Education Secretary Michael Russell has confirmed that Tony Jakimciw has been invited to lead regional college planning in Fife. Mr Jakimciw, currently Principal of Dumfries and Galloway College, will work with the Fife colleges and other interested parties to ensure college courses in the region best meet the needs of learners and local employers.
FIFE’s primary 6 and 7 pupils enjoyed a red carpet event on Thursday 21 June 2012, when they attended an awards ceremony to celebrate Say4Schools storyboard animation competition 2012.
Click here for all the details of the event and the winners!
A flashmob of children from four Dunfermline primary schools performed a secret song they helped compose called ‘Fife goes Olympic’ today.
Around 170 primary 6 &7 youngsters gave unsuspecting shoppers at the Kingsgate Shopping Centrea big surprise when they performed their song for the first time ahead of the Olympic Torch Relay in Dunfermline.
The pupils from Cairneyhill, Duloch, St Margaret’s RC and St Leonards Primary Schools have been working together on the top secret project which was supported by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland and Fife Council under the ‘Summer of Song: Celebrating the Olympic Torch in Scotland’banner.
The children wrote their very own Olympic Song for Fife during a songwriting process which was led by musicians from Edinburgh based charity, Fischy Music.
The charity worked with the children over the course of four weeks to compose their song and co-ordinate their special flashmob surprise.
Fischy Music has worked directly with children for over 14 years and their resources, promoting emotional, social and spiritual wellbeing, are used in thousands of schools across the UK and beyond.
Also helping to support the performance on the day were the Kingsgate Shopping Centre Management team and representatives from Queen Anne Singers and Dunfermline Choral Union.
Heather Gibson, Area Cultural Co-ordinator from Fife Council who lead the project said: “This really has been a top secret project as we wanted to make sure everyone got a big surprise!
We were delighted to receive funding from Creative Scotland and the council to make this project come to life. We also worked closely with the council’s Education Service who advised us on potential schools to develop the project with and also recommended the specialised skills Fischy Music could bring to this very exciting idea.
I’d like to thank them, the children and staff from the schools involved, who really embraced this idea from the very beginning and who were delighted to be involved in making Fife Secret Song a reality.”
As a thank you to the hard work and dedication of the children, the staff, Fischy Music and Fife Council’s Cultural Partnerships Team to make this flashmob happen, please help us promote Fife’s Secret Song – ‘Fife Goes Olympic’ far and wide. Tell everyone you know to go to www.youtube.com/Thefifecouncil to view Fife Council’s flashmob clip and also search Dunfermline Flashmob which Colin Weaver (parent) kindly put up of almost the full concert! Get ‘sharing’, ‘blogging’ and ‘tweeting’!
Fife’s Cultural Consortium warmly invites local community/voluntary groups to their first Cultural Roadshow of 2012, which is being held on Tuesday 27th March from 1pm-6pm at the Rothes Halls in Glenrothes. This FREE event offers a series of seminars, networking and funding opportunities to groups and individuals working within a cultural context in Fife’s communities.
Tuesday 27 March 2012
1pm – 6pm, Rothes Halls, Glenrothes
Fife’s Cultural Consortium warmly invites you to their second Cultural Roadshow.
This FREE event offers a series of seminars, networking and funding opportunities to groups and individuals working within a cultural context in Fife’s communities.
The Roadshow includes workshops, breakout sessions and a central Marketplace: your opportunity to meet with funders and find out what is on offer. Includes Fife Council’s Funding & Monitoring Team, Leader in Fife, Fife Environmental Trust, Heritage Lottery Fund and much more.
To receive further information or to book a place on any of the Workshops or Breakout Sessions please contact the Cultural Partnerships Team, details below.
This opportunity is available in: Fife
For further information, please contact cultural.partnerships@fife.gov.uk (Cultural Partnerships Team), or call 01592 583255, or visit http://www.fifedirect.org.uk/culture. The deadline is Tuesday 27 March 2012 at 13:00.
Early Primary Category Ben Easton (P4) King’s Road Primary School in Fife
Later Primary Category Niamh Corkey (P6) Kirkcaldy West Primary School
Secondary Category
Molly Broadley (S6) Cults Academy
The four runners-up in each age category were:
Early Primary Category Evyn Kelly (P1) Our Lady of the Missions Primary School in East Renfrewshire
Jasmine Scott (P3) Mauchline Primary School in East Ayrshire
Lily Childs (P4) Park Primary School in Argyll and Bute
Abby Taylor (P1) Burravoe Primary School in the Shetland Islands
Later Primary Category Evie Campbel (P7) Robslee Primary School in East Renfrewshire
Lily Bircham (P7) St Madoes Primary in Perth and Kinross
Caroline Baillie (P7) Sandaig Primary School in Glasgow
Isla McMillan (P6) Eaglesham Primary School in East Renfrewshire
Secondary Category Alexander Orr (S2) Cults Academy in Aberdeen City
Rowan Ah-See (S6) Cults Academy in Aberdeen City Amy Galloway (S5) Auchmuty High School in Fife Danuelle Jackson (S5) Carluke High School in South Lanarkshire
Diversity week is an opportunity for Fife’s schools to be part of the celebration of Fife’s rich and diverse culture. Everyone can contribute to making this event a success and there are many different ways in which you can do this.
Diversity enriches our lives, consider how dull life would be if we all looked alike, thought alike, and acted alike! By learning to recognize our similarities and appreciate our differences, we can overcome prejudice and intolerance and work towards a better world.
If you would like to discuss any ideas you have / would like support in putting something together for diversity week, please contact:
Marks on the Landscape is a resource available through Education Scotland to inspire creativity across the curriculum. It integrates creative skills with experiences and outcomes across a range of curriculum areas to support interdisciplinary learning.
The context for learning and teaching for this resource is Fife Earth, an ambitious land regeneration project.
Fife Earth
“Fife Earth is a surface coal mine, three miles squared, being reclaimed as a huge project, but this is much more. Fife Earth is reclaiming and transforming this huge site into a celebration of art, creativity and of Scotland, its history, its achievements and its place in the world. It is art created by bulldozers. It is a vision driven by ambition, conceived by one man and being realised by many. ”
From the essay ‘How big are your dreams?’ by David Cameron, Education Consultant