GOOD PRACTICE: Sharing Good Practice from the 2022 National Awards for Pastoral Care in Education
Sharing Good Practice from the 2022 National Awards for Pastoral Care in Education
The judges were very impressed with the excellent practice in pastoral care and brilliant support that is being provided for learners that was highlighted in the nominations for the 2022 Awards.
In this edition of NAPCE News we are sharing some more of the good practice that was highlighted, this time, in the Pastoral Development of the Year Award at the 2022 event.
The criteria for this category is “A pastoral initiative or idea that has achieved positive outcomes and has improved the learning experience and future life chances, for young people.”
The 2022 Award Winner was:-
Emma McCarron, St Patricks College, Dungannon
The 2022 Finalists were:-
Meridian High School Summit Team
St Louis Grammar School, Ballymena
Russell Friese, Bassett House School
Michael Fitzsimons, Trinity Sixth Form Academy
Pastoral Development of the Year Award 2023
Emma McCarron, St Patricks College, Dungannon
Emma introduced our Mental Health & Well Being P16 leadership Team initiative in 2019. This team comprises of Year 13 & 14 students who work together with staff, parents and external agencies and local community partners to raise awareness, challenge stigma and campaign for change for all our students. Emma and her team present at whole school and year group assemblies, they facilitate intervention programmes such as the buddy team, they organise workshops from youth clubs and social trust services, they liaise with staff for mapping Mental Health across our subjects and ensuring it is included in schemes of work and resources, they build noticeboards signposting relevant supports and services for both students and staff alike. They organise and encourage visits by external groups to promote Mental Health & Well Being and challenge stigma of the same as well as well as sourcing Mental Health First Aid training for staff. The team lead a hugely successful annual Mental Health & Well Being week which is sponsored by community groups. This year the theme was ‘Express yourself’. The purpose of the week is to run activities and workshops which encourage students (and staff) to take part in activities that help both their mental and physical health and wellbeing. We managed to run a vast number of activities to introduce students to things they may never have taken part in before, including Yoga, Cheerleading, Art therapy, Mindfulness, Mediation, Dodgeball, Baking, Dance, Board games, Drama, Animal Balloon making, Movie sessions, Rounder’s, football, a Make-up tutorial – to only name a few – we worked hard to capture the interests of as many students as possible. Everyone becomes involved and this is down to the staff and students who gladly volunteer their time. It has now become a highlight of the school calendar.
Meridian High School Summit team, Meridian High School
The Summit team have set up a phenomenal provision in the school which supports the social, emotional, and mental health of every young student in their care. The summit provision is expertly lead by Jayne Curd and Gary Newton the senior leaders responsible for pastoral, behaviour, and attitudes. During Covid the pastoral team have made a vision become a reality where a team of non-teaching pastoral welfare leaders, learning mentors, Thrive practitioners and child wellbeing practitioners work together to meet the needs of the students so that learning can become their focus and ultimately keys to their future successes. Jayne and her team have set up SEMH workshops that focus on the issues that our relevant to their context. This includes social skills, ready to learn, self-confidence, Thrive, zones for regulation, emotional well-being, ‘lives not knives’. The team lead weekly Thrive sessions with staff to support teachers and LSAs with key strategies to enable the student to access and thrive in learning. This has now also started with our prospective year 5 and 6 students where the team have been leading sessions for parents and children who are vulnerable and need more support. During the pandemic the team made over 5000 calls and home visits to our students and families and provided them with laptops to access learning as well as food parcels for those in need. The team not only offer support to students but also support parents. Our demographic is challenging but is our driver as Jayne and her team embody the mantra that positive educational outcomes will increase the life chances for the young people and community that we serve and where ever they can they make it possible for students to be successful.
St. Louis Grammar School Ballymena,
Anti-Bullying initiative
The newly appointed Head Girls/Boys introduced a new role within the prefect team called ‘Anti Bullying Prefects.’ They chose two Head prefects who they knew would have empathy, be great listeners and role models for kind behaviour. We asked the Year 14 student body to decide if they would like to become part of this team so that we would have enthusiastic and passionate pupils leading the initiative. Aligned with this we enlisted Year 8-13 pupils and merged them with the team to take part in Anti–Bullying Training provided by The Diana Award Organisation and as a result we had a fully trained second group of Anti-Bullying Ambassadors (one girl and boy from each year group). The groups have worked hard to achieve their Online Safety Badge and Student Wellbeing Badges awarded by the Diana Award. The pupils have a dedicated safe space for students to report bullying behaviours to their peers. This is in response to research by Ofsted which reports that young people are more likely to share concerns with their peers than with adults. They produced a rota so that a male and female ambassador is present at break time in the new creative Arts building.
