Tuesday, 21 June 2016

OSCPPA Strategic Visioning Day; Facing the Future Together

It is my privilege to plan and lead this visioning day in Cromwell as my last official duty for the Otago Southland Catholic Primary Principal Association (OSCPPA) before I leave for Melbourne.

In order to ensure that the strategic visioning day is as constructive as possible for participants from the OSCPPA, all participants are asked to prepare in advance. This is similar to a flipped learning experience that some of us use for our staff meetings and in our classrooms to ensure we are time efficient and purposeful.

Here is a link to the existing constitution OSCPPA Constitution. Please read through this for your own information. Thanks Michelle for sourcing this from past president Alan Watts.


Please read through the NZCPPA visioning experience at this link. This will help you understand how this inclusive process works. Recognition is made to Mary Wilson and Teresa Edwards whose resources I have used to plan and prepare for the day. Special thanks to Paul Richardson who helped to prepare the original draft outline and probe questions. Thanks to all OSCPPA principals who have a growth mindset and are committed to the Catholic education and the important role our schools play in carrying out the mission of the Church.

Outline of the Day

8:30 Venue open, hot drinks available.

9:00 Welcome and prayer

9:15 Clarification around process and key probes (adapted from objectives of OSCPPA and those shared with you at the Bishop's Forum). Keep in mind anything you see as important and ensure you bring this out in your responses.

  1. How can we work cooperatively to market, grow and ensure the continuing prominence of the Special Catholic Character of our Catholic schools ?
  2. In what ways can we nurture our links to the Diocesan office (our relationship with the Proprietor, the Catholic Education Office) beyond the Diocesan events and forums ?
  3. What are the most effective ways to promote and support Catholic professional development for principals and their schools according to needs from within the group eg. personal and spiritual well being ?
  4. How can we enable members to have equity of representation from across our Diocese on appropriate bodies and organizations, including those at local and national level ?

9:30 Divide into four balanced groups (mixed gender and mixed regions) for the Classic Brainstorming and 10/4 voting process with 20 minute sessions for each of the four probes. 


 9:40 Round 1 

10:00 Round 2

10:20 Round 3

10:40 Round 4

11:00 Coffee Break 
During this time, top two responses from each group are collated onto a master page and copy made for everyone is made. This will mean eight responses per probe.

11:30
Individually review the responses and make 10 private votes.
These are then used to collate the draft vision and goals during the lunch break.
12:00
Lunchtime
Draft vision and action plan collated. Come up with about 6 important goals and spaces for actions and next steps.


12:45-2:30
Review and include actions, timelines and plan an agreed way forward for OSCPPA


2:30
AGM Meeting based on Article 6 OSCPPA constitution

3:00 Conclusion














Sunday, 19 June 2016

Be proactive and nip things "in the bud"

Here is a copy of a post from the Staff as Activator section of this blog from last June. It is worth revisiting it at this time of the year when the end of term is looming and our staff find themselves caught up completing assessments and reports, preparing for interviews and in our case a school production. I have adapted this post.
image credit to all-father4.rssing.com
We have just finished the seventh week of a ten week term. Staff are busy completing assessments for mid year reports as well as continuing their normal teaching and learning commitments. Winter is upon us with student and staff absence increasing due to sniffles, coughs and splutters. This is the exact time when 'little' niggling behaviours across the school can sometimes begin to escalate. The very time when staff and families need to be proactive and nip everything "in the bud".
Learn more about this saying at https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/nip_in_the_bud

Isn't it easier just to count down to the end of term and hope it all 
goes away in the holidays ? NO. 

Let's be proactive and nip things in the bud. So....what can we do ?

This is the perfect time to revisit our school values and behavioural guidelines
with all learners and families.


It is a chance to meet with learners and parents about real time concerns
that might need more time than just the end of term parent meetings.

Be explicit and work towards solutions collaboratively.

These are our school values and guidelines:



    3 key ways to be proactive and nip things "in the bud":

    1. Be transparent. Share links to this information in the weekly emails to
    parents and on the school news blog. Ask parents to have conversations
    with their children around the guidelines.

    2. Ask staff to link certificates and awards to school values and guidelines.

    3. Capture photos of the values in action and create videos with
    student leadership groups to reinforce these messages.

    It's important to understand that these behaviours arise naturally
    towards the end of a term at all schools. They can be positively actioned
    when we focus on building quality learning relationships as a whole
    school community together.


    Be proactive and nip things "in the bud".
    What are you doing at your school to ensure a stress free and 
    successful end to the term for all ?