Category Archives: Uncategorized

Creativity Portal Highlights #3 – your local creative learning contacts

Today is the third of a new series of bi-weekly posts highlighting the very best content available through the Creativity Portal.
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As the new academic year begins you have the opportunity to embed creativity into your teaching, and engage your learners with creative learning strategies and partnerships. Your local authority will have staff in place to support you in developing creativity in your work, and may have a Creative Learning Network you can engage with.

You can find all of your local creative learning contacts on the Creativity Portal here:

http://creativityportal.org.uk/?q=&c=,creative-learning-contacts

Creativity Portal Highlights #2 – Professional Learning Community on Glow

Today is the second of a new series of bi-weekly posts highlighting the very best content available through the Creativity Portal.
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A new professional learning community for Creativity has been set up within Glow with the hashtag #create. Please join us to share news, events, resources, discussions and thinking around this curricular area. All welcome.

http://creativityportal.org.uk/?q=%23create

Creativity Portal Highlights #1 – Changing Education Paradigms

Today is the start of a new series of bi-weekly posts highlighting the very best content available through the Creativity Portal.

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Sir Ken Robinson’s call for education reform, visualised using animation, has been a powerful starting point for educators to begin a journey towards creative teaching, creative learning and creative approaches to transformational change.

http://creativityportal.org.uk/?q=paradigms

Design Competition for a New Maggie’s Centre – standard grade and higher

The Maggie’s Centres design competition for Standard Grade and Higher pupils challenges students to design a new Maggie’s Cancer Centre. This competition provides an opportunity to develop research and presentation skills, to introduce architecture in the classroom and to inspire pupils who have an interest in design.


https://blogs.glowscotland.org.uk/glowblogs/eslb/2013/07/10/a-design-competition-for-a-new-maggie%e2%80%99s-centre/

Ullapool High School team wins European Business Game

The ‘Squeasy Peasey’ team from Ullapool High School has won the European Business Game (EBG). Their proposed reusable baby food pouch company impressed the judges at the international final in the Faroe Islands on Friday (5 July).
http://www.highland.gov.uk/yourcouncil/news/newsreleases/2013/July/2013-07-09-07.htm

The team represented the whole of Scotland after winning the national final in April. The international final was a particularly tough competition with some great ideas from each of the participating countries.

It was the team’s innovative product and detailed proposal that saw them win the award. Their business pitch included market research, a three-year financial plan, and multi-lingual baby-food recipe videos on YouTube. The Czech Republic’s entry – a car wheel-changing device – came a very close second.

New Award announced to celebrate innovation and creativity in education

Award created in honour of social reformer Robert Owen.
A new award recognising inspirational educators has been announced by Education Secretary Michael Russell.

The Robert Owen Award will recognise ground breaking and inspirational innovation in Education. The first winner will be announced later this year.

Mr Russell made the announcement while speaking to international delegates at The Utopian Studies Society’s European conference at New Lanark, the village where Owen provided security, education and decent living conditions for the mill workers and their families.

The award also recognises that this is the 200th anniversary of the publication of Owen’s seminal book “A New View of Society”.

Mr Russell said:

“In New Lanark child labour was ended; a sickness fund was established; a crèche for working mothers was developed and a comprehensive system of education was provided. Robert Owen saw education as being essential to the human experience.

“Modern Scotland embraces that view – we see education as a societal good as well as an individual one. It remains central to our values and to our very sense of ourselves.

“Owen challenged the status quo, he looked at how to engage and inspire people through education as he realised that it was the most important foundation in life.

“The Robert Owen Award will reward outstanding commitment to Scottish education, it will recognise creativity and it will exemplify why so many countries in Europe look on with interest on all that we have achieved in improving the prospects for our young people.

“Like Owen, we believe that we have a duty to provide education and that we all pay the price if we do not meet that responsibility.

“Yet until Scotland gains full control of its own finances, until we develop our own system of welfare, benefits and taxation, we will continue to be at the mercy of decisions taken remotely that limit our ability to do the best we can.

“For me, the independence debate is about the powers we need to tackle the deep-rooted challenges that face us – challenges like child poverty and gaps in educational attainment that have never been adequately tackled.

“Those are the issues that Robert Owen started to tackle and it is a debate which starts with the question; What kind of Scotland do we want to live in?”

Enter Royal Mail’s Christmas stamp design competition

Royal Mail is running an amazing national art competition for primary school pupils to design stamps for Christmas 2013.

http://www.royalmail.com/stamps-design-competition-2013

Two lucky winners will see their designs on one of the 1st or one of the 2nd Class Christmas stamps from this year’s range.

The competition theme is ‘what does the Christmas season mean to you?’ and so the children can design an image that best describes what the festive holiday period means to them.  Competition entries must be received by 19 July 2013.

Enspire – pupil led festival of ideas

‘Enspire’ is an exciting new festival taking place on 9 June run entirely by young people in St Joseph’s Academy, Kilmarnock. Inspired by the world famous TED Talks a team of S4 pupils from St. Joseph’s Academy in Kilmarnock have organised their own home-grown festival of ideas: Enspire.

Enspire is being designed and curated by an S4 Enterprise class who have established an events business called ID Launch. They have been working towards this all year. The purpose of Enspire is simple: to harness energy, creativity and ideas to make a difference by thinking differently. The festival is based around three powerful words: reinvention, inspiration and transformation. All presentations will take as their starting point the themes of reinvention, inspiration or transformation. The festival also features bands, comedy, entertainment and great local food cooked by their pop-up restaurant.

The festival is open to anyone to attend.  Please contact St. Joseph’s Academy School Office on 01563 526144 for more information.

Places still available – Festival of Dangerous Ideas

Tuesday  18th June

Wild Ideas – Celebrating Failure and Success (1000-1500)
West Highland College UHI, Carmichael Way, Fort William

In the first part of the day, the West Highland Way Walkers who will just have completed their 5 day walk, led by young people from West Highland College  will exhibit the dangerous ideas that grew during their journey in the  wild. In the second half of the day, Outward Bound will lead a session that will explore how they have used the research on Mindsets to develop their work with young people

View Programme and Book Online

Wednesday 19th am. and pm.

Modern Assessment Tools to Match Modern Literacy Practices in These Dangerous Times College Development Network, Argyll Court, Stirling (1030-1230)

In order for pedagogy to stay aligned with this seismic shift in communication, how could the ubiquitous practice of digital photography be used as an assessment tool?

View Programme and Book Online

Dangerous Assessment Conference (1300-1600)
College Development Network, Argyll Court, Stirling
Alastair Pollitt from UCLES will put forward the argument that we stop marking exam papers.

View Programme and Book Online

Thursday 20 June 2013

Learning Through Gaming (1000-1600)
Dundee College, Gardyne Campus

As part of the Festival of Dangerous Ideas, participants at the event are encouraged be as ‘dangerous’ as possible in considering how gaming can influence pedagogy and encourage greater engagement with learning.

Speakers include Chris van der Kuyl of brightsolid, Derek Robertson of Education Scotland and David Renton of Reid Kerr College.

View Programme and Book Online