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New Directions in Student Leadership Staff Training Modules

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Title: New Directions in Student Leadership Staff Training Modules


1
New Directions in Student Leadership Staff
TrainingModules
2
Outcomes
  • On completion of all modules, participants will
  • Have an understanding of the ways in which
    effective student leadership programs improve
    school life
  • Understand DET directions and commitments to
    student leadership
  • Be aware of the roles and responsibilities of
    school staff in promoting student leadership
    programs
  • Have developed knowledge and skills to value and
    implement effective student leadership programs.
  • Have become familiar with resources that support
    student leadership programs

3
Module One
  • Student Leadership
  • An overview

4
VisionThe value of student leadership programs
  • Why be involved in student leadership programs in
    schools?
  • Why actively work to support and increase student
    leadership participation?
  • Whats your VISION or bigger picture of WHY
    the participation of young people in schools is
    important?

5
Why have student leadership programs in schools?
  • Engaging with young people and getting our views
    is one very important way of helping to rebuild
    that sense of connection between us, the school
    and the community in which we live.
  • It is an opportunity to feel respected and be
    confident that our views are being taken
    seriously
  • Young person, World Youth Forum

6
Student leadership permeates all aspects of
school life
Debating
Creative Performing Arts
Peer Leadership- house captains- school captains
Peer Support
SRC School Parliaments
LEADERSHIP
Peer Mediation
Sporting
Academic
Cultural Religious Leaders
7
Student leaders need to work for the benefit of
all groups
Subjects Careers Education, Voc Ed. Pathways
Attitudes to School enjoy?dont enjoy?
LBOTE communities
Aboriginal
Special Needs
Parents Community
School Spirit, Culture Environment
PARTICIPATION
Socio-Economic Status
Gender Equity
Student -Teacher Liaison Morale
8
How does the Department of Education and Training
support student leadership programs in schools?
9
DET Student Welfare Policy p6
  • Positive school climate is enhanced by
  • Maximising student participation in decision
    making
  • Ensuring principles of equity and fairness
  • opportunities for students to demonstrate
    success
  • Development of skills in positive relationships,
    social responsibility, problem solving and
    dispute resolution
  • Student views incorporated into planning related
    to school climate and organisation
  • Opportunities for leadership experience through
    SRCs or school parliaments

10
Other support documents
  • Values in Public Schools
  • NSW DET Priorities Statement
  • Charter for SRCs

11
DET Initiatives SRCs and Student Leadership
  • Conduct more Premiers youth leadership forums
    for senior secondary students in their local
    communities
  • Review existing guidelines and promote an SRC
    Charter to cater for the needs of all schools
  • Encourage all schools to establish an effective
    SRC
  • Encourage more effective SRCs across school,
    region and state networks
  • Improve electronic communication between SRCs by
    accessing the Departments student leadership
    webpage and the e-learning program
  • Conduct an annual forum for SRCs to consult with
    senior executive in the Department

12
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13
from the constitution of the NSW SRC
  • Our main objective is
  • to take action
  • to improve the
  • quality of school
  • life for all students
  • through student
  • leadership programs.

14
The reality
  • Student Leadership in schools
  • Visionary or lacking direction?
  • Well supported or seen as a tack-on?

15
Student motivation depends on three key student
needs
To feel competent
To feel in control of their learning
To feel connected with others
Roger Holdsworth quoting Walker and Kelly
(2002) at the 2005 State SRC Conference
16
Student leadership - Visionary
  • A student leadership program should complement
    the schools vision, management plan or school
    targets.
  • Ideas
  • Share the same goals
  • Head in the same direction
  • Draw links between student leadership activities
    and the directions set by the school.

17
Student Leadership- Challenging and meaningful?
  • Are our student leaders limited by the challenges
    we set them?

18
Student leadership and Quality Teaching in NSW
Schools
  • Student leadership groups, eg SRCs, can be seen
    as learning teams
  • All stages of student leadership activities are
    also learning experiences for the students
  • by providing opportunities for our student
    leaders to reflect on their practice, student
    learning outcomes can be enhanced.

