Osborne Technologies<br />

Osborne Technologies is the creator of immersive<br />

learning environments for SEN and mainstream<br />

schools. The SensoryPod is a complete<br />

multisensory package for installation inside or out<br />

(stand SN11/E100).<br />

Soundbeam<br />

Soundbeam uses new wireless technology<br />

requiring no computer. Touch switches and<br />

motion sensors make Soundbeam a tool for selfexpression,<br />

music performance and composition<br />

for learners at any point on the disability spectrum<br />

(stand SN102).<br />

Educater<br />

The Educater system is a person-centred<br />

communication system built specifically for the<br />

education sector. It is designed to reduce the<br />

administration burden within several key areas,<br />

including school tracking and assessment, journal<br />

and SEND paperwork (stand F75).<br />

TAPit<br />

The TAPit platform is the “Touch Accessible<br />

Platform for Interactive Technology”. It is an<br />

assistive learning centre using “intended touch” to<br />

serve each individual’s SEN (stand SN90).<br />

Rising Stars<br />

The award-winning systematic phonics-based<br />

reading intervention programme Dockside is<br />

designed for older pupils and works to build<br />

confidence with a step-by-step phonics approach<br />

to engage and motivate with real-life stories that<br />

students can relate to (stand C116).<br />

JellyJames<br />

The <strong>Bett</strong> 2015 award-winning developmental<br />

dyscalculia assessment and intervention<br />

programme, Dynamo Profiler, provides an<br />

individual number sense developmental profile<br />

with an intervention plan. Dynamo Maths is also<br />

an award-winning dyscalculia and low maths<br />

achievers intervention programme (stand SN65).<br />

EducationCity<br />

Used in more than 15,500 schools,<br />

EducationCity is a teaching, learning and<br />

assessment resource, aimed at children with SEN<br />

of all ages. Interactive activities cover English,<br />

mathematics, science, computing, French,<br />

Spanish and English as an additional language. It<br />

is mapped to UK and worldwide curricula (stand<br />

D360).<br />

Further information<br />

The exhibitors listed here are just a few of the<br />

700-plus that can be found at <strong>Bett</strong> <strong>2016</strong>. For a<br />

full list of exhibitors, visit www.bettshow.com<br />

SecEd<br />

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SecEd 29


MY BETT<br />

The English Baccalaureate<br />

With the continued emphasis<br />

on the English Baccalaureate<br />

(EBacc) subjects, we profile<br />

a few companies offering<br />

support in these areas<br />

SAM Learning<br />

This online homework and exam-preparation<br />

service for secondary schools covers subjects<br />

including English, maths and science through<br />

to modern foreign languages, history,<br />

geography and computing (stand H88).<br />

Breckland Scientific<br />

Breckland has been supporting science<br />

teachers and technicians for more than 25 years<br />

with a range of different products. Breckland<br />

recommends equipment for each of the main<br />

exam boards, in line with the new science<br />

A level and GCSE requirements (stand G355).<br />

Big Brain Maths<br />

Big Brain Maths provides online lessons to<br />

engage students and improve maths’ results.<br />

It uses videos that have been edited to make<br />

students feel that they actually have a teacher<br />

sitting next to them, giving them one-to-one.<br />

Lessons are taught by an experienced teacher,<br />

who uses real-life examples to produce<br />

dynamic lessons (<strong>Bett</strong> Futures zone).<br />

Sensavis<br />

The 3D Classroom is a visual learning tool<br />

containing subject modules for geography,<br />

science and maths, among others. It allows<br />

users to navigate through interactive, realistic<br />

visualisations and, using a teacher’s own<br />

words and pedagogy, it can adapt the lesson to<br />

help the students interact more easily with the<br />

content (stand H130).<br />

MyLearning<br />

MyLearning has created a multilingual<br />

platform supporting 80 languages compatible<br />

with all mobile devices. Built-in tools enable<br />

teachers and students to be creative, allowing<br />

the capture of video, audio and images (stand<br />

F410).<br />

DoodleMaths<br />

DoodleMaths Secondary Maths is due to<br />

be launched at <strong>Bett</strong>. As an extension of the<br />

primary version, the app contains 8,000<br />

individually written questions and 300 topic<br />

explanations designed to provide a personal<br />

programme of study for any child working up<br />

to a grade C at GCSE (stand F41).<br />

Boardworks Ltd<br />

Doddle is an online teaching, homework<br />

and assessment resource containing 16,000<br />

presentations, interactive activities and<br />

quizzes across 18 subjects. Its English, maths,<br />

science and ICT and computing tests help<br />

schools to track progress on key skills at key<br />

stage 3. Results are instantly reported to the<br />

online markbook (stand A140).<br />

Focus Educational Software<br />

A publisher of apps and software, Focus<br />

offers products such as Geography River<br />

Studies fieldwork software for GCSE and<br />

A level and also has new Design Technology<br />

and Science Curriculum Apps Packs (stand<br />

F440).<br />

ClickView<br />

ClickView uses educational videos and<br />

television recording to help teachers create<br />

engaging lessons and improve learning<br />

outcomes. Its curriculum specialist, Albert,<br />

helps you find the perfect lesson plan using<br />

learning areas and requirements from the<br />

national curriculum for England (stand B300).<br />

Further information<br />

For more STEM-related exhibitors, see page<br />

28. For a full list of all <strong>Bett</strong>’s 700 or so<br />

exhibitors, visit www.bettshow.com<br />

SecEdOnline<br />

www.sec-ed.co.uk<br />

Offering the latest secondary education news,<br />

best practice guidance and leading commentary.<br />

Access all of SecEd’s news, best practice,<br />

expert blogs, and analysis online.<br />

Receive regular SecEd e-bulletin updates<br />

free of charge.<br />

“SecEd provides an invaluable contribution<br />

to my leadership role. It is informed,<br />

balanced and really gets to the bottom of<br />

the current educational issues.”<br />

Jonathan de Sausmarez, Executive<br />

Headteacher, The Romsey School<br />

Join the thousands following us on twitter @SecEd_Education<br />

30<br />

SecEd


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Pete Henshaw, Editor SecEd & Headteacher Update<br />

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Caroline Sharp, Research Director, National Foundation for<br />

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