Secondary Schools. A complete approach to transforming students enterprise skills

Similar documents
MASTER S COURSES FASHION START-UP

Online Master of Business Administration (MBA)

Bold resourcefulness: redefining employability and entrepreneurial learning

Hawai i Pacific University Sees Stellar Response Rates for Course Evaluations

2017 FALL PROFESSIONAL TRAINING CALENDAR

St Michael s Catholic Primary School

Job Description Head of Religious, Moral and Philosophical Studies (RMPS)

About our academy. Joining our community

Teacher of English. MPS/UPS Information for Applicants

PROPOSED MERGER - RESPONSE TO PUBLIC CONSULTATION

Eastbury Primary School

I set out below my response to the Report s individual recommendations.

Putnoe Primary School

Short inspection of Maria Fidelis Roman Catholic Convent School FCJ

Newlands Girls School

Dear Applicant, Recruitment Pack Section 1

Outstanding by Ofsted

STRATEGIC GROWTH FROM THE BASE OF THE PYRAMID

Plans for Pupil Premium Spending

Evaluation of pupil premium grant expenditure 2015/16 Review Date: 16th July 2016

Information Pack: Exams Officer. Abbey College Cambridge

Biomedical Sciences (BC98)

DfEE/DATA CAD/CAM in Schools Initiative - A Success Story so Far

Course Specification Executive MBA via e-learning (MBUSP)

LITERACY ACROSS THE CURRICULUM POLICY Humberston Academy

PROVIDENCE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE

Researcher Development Assessment A: Knowledge and intellectual abilities

BUSINESS OCR LEVEL 2 CAMBRIDGE TECHNICAL. Cambridge TECHNICALS BUSINESS ONLINE CERTIFICATE/DIPLOMA IN R/502/5326 LEVEL 2 UNIT 11

ZHANG Xiaojun, XIONG Xiaoliang School of Finance and Business English, Wuhan Yangtze Business University, P.R.China,

An Introduction to Simio for Beginners

29 th April Mrs Diana Dryland Headteacher Bursted Wood Primary School Swanbridge Road Bexley Heath Kent DA7 5BS

Associate Professor of Electrical Power Systems Engineering (CAE17/06RA) School of Creative Arts and Engineering / Engineering

VSAC Financial Aid Night is scheduled for Thursday, October 6 from 6:30 PM 7:30 PM here at CVU. Senior and junior families are encouraged to attend.

Market Intelligence. Alumni Perspectives Survey Report 2017

AUTHORITATIVE SOURCES ADULT AND COMMUNITY LEARNING LEARNING PROGRAMMES

IN THIS UNIT YOU LEARN HOW TO: SPEAKING 1 Work in pairs. Discuss the questions. 2 Work with a new partner. Discuss the questions.

IBM Software Group. Mastering Requirements Management with Use Cases Module 6: Define the System

Visionary Leadership Global Business Excellence Innovation and New Business Creation Personal Growth

Swinburne University of Technology 2020 Plan

WMO Global Campus: Frequently Asked Questions and Answers, July 2015 V1. WMO Global Campus: Frequently Asked Questions and Answers

EVENT BROCHURE. Top Ranking Performers BEST IN THE WORLD 2017 GLOBAL Conference. Grange City Hotel, London th October 2017

BSc (Hons) Marketing

Head of Maths Application Pack

THREE-YEAR COURSES FASHION STYLING & CREATIVE DIRECTION Version 02

Foundation Apprenticeship in IT Software

California State University, Chico College of Business Graduate Business Program Program Alignment Matrix Academic Year

Teacher of Art & Design (Maternity Cover)

SULLIVAN & CROMWELL LLP

International Business Principles (MKT 3400)