Anti-Bullying Presentation.
We choose to educate the school on bullying behaviours and why it is not kind or right to bully anyone. The Anti-Bullying Ambassadors put across information such as, photos of Anti Bullying Prefects and who they are, where the safe space is and to highlight ‘One Kind Word’ for Anti Bullying week. The presentation was shown to every single pupil and staff member on Monday 15th November at 10.30am.
Poster Campaign
Anti-Bullying Ambassadors created posters and used resources from Anti-Bullying websites to highlight that bullying behaviours are wrong.
Russell Friese, Bassett House School
Alongside their current extensive pastoral program, the school has introduced a new individual pastoral care initiative that delivers a threefold support system to ensure no pupil is left behind and that every child receives the personalised pastoral support they need. To achieve these goals the school has introduced the following:
1. Each child receives a personalised pastoral plan as soon as they join the school whether that is in EYFS or as an in-year admission. In this plan the children record their wishes, feelings and personal targets and discuss these with their Form Teacher and the Pastoral Lead to ensure the correct support is given.
2. A pupil pastoral audit is completed at end of each term and involves the Headmistress, Deputy Head and Pastoral Lead meeting with individual Form Teachers to discuss the pastoral requirements for every child in their class which then inform an action plan for each class and each individual pupil
3. Weekly “Communication Station” hub sessions are attended by selected children who have been recommended by Form Teachers, Senior Leaders and even parents, and focus on helping those children who require extra support with areas such as, but not exclusive to, verbalising feelings, building confidence, building friendships and managing emotions. The sessions incorporate games, role plays, group discussions, drawing, writing, talking about feelings, circle time and reading stories in order to help the children develop their skills in these areas. The children selected really enjoy the sessions and it has had a continued positive impact on their learning and friendships, which are the main aims of the programme.
Michael Fitzsimons, Trinity Sixth Form Academy
Trinity+ is an innovative approach to the wider curriculum offer at Trinity Sixth Form Academy (TSFA). The pandemic brought many challenges, but also enabled leaders at TSFA to re-evaluate curriculum design and best practice. After a period of research and consultation, involving students, staff and academic literature, Trinity+ was born. Trinity+ is a two-and-a-half-hour lesson, delivered by a senior leader and supported by two personal progress tutors (PPTs). The lesson takes place in one space, with IT facilities, taught in real time but also beamed live on MS Teams. Trinity+ is made up of five components: Personal Development is planned meticulously. The curriculum considers guidance from the PSHCE Association and represents the needs of our student demographic and local labour market. Self-Appraisal provides students with an opportunity to reflect on their progress in all aspects of their 6th Form lives. A weekly rolling survey is utilised, with students reflecting on diet, sleep, water intake, attendance, conduct, progress and attainment, emotional and social health, and wellbeing. The results are used by pastoral staff for proactive discussion with students and curriculum refinement. Life Ready lesson was a concept born through observation. 60% of students at TSFA come from the bottom 30% of deprived families and both oracy and public speaking confidence are considerable obstacles for students. Life Ready lessons focus on increasing tier two vocabulary, teaching students about the pleasure of reading and emerging students in progressive public speaking opportunities. Focused Independent Study involves modelling best revision habits and creating an atmosphere that is conducive to learning and self-betterment. Monitoring meetings take place within this time between students and PPTs, safeguarding and SEND teams, and our in-house careers advisor. The Literary Message concludes each lesson and centres on a piece of text from a renowned author.
The nominations for the 2023 National Awards for Pastoral Care in Education are now with the judges.
The finalists will be announced in the June NAPCE newsletter.
The grand Presentation Event will take place in the Graeme Hick Pavilion at Worcestershire County Cricket Club in Worcester on Friday 29th September, 2023.
Details will be available soon. |