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Reenvisioning purpose

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Title: Reenvisioning purpose


1
Re-envisioning purpose
  • Inside-out and upside-down
  • a recipe for reinventing schooling
  • for the 21st century
  • Dr Leoni Degenhardt
  • Principal, Loreto Normanhurst

2
  • WHY
  • schools need to change

3
The rate and extent of change is well documented
  • advances in technology and communication
  • changes in employment, family and gender roles
  • increasing abdication from personal / parental
    responsibility
  • the decline of social institutions
  • spiritual hunger, but less allegiance to
    organised religion
  • globalisation
  • complex ethical and ecological issues
  • deep uncertainty and the rise of fundamentalism
  • increasing divide between the haves and have-nots

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5
The future of school
  • Im not saying that its a good idea to change
    school. Im saying that it is inconceivable that
    school as weve known it will continue. And the
    reason why its inconceivable is that little
    glimmer with my grandson who is used to finding
    knowledge when he wants to and can get it when he
    needs it, and can get in touch with other people
    and teachers, not because they are appointed by
    the state, but because he can contact them in
    some network somewhere. These children will not
    sit quietly in school and listen to a teacher
    give them predigested knowledge. I think that
    they will revolt.
  • The Future of School A Discussion between
    Seymour Papert and Paolo Friere (late 1980s)
    http//www.papert.org/articles/freire/freirePart1.
    html

6
  • A moral imperative
  • how can we NOT make schooling a
  • relevant and growthful experience
  • for our young people?

7
  • So how do we move from this.?

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10
  • John Brack Collins Street 5pm

11
  • to the Knowledge Society?

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  • Photo of Curran theatre

15
Inside out
  • Start with students
  • Identify your values
  • Connect with the external context
  • Draw on theory

16
Upside down
  • Start with students
  • Make everything serve their needs
  • Listen to the school community
  • Incorporate external requirements

17
And you need
  • a contemplative, holistic approach...
  • flexible
  • humble
  • collaborative
  • intuitive
  • humour-laden
  • respectful

18
A 12 step recipe
  • for reinventing schooling
  • based on the experience of
  • Loreto Normanhurst

19
Loreto Normanhurst
  • Catholic independent school for girls aged 12 -18
  • Based on the educational philosophy of Mary Ward
    , 1585 1645
  • Founded in 1897 as a boarding school only
  • 915 students, 190 boarders from country NSW
  • Upper North Shore of Sydney

20
Step 1start with purpose
  • What is the purpose of schooling ?
  • How should schools be?
  • Your answer will depend on your mental
    paradigm..
  • on your imaginary (Beare, 2006)
  • on your ontological perspective

21
Ontological perspectives
  • How do you see reality?
  • What is the metaphor you use to describe a
    school? your school?
  • a factory? a community?
  • an army? a business?
  • a family? a nation-state?
  • Your metaphor will shape your actions

22
My ontological perspective
  • a
  • living systems view of organisations
  • (and therefore of schools)

23
  • the fundamental nature of reality is
    relationships, not things
  • a living system has the capacity to create
    itself
  • (Senge et al., 2000, p.52-3)

24
At Loreto Normanhurst
  • growing
  • individuals
  • and
  • communities

25
Step 2identify values
  • At Loreto Normanhurst
  • Catholic Christian
  • Mary Ward charism
  • We needed to work out what these meant by
    telling stories

26
Mary Wards educational philosophy
  • Reformation era her background
  • a dangerous innovator
  • education of womeneducation as
    liberation
  • innovative curriculum eg drama
  • education of the whole child, in and
    out of the classroom
  • relevant to the needs of the time / place
  • as part of a community and society

27
  • 8

28
Step 3engage with the external context
  • schools cannot shut their gates and leave the
    outside world beyond them
  • schools are losing their monopoly on learning
  • schools are one of our last hopes for rescuing
    and reinventing community
  • teachers need a lot more help
  • market competition, parental choice and
    individual self-management are already redefining
    how schools relate to their wider environment
  • schools can no longer be indifferent to the
    working lives that await their students when they
    move into the adult world
  • Fullan, 1997

29
Step 4include everybody
  • collect data survey people
  • listen to people students, parents, staff,
    wider community
  • provide structures which include a wide range of
    perspectives
  • share professional reading and ideas
  • nb. not everybody will WANT to be included

30
At Loreto Normanhurst
  • The strategy workshops
  • included all staff, most parents, many students
  • re-articulated the schools values
  • convinced people of the need for change
  • created a sense of urgency the burning
    platform
  • required people to engage in double-loop
    learning
  • focused our efforts growing individuals and
    communities

31
Step 5dream of how it could be
  • presencing
  • Senge et al.(2004). Presence Human Purpose and
    the Field of the Future.