RWTH Aachen University

Oasis Academy Coulsdon

St Matthew s RC High School

POST-16 LEVEL 1 DIPLOMA (Pilot) Specification for teaching from September 2013

MSc INVESTMENT BANKING & RISK MANAGEMENT FULL-TIME 18 MONTH PROGRAMME IN ENGLISH IN COLLABORATION WITH

CEE 2050: Introduction to Green Engineering

Tuesday 24th January Mr N Holmes Principal. Mr G Hughes Vice Principal (Curriculum) Mr P Galloway Vice Principal (Key Stage 3)

JAM & JUSTICE. Co-producing Urban Governance for Social Innovation

Lawyers for Learning Mentoring Program Information Booklet

Leveraging MOOCs to bring entrepreneurship and innovation to everyone on campus

4th Term MBA-2016 ½ credit

Essex Apprenticeships in Engineering and Manufacturing

IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON ACCESS AGREEMENT

MBA PROGRAMS. Preparing well-rounded graduates to become leaders in the private, nonprofit, and public sectors. GRADUATE STUDIES Light the way.

Teacher of Psychology and Health and Social Care

École Jeannine Manuel Bedford Square, Bloomsbury, London WC1B 3DN

Mock Trial Preparation In-Class Assignment to Prepare Direct and Cross Examination Roles 25 September 2015 DIRECT EXAMINATION

International Seminar: Dates, Locations, and Course Descriptions

Director, Intelligent Mobility Design Centre

Multiple Intelligence Teaching Strategy Response Groups

Opening Essay. Darrell A. Hamlin, Ph.D. Fort Hays State University

Tuesday 13 May 2014 Afternoon

Student guide to Financial support

Senior Research Fellow, Intelligent Mobility Design Centre

5.7 Course Descriptions

Archdiocese of Birmingham

Like much of the country, Detroit suffered significant job losses during the Great Recession.

OCR Teaching in the Lifelong Learning Sector Qualification Units

EXECUTIVE MASTER ONLINE MASTER S IN INNOVATION AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP

Marketing Management MBA 706 Mondays 2:00-4:50

Treloar College Course Information

UK Residential Summer Camps English Summer School London Day Camps 3-17 year olds. The summer of your life...

White Paper. The Art of Learning

Managerial Decision Making

SEN SUPPORT ACTION PLAN Page 1 of 13 Read Schools to include all settings where appropriate.

Whole School Literacy Policy 2017/18

Business. Pearson BTEC Level 1 Introductory in. Specification

First Line Manager Development. Facilitated Blended Accredited

The Waldegrave Trust Waldegrave School, Fifth Cross Road, Twickenham, TW2 5LH TEL: , FAX:

Accounting & Financial Management

Films for ESOL training. Section 2 - Language Experience

SELECCIÓN DE CURSOS CAMPUS CIUDAD DE MÉXICO. Instructions for Course Selection

Head of Music Job Description. TLR 2c

PUPIL PREMIUM REVIEW

University of Plymouth. Community Engagement Strategy

Programme Specification

How to organise Quality Events

Corporate learning: Blurring boundaries and breaking barriers

CPS122 Lecture: Identifying Responsibilities; CRC Cards. 1. To show how to use CRC cards to identify objects and find responsibilities

BSc Food Marketing and Business Economics with Industrial Training For students entering Part 1 in 2015/6

The Consistent Positive Direction Pinnacle Certification Course

Transcription:

Secondary Schools A complete approach to transforming students enterprise skills

Introduction Hello! As a team of teachers, we set up Enabling Enterprise to help our students become rounded and successful. We wanted to do more to build our students enterprise skills, their understanding of the world of work and high aspirations. We focus particularly on eight core skills that are the essentials: Teamwork & Leadership; Listening & Presenting; Aiming High & Staying Positive; Problem- Solving & Creativity. We start by understanding where your students strengths and weaknesses currently lie, and then train teachers on how to teach these skills effectively. Building on this foundation, Enabling Enterprise builds high levels of competence in these skills through innovative programmes of lesson-time projects, challenge days and trips to visit top businesses. With Enabling Enterprise, your students could be carrying out a debate in English with a top law firm, designing a new brand of chocolate in mathematics, or seeing ICT in action by working with IBM. It s been exciting to see the impact of our work on over last seven years, and the growing number of students we ve supported over 80,000 this year already - and hope this booklet inspires you to get involved too. Tom and the Enabling Enterprise Team info@enablingenterprise.org www.enablingenterprise.org Page 2

