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Engaging students, teachers, schools and communities in ... community' evokes a sense of collectivism, shared interests and values, and a common purpose. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Engaging students, teachers, schools and communities in enriching learning experiences


1
Beyond the classroom
.
  • Engaging students, teachers, schools and
    communities in enriching learning experiences
  • Workshop presentation for the Senior Schooling
    Conference 2009

2
Who is FYA?
  • The Foundation for Young Australians is
    Australias largest youth-focused philanthropic
    organisation
  • Our vision is an Australia where all young people
    achieve their full potential and are values by
    all
  • Our mission is to empower young Australians to be
    successful learner and confident, active and
    valued citizens
  • We will do this by supporting innovative
    approaches, rich learning opportunities and the
    development of resources that inspire and
    challenge young Australians and improve their
    wellbeing

3
Our values
  • EQUAL ACCESS we need to ensure opportunities
    are attainable for all young people, regardless
    of cultural, racial, social or economic
    background
  • WORKING TOGETHER together we have the
    responsibility to find impactful solutions to
    issues that are important to young people
  • BEING COURAGEOUS - whether an idea is new or
    old, we have the courage to push the boundaries
    and learn from experience
  • HIGH IMPACT we want to create outcomes for
    young people that make a difference on a large
    scale, both socially and systemically.

4
Education Foundation
  • Education Foundation was founded 20 years ago and
    became a division of FYA last year.
  • Its focus is on equity and access to an excellent
    education system in Australia. Its core functions
    are developing and incubating innovative programs
    for students in public education that are
    exemplars of pedagogy, curriculum, best practice
    and based on research. Education foundation also
    has a strong focus on educational research,
    scholarships and school and community
    partnerships.

5
Melbourne Declaration on Educational Goals for
Young Australians (Dec 2008, MCEETYA)
  • As a national Australia values the central role
    of education in building a democratic, equitable
    and just society a society that is prosperous,
    cohesive and culturally diverse, and that values
    Australias Indigenous cultures as a key part of
    the nations history, present and future.
  • Goal 1 Australian schooling promotes equity and
    excellence
  • Goal 2 All young Australians become
  • Successful learners
  • Confident and creative individuals
  • Active and informed citizens.

6
Beyond the Classroom professional learning for
educators
  • Beyond the Classroom is a synthesis of research,
    theory and practice and has been heavily
    influenced by the work of the Education
    Foundation (a division of FYA)
  •  Beyond the Classroom is a professional learning
    package targeted at teachers and school leaders
    from Prep to Year 12.
  •  
  • The central concept for Beyond the Classroom is
    to enable schools to effectively engage their
    community to develop learning beyond the
    classroom in order to improve student outcomes.
  •  
  • There are three core conceptual strands to this
    package
  • Understanding Community
  • Innovation in Programs
  • Building Sustainability through Partnerships.

7
Strand One - Understanding Communities
  • how can we learn to live together in the
    global village if we cannot manage to live
    together in the communities to which we naturally
    belong the nation, the region, the city, the
    village, the neighbourhood. Jacques Delors
  • Learning the treasure within
  • UNESCO Report, 1996
  • Essential Questions
  • What is a community?
  • How is school a community?
  • What is a learning community?

8
Community
  • What is community?
  • A community is a set of people with some shared
    element in particular a group of people who
    live in the same area is a community. The
    substance of shared elements varies widely, from
    situation to interest to lives and values. The
    word community evokes a sense of collectivism,
    shared interests and values, and a common
    purpose.
  • You cannot learn to play tennis if you have not
    seen it played. You cannot teach children the
    power of wonderful ideas if they have not been
    immersed in a community that cares about
    wonderful ideas, that believes in them. That
    explores them, and that puts them into practice.
  • Meier, D.
  • Transforming schools into powerful communities.

9
Strand Two - Innovation in programs
  • Real learning gets to the heart of what it means
    to be human. Through learning we recreate
    ourselves. Through learning we become able to do
    something we never were able to do. Through
    learning we re-perceive the world and our
    relationship to it. Through learning we extend
    our capacity to create, to be part of the
    generative process of life. There is within in
    each of us a deep hunger for this type of
    learning.
  • Peter M. Senge, Educator and Author
  • Essential Questions
  • How can we construct a learning program where the
    community is the classroom?
  • How could your learning community look different
    for your students?
  • How might this constitute innovation?

