Monday, August 23, 2010

NSP Projects/Before - After

When I first got to what then was Keilor Downs Primary School, there was certainly a need for grounds and building developments. With the support and commitment of school council and the physical environment committee, share our success with the following before and after snaps... :-) Enjoy.

Before - Over $100K spent on toilets

After
Before
After - works included new floors, basins, plumbing, cubicles, paint, electrics and ventilation

The drought was taking its toll on our grounds, local fund raising has been instrumental in the development of areas across the school that were 'high traffic' and required a practical solution.
After
Before
After

Branding

This is the new branding, incorporating the logo, motto and all the design elements.



This is the final design that was chosen, it will appear on our uniform and in various forms on our stationary and signage.

New School Design

The design of the school is in four stages, stage one is the BER template design. This consists of six general purpose classes and a library. (see below)

Purposeful Spaces

The design of the school will include 'purposeful learning spaces' that are conducive to educational 'flow'. Educational spaces are often categorised as 'open plan', 'open spaces' or 'flexible learning spaces', more recently I have heard the term 'marquey' spaces. 

I prefer the term purposeful spaces as the name simply describes the space in terms of its purpose for any one learning need or period of time. By this I mean operable doors between larger spaces can be opened, closed or at some point in between to support the facilitation of collaborative or individual learning activities. The building,  in turn can be manipulated to provide a space for the sole purpose of an activity that requires different acoustics, feel, confidentiality or less distraction.

As important as differentiating the learning needs for our students we must differentiate the design and purpose of building the schools of the future,  which brings me to 'flow'.

Our goal in design is to have students use all available resources to support learning. 'Flow' in learning is about accessibility to technology, design, communication tools, multimedia, print materials and resources that support learning in an 'in time' environment.

Mass storage of computers and technologies in labs, books in libraries and maths equipment in cupboards promotes less opportunity for students to determine what they will need to solve a problem.

With resources in shared purposeful spaces, students will 'flow' between technology, print, collaborative spaces, design spaces, production spaces and determine the use of resources in a timely manner for their needs.  
An  anecdote that had a profound effect on my thinking was to liken  the use of computer labs and technologies to housing all the dictionaries in the school in one room and allowing student  access to them for only one hour a week.

There are many statistics that suggest that we are preparing our children for a world that will not exist, the following are some adaptations from 'The Future Child'. Written by Headly Beare.
Based on Angelica an 8 year old girl….who is the future.

Wherever she chooses to live or work it will certainly be


Multicultural,

Multinational

and multi-faith. 
 
Self programming and artificially intelligent computers will shoulder many of the tasks now being done by humans.

The really prosperous nations in her world will have small populations and few physical resources.


The commodities they trade will be…….

non-material

technical skills

brain power

and know how.

Her richest friends will work with problem solving skills, problem identifying skills and in strategic brokerage.

Her potential employers will insist on :-


Well-developed Interpersonal and co-operative skills

A high level of self-motivation and personal intelligence

Flexibility, adaptability and creativity

And…….

Deeper levels of thinking and problem solving


Resourcefulness and Initiative

Well developed Literacy and Numeracy skills

Community and global awareness

and Technological capabilities

Our challenge is before us...in the 1940's, pioneering Italian teacher and psychologist Loris Malaguzzi founded the Reggio Emilia approach to learning on the premise that children develop through interactions, first with the adults in their lives - parents and teachers- then with their peers, and ultimately with the environment around them. Environment said Malaguzzi, is the third teacher.