Why we Exist We work to ensure that all students develop the eight key enterprise skills and attributes they need for future success: Page 3

How we Work We work in partnership with over one hundred top businesses and other employers including: Professional & Business Services Construction & Manufacture Creative Industries Retail & Logistics And many others Page 4

Our Programmes There are two parts to our secondary school programmes: Foundations Skills assessment A complete skills assessment using our rigorous framework to support students development. This enables a more finely tuned approach to focus on where the students need the most support. Staff training We run CPD sessions in school for all teachers on developing the 8 core enterprise skills. We help teachers to run or design successful enterprise and work-related projects. Putting it into Action Lesson time projects A wide selection of lesson-time projects, designed in 10 session blocks. Each project builds on the students enterprise skills, whilst also linking to learning across other parts of the curriculum. Challenge days Exciting and engaging days run in school, coordinated by EE staff. Challenge days cover a range of optional topics, including introductions to politics, business or the world of work. Business trips Designed to draw out the links between the lesson-time projects and the real world, hosted by a business partner. Includes meeting employees and an engaging game or simulation. Page 5

Year 7 Year 13 Foundations Part 1: Skills Assessment We use a skills levelling framework so we can quantifiably see progress over time, rather than just relying on students confidence. Year 13: Best Year 13: Better Year 13: Target Year 13: Below Target. Year 7: Best Year 7: Better Year 7: Target Year 7: Below Target Example: Working in a Team 7 13 By the end of Year 7 Below target: I help my team make decisions and I am happy to support others ideas. Target: I recognise the value of others ideas and try to add extra ideas too. Better: I am helpful to others in their tasks and include all team mates in discussions. Best: I can spot when I might be getting into an argument and take steps to avoid it. By the end of Year 13 Below target: I reflect on the team s progress and make suggestions for improvements. Target: I can reflect and evaluate on the team s approaches to tasks and carefully influence to get better results. Better: I m aware of the team leader s strengths and weaknesses and actively support them when they need me. Best: I understand the skills of other team members and adapt my approach to them.

The Impact Over a year working with Enabling Enterprise, 96% of teachers see a change in their students skills that they attribute to the programme. The results of the students skills assessment are further evidence that this gap can be closed: The skills gap can shrink After a year of Enabling Enterprise, Below 39% the youngest students close their skills gap and move ahead of expectations making it easier to stay on track in the future. The older students meaningfully narrow the gap. On 32% Above 29% 8 6 4 2 0 Start of Year 6 Without EE 96% Of EE teachers See tangible improvements in their students enterprise skills With EE This year, our Year 6 students saw their skills gap close by 50% after one year on the programme. Our students accelerate Students on Enabling Enterprise programmes consistently make more than their target 1.0 level of progress per year. The average student made Below 34% 1.13 levels of progress last year, and established school programmes made 1.20 levels of progress each year. Through EE 3.5 months extra progress Above target progress 1.09 1.10 1.10 1.11 1.13 1.14 1.16 1.17 On 45%

Foundation Part 2: Staff Training Our team of outstanding qualified teachers help your teachers to build their confidence in teaching enterprise and supporting their students progress. Core support includes: Initial teacher training: Introducing effective enterprise education and the EE Programmes. Embedding the skills: Exploring your students skills, with practical application for how to develop them in the classroom Learning walks: Supporting teachers delivering programmes in the classroom, providing specific feedback and ideas. Building on the skills: Reflecting with teachers to analyse the progress their students have made and future development. Wider support includes: Modelling and feedback: Modelling programme delivery, to get the most out of EE resources, with an opportunity to reflect. Curriculum planning: Supporting teachers to plan their projects effectively to specific school curriculums. Skill focus: Maximising progression in a particular Challenge Skill (e.g. staying positive or leading). Page 9

