Welcome to the ATP Training Day. ATP Training programme 9.40 – 9.45 Welcome and IntroductionAntonia Coppen 9.45 – 09.50 ATP programme detailsFiona Peacock.

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Presentation transcript:

Welcome to the ATP Training Day

ATP Training programme 9.40 – 9.45 Welcome and IntroductionAntonia Coppen 9.45 – ATP programme detailsFiona Peacock 09:50 – Going into SchoolJocelyn Sumner :10BREAK – Widening ParticipationEmma Stephenson :00LUNCH CRB Paperwork – Enterprise Activity trainingAntonia Coppen – BREAK – Enterprise Activity trainingAntonia Coppen

General ATP enquiries/placement details: Fiona Peacock, ATP Marketing and Administration Intern (Monday, Wednesday, Friday afternoon) School issues whilst on placement: Rachel Ware, Secondary Partnerships Coordinator ATP Contacts

Enterprise Activity Training

By the end of the training you will be able to: 1.The Enterprise Activity Explain the activity to others Feel confident to plan, deliver and facilitate the activity to pupils successfully 2.Enterprise and Sustainability Explain the meaning of the terms Discuss why enterprise education is important and how it can be delivered in the national curriculum 3.Learning Outcomes Identify the importance of learning outcomes Devise a set of learning outcomes for the activity Aims and Learning Outcomes

4. Activity Planning and Facilitation Describe the difference between presentation and facilitation Devise a plan/schedule for the activity Explain the resources provided and identify resourcing gaps Identify problems and develop a contingency plans 5. Evaluation Explain the importance of evaluation Develop evaluation methods and materials for - Facilitator evaluation of the pupils work - Pupil self evaluation and reflection Aims and Learning Outcomes

Interactive scenario activity to encourage pupils to use, develop and evaluate their enterprise skills Delivered in a team (number per team dependent number students allocated per school) Delivered once during the 5 day placement The session will last for approx 3 hours in total (dependent on time allocated by the school) Number of pupils undertaking the activity dependent upon each school Resources for the activity will be provided by: - University of Exeter - By the school (requires confirmation by YOU) - YOU The Enterprise Activity

1. Style of teaching that enhances pupils’engagement with lessons and can improve their classroom behaviour and performance. “ It is a teaching strategy which motivates learners and can help raise aspirations and develop valuable skills for further education, employment and life in general. Learners enjoy being given autonomy to tackle problems, take responsibility for their own actions, engage In real issues and evaluate the outcomes of their decisions. It is about helping the pupils develop enterprise capability, financial capability and economic and business understanding.” Enterprise Coordinator, North East, Business & Enterprise Status The Enterprise Activity Why is enterprise education important?

2. Lack of experience in Schools “The survey of more than 1,000 primary and secondary school teachers found that while 90% agreed that entrepreneurship should form part of the national curriculum only 30% said they knew how to teach it.” Report commissioned by Rod Aldridge, Capita founder 3. Employers want it: “Sage, Tata Steel, Citi Group and RBS-owned Natwest are among around 80 organisations who are calling for employability and entrepreneurship education to be placed within the statutory curriculum in UK schools.” Employers call for 'enterprise curriculum’, Telegraph, 22 March Gap in skilled workforce “Britain has 37,000 engineering vacancies but produces just 22,000 engineering graduates each year.” Sir James Dyson, vacuum cleaner entrepreneur The Enterprise Activity

In groups: Prepare a two minute presentation to explain one of the following terms as though you were discussing them with class of year 9 pupils (13 – 14 year olds). 1.Enterprise 2.Sustainability Think about how you can make it relevant to them! The Enterprise Activity

The Scenario Aspirational Teachers present themselves as a ‘house building developer’ based in the South West that wants to commission a new design for an ‘eco house’ to market for sale to the general public. The maximum budget for the house is £200,000. Pupils will work in teams as an ‘environmental building consultancy’ to research, plan and design an ‘eco house’ to present to the ‘house building developer’. The Enterprise Activity

Pupils will work in teams (maximum 8) to produce the following outputs: 1.Design a ‘mood board’ 2.Produce a Blueprint/floor plan (to scale) for their house 3.Devise a simple building budget/costings for the materials and equipment used in their design 4.Pitch/present their design to the ‘house building developer to justify why their proposal should be chosen. Followed by a Q&A session The Enterprise Activity Mood board examples

Pupils will address some of the following issues in the activity: What is an ‘eco house’? What will they need to consider in its construction and design? How will sustainability and energy efficiency be maximised? What energy savings will be made compared to current house design? Who is the design of the house aimed at? Who would want to buy it and how will they make it attractive to that market? How will they ensure the design stays within budget? What ideas for future innovations could be developed? The Enterprise Activity

What is meant by the term learning outcome? Why are they useful? Learning outcomes Learning outcomes are statements of what a learner is expected to know, understand and/or do as a result of a learning experience. They can: - help guide students in their learning by explaining what is expected of them which in turn helping them to succeed in their studies. - help teachers to focus on exactly what they want students to achieve in terms of both knowledge and skills.

Enterprise education consists of: Enterprise capability supported by financial capability and economic and business understanding Three strands of enterprise education: 1.Enterprise knowledge and understanding 2.Enterprise skills 3.Enterprise attributes Learning outcomes In groups: Devise a set of learning outcomes for the enterprise activity.

What is the difference between presentation and facilitation? In groups: Decide which statement on the handout provided belongs to Presentation or Facilitation Activity Planning and Facilitation

Definition of a Facilitator A facilitator is someone who helps a group of people understand their common objectives and assists them to plan to achieve them without taking a particular position in the discussion. Activity Planning and Facilitation What qualities, skills and actions makes a good presenter and facilitator?

Activity Planning and Facilitation In groups: 1. Read and discuss the activity structure in your handbook – pages 2.Devise a plan to deliver to the activity to 30 pupils, Year 9, Key stage 3 (13-14years). On this occasion the school has provided laptops. - Draw-up timetable. How long will each section take? - Who will deliver what? - Review the resources provided. What additional resources will be needed e.g. mood boards? -identify potential problems and develop contingency plans 3. Review and evaluate another group’s plan

Evaluation In groups: 1. Decide how you would choose the winner of the Eco House. What criteria would you use? What skills would you want to credit? 2. Review the Pupils project evaluation form. Devise an additional form for the Pupils to reflect on their personal performance and enterprise skills development. Why is evaluation important?

QUESTIONS?