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School councils – welcome back!

Hello everyone,

Welcome back to school. Hope you all had a fun summer!

To give you a quick  idea of what we’ve been up to…..

In between lovely holidays to Loch Ness, Aberdeen, Rugby and France, we’ve been doing lots of work on the Smart School Council Community, a charity we’re setting up and supporting.

It’s led by fifteen founding schools who we know have AMAZING student voice/school councils. Any young person, teacher or governor can join for FREE and get some help (or help others) with your school council. Good deal, right?

Head over to www.smartschoolcouncils.org.uk to get involved.

As a social enterprise based in Tottenham, we’ve been busy helping out after the riots. As well as donating and sorting clothes, Asher’s been writing about the subject and also been on the radio talking about it.  That second link features a hilarious picture of him.

Related to these events, and the questions about education and engagement in the UK today, we’re working on an exciting new film project with the Carib Theatre Company and Franklyn Lane Productions. We’ll keep you posted.

 We also had a great time at the UKYP Annual SittingLOADS of really engaged young people who are a credit to their areas and the UKYP too. Here’s Asher next to our stand:

And here’s our map where you could rate your school council:


Finally, don’t forget that you can get us in to do some training in your school or cluster of schools.

We’ve got lots of training booked, including trips to the Republic of Ireland and the Czech Republic.

Importantly, we’re working with many  local schools in Tottenham as part of the Smart School Council Community too.

Thanks for reading and stay tuned for lots of useful advice and blogs!

Greg

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New addition to the involver team:

Nice, huh?

 

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School councils and democracy: pick your model carefully

Modelling democracy is an incredibly important role of the school council, but it’s something that’s easy to get wrong. The first thing to think about it what type of democracy you want to model. The simplest answer is to base it on our local or national model. The problem with this is that most people adults feel pretty disconnected from this. Another option schools go for is what some schools might call the ‘effective democracy’ model: there is some voting involved, but staff push certain students who they ‘know would get things done’ into position. This model of democracy has recently been rebelled against in various Arab countries, but is still being used in Zimbabwe.

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There's more to democracy than voting. That's what our logo's supposed to represent: a voter's X with a +

I would suggest the type of democracy schools should want to model is one where:

a) People are engaged throughout the year, not just once when they vote.

b) Where representatives are picked they are selected solely by the people they represent.

What I mean by being engaged is that the whole school is involved in:

  • Identifying issues
  • Creating solutions
  • Carrying them out
  • Evaluating them

These aren’t things we expect other people to do for us, just because we elected them at the beginning of the year.

So, here’s what you need to do:

  1. Decide on what type of democracy you want to model – what values are important, not what structures.
  2. Decide on what kind of elections would best achieve this.
  3. Understand that any elections and representatives are just a small part of this.
  4. Get in touch with your local authority’s Democratic Services; they can help you out with ballot boxes, voting booths, etc.
  5. Give people plenty of warning about standing and help them to find out what it would mean to be a representative.
  6. Make sure your elections are open and fair and run in the same way across the school.
  7. Set up and keep up excellent communication between the whole school and the school council.
  8. Make sure everyone has the chance to get involved in problem solving through class councils, action teams, whole school meetings and so on.
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Pupil voice, creativity and learning detectives

A couple of great pupil voice resources found their way in to my inbox yesterday (thanks to Google Alerts) that I think are really worth sharing.

The first is from the amazing Wroxham School (@wroxhamschool). It outlines some of the ways Wroxham has been using pupil voice to enhance creativity in their curriculum.
If you haven’t used Prezi before, just click the play button to move from ‘slide’ to ‘slide’:

I really wish there was a way I could remove that last image.

I visited Wroxham School as part of our research for the Office of the Children’s Commissioner and they really do do some inspiring stuff.

The next resource is a write-up from a Archbishop Benson CE VA Primary School in Cornwall of how they set up a ‘Learning Detectives’ scheme to give pupils more control of their learning. I really love the way they’ve matched up the animals with different aspects of being a good learner.

[gview file=”http://www.campaign-for-learning.org.uk/cfl/assets/documents/CaseStudies/Archbishop_Benson2%5B1%5D.pdf”]

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How running a school like a factory can improve student voice

Much has been said about the fact that our schools are based on a factory production model and how counter-productive that is – best explained by Sir Ken Robinson in this great video:

This of course ignores that fact that factories don’t all run in the same way. A school we came across as part of our research in to good practice on student voice – which we were carrying out for the for the Office of the Children’s Commissioner – uses the insight of industrialist W. Edwards Deming to help them remodel their school.

I must admit before visiting Matthew Moss High School in Rochdale I’d never heard of Deming, but something the deputy headteacher said to me about him made me look him up and I’ve been really taken with what I found out:

Deming says, ‘97 per cent of people want to do a brilliant job, let them. Don’t build systems for the three per cent and make the 97 per cent follow them. You get no risk, no creativity, no nothing.’

Deming wasn’t talking about schools, he was helping Japan to build factories after the Second World War. So how strange that this seems to describe exactly what most schools in England in the 21st Century do. Where school policies and organisations are based on the assumption that you should trust people to want to do the best for themselves and each other you actually get more creativity, more action and better results.