Putting it into Action Part 1: Lesson-Time Projects EE lesson-time projects bring your students learning to life. Each project is supported by a leading business. They give your students a chance to develop and apply new enterprise skills, while widening their understanding of the world of work: Three examples from our 60+ projects: Maths: Racing Machines Vehicle Manufacture (6 sessions) Students use their skills in shape and space to design new vehicles. They then experiment with them, producing reports that analyse the data on their performance. Year 10 English: Legal Eagles Law (6 sessions) Students take on the role of lawyers in a trial, planning and performing persuasive speeches. By the end of the project, the students understand the legal world, and the power of words. Year 12 Business & Careers: Dreams to Reality Enterprise (12 sessions) Students plan, develop and implement their own businesses. The project provides excellent opportunities for students to develop and demonstrate core transferable skills, which can give a boost to their CVs and UCAS applications. Page 11

Putting it into Action Part 2: Challenge Days Our Challenge Days provide an exciting and engaging way for students across a class, a year group or even the whole school to work together and use their enterprise skills. The challenges include everything you need to make the day a success, with videos to launch each section, as well as support from EE on the day. They are also linked to curriculum outcomes. Some of the Challenge Day options: Focus Focus: Reflecting on their own skills and the careers they are interested in pursuing. Commit to Confidence: Students experience simulated professional scenarios to develop their confidence in applying their skills after school. Moon Base: Students explore the world of work by having to create a new community on the moon from scratch. Invest it Best: Students work in teams as trading desks, choosing and competing to achieve the most prudent investment. Business in a Day: Students work in teams to set up and run a their own small company, including production and marketing. Chocolate Challenge: Students set up a new chocolate brand using market research, financial modelling and 3D design. Social Entrepreneur: Students identify a need or challenge in their school or community, and develop ideas to solve them. Law in Action: Students turn around a failing legal firm by bidding for cases and exploring how the law and morals interact. A Day in Politics: Students learn about democracy and politics through games, including setting up their own political parties. Page 13

Putting it into Action Part 3: Trips to Businesses Our business trips help students to make the link between the enterprise skills they are developing in the classroom and how they are used in the working world. The trips include the chance to work with volunteers from the business, as well as taking part in a game to give a flavour of the industry. We run trips to over 80 businesses and employers. Some examples are: Société Générale International Business Students visiting the offices of French investment bank Société Générale are quickly immersed in the world of international business. Meeting a variety of volunteers from across the world, a trading game explores how the global economy functions. Birmingham Airport Transport Students learn about Birmingham Airport and the huge range of different roles that people have at an airport. They apply their learning by designing new branding for one of the airlines they meet. London Business School Careers in Business Students visiting London Business School are spoilt with the range of business professionals that they are able to talk to. The day gives students the chance to explore different industries, from advertising to engineering, before working with MBA students to create career maps. Page 15

Get Involved We are now able to work with schools across England from our bases in Birmingham, London and Manchester. We have a full range of partnership packages available according to the priorities of your school. To set up a phone call or meeting, please don t hesitate to email us at info@enablingenterprise.org Alternatively, find the right contact for your region at: www.enablingenterprise.org/contact Page 17

Enabling Enterprise have worked in partnership with Heartlands Academy for the past 3 years. It is evident that our students have grown in confidence and are developing the skills and knowledge to seek information about their future choices. Students are aware of routes into employment and the skills and character attributes required to be employable. As well as student achievement, our continuing engagement with Enabling Enterprise not only supports and benefits our students, but our academy as well, contributing to our Outstanding Ofsted rating. - Community Director, Heartlands Academy

Enabling Enterprise is a not-for-profit partnership of schools and businesses transforming students enterprise skills, experiences of the working world and aspirations. Contact us: info@enablingenterprise.org London Birmingham Manchester www.enablingenterprise.org Enabling Enterprise all rights reserved