“You can inspire students to learn with simple demonstrations of your own curiosity”

As a teacher, the most important asset I can teach my students is a love of learning. In my 10 years teaching high school, I have found that making a deliberate and transparent effort to continue my own learning allows me to inspire my students to follow my footsteps.

Here are some best practices that I have created for myself, to facilitate both my own learning and my students’ passion to learn.  Click here to read Why Great Teachers Are Also Learners.

What does a curriculum that is designed explicitly with young peoples’ agency in mind look like?

“Initiatives such as the RSA’s Opening Minds, among many others, seek to teach competences (or skills) looking at what young people might need to be able to do to effectively apply the knowledge they gain at school. By bringing such capabilities into the curriculum itself, both to demonstrate the relevance of the knowledge being imparted, and to develop young people’s capacity to use that knowledge, these initiatives seek to give all young people the opportunity to shape their worlds.

However, important critiques of these discourses emphasise the dangers of an education that seeks to form personalities and identities in order to create perfect citizens and economic operatives. By suggesting that young people must use what is learned at school in a certain way, for certain ends (sustainability for example), the curriculum could become an agent that denies young people real freedom for self determination and creative thought.

How do we move beyond this impasse? How do we equip young people to exercise agency without determining how that agency should be used and to what end? What does a curriculum that is designed explicitly with young peoples’ agency in mind look like?”

Click here to read more. Take a look at the RSA Education Seminars Report.

Area based curriculum

What is an Area Based Curriculum?

An Area Based Curriculum is one that is co-designed and co-owned by schools and other partners in the community. It takes into account a variety of views about what it is important to know, and is taught by teachers and community members together, inside school and in other locations in the local area.

Any school curriculum must of course take the National Curriculum and national qualifications into account, as well as ensure that the professional role of the teacher is respected. An Area Based Curriculum must do all of this, but in addition ensure that it challenges and questions the following:

1. The people involved: re-imagining who can be involved with education, and in what ways, by engaging a wider community in curriculum development
2. The places where learning happens: re-imagining the role of a place in educating young people by establishing the whole area as a learning environment
3. What it is important to know: re-imagining where knowledge is created and found by exploring the context of a place.

Click here to read more from RSA.  And read the Lessons-for-localism Report.