BBC: Get Creative asks What is the Future of Education?

BBC Get Creative: What’s the future of education?

 

Get Creative is a new, public-facing, year long campaign led by the BBC

together with many other partners. It aims to raise the profile of arts,

culture and creativity, to highlight their central place in all our

lives and to celebrate where they happen all over the nation.

 

Get Creative will be launched through a series of events and debates

all over the UK – some of which will be picked up and covered by the

BBC on their TV or radio channels. Over the next year lots of different

activities, programmes, events and art works will be part of the Get

Creative Programme.

 

We think that the launch is a great opportunity to ensure that young

people and learning have a profile in this process right from the start,

so the CLA wants to ask all our members and supporters a question:

 

‘What is the future of education?’

 

We will be holding an event in the launch week of 23 February at which

will we ask young people to work with artists and teachers to think

through and present their ideas on the future of education. We’ll

collate and publish them, and ensure that the political teams and

education leads in all the political parties who are writing the

manifestos for the General Election are aware of them.

 

We want to showcase the fantastic power of cultural learning to inspire

creativity and innovation.

 

We’d love you to be a part of this process too.

 

 

How to get involved:

 

1.Hold your own event or debate in the launch week where you discuss

the future of education.

2.Come up with suggestions, manifesto pledges and ideas for education

over the next 20 years. Be as visionary and as innovative as you’d

like.

3.Hold your event or debate in whatever format you’d like –

workshops, meetings, a panel debate, a chat over coffee and cake, a

twilight session, an online discussion, a festival, or a performance.

You can make this discussion a part of an existing event or programme

something new, it’s up to you.

4.Invite anyone you’d like to be part of it – young people,

teachers, artists, colleagues, policy makers, arts learning partners,

parents.

5.Let us know you’re having it – email

lizzie@culturallearningalliance.org.uk with the details of your event

and we’ll tell the BBC team that are covering the launch and we’ll

send you the branding pack and further information about the scheme.

6.Record your findings and your ideas. Let us know your top five

suggestions for the future of education – you can send us videos,

podcasts and artworks (with the right permissions), but put your ideas

on paper too. We’ll include them in the dossier to send to policy

makers.

 

What is Get Creative?

 

Get Creative is a major celebration of the nation’s culture and

creativity. Led by the BBC and What Next? in collaboration with a huge

range of arts, cultural and voluntary organisations, everyone is invited

to get involved and share their creative talents.

 

How Get Creative came about?

 

Get Creative, led by the BBC and What Next?, came about as a result of

the Warwick Commission on the future of cultural value, and

collaboration with Voluntary Arts, Culture24, 64 Million Artists, Fun

Palaces, Cultural Learning Alliance and Arts Council England.

 

BP Portrait Award: Experimental Drawing

National Portrait Gallery

Friday 27 February 1pm – 4pm

Target audience: teachers of all ages and stages welcome

Be inspired by the BP Portrait Award 2014 exhibition. Led by practising artists, Fraser Gray & BP Portrait Award winner Gareth Reid, this session includes a guided tour of the exhibition and a practical drawing session. Analyse artists’ processes, discuss the exhibition, ideas for the classroom and experiment with media and techniques, drawing from a life model. All materials provided.

Venue: Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Queen St, Edinburgh EH2 1JD

To book please contact education@nationalgalleries.org 0131 624 6547

What Is Creativity? – CPD

National Galleries of Scotland

Tuesday 24 Feb 4.30pm – 6pm OR Saturday 7 March 11am – 12.30pm

Target audience:  teachers and artist educators of all subjects and stages welcome

What do we really mean by ‘creativity’? How can we encourage learners to develop their creativity skills, through different subject areas across the curriculum?

Delivered in partnership by Arts & Creative Learning, City of Edinburgh Council and the National Galleries of Scotland.

Venue: Scottish National Gallery, The Mound, Edinburgh EH2 2EL

To book contact education@nationalgalleries.org  0131 624 6547

 

Notes from Scotland – composition competition

A new national composition competition for 12 – 18 year olds from the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and National Trust for Scotland.

“This is a fantastic idea to engage young people in composition and to bring them together with existing composers and musicians to pass on their knowledge and skills. I’m sure it will be an invaluable experience for all concerned.”

Craig Armstrong, Composer (The Great Gatsby, Romeo +Juliet, Moulin Rouge)

Get your entries in now for feedback from Scotland’s most famous composers.

Compositions should be for trio, quartet or quintet with any combination of Orchestral instruments allowed. As a guide, we have recommended each piece to be roughly 2 – 3 minutes long, but this is just a suggestion, and the final length of the piece is up to the entrant, within reason. Your five movement symphony can wait!

