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Building Student Leadership

Building Student Leadership. GEOFF BARTON. King Edward VI School. Building Leadership. What do we know about young people? What do we know about schools? How can our students help us to improve our schools?. 2 starting-points …. Building Leadership.

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Building Student Leadership

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  1. Building Student Leadership GEOFF BARTON King Edward VI School

  2. Building Leadership ... What do we know about young people? What do we know about schools? How can our students help us to improve our schools? 2 starting-points …

  3. Building Leadership ... Nowadays all the children behave like adults and all the adults behave like children (Terry Waite)

  4. Building Leadership ... Schools are places where children go to watch the adults working (John West-Burnham)

  5. What do we know about young people?

  6. Childhood obesity fuelled by cartoons • Teenage pregnancy rates out of control • UK teenage girls seriously depressed • Boy stabbed to death for his 30 baseball cap • Violent TV harms children • Locals attack binge-drinking and yob behaviour • 40% of teens want plastic surgery • Avoid a tokenistic ‘student voice’ and instead: • Create a moral culture that challenges the stereotypes • Build self-esteem and leadership • Develop a partnership for genuine self-evaluation

  7. What do we know about schools?

  8. “Going to school is compulsory but learning is optional” (Louise Stoll, et al) “Schools teach a 19th century curriculum in 20th century buildings to 21st century students” (John West Burnham)

  9. What do we know about young people and schools?

  10. NFER survey of 14 year olds: • 50% say most of the time they don’t want to go to school • 25% think teachers are too easily satisfied • 20% deny being happy at school

  11. Involvement in extra-curricular activities is one of their most positive experiences 40% of all young people in schools = “the disappointed” (Michael Barber)

  12. Work is too easy in Year 7; then as it gets harder in Year 8 they lose support of parents and less praise from teachers. Only in Year 11 does the curve begin to rise again

  13. 5 steps to developing a culture of student evaluation …

  14. 1: Consistent key messages Being an individual isn’t just about how you dress Self-esteem, not just self-confidence Doing something for others isn’t an optional extra “Only dead fish go with the river” Sense of pride Judge me by who I am, not the number of qualifications I have “It’s our choices, Harry, that show who we really are”

  15. 2:Create a civilising environment • The look of a school is not superficial: it’s a statement of values • Art-work, plants, framed photographs, cheesy motivators • Humane toilets and toilet checks • Opening up rooms • School coat; achievement assembly suits • Media team • Duty team approach / Barton Breakfasts • 3-session day • Bell-free

  16. "I've missed over 9,000 shots in my career.  I've lost almost 300 games.  26 times I've been trusted to take the game-winning shot . . . and missed.  I've failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed." (Michael Jordan)

  17. 3: Give School Council teeth • Terms of reference • Budget • Direct access to the Kingmakers • Sexy, feisty, action-driven (not a talking-shop) • Action groups • Involve in L&T, curriculum planning, evaluation • Report small successes and attribute to them • Give them quick hits • Take them out of lessons to raise status • Current projects: developing ‘Houses’; introducing recycling scheme; planning new building

  18. 4: ACTIVELY BUILD LEADERSHIP • Create high-profile elected roles • Showcase them visually • Have student (m/f) voice in EVERY assembly and challenge stereotypes • Have vocabulary and skill-set of leadership - coach, resource manager • Expect leadership in every tutor time, every lesson • Build into school evaluations • Ask middle leaders for feedback on student leadership • Don’t expect a quick hit: it’s culture we’re changing here

  19. 5: FOCUS ON LEARNING • Develop ‘house-style’ on behaviour & language, and use the same with students and staff • Spell out expectations, but as few rules as possible • Get teachers talking less • Learning sessions, not lessons • Blur the distinction between in / out of class using an accreditation scheme • Expect leadership in lessons and monitor • Keep getting student feedback - eg “sample of 100 students says …” • Use questionnaires and focus groups and breakfasts

