Fraction of a Teacher

Episode 14: Can One Lesson Work for 30 Different Learners?

31 min · 10 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 14: Can One Lesson Work for 30 Different Learners?

Descripción

In this episode of Fraction of a Teacher, Jen and Francis explore Teacher Standard 5: how to adapt teaching to respond to the strengths and needs of all pupils. From dyslexia and processing time to confidence, stretch, scaffolding and classroom culture, they reflect on what adaptive teaching actually looks like in a real classroom. Through honest examples from their own practice, they discuss how teachers can support pupils as individuals without feeling like they have to create thirty different lessons. A conversation about knowing your pupils, making thoughtful adjustments, and building classrooms where every learner can access success.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Fraction of a Teacher!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

34 episodios

episode Episode 18: What It’s Really Like Living With a Teacher: The Reality No One Sees artwork

Episode 18: What It’s Really Like Living With a Teacher: The Reality No One Sees

This week, Jen is joined by her partner Claire for an honest conversation about what life looks like beyond the classroom. People often talk about the holidays, the early finishes, and the perks of teaching but what about the planning at 10pm, the emotional highs and lows, the endless conversations about learning, and the days when there’s simply no energy left to speak? Together, Jen and Claire explore what it’s really like living with a teacher, from work-life balance and supporting each other through demanding careers, to the surprising similarities between teaching and coaching. They discuss reflection, wellbeing, relationships, and why sometimes the most important thing you can do after a difficult day is take the dog for a walk. Whether you’re a teacher, live with one, or are simply curious about the reality behind the profession, this episode offers a candid and heartfelt look at the side of teaching that rarely gets talked about. In this episode: * The myth of the “8–3” school day * How teaching affects life at home * Why reflection matters in both teaching and coaching * Supporting a partner through a demanding career * Work-life balance, wellbeing, and finding time to switch off * Claire’s advice for anyone living with a teacher 🎙️ Fraction of a Teacher: honest conversations about teaching, learning, and life beyond the classroom.

3 de jun de 202637 min
episode Episode 17: Assessment is the Start of Something artwork

Episode 17: Assessment is the Start of Something

Assessment is more than marks, grades, and data drops. In this episode of Fraction of a Teacher, Jen and Francis unpack how assessment can actually shape learning rather than simply measure it. From mini whiteboards and exit tickets to QLAs, self marking, and revision strategies, we explore the difference between confidence and competence, the role of low stakes assessment in reducing maths anxiety, and why feedback should lead to action rather than just sit in a book in purple pen. Jen also shares insights from her Solent Maths Hub metacognition inquiry, including how “No Hiding Exit Tickets” helped students attempt more GCSE questions and develop greater ownership over their learning. This episode is a reflective conversation about assessment, metacognition, motivation, and helping students become resilient learners both inside and beyond the maths classroom.

19 de may de 202635 min
episode Episode 16: The Pressure of Wanting to Be a Good Teacher artwork

Episode 16: The Pressure of Wanting to Be a Good Teacher

In this solo episode of Fraction of a Teacher, Jen reflects honestly on the pressure teachers place on themselves to be “good” at the job. Not just surviving the day or meeting the teaching standards, but genuinely making a difference to the students in front of them. From the constant feedback of the PGCE year to the quieter internal pressure of ECT life, this episode explores the emotional weight of teaching, the fear of getting things wrong, and the reality that one difficult lesson can sometimes feel deeply personal. Jen discusses perfectionism, observations, social media comparisons, behaviour, reflective practice, and the challenge of separating mistakes from identity. She also reflects on what students actually remember about their teachers and why relationships, consistency, care and reflection may matter more than perfection. This episode is an honest conversation about teaching, self-doubt, growth, and the invisible pressure many teachers quietly carry. If you’ve ever questioned whether you’re doing enough, this one is for you.

12 de may de 202618 min
episode Episode 15: From the City to the Classroom: What Teacher Training Doesn’t Tell You artwork

Episode 15: From the City to the Classroom: What Teacher Training Doesn’t Tell You

In this episode of Fraction of a Teacher, Jen and Francis are joined by Peter, who shares his journey from a 40-year career in the City into education through Now Teach. Together, they explore what career changing into teaching really looks like, from the shock of stepping into the classroom to the reality of training routes, lesson planning, mentoring and finding your feet in a completely new profession. Peter reflects honestly on the parts of teaching he found most challenging, the importance of support, and why good mentoring can make such a difference. Along the way, the conversation opens up into wider reflections on classroom culture, how teachers develop their own style, and what it really means to be “the teacher” in the room. If you are thinking about career changing into teaching, are currently in training, or just want an honest conversation about the reality of learning to teach, this one is for you.

14 de abr de 202631 min