10
Learning Communities
  • Learning communities are made up of people who
    share a common purpose. They collaborate to draw
    on individual strengths, respect a variety of
    perspectives, and actively promote learning
    opportunities. The outcomes are the creation of a
    vibrant, synergistic environment, enhanced
    potential for members, and the possibility that
    new knowledge will be created.
  • Sue Kilpatrick, Margaret Barrett and Tammy Jones
  • Faculty of Education, University of Tasmania

11
What is a BTC program?
  • It is one that supports the development of an
    enterprise learner through engaging in
  • Civic Responsibility and Contribution
  • Social Action
  • Academic Curriculum
  • A teaching and learning experience where guided
    or classroom learning is deepened through working
    with others beyond the perimeter of the
    classroom. It is a process that provides
    structured time for reflection on the experience
    and demonstration of the skills and knowledge
    acquired.
  • Adapted from the work of
  • Cathryn Berger Kaye, M.A. 2004

12
Identifying learning approach for BTC program

13
Multiple approaches multiple outcomes

14
Education Foundation programs
  • ruMAD? (are you making a difference?)
  • Cityscape
  • Worlds of Work

15
Strand Three - Building sustainability through
partnerships
  • Where school is of their community, that
    community is automatically richer for it.
  • Essential Questions
  • What is a school/community partnership?
  • How might we build school/community partnerships
    to
  • Support the development of innovative programs?
  • Improve student learning outcomes?
  • Support school based strategic plans?
  • What is the relationship between partnerships and
    sustainability?

16
Importance of working together
  • Communities and schools that share the belief
    that education is the responsibility of the whole
    community and work together drawing on skills
    and knowledge of the community as a whole
    experience benefits that extend far beyond simply
    producing a well-educated group of young people.
  • Kilpatrick. S, Johns. S, Mulford. BUniversity of
    Tasmania. Maturing school-community partnerships

17
The Rs of school-community partnerships
  • Recognition Effective partnerships require each
    partner to recognise their own culture intimately
    in order to understand the other partner more
    fully. (We have attempted to do this by focusing
    on My Learning Community in Strand One).
  • Respect A respect for each other implies a
    willingness to share skills, knowledge, personnel
    and resources
  • Review Critical review and reflection sustain
    effective partnerships
  • Resilience Strong leadership that has an
    acceptance of challenges and a willingness to be
    flexible is crucial
  • Responsibility Each partner must recognise and
    accept responsibility for their contributions. A
    commitment to sustainable success, socially,
    culturally, environmentally and economically is
    crucial.
  • Reward Benefits should be mutual to all
    partners, acknowledging that different partners
    will measure success in different ways
  • Resolve At times other priorities will emerge
    putting time on time and energies.
  • Reference What will good look like? Measurable
    outcomes for all partners will need to be
    identified and articulated. Partnerships and
    projects need to be differentiated and outcomes
    will differ accordingly. Partnerships will be
    long term where projects will have determined
    timelines.

18
Building sustainability
  • Maintaining and demonstrating the quality of a
    program and adherence to good practice
  • Establishing succession plans to minimise
    dependence on one special person
  • Developing a resourcing strategy as a permanent
    feature of the school-community environment
  • Maintaining a spirit of innovation and enthusiasm
    in program leadership process of reflection and
    evaluation are important for program evolution
  • Establishing processes for reflection and
    evaluation so programs evolve to met changing
    needs or policy shifts

19
FYA and Education Foundation examples
  • Initiatives
  • Back to School (schools, community and past
    student connections in partnership with Coles)
  • Schools First (in partnership with NAB, ACER and
    Australia Cares)
  • Research
  • Beyond the Classroom Building new school
    networks (Rosalyn Black), ACER Press, 2008
  • Corporate Australia and schools Forming
    business class alliances and networks (Rosalyn
    Black and Lucas Walsh), CSE Seminar Series Feb
    2009

20
End
  • Thursday 19 March, 2009
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