  20. Student Evaluation … Examples

  21. Student …

  22. Student … • 12 What do you think is the most important ingredient in a good lesson? • fun but strict teacher • enjoyable and not boring • lots of topics • good discipline • active participation • variety of activities

  23. 14 Any suggestions for how we could further improve the school? • More time for coursework • Bring back Foundation Days •  More access to water • Allow iPods in some situations • More special non-timetabled days • Give students more choices • Allow Sixth Form to wear shorts • Teach us about finance – loans, mortgages, etc • Fairer rules for playing games at lunchtime • Make sure there is always a teacher on the lower field • More achievement assemblies • End-of-year rewards – eg Alton Towers • Have the last lesson of each term in tutor groups • New headteacher • Bring back Coke and chocolate! Student …

  24. Attitudes to learning

  25. Of all the ways the teacher gets you to learn about things, which do you enjoy least? • Vague questions that you don’t know what it means • I think we should be setted for English because it could be more challenging too long on one piece of work would be helpful, disruptive people were in difficult group • Humanities – go round and round in circles because don’t have specialist teachers. Spend time trying to manage behaviour

  26. PE Review • Yr9 students: • Positive response – but could not say that this was due to sports college status impact or it was just the difference between their middle school experience and the current diet offered here.  Students appear to know what level they are at and what they need to do to improve and the subject was ranked high (3), which indicates a potential high level of interest in the subject as a GCSE option choice. • Yr10 students: • They were slightly less positive – There appears to be no noticeable difference between GCSE and CORE students apart from the indication that the GCSE students are more aware of their level and are being informed more about what they need to do to improve. The CORE students gave more ‘negative’ responses than the GCSE students.  The subject was ranked average (5) by both GCSE and CORE students.

  27. Instrumental Tuition Review • Student Feedback(based on 110 student questionnaires) • 84% of students always enjoy instrumental lessons • 71% of students feel they always receive encouragement in their lessons • 79% of always feel well prepared for exams • 93% of students feel that they make good progress in their lessons • 94% of students feel there is good variety and interest in the lessons • 84% of students feel motivated to practise after their lessons • 86% of students feel there is an appropriate level of challenge • There are areas of inconsistency: • Nearly 75% of students do not regularly use the instrumental record booklet • Nearly 50% of students feel they do not learn aspects of music theory in their lessons • 33% of students do not get given targets to aim for in their lessons • 36% of students stated that lessons don’t always start on time

  28. Languages Review

  29. What do teachers do that helps you to learn well? • Talk less and let us get on with work • Teaching us techniques for learning and revising • Practice papers • Explain things clearly • Acknowledge different kinds of learners • Praise us • Basic ideas about how to do things • Providing lunchtime sessions • Teach me in a way that I understand

  30. BOYS 1: Think of people in music, media, sport, politics. Who do you see as positive role-models? Michael Jordan; Johnny Wilkinson; Richard Branson; Marcus Trescothick; Gary Lineker; David Beckham; Paul Merton; Tiger Woods; Slash; Thierry Henry; Bob Geldof; Rolling Stones

  31. 2: Think of teachers who motivate you most successfully. What do they do? Mr G - funny; tells us what we need to know; knows his stuff Mr W - teaches well; encouraging; takes no rubbish from anyone Mr W - honest; encourages everyone, not just the best Mr P - energetic; makes lessons active Mrs C - lively; fun Mrs W - explains clearly; not patronising.

  32. 3: How could we encourage you to take on leadership responsibilities around school? • Give everyone in Year 11 someone to look after in Year 9 • Give us more responsibility • Get us teaching younger students - eg how to play the guitar • Better rewards policy • Extra privileges • Give us more say • Rewards - eg non-uniform • Let us run clubs.

  33. 4: Put these in rank order: • Lessons • Breaks / lunchtimes • Extra-curricular activities • Weekends 100% like weekends best 79% like lessons least (98% in bottom two) 50:50 split between breaks / extra-curricular

  34. SUMMARY • Quote students’ views on learning and environment • Use surveys for facts and attitudes • Think: “Would I be happy for my child to be taught in this lesson?” • Challenge media stereotypes through charity events, • concerts, technical team • Student news in assemblies and notices • Be tough on expectations: give clarity • Provide role-models.