Matthew Moss is trying to learn from what made Japanese industry the envy of the world in the second half of the last century and apply it to a school. Having now read a little on Deming, I can see how his 14 key principles could be really instructive for all schools to consider:

  1. Constancy of purpose: Create constancy of purpose for continual improvement of products and service to society, allocating resources to provide for long range needs rather than only short term profitability, with a plan to become competitive, to stay in business, and to provide jobs.
  2. The new philosophy: Adopt the new philosophy. We are in a new economic age, created in Japan. We can no longer live with commonly accepted levels of delays, mistakes, defective materials and defective workmanship. Transformation of Western management style is necessary to halt the continued decline of business and industry.
  3. Cease dependence on mass inspection: Eliminate the need for mass inspection as the way of life to achieve quality by building quality into the product in the first place. Require statistical evidence of built in quality in both manufacturing and purchasing functions.
  4. End lowest tender contracts: End the practice of awarding business solely on the basis of price tag. Instead require meaningful measures of quality along with price. Reduce the number of suppliers for the same item by eliminating those that do not qualify with statistical and other evidence of quality. The aim is to minimize total cost, not merely initial cost, by minimizing variation. This may be achieved by moving toward a single supplier for any one item, on a long term relationship of loyalty and trust. Purchasing managers have a new job, and must learn it.
  5. W. Edwards Deming
    W. Edwards Deming
  6. Improve every process: Improve constantly and forever every process for planning, production, and service. Search continually for problems in order to improve every activity in the company, to improve quality and productivity, and thus to constantly decrease costs. Institute innovation and constant improvement of product, service, and process. It is management’s job to work continually on the system (design, incoming materials, maintenance, improvement of machines, supervision, training, retraining).
  7. Institute training on the job: Institute modern methods of training on the job for all, including management, to make better use of every employee. New skills are required to keep up with changes in materials, methods, product and service design, machinery, techniques, and service.
  8. Institute leadership: Adopt and institute leadership aimed at helping people do a better job. The responsibility of managers and supervisors must be changed from sheer numbers to quality. Improvement of quality will automatically improve productivity. Management must ensure that immediate action is taken on reports of inherited defects, maintenance requirements, poor tools, fuzzy operational definitions, and all conditions detrimental to quality.
  9. Drive out fear: Encourage effective two way communication and other means to drive out fear throughout the organization so that everybody may work effectively and more productively for the company.
  10. Break down barriers: Break down barriers between departments and staff areas. People in different areas, such as Leasing, Maintenance, Administration, must work in teams to tackle problems that may be encountered with products or service.
  11. Eliminate exhortations: Eliminate the use of slogans, posters and exhortations for the work force, demanding Zero Defects and new levels of productivity, without providing methods. Such exhortations only create adversarial relationships; the bulk of the causes of low quality and low productivity belong to the system, and thus lie beyond the power of the work force.
  12. Eliminate arbitrary numerical targets: Eliminate work standards that prescribe quotas for the work force and numerical goals for people in management. Substitute aids and helpful leadership in order to achieve continual improvement of quality and productivity.
  13. Permit pride of workmanship: Remove the barriers that rob hourly workers, and people in management, of their right to pride of workmanship. This implies, among other things, abolition of the annual merit rating (appraisal of performance) and of Management by Objective. Again, the responsibility of managers, supervisors, foremen must be changed from sheer numbers to quality.
  14. Encourage education: Institute a vigorous program of education, and encourage self improvement for everyone. What an organization needs is not just good people; it needs people that are improving with education. Advances in competitive position will have their roots in knowledge.
  15. Top management commitment and action: Clearly define top management’s permanent commitment to ever improving quality and productivity, and their obligation to implement all of these principles. Indeed, it is not enough that top management commit themselves for life to quality and productivity. They must know what it is that they are committed to-that is, what they must do. Create a structure in top management that will push every day on the preceding 13 Points, and take action in order to accomplish the transformation. Support is not enough: action is required!

From http://www.qualityregister.co.uk/14principles.html
It seems to me and to Matthew Moss that running throughout this way of structuring an organisation is listening to and involving everyone in the process. Trusting them to want to do the best and supporting them to do it. This is incredibly powerful for student voice because it sets it up as an essential part of the system, not a counterbalance to a staff-led hierarchy.
Do you agree? Can education learn anything from Deming? Can you see any of these principles working in your school?

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Project planning and evaluation videos for school councils

We helped make this series of six videos for Parliament’s Education Service. As well as encouraging schools to enter the Speaker’s School Council Award they contain loads of great tips from MPs and school councillors of all ages on how to make any project a success.

If your school council or project team is getting a bit stuck have a watch of some of these, they might just give you a few ideas.

Why enter the Speaker’s School Council Award

Getting ideas and choosing a project

Planning your project

Keeping your team on track

Keeping people informed and involved

Evaluating your project

These videos were all shot, directed and edited by the fantastic Kwame Lestrade of Franklyn Lane Films.