Any submissions will be considered works in progress until the deadline date of May 31st and can be replaced at any point before that date. These work-in-progress submissions will then be shown to one of the professionals involved with the project for comment. This is an excellent and rare opportunity to get feedback on your music from one of Scotland’s eminent composers. Submissions can also be in various formats: sheet music, as PDF or Sibelius / Finale / Notion project file; audio recording of a piece of music; Figure notes sheet music file.

We’ve now held workshops at three out of the five properties involved in the project, with two more scheduled in the run up to the submission deadline.

Glasgow /w composer Stuart McCrae – January 25th, Pollok House, 2pm – 4pm

Edinburgh /w composer Matilda Brown – March 7th, Georgian House, 2pm – 4pm

Of course, you don’t need to have been at a workshop to enter, we have a whole host of tips from Scotland’s composers and introductions to each of the NTS properties involved in the project up on the Notes from Scotland site: www.notesfromscotland.co.uk <http://www.notesfromscotland.co.uk/>

To come along to one of the workshops, or for any enquiries about the competition in general, please email neil.cullen@rsno.org.uk.

Tesco Bank Art Competition for Schools 2015

This year there are even more reasons to enter with 85 ways to win!

  • 53 great prizes of art materials for winners with their work displayed at the Scottish National Gallery
  • £100 vouchers for art materials to 20 schools as a thank you for entering
  • Free artist-led workshops with help towards transport costs included for 12 lucky schools

With fun, inspiring themes for nursery, lower and upper primary, secondary and special education schools we hope you enjoy looking at, talking about and finally making your own art. You can download each of the categories separately. All winning artworks will be framed and exhibited at the Scottish National Gallery with a selection featured in a colourful calendar posted to every school in Scotland.

Full details can be found at www.nationalgalleries.org/schoolartcompetition

Show Racism the Red Card – Creative Competition 2015

The Creative Competition is an exciting highlight of Show Racism the Red Card’s calendar and reaches out to schools all over Scotland.  With almost 1 in 5 schools having participated in the competition, the Creative Competition is getting bigger and better every year. Entries are welcome from both individuals as well as class groups and the closing date for all entries is Friday 30th January 2015. 

To enter, students of any age, must develop a piece of creative work that gets across loud and clear the important message that racism and/or sectarianism does not have a place in Scotland. Instead, it should show how Scotland can celebrate its diverse and multicultural population.

For further information on how to enter, please visit the website – http://www.theredcardscotland.org/news/news-and-events?news=5533

Funding in Scotland – Search Engine

SCVO launches free new funding search tool

Funding Scotland, a free new online search tool has been launched to help Scottish charities, community groups and social enterprises access funding.

 start searching now – http://www.fundingscotland.com/

Created by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO), the new online search engine will help people find out about over 800 funds that provide support to Scottish projects. It includes grants, loans, prizes and other sources of funding support.

Fringe Schools Poster Competition 2015

The Edinburgh Festival Fringe is the largest arts festival in the world and takes place every August for three weeks in Scotland’s capital city.
Every year thousands of performers take to a multitude of stages all over Edinburgh to present shows for every taste. The festival includes theatre, comedy, dance, physical theatre, musicals, operas, music, cabaret, exhibitions and events, as well as a huge range of fun shows for children, from magic and comedy to interactive theatre and storytelling.
Our annual Schools Poster Competition is the perfect opportunity for schools to get involved with the Fringe, and for budding young artists and designers to be part of the festival. Each year, we ask school children from across Scotland to design a poster that captures their interpretation of the Fringe, and the winning design becomes the official poster for that year’s festival, as well as being featured on a range of merchandise and in an exhibition alongside other shortlisted entries.

Deadline for entries this year is 6th March 2015 at 5pm
For more information or to download an entry pack, please visit www.edfringe.com/poster.

The Emporium of Dangerous Ideas Launch 2015

 

Tuesday 09 June 2015 (1000-1230)

Govanhill Baths, Glasgow 

  

 View Programme and Book Online

This year’s Launch of the Emporium aims to explore the ideas around ’emancipatory education’. In a 21st century context who is set free? An aquarium style event, hosted by Team Academy with Dr. Colin Jones, Senior Lecturer in Entrepreneurship at the University of Tasmania, Cherry Hopton, Course Leader from Dundee and Angus College and The Real David Cameron, Agent Provocateur of the Education World.

Will they be swimming with or against the tide of current thinking around education policy and practice?

Join them and other swimmers for this unique and thought provoking launch.

News, opportunities, research and strategy relating to creative teaching and learning in Scotland

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