  35. Building Student Leadership GEOFF BARTON King Edward VI School

  36. STUDENT ENGAGEMENT AT QUEEN ELIZABETH’S SCHOOL

  37. CORE PRINCIPLES • Every stakeholder must have a voice • Consultation is pointless without outcome • Engagement is better than involvement • Current students could actually be disadvantaged by having a new school built • Students know best what the school is like • Expertise is not limited to the experienced • Additionality – must work alongside current structures and not create extra burdens

  38. THE PROBLEM Easy to say Not so easy to do

  39. STUDENT ENGAGEMENT AT QUEEN ELIZABETH’S SCHOOL

  40. CORE PRINCIPLES • Every stakeholder must have a voice • Consultation is pointless without outcome • Engagement is better than involvement • Current students could actually be disadvantaged by having a new school built • Students know best what the school is like • Expertise is not limited to the experienced • Additionality – must work alongside current structures and not create extra burdens

  41. THE PROBLEM Easy to say Not so easy to do

  42. FIRST THOUGHTS • Which methodology? Which gimmick? • Student shadow teams • Using ICT to the maximum • Real issues; real questions -> burning question of the month • Events and conferences • A legacy of student engagement

  43. STRUCTURE FOR STUDENT ENGAGEMENT AT QUEEN ELIZABETH’S SCHOOL Project Managers Colin Pielou & David Crudgington DCC Ecology Carol Tompsett Phil Sterling (Champions) Shadow Core Group STUDENTS Mark Willis Champion Project Core Group MSP Facilitator Kristina Wingeleth Education Officer Keith Armstead DCC Sustainability Katie Wynn Mike Petitdemange (Champions) School Champion Kevin Brougham Headteacher Andy Puttock Design Team Andy Ratcliffe Mouchel Parkman David Stansfield Feilden Clegg Bradley Working Groups Construction Andy Dickinson (Champion) Governor John Andrews Staff Contractor David Pritchard Alfred McAlpine Curriculum Development Caroline Kurtulan Champion Design & Graphics Cara Tully (Champion) Elected Members Other Stakeholders Others Cherrie Murray DCC Youth Service (Champion) Students Neighbours Services Other Organisations Leisure Centre

  44. 3 FOCUSES FOR ENGAGEMENT CONSULTATION Le Papier Workshops ALL Interactive Message Board Assemblies EDEP Ambassadors Questionnaires Project Core Group Working Groups Website ENGAGEMENT Art & Design MANAGEMENT CURRICULUM Work Related Learning Shadow Project Team Science Business Education Curriculum Working Group

  45. DEFINITION OF STUDENT ENGAGEMENT GROUPS

  46. PROPOSED TASKS FOR WORKING GROUPS • MANAGEMENT • Consider and evaluate new ways of organising the school • Research the Project Process • Develop a Brief for an area of the School for Design Group • Plan a Community Event • Develop a Communication Plan for the Student Body • Manage and Co-ordinate Student Media Reports • Problem Solving activities related to the Project • CONSTRUCTION • Construction Process – Site Visits • Research Building Materials • Creative Spaces – CITB • Careers in Construction • Vocational Skills – link with Weymouth College • Work Experience • ECOLOGY • Audit Wildlife and Plant Species on site • Evaluate possible effects on the environment due to construction • Design Wild Area in School Grounds • Meet National Trust to identify issues • Develop a plan to protect wildlife / plant life on site • SUSTAINABILITY • Research and evaluate Sustainable Technologies • Visits to Sustainable Buildings • Relate Sustainable Technologies to School Plans • Plan and develop Sustainable Resource Centre • Research and evaluate Sustainable Building Materials • DESIGN & GRAPHICS • Designmyschool.net • Design aspects of School, classroom, storage, dining, etc. • Visit to Feilden Clegg Bradley • Visits to School Buildings • Use Student Brief to design area of the School.

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