Dr Debra Kidd
@debrakidd.bsky.social
4.4K followers 3.8K following 2K posts
Teacher, doctor, author, Leader of Learning and Teaching at the British School of Brussels. Books: Curriculum of Hope, Teaching Notes from the Frontline, Uncharted Territories and Becoming Mobius. A Pedagogy of Power currently gestating!
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debrakidd.bsky.social
This is why we have google, my friend 😀
debrakidd.bsky.social
Yes - unless you're a confident, skilled teacher who takes the crux of a lesson and turns it into something practical. Some of our teachers are replacing worksheets with outdoor learning, but keeping key objectives in mind - saw a great lesson the other day using conkers, acorns etc for place value.
debrakidd.bsky.social
It's a tricky one - especially in primary I think where in general, you're not dealing with subject specialisms. A scheme like WRM can be a good scaffold. But you have to be able to step off it and adapt to the children in front of you. And I think too much is crammed in at a cost to number fluency.
debrakidd.bsky.social
There's no perfect metaphor, but a better one would be that it's rhizomatic. A rhizome doesn't capture the sensory/emotional elements of brain connections, but it comes close to representing the messiness and complexity of neural connections and of a complex, adapitive system.
debrakidd.bsky.social
That it's pedagogically awful too. Way too much paper and not enough thinking/manipulation of objects/active learning. All those worksheets are environmentally irresponsible and they're not valued/retained. We've ditched a lot of that. I like WR infinity though - good for targeting individual gaps
debrakidd.bsky.social
I think the way it's structured, with steps and 'blocks'. People feel like they must cover everything or they're somehow failing. But covering doesn't = learning. There's too much and blocks are unhelpful for securing fluency. It's probably really a problem with the English NC, but we also find...
debrakidd.bsky.social
This is a big problem with WRM and some of the more atomised English schemes at primary. It becomes about sprinting through 'steps' and tasks rather than securing depth of understanding.
debrakidd.bsky.social
I'm tired of seeing discredited metaphors like 'architecture' and 'computer' to describe how the brain works. This description of the human brain is so very limited and lacking in complexity, creativity or even accuracy, that the pedagogy that is claimed to serve it must be equally flawed.
debrakidd.bsky.social
Do you get angry with women often?
debrakidd.bsky.social
Can think of many times when I've lost my voice and had to do this.
debrakidd.bsky.social
Everyone here speaks English. And French. And Dutch. In the supermarket, garage, doctor's surgery, restaurants, bars etc...fluency in English (and other languages) is a norm.
debrakidd.bsky.social
We expect our 10 year olds to be fluent readers and speakers of English and the grammar tests we put them through would flummox many adults.
Reposted by Dr Debra Kidd
markgoodrich.bsky.social
I will never understand why this doesn’t make more people quit X.
sundersays.bsky.social
Elon Musk is funding Tommy Robinson's court battles, along with other online fans to keep him in Bentleys
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/10...
Access Restricted
www.telegraph.co.uk
debrakidd.bsky.social
This wrinkled, faded, blonde, white woman with her post menopausal body is a big fan of this man. Maybe we can do this without the misogyny.
debrakidd.bsky.social
You don't even have to do that, scroll down and hit submit and you don't have to fill anything in at all.
debrakidd.bsky.social
What are the chances that if the question were the other way round, the answer would be a resounding yes from Express readers?
tobifrenzen.bsky.social
Would be a shame if this Daily Express poll didn't go the way they hoped...

Vote here 👉 xd.wayin.com/display/cont...
debrakidd.bsky.social
This is a great description and could be applied to the way many young people experience education.
debrakidd.bsky.social
It would seem that in your obsessed, anonymised little world, everyone with a different world view to you is an ideological activist.
debrakidd.bsky.social
I'm not actually trans, but it's interesting that you assume that the only people who could possibly care must be. Or that anyone who demonstrates more knowledge about the law than you clearly have, must be acting in bad faith.
debrakidd.bsky.social
They also understand that just because something can 'hardly be seen' it doesn't mean it is insignificant.
debrakidd.bsky.social
Our Year 2 children understand this.
dsquareddigest.bsky.social
I don't want to get all Chesterton's Fence here, but if you don't understand that a "microscopic snail" is an indicator species that's protected for the health of the entire ecosystem, you probably shouldn't be forming "good relationships" with developers
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
Rachel Reeves clears planning blockage amid ‘good relationship’ with developer
Exclusive: Chancellor says 20,000 homes were being held up due to ‘some snails that are a protected species or something’
www.theguardian.com
debrakidd.bsky.social
Whether they choose to hear the case or not (they still have three months to decide), is irrelevant. You claimed that the Supreme Court ruling was not contested. It clearly is.
debrakidd.bsky.social
Once again, misrepresenting the law. But your answer clarifies for me that you're not familiar with the Hampstead Ponds, or you would know that there is already a mixed sex pond.
debrakidd.bsky.social
Trans people can access the ponds on the basis of the policy of the ponds, which currently is inclusive of trans people. Your interpretation of what constitutes a woman or a man is irrelevant.