19
Intellectual quality
  • Problematic knowledge
  • - encourage students to address multiple
    perspectives and/or solutions
  • Substantive communication
  • encourage students to regularly engage in
    sustained conversations about the concepts and
    ideas they are encountering

20
Quality learning environment
  • Engagement
  • most students, most of the time, are seriously
    engaged in the activity rather than going through
    the motions
  • Student direction
  • allow students to exercise some direction over
    the selection of activities related to their
    learning and the means and manner by which these
    activities will be done

21
Significance
  • Inclusivity
  • programs require the participation of all
    students across the social and cultural
    backgrounds represented in the school
  • Connectedness
  • programs apply school knowledge in real-life
    contexts or problems, and provide opportunities
    for students to share their work with audiences
    beyond the classroom and school

22
Module 2The SRC Teacher Adviser
  • How do I manage a student leadership program?

23
Module Two Outcomes
  • Participants will
  • Understand scaffolding theory
  • Discuss the roles and responsibilities of SRC
    teacher advisers
  • become familiar with SRCs a practical guide for
    student leaders and teachers the Student
    leadership framework for primary schools
  • become familiar with the SRC Toolkit in the
    implementation of student leadership programs

24
Whats the difference between helping and
taking over?
  • The teacher adviser who is supposed to support
    us is usually too busy, so we make all these
    plans on our own but we dont always know how to
    make our plans work. SRC student
  • Our teacher adviser does everything! In the
    school other staff dont call us the SRC, we are
    called Mr s group.
  • SRC student

25
Naïve views of decision-making
  • Traditionally, the approach has been for the SRC
    to either pass a general decision calling on
    others (usually teachers) to do something.
  • Alternatively, SRCs have felt that they should
    lead on the issue themselves and initiate
    research or action without first checking if they
    are truly representing the wishes of the broader
    student population.
  • Roger Holdsworth, University of Melbourne Youth
    Research Centre, 2004 State SRC Conference

26
Scaffolding to build capacity in student leaders
High challenge
Engagement zone - new learning occurs here
can lead to frustration
Low support
High support
simple repetitive tasks become boring
Easy to remain in the comfort zone
Low challenge
Mariani (1997)
27
Scaffolding
Mariani (1997)
High challenge
Students attempt to change whole school
policy independently
Student leaders involved with school
community in decisions regarding 'real' issues
Low support
High support
a kindly teacher does nearly everything for
the student leadership group
simple task performed fairly independently by
a small group of students
Low challenge
28
Scaffolding How do we raise the bar for SRCs?
  • Effective learning tasks should be ahead of the
    students abilities to complete them alone but
    within their ability to complete when scaffolding
    is provided (Mercer 1994)
  • Sees both teachers and students as active
    participants in learning process

29
Scaffolding The Apprenticeship Model
  • SRC adviser assists students to accomplish tasks
    and develop understandings they cant manage on
    their own
  • Student leaders are pushed beyond their current
    abilities and levels of understanding so that new
    learning can occur

30
ScaffoldingSRC teacher advisers provide support
  • at the point of need
  • to help students learn not only what to think and
    do
  • but how to think and do
  • Gradually withdrawn
  • To ultimately enable students to act
    independently

31
Module Three
  • Effective
  • Practice
  • The Charter
  • for SRCs

32
Module Three Outcomes
  • Participants will
  • come to an understanding of the benefits of
    student leadership programs and in particular SRC
    programs
  • Gather ideas regarding successful projects
  • Gain ideas and action plan local student
    leadership initiatives

33
What resources exist to support student
leadership programs in schools?
  • www.schools.nsw.edu.au/studentsupport
  • The Charter for SRCs
  • SRCs a practical guide for student leaders and
    teachers (1998, reprinted 2002)
  • Student leadership framework for primary schools
    (2001)
  • Just Like Us (2001)
  • Student Welfare Policy (2001)
  • SRC Toolkit (2003/04)
  • Professional Support PASTA (Professional
    Association of SRC Teacher Advisers)
    http//hsc.csu.edu.au/pta/pasta/

34
Who are the people that support student
leadership programs in schools?
  • At school
  • School principal
  • Head Teacher/Coordinator Welfare or executive
    member of staff
  • Welfare Committee
  • SRC teacher adviser
  • In the region
  • Regional or inter-school SRC coordinator (if
    applicable)
  • Student welfare consultant
  • Across the state
  • the Student Wellbeing Unit
  • Leader, Values and Student Leadership 92465504
  • Coordinator, Student Leadership and SRCs 92465533

35
The Charter for SRCs
  • Involved students Students should be active
    citizens of the school community and have their
    ideas and opinions routinely sought and
    respected.

