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Part C:Student Action Teams: In Practice

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Title: Part C:Student Action Teams: In Practice


1
Part C Student Action Teams In Practice
  • Local initiatives
  • Choosing a topic
  • Curriculum placement
  • Common steps and elements

2
Local implementation 1 2003-6
  • Darebin northern Melbourne suburbs - Preston to
    Reservoir
  • Working class, cultural diversity - concern about
    low aspirations
  • Cluster of primary and secondary schools around
    SRC/JSC issues since about 1989 (10-15 schools)
  • Traffic Safety (2003) Environment (2005-6)

3
Local implementation 2 2005-6
  • Manningham outer NE Melbourne suburbs -
    Bulleen-Doncaster-Templestowe-Donvale
  • Relatively well-off area fairly mono-cultural
  • Cluster of six Catholic primary schools with some
    recent history of working together around SRC
    support
  • Values Education grant from Australian Government
    (2005-6)

4
Value of a cluster
  • Increases shared resources
  • Provides external events that are exciting and
    special
  • Enables students to summarise and present to
    other students
  • Persuades community groups extends impact
  • Forums can drive in-school work both in terms
    of ideas and in deadlines
  • Professional development of staff

5
Problems of a cluster
  • Cluster priority - an extra layer of work
  • Commitment needed to cluster self-management
  • Extra funding required for student travel
  • Need for trust and shared vision
  • Competition, ownership, egos

6
Choosing a topic
  • Traffic Safety approach from TSE consultants to
    schools
  • Environment initiative of schools
  • Values cluster application to Australian
    Government program
  • Possibilities for initiatives
  • From community approach schools with issue
  • From schools identify issue and set up team
  • From students concern (eg SRC) or search
    process within broad program constraints

7
One teachers view
  • If theres a community issue to be tackled, our
    normal approach is now to set up a Student Action
    Team to deal with it.
  • Secondary school teacher, Melbourne, 2001

8
Location within school
  • Increasingly within a class versus cross-school,
    ad hoc or SRC
  • Identification of interested teacher/s and
    appropriate subjects
  • Reasons
  • Time provides students and teachers with
    timetabled space
  • Recognition as curriculum - a way of meeting
    curriculum objectives
  • Sustainability.

9
Overall Structure
  • Engagement Event (Forum 1)
  • Research Phase what is the issue? what do we
    know about it?
  • Research Reporting Event (Forum 2)
  • Action Phasewhat will we change? what will we
    do?
  • Action Reporting Event (Forum 3)

10
SAT Flow Chart
11
Role of community or external body
  • Challenging commissioning real work
  • Resourcing providing ideas, material, people
  • Partnership working on common issues together
  • Audience receiving student reports

12
Step 1 Teacher Preparation
  • Development of a shared commitment to the
    approach, definition of a broad topic,
    constraints, funding, management structures,
    partnerships
  • What issue?
  • What are the external expectations?
  • What are our views of students roles?
  • Who will be involved?

13
Step 2 Engagement
  • First investigation of the issue by students
  • Students acknowledge that the topic is important
    to them and to others
  • What is this issue all about?
  • Is it important? Why? To whom?
  • Do we want to do this? Why?

14
One Students Response
  • When I saw these figures, I was first of all
    surprised, then angry, then determined to do
    something about them!
  • Primary school student, Preston, 2003

15
Step 3 Research Questions
  • Usually two areas for research
  • What is the important issue in our community?
  • What do we know about it and want to know about
    it?
  • What do we know already about this?
  • What do we need to find out?
  • How will we do this?

16
Step 4 Research Planning
  • Setting up a structure for data collection and
    defining methods such as interviews, surveys,
    observations, measurements etc
  • What sort of research?
  • Who? How? How many? When?
  • What instruments? What questions?

17
Step 5 Conducting Research
  • Carrying out the research reflecting on its
    progress
  • How is it going?
  • Are we keeping to the timeline?
  • What gaps in our research?
  • What changes are needed in our approach?

18
Step 6 Analysing Research
  • Looking at the research results and asking what
    they mean analysing by population groups,
    location etc
  • What is it like now? (describe)
  • What are we finding?
  • What differences/diversity exists within our
    results?

19
Step 7 Presenting Research Results
  • Reporting on findings - often to an external
    audience, including commissioning body
  • What did we do (summary)?
  • What did we find out?
  • Who do we need to tell?

20
Step 8 Need for Action
  • Reflection on research and a comparison of what
    is with what should be possibilities for
    dreaming or visioning
  • What surprises us?
  • What concerns us? (makes us angry, annoyed,
    worried?)
  • Why?
  • Do we all agree on this?

21
Step 9 Setting Goals
  • From the vision, specifying some outcomes or
    objectives
  • What should it look like?
  • What do we want to see happening?
  • What needs to change to make it like that?
  • What are the barriers to change?
  • What is needed to overcome these? To bring about
    change?

22
Step 10 Defining Action Needed
  • With the objectives in mind, designing the forms
    of action that will be appropriate, achievable
    and effective
  • What can we do to bring about these changes?
  • What forms of action can we take?

23
Forms of Action
  • Education providing information, telling or
    training people
  • Encouragement rewarding positive behaviour,
    praising, good examples
  • Enforcement punishing negative behaviour
  • Engineering building things, structural changes

24
Ways in which students take action
  • Taking action themselves things that student can
    do directly
  • Asking others to act demands or requests
  • Sharing in decisions about action collaboration
    and partnerships in decisions and implementation

25
Step 11 Planning Action
  • Details of the action developing an action plan
    with timelines and commitments
  • What to do?
  • When?
  • Who will do it?
  • How?
  • What is needed?

26
Step 12 Taking Action
  • Carrying out the action plan, but also monitoring
    it and adapting it where necessary
  • How is it going?
  • What do we learn as we do this?

27
Step 13 Assessing Action
  • Comparing the situation before and after the
    action this might involve more data collection
  • What has changed? Why?
  • How do we know weve made any difference?

28
Step 14 Presenting Outcomes
  • Reporting on the action taken, including
    accountability to the body commissioning this
    work effective means of presentation
  • Who do we need to tell?
  • How?

29
Step 15 Celebrating Reviewing
  • Reflection on the journey and celebration of
    achievements evaluation also setting new tasks
  • What have we achieved?
  • Where to now? Why? How?
  • What did we learn?
  • How could we improve next time?

30
Resources
  • Connect magazine - several issues reporting on
    these Student Action Teams
  • Student Action Teams Implementing Productive
    Practices in Primary and Secondary School
    Classrooms - forthcoming, 2006 - available from
    Connect (approx. 30)

31
Changing teachers too
  • I have always held as sacrosanct the need to put
    students at the centre of all I do that I must
    ensure I dont teach them just knowledge, but
    teach them the skills to understand the
    knowledge that good curriculum allows for this
    to happen while superficial curriculum allows
    students to regurgitate facts I know
    involvement in the Student Action Team project
    has made me a better teacher. It has made the
    students believe they have a valid and important
    voice.
  • Leesa Duncan, St Clement of Rome School, Bundoora

32
Changing teachers too
  • Children who were not achieving started to
    really shine The children now really believe
    that they have a voice and can make a difference.
    I now believe that too.
  • Geraldine Butler, St Charles Borromeo School,
    Templestowe
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