Title: Creativity, Challenge and Change
1Creativity, Challenge and Change Judy Durrant
with Peter Thompson INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF
SCHOOL EFFECTIVENESS AND IMPROVEMENT Vancouver,
BC, Canada, 4-7 January 2009
2Creative Partnerships a flagship initative
- initiated and managed by Arts Council England
- developing young peoples skills, raising
aspirations and achievements, opening
opportunities for the future - Creative Professionals work alongside teachers
- school-based projects for creative learning and
school improvement
3(No Transcript)
4Evaluating impact
- Contradiction in terms to try to evaluate
Creative Partnerships by the same standards and
criteria as the national programmes and
standards-based approaches it aims to challenge - (Sefton-Green, 2007)
5How can we measure or prove
inspiration
engagement
motivation
creative potential
6Creative Partnerships legacy might be
generating enough accounts of practice which
describe meaningful models of change
7Creative commentaries
- Independent researchers exploring 5 themes in
Hastings and East Sussex (23 schools) - Every Child Matters
- Learning Environments
- Partnerships
- Language Development
- Pupil Voice
- Commentary not evaluation a weaving of
evidence...
8 Discussion, collaboration and reflexivity
amongst the research team led to powerful
shared understandings and questions...
9Challenging our assumptions
- Re-conceiving outcomes what do we
measure? - Re-conceiving boundaries challenging
practice and interpretation - Re-conceiving time-scales for
long-term improvement - Re-conceiving partnerships valuing
dissonance and conflict
10long-term development cannot be evaluated yet
OUTSIDE THE BOX
conflict and dissonance are part of the creative
process
INSIDE THE BOX outcomes measured according to
prescribed criteria, pre-conceived ideas and
aims to do with raising standards
softer, less measurable outcomes with less
apparent validity
unexpected outcomes
11(No Transcript)
12If we only use evaluative frameworks that are
inside the box, we miss much of what is good and
limit our perceptions of improvement.
- If we plan and implement change inside the box,
we limit learning, stifle intervention and
creativity and put a lid on change
13What are the implications - for teachers and
principals, researchers and policymakers?