Education Partnerships A conversation starter for school leadership teams and teaching staff.

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Presentation transcript:

Education Partnerships A conversation starter for school leadership teams and teaching staff

What the evidence demonstrates The willingness and capacity of the corporate and philanthropic sectors to contribute to the work of government schools has never been greater. Black 2008 Walls of the school have become more permeable and transparent and schools are under the microscope. This increase in demand for better performance and greater accountability means a shift in the roles and orientations, from within the school to the outside. Fullan, M. 2000

What the evidence demonstrates Source: LIFE Centre:

Benefits of an education partnership Lower drop out and higher attendance rates Improvements in student readiness to learn Reduced demand on teachers crating greater opportunity to focus on leaning activities Support for ongoing improvement in outcomes from birth through to adulthood. Better learning and development outcomes for children and young people, effective schools and strong communities Families / Community Children and Young people School

In action See how the benefits of a school working in partnership with business has made a difference

Leadership For education partnerships to be effective strong distributed leadership is critical. Strong leadership can create: a larger knowledge base a stronger ownership sustainability of partnership activity collaborative effort and greater capacity to achieve successful outcomes

Discussion Where do we want our students and school to be in the next 12 months? What type of partnerships will assist us to get us to where we want to be? What type of organisations would we want to partner with? Are there certain organisations we would not want to partner with? What background research on potential partners would we need to do before committing to a partnership?

Education Partnership Website