Day 4
Action planning! Our post it notes from the previous evening had been arranged into order so that we could create our way forward- which were:
Action now - immediate needs
Teacher capacity buildIng invest in teachers so they can empower students
Empowering students giving students the knowledge, understanding and skills to shape their own future
Capacity building - local grow momentum, commitment locally
Capacity building - global big picture projects we can do together
Global networking and support sharing expertise as a whole
Partnerships and actions at a higher level engaging with people organisations who can make a difference
Policy/political working locally and nationally to create and implement laws/policies
Each grouping was taken by a set of interested members, who started to tease out actual activities and a plan for the next 12 months and what we need to do in the next 90 days. The difficulty clearly, was that although many of us represent an association (such as me representing GSA), very few of the members had any power, other than awareness raising and in our own schools. ICP which represents Principals across the globe is an association also, which has little in the way of monetary resources. Clearly there is no quick fix, but the willingness to make the small changes and raise awareness across the world should create a momentum. ICP is planning its next conference in Cairns, Australia in 2013 and the next stages of the process will be taken up there, but it was clear that some key partners should be invited so that some strong partnerships are formed. It was suggested that ICP needed a communications officer on the executive, to be able to create and maintain a website which acts as both a resource and networking vehicle.
Some other good ideas discussed included:
- a mission statement from the conference
- a strap line and logo about gender equity (such as Free Trade endorsing products)
- collating the research that is already available
- promotion in the media (using contacts such as Oprah Winfrey, Michelle O'Bama, Hilary Clinton) with reference to creating a press release for each of us to use on a local level.
- staff professional development through linking schools together
- role of the media in dictating gender models, local radio and community papers
We also had a resource poster, where everyone could write down websites or books which they thought would be of benefit to the rest of the group with regards to gender equity. It was good to know that in GSA we have an excellent grasp of what is available and we felt we added a good number of resources to the collective group.
We finally said goodbye to each other; we had swapped email addresses, made a promise to not forget what we had learnt and to promised to ensure our action plans were fulfilled.
A worthwhile experience for all involved: very humbling and a salutary lesson in commitment across the globe.
ICP Conference South Africa 2012
Monday, 3 September 2012
Day 3
Day 3
The first session on this wonderful winter South African day (clear blue sky, gentle warm breeze, dry air) involved doing a brain plotting exercise. Although many leaders will have done similar things in the past, the exercise was done with good humour and gusto. The room of leaders had a variety of the four main types: people who nominally work with facts, feelings, form (structure) or the future. (guess which one I am?) The following exercise, taking our overnight task of predicting what the future should look like, in our mixed brain types enabled a creative, collaborative picture of the future for different people in the world ( a young girl, a teenage boy, a young mother, a primary teacher, a school principal, etc) which was optimistic and compelling.
Each group were asked to envision the future as a story and then depict the story in a motif. After listening to another real life story (from the male perspective) we took aspects of our different stories to see how we can create the road map to make them real. This was facilitated by suggesting actions in three categories for both our schools and associations. The categories are:
Identifying immediate actions
Building momentum system change
Creating a compelling sustainable future
Immediate actions were very easy to fulfil; each person's position and place in their world dictated the calibre of the responses. This first section was 'be the action', and what we as individuals could do.
The last section was the hardest, but this was the aim of the ICP conference in reality.
(As well as this arrangements were being made for leaving!!) We were encouraged in this to be visionary, exciting and challenge ourselves to be brave. A room full of post-it notes were left on the wall for the leading team to try to structure before our return in the morning.
The evening ended with a formal dinner and a presentation by some of the returning OWLA girls. Highly professional and entertaining; it was lovely to talk to the girls at the end of the evening.
Regards
Tuesday, 14 August 2012
Day two
This
morning, following a sumptuous breakfast of fruit and porridge, the day feels
like a beautiful spring day in the UK. Clear blue sky and a frost on the
ground!
We
returned to our groups to be questioned about our own worlds, what inspires us,
where we are frustrated, what would we want to change. The responses were
collated and reflected upon, and we recognised the themes and beliefs which
keep us together and make us stronger in our collective work.
A life
story from a successful young black women challenged our western perceptions of
gender equity and the necessity not to forget the culture of the young people
we are educating. We then listened to another presentation from the CEO of the
company 'The future of the African daughter'. She ended her very
thought-provoking insight into the difficulties of addressing the third
Millennium Goal, by challenging the school leaders to:
- Foster
interest in stem subjects
- Create
a utopia in our schools of equity
- Fight
for girls' rights and privileges
- Protect
the girls in our care and give them a safe place to learn
- Create
an environment of support
This ties
in very much with the GSA charter for girls' education that we are trying to
develop in the UK. She ended with stating a quote from the New York Times: the
best resources of the world are not the oil, coal and water, but the uneducated
women and children of the world.
Our final
session of the day, we had stories of success from around the world and we were
asked to see if we could transfer some of the good ideas into our own schools,
before being set our overnight task of stating what we would see as success in
10years time.
At the
end of the day, one of our group demonstrated and taught her world famous
circus skills of whip-cracking!!
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