36
Effective Practice
  • Involved students
  • Parliamentary model cabinet meets with the
    principal each fortnight
  • Student leadership program links to school values
    statement
  • Time for student consultation is built into the
    school timetable
  • Secondary student leaders assist in Year 6
    Orientation
  • A student action team is established to address
    access to playground areas
  • Student involvement in staff committees and
    community forums

37
The Charter for SRCs
  • Making real decisionsStudents from Kindergarten
    to Year 12 are encouraged to contribute to and
    participate in decision-making in their school.

38
Effective Practice
  • Making real decisions
  • Students collect and use data, eg surveys, to
    inform decisions about school life
  • Students work with staff in a school
    construction project
  • Students control and access SRC budget to finance
    own projects
  • Students are involved in policy development eg,
    school uniform and healthy canteen food.
  • Student leadership teams co-manage focus areas in
    the school, eg, School Environment Team
    Sports Forum.

39
The Charter for SRCs
  • In many placesRepresentative students can inform
    decision-making throughout the Department of
    Education and Training and in the wider
    community.

40
Effective Practice
  • In many places
  • Stage 5 student leaders assist Stage 3 students
    in learning tasks
  • Primary and High School SRCs link together for
    regular meetings
  • Student Forums discuss local issues
  • SRC representatives attend School Council meetings

41
Inter-school SRC Networks
  • In many places
  • All regions are encouraged to run inter-school
    SRC networks.
  • Inter-school networks provide opportunities for
    students to share ideas and develop projects with
    other students from nearby schools

42
The Charter for SRCs
  • For everyoneOpportunities for participation and
    leadership must be inclusive of gender, special
    needs, cultural background, sexuality,
    socio-economic status and geographically remote
    circumstances.

43
Effective Practice
  • For everyone
  • All Year 6 are prefects for 3 weeks
  • Student leadership model involves all students in
    Year 6 on a rotational basis
  • Multiple participation and leadership
    opportunities, eg sport, creative arts, debating
  • Aboriginal student leadership programs
  • Schools encourage a range of leadership styles,
    eg peer support, mentoring

44
The Charter for SRCs
  • Chosen fairlyThe methods used to involve
    students in decisions affecting their lives
    should model Australian democratic and
    representative practices

45
Effective Practice
  • Chosen fairly
  • Staff and student leaders educate the student
    body in the election process
  • Criteria for election published
  • Democratic election processes used writing
    expressions of interest, making speeches
  • Students measure their capacity to lead against
    the school values statement
  • SRC elections conducted in consultation with
    local officials of the Australian Electoral
    Commission

46
The Charter for SRCs
  • Well supportedStudents will be prepared for and
    supported in their leadership and decision-making
    roles through all aspects of the curriculum, in
    classroom, whole school and out-of-school
    activities

47
Effective Practice
  • Well supported
  • SRC meets fortnightly with principal
  • All class teachers involved in election processes
  • Regular student forums. Staff scaffold student
    participation
  • Year 6 student leaders supported through
    transition to high school
  • Principal, Head Teacher Student Welfare and
    counsellor attend and participate regularly at
    SRC meetings

48
Good Practice - Secondary
  • Well supported
  • Regionally
  • Students attend inter-school
  • leadership meetings and events
  • State
  • NSW SRC the peak student leadership
    consultative and decision-making forum
  • State SRC Conference Working Party which plans
    and conducts the annual State SRC Conference

49
The Charter for SRCs
  • Appropriately recognisedThe skills, values,
    knowledge and attitudes that students learn from
    participation in school life are vital to their
    future role as citizens of a democratic society

50
Effective Practice
  • Appropriately recognised
  • SRC website
  • Student leadership awards at annual presentation
    Day ceremony
  • Student run assemblies
  • Representative status for student leaders equates
    with status given to students displaying sporting
    success
  • Student leadership acknowledged in school reports
    and references
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