32
At Loreto Normanhurst
  • as part of each
  • Strategy workshop
  • people were asked to
  • present how they would
  • personally contribute to
  • growing individuals and communities

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34
Step 6develop a shared paradigm
  • How would we make it happen?
  • calling for draft models
  • communal critiquing
  • amalgamation of the best ideas
  • successive teams of volunteers
  • the evolution of the holistic Loreto Normanhurst
    Student Growth Model (LNSGM)

35
What would it look like?
36
Elements of the LNSGM
  • Learning relationships
  • FACE curriculum
  • - Faith
  • - Academic
  • - Community
  • - Extra-curricular
  • Radical new pedagogy
  • Digital portfolio MySite

37
  • Holistic learning program Integrated
    Learning
  • - EQ
  • - Literacies
  • - ICT
  • - values
  • Advisor role
  • Student/advisor conversations
  • Plenary meetings with parents

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  • And what did we really mean by holistic
    education ?

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41
Step 7 lead appropriately
  • Leadership for change
  • Leadership of change

42
Useful leadership theories
  • Level 5 leadership (Collins, 2001)
  • Parallel leadership (Crowther, Hann et al. 2001)
  • Values-based contingency leadership (Day, Harris
    et al. 2001)
  • Leadership from soul (Beare 2006)
  • Contemplative-reflexive leadership (Degenhardt,
    2006)

43
Contemplative-reflexive leadership for reinvention
44
Step 8manage change and micropolitics
  • listening
  • avoiding balkanising the opposition
  • providing opportunities to express concerns
  • being aware of gatekeepers
  • bearing a lot of projected anger
  • having a resilient Leadership Team
  • sharing change and transition theory with staff
  • change management workshops

45
Transition management
  • Change the situation, what happens
  • Transition the psychological process that
    people go through to come to terms with the new
    situation.
  • Bridges (1995)

46
Understanding change Handys
sigmoid curve
Handy, C. (1995). The Empty Raincoat making
sense of the future Arrow Books Limited.
47
Transition management
Bridges, W. (1995). Managing Transitions Making
the most of change. London.
48
Step 9provide professional development
  • voluntary workshops to develop the underpinning
    principles of the LNSGM
  • external learning consultants
  • external process consultants
  • internal practitioner researchers
  • release time for planning and curriculum
    development

49
Step 10adapt structures architecture
50
Curriculum design evaluation structure
51
Step 11 evaluate constantly
  • annual school goals
  • exit surveys for students, staff
  • evaluation of
  • learning programs
  • team effectiveness
  • regular events and functions
  • the hidden curriculum
  • the Evaluation Committee annual whole school
    evaluation

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Step 12 you will end up with a continually
reinventing culture
54
A continually reinventing school
  • a perpetual learning system
  • Argyris 1992
  • is also a paradox
  • culture is by definition a stabilizing,
    conservative process, whereas a learning culture
    attempts to institutionalize and stabilize
    learning, innovation and change
  • Schein,
    1992

55
Examples
  • 2008 is vastly different from 2004
  • (programs architecture pedagogy
  • structures school culture)
  • helping the pioneer Year 7 Team (the
    keepers of the vision) deal with ongoing
    evolution
  • the need to support change vanguard as change
    continues

56
Learnings
  • The need for a WHYa compelling reason for change
  • The need for a strong values base to draw on
  • Inclusive processespros and cons
  • Leadership for change
  • Communication issues
  • Mistakes are your friends
  • The need for openness to change and adaptation
  • The will and grit to work through uncertainty
    and pain

57
We need to work for continuous
change in our schools
Our young people, our society, and our world,
need people of sound values, engagement with
present realities, and clear vision for the
future and the courage
to make that vision happen..
58
  • In times of change, learners inherit the earth,
    while the learned find themselves beautifully
    equipped to deal with a world that no longer
    exists.
  • Hoffer
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