
The Adventurous School: Vision, community and curriculum for primary education in the twenty-first century
Author(s): Jane Reed (Author), Kathy Maskell (Author), David Allinson (Author), Rosemary Bailey (Author), Fernanda Bates (Author), Sian Davies (Author), Catherine Gallimore (Author)
- Publisher: Institute of Education
- Publication Date: 25 May 2012
- Language: English
- Print length: 220 pages
- ISBN-10: 0854739165
- ISBN-13: 9780854739165
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
This is a remarkable book containing significant messages for anyone engaged in school improvement … which is to say everyone involved in schooling. Recent school improvement initiatives have been very much politically led. The system has been re- structured, the workforce retrained, the curriculum re-engineered and so on and on. The driving metaphor for these interventions has been that of education as a production line. Politicians know all the answers and the profession must be got up to scratch under the lash of Ofsted. The authors of The Adventurous School are deeply committed to school improvement but they do not like the production line metaphor. They do not believe anyone knows all the answers or indeed all the questions. They are acutely alert to the dangers of being captured by driving metaphors and have gone to a lot of trouble to choose their own. They chose schooling as ‘adventure’ it being an exciting but risky enterprise. Most of the authors hold senior positions in primary schools each in its challenging context. They tell the story of how the metaphor of adventure shaped how the formed their school visions, how it informed and fructified their working relationships with their local communities and how it inspired them to re-create their curriculum. For each school the adventure has been hugely successful in terms of the experiences and achievements of the pupils and of community engagement. Their argument that their adventure metaphor liberated forces of creativity that a production line metaphor could not even imagine is very persuasive. At the heart of their metaphor of course is the issue of risk. No risk means no adventure. The metaphor calls for bravery as well as creativity. How is risk to be appraised and managed; how can teachers or indeed schools help each other to be courageous and creative; how can communities and pupils be maximally engaged in the adventure whilst at the same time securing all the achievements desired by the most demanding of parents? The authors face all these questions. They share their vision, they philosophize quite a lot but they also tell a very practical story warts and all. If you like an adventure story this is a good read. If you like the adventure metaphor this is a good guide. — Emeritus Professor Charles Desforges OBE ―
University of Exeter Published On: 2012-05-08In a time of educational uncertainty, how refreshing it is to read a book that celebrates the work of three visionary schools who have shown the courage to set their learning in the context of their children, their community and our collective future. The book gives a clear direction for schools to take if we want the well-being of our children, the engagement of our communities and the sustainability of our wider world to be at the heart of what we teach and how our children learn. Read it, enjoy the stories and let’s see how many of us can apply more of this type of real life learning to our own school practices. — Richard Dunne ―
Headteacher, Ashley CofE Primary School Published On: 2012-05-08As a society we are starting to realise we live on the edge of the unexpected; facing challenges such as economic instability, social inequality and stresses due to a changing climate; this book offers us a refreshing angle on how those working in education and schools may innovate their own (successful) path into an uncertain future. It seeks to understand how we might transform our education system through the inspiring and engaging active inquiries of three schools. The insights into learning and leadership lay a strong and necessary foundation for those who wish to become a sustainable school. If more schools went on their own adventures of learning we might just create a better world and prepare pupils for any future that lies ahead of them. A must-read for anyone in education seeking to carve their own pathway into an uncertain future. — Anna Birney ―
Forum for the Future Published On: 2012-05-08
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