iTap 2

Oracy in Practice – Day 2 & 4 iTap Sessions

Supporting SCITT Trainees in Applying Oracy Strategies 
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Slide 1: Slide
ComputingPrimary Education

This lesson contains 24 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 1 video.

time-iconLesson duration is: 120 min

Items in this lesson

Oracy in Practice – Day 2 & 4 iTap Sessions

Supporting SCITT Trainees in Applying Oracy Strategies 

Slide 1 - Slide


What is the connection??

Slide 2 - Open question

How confident are you deploying oracy in your lessons?
Very
Somewhat
Rarely
Not yet

Slide 3 - Poll

Slide 4 - Video

Where do students talk in your lessons – and why?

Slide 5 - Mind map

Why might spoken reasoning be as important as written answers when teaching digital law?

Slide 6 - Open question

Slide 7 - Slide

The Listening Ladder — Building Active Listening in Computer Science
The Listening Ladder helps students become active listeners — moving from hearing to responding, building, and deepening thinking.
It encourages pupils to reflect on how they listen, not just what they say.

Slide 8 - Slide

Why Use It in Computer Science?
  • Supports precise reasoning in technical discussions.
  • Reinforces disciplinary talk — especially in topics like Legal, Ethical, and Cultural Issues.
  • Helps quieter pupils contribute using visible, structured goals.
  • Encourages metacognition (“Which rung am I on now?”).

Slide 9 - Slide

Slide 10 - Slide

Slide 11 - Slide

Instigator 🟢
Prober 🟣
Challenger 🔴
Clarifier 🟡
Builder 🟩
Summariser 🔵
Each Voice 21 “Talk Tactic” gives students a purpose in discussion.
Drag the sentence stems to match the correct discussion role.
“I’d like to start by saying …”, “I think we should consider …”, “Let’s also think about …”
“Why do you think …?”, “What do you think would happen if …?”, “Can you give an example to support that?”
“I disagree because …”, “You mentioned X but what about …?”, “I understand your point, but have you thought about …?”
“Can you explain a bit more about …?”, “What do you mean when you say …?”, “Does that mean …?”
“I agree and would like to add …”, “Building on what X said …”, “Linking to what Y said …”
“Overall, the main points were …”, “Our discussion focused on …”, “The three key ideas were …”

Slide 12 - Drag question

Bullseye Challenge
  • The Bullseye Challenge motivates students to use precise, subject-specific language when speaking.
  • It turns oracy into a game — rewarding clarity, accuracy, and confidence.
  • In Computer Science, this helps pupils practise legal vocabulary when explaining how laws protect individuals and organisations.

Slide 13 - Slide

How it works

Slide 14 - Slide

What laws and rules help protect people’s personal data online, and why are they important?
1 point
2 points
3 points

Slide 15 - Slide

When using the Bullseye Challenge to discuss Legal Considerations to Protect Individuals, what is the main purpose of the activity?
A
To make sure students answer quickly and compete against each other
B
To encourage students to use precise, technical language when explaining ideas
C
To let students talk freely without worrying about terminology
D
To test students’ memory of key legal definitions

Slide 16 - Quiz

In the Listening Ladder, what does it mean when a student moves up the ladder?
A
They listen quietly without responding
B
They dominate the conversation with longer answers
C
They start to build, question, or summarise others’ ideas
D
They memorise the teacher’s explanation

Slide 17 - Quiz

During a Talk Tactics discussion on digital law, what is the role of the Prober?
A
To summarise what others have said
B
To ask deeper questions and request evidence or examples
C
To challenge others’ ideas directly
D
To introduce new topics for discussion

Slide 18 - Quiz

Task - Create an oracy task.
School uses AI tool that stores student data.
Should schools be held responsible for data breaches?

1) Model the question using the "Listening Ladder" model.
2) Model the question using the "Bulls Eye" model.

Slide 19 - Slide

10IM

Slide 21 - Slide

8JC

Slide 22 - Slide

Lesson Observation follow up!
Which oracy moves had the biggest impact in the lesson you observed?

Slide 23 - Slide

Analyse
Please reflect on the questions below.
  1. How does the teacher establish and model ambitious norms for talk such as the use of explicit vocabulary instruction?
  2. How does the teacher set the expectations for talk in the classroom?
  3. How does the teacher ensure oracy activities are purposeful?
  4. How well prepared are students to undertake a talk activity?
  5. How does the teacher ensure a high level of participation?
  6. How does the teacher ensure ‘meaningful listening’ is happening?
  7. During the tasks given, how could they have been adapted to support the oracy of students?
Once this is complete you can start to create the resources for the lesson that you are going to deliver (remember each lesson will need a plan).

Slide 24 - Slide