Education Matters
What does a school leader actually learn from a five-minute classroom drop-in? Should canteens be doing more to feed children well and are 45% of parents really more stressed about GCSEs than their own kids? This week on Teaching Matters, host Paul Hazzard is joined by the experienced and forthright John Gibbs and Dr Shauna McGill for a wide-ranging conversation that covers school leadership, food policy and the very real human cost of exam culture. Classroom Drop-ins: Genuine Support or Covert Surveillance John makes the case that unannounced classroom drop-ins are, almost without exception, a form of surveillance dressed up as professional development. He argues that any headteacher not teaching at least 20% of their timetable is missing the point and that middle leadership exists precisely to bridge the gap between the classroom and the senior team. Shauna brings a more measured perspective, pushing the conversation toward what a drop-in is actually for. Is it pastoral? Is it tied to a school development plan with clear and shared goals? The distinction matters enormously. Paul rounds things off with a question nobody quite wants to answer: how would senior leaders feel if teachers dropped in on their meetings? School Canteens, Healthy Eating and the Cheeseburger Problem Today’s second story is about school food policy and the ongoing tension between nutritional guidance, parental responsibility and what pupils themselves actually want. With government standards tightening, the panel explores the limits of choice, the reality of food poverty and whether schools can be expected to fix what wider society hasn't. Year 7s at Richard Challoner School in New Malden get the last word and they're not surrendering their cheeseburgers without a fight. GCSE and A-Level Exam Stress: Who's Really Suffering? A recent survey suggests that 45% of parents are more stressed about their children's exams than the children themselves. John shares a quietly devastating story from his time as an invigilator: a student who asked to leave ten minutes into an English exam and what that moment revealed about years of accumulated failure. Shauna speaks candidly as a parent of a young person currently sitting GCSEs, reflecting on the difference between supporting a young person and absorbing their anxiety on their behalf. Paul raises the uncomfortable reality of hothousing: children drilled to peak for school-age public examinations and then struggling badly once they reach university. The panel agrees that exam results shape identity in ways that follow people for decades and that the system, accurate as it looks, is far less reliable than most people realise. John's "banana" of the week draws on research into sanitised history teaching in Florida and what Schopenhauer's bleakest philosophy has to do with student wellbeing, tolerance and inclusion. The conclusion? Honest and difficult is always more useful than polished and comfortable. About Teaching Matters Teaching Matters is a weekly panel show from Education Matters, the digital platform that brings outstanding people, practice and ideas to a global audience. New episodes every week, covering issues, policies, debates and human stories that shape education today. 🔔 Subscribe so you never miss an episode 👍 Like and share if this one got you thinking 💬 Tell us where you stand in the comments #TeachingMatters #EducationMatters #EducationPodcast #SchoolLeadership #ClassroomObservation #GCSEStress #ExamSeason #ALevels #TeacherWellbeing #UKEducation #SchoolFood #HealthySchools #ParentalAnxiety #TeacherTraining #ProfessionalDevelopment #StudentMentalHealth #RetrievalPractice #Metacognition #PSHE #TeacherPodcast
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