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Summary
Paul and Shaniqua take on three big questions that educators face:
🔍 What is practitioner inquiry and does it actually work in schools?We hear how teachers might use research to improve their practice, but also the reality: time pressures, accountability, and the challenge of making local findings matter more widely. Shaniqua shares how partnerships with universities could make the process both meaningful and manageable if it’s done right.
👩🏫 Why can’t we agree on what great teaching looks like?Bruce Robertson’s TES article sparks a smart, honest conversation about what counts as good teaching. Is engagement enough? Does consistency matter more than creativity? Should every teacher be free to teach their way or is a shared foundation essential? Paul and Shaniqua explore how flexibility, feedback, and humility are at the heart of powerful practice.
🎓 How should we leave schools well?Whether it’s retiring, moving on, or saying goodbye at the end of the year, departures matter. Especially for the children. From public farewells to quiet exits, the duo reflect on why endings should be thoughtful, respectful and personal. Shaniqua opens up about how pupils react to change and why goodbyes deserve time, care and sensitivity.
🍌 Banana TimeThis week’s light-hearted moment includes a Federer quotation, a high-risk classroom game (“How well do you know your teacher?”), and some priceless guesses about what Shaniqua might do with her holidays. (Spoiler - they involve Spain, St Lucia, and maybe a political career.)
🔗 Highlights
Honest reflections on teacher autonomy and the pressures of CPD
A sharp look at the tension between freedom and consistency in teaching
Gentle wisdom about transitions, endings, and why every goodbye counts
Plenty of warmth, humour and quotable lines from both guests
📌 For Educators, Trainees and Teacher EducatorsWhether you’re just starting out or decades in, this episode offers insight into how we grow, how we teach and how we leave. A perfect listen to close the summer term.
Summary
Paul and Shaniqua take on three big questions that educators face:
🔍 What is practitioner inquiry and does it actually work in schools?We hear how teachers might use research to improve their practice, but also the reality: time pressures, accountability, and the challenge of making local findings matter more widely. Shaniqua shares how partnerships with universities could make the process both meaningful and manageable if it’s done right.
👩🏫 Why can’t we agree on what great teaching looks like?Bruce Robertson’s TES article sparks a smart, honest conversation about what counts as good teaching. Is engagement enough? Does consistency matter more than creativity? Should every teacher be free to teach their way or is a shared foundation essential? Paul and Shaniqua explore how flexibility, feedback, and humility are at the heart of powerful practice.
🎓 How should we leave schools well?Whether it’s retiring, moving on, or saying goodbye at the end of the year, departures matter. Especially for the children. From public farewells to quiet exits, the duo reflect on why endings should be thoughtful, respectful and personal. Shaniqua opens up about how pupils react to change and why goodbyes deserve time, care and sensitivity.
🍌 Banana TimeThis week’s light-hearted moment includes a Federer quotation, a high-risk classroom game (“How well do you know your teacher?”), and some priceless guesses about what Shaniqua might do with her holidays. (Spoiler - they involve Spain, St Lucia, and maybe a political career.)
🔗 Highlights
Honest reflections on teacher autonomy and the pressures of CPD
A sharp look at the tension between freedom and consistency in teaching
Gentle wisdom about transitions, endings, and why every goodbye counts
Plenty of warmth, humour and quotable lines from both guests
📌 For Educators, Trainees and Teacher EducatorsWhether you’re just starting out or decades in, this episode offers insight into how we grow, how we teach and how we leave. A perfect listen to close the summer term.