AWARDS: Great Practice from the NAPCE Awards 2023 – Episode 3
The National Awards for Pastoral Care in Education 2023 – Sharing Good Practice – Episode 3
The NAPCE Awards 2023 was an amazing success, bigger than ever with a record number of entries and a sold-out event.
Every year we share a huge number of great examples of excellent practice in pastoral care and we’re proud to share some of these with you in NAPCE News which may help guide and inspire your own work.
For this third episode we’re focussing on the category International Contribution to Pastoral Care.
International Contribution to Pastoral CareThis award is for an international school, organisation outside of the UK or an individual working in research or in an international school outside of the UK, that has promoted or delivered high quality pastoral care.
In 2023 it was sponsored by Global Equality Collective.
The Global Equality Collective (GEC), is a multi-award-winning global community of over 13,000 Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) change makers including 300+ DEI subject matter experts, working together to equip, empower and educate. We fuse this knowledge base with groundbreaking technology (the GEC Platform) which enables state-of-the-art analytics and the latest academic research to solve one of the biggest issues in education, which is diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). Our aim is simple – to make ordinary classrooms extraordinarily inclusive
The winner of the International Contribution to Pastoral Care for 2023, announced at the grand presentation event in Worcester, in September was Charlene Secondary School Kiryandongo Uganda.
Here are some of the comments that were made about the 2023 winner of this award in the nomination.
“Charlene Secondary School is located in Kiryandongo District in a remote area of western Uganda. It was built and is being supported through Charlene’s Project, a UK charity inspired by Charlene Barr, a young girl, while battling with her own life-threatening illness pledged to raise funds to build a school in Uganda. Although she did not live to see the school opening, she died aged 20 in 2010, her legacy lives on as staff and students in Charlene Secondary continue on their exciting journey of education. Supported by the charities’ UK/Ugandan Education Advisory Team and managed by Ugandan Charlene Education Foundation.
The school, recognized from the outset the need to establish a school ethos and culture and the importance of involving the whole school community in developing this. Led by the Director and Head Teacher along with teaching staff, their Year 1 action plan focused on developing policies, procedures, and practices for pastoral care. They discussed topics like ethics, values, and standards before producing a draft statement on the vision and values they had for the school and began the task of enshrining these in policy. A schedule was drawn up which included a fortnightly workshop involving the whole staff to address a range of pastoral issues which they encountered on a daily basis. Each of the two-hour workshops, facilitated by the Charlene Project Advisory Team outlined best practice in pastoral care and offered staff the opportunity to consider cultural adaptations required for their school. The table below provides an insight into the topics covered. The schedule was not followed slavishly, rather, they spend more time on some areas than others making adaptations and changes as required.
As in all schools they find the implementation of new initiatives a struggle therefore implicit in the action plan is the monitoring and evaluation process to be used. This includes both qualitative and quantitative approaches and involves all members of the community including parents. The workload and energy required to develop policies and procedures for each area is daunting. Teachers embark on the planning every Friday at the end of their working day, many will have travelled many miles to get to the school and will endure the same journey home, often in difficult circumstances. Additionally, they will be back in school the following morning as they have a half day teaching timetable on Saturdays. They recognise this is a huge commitment but that it is the foundation for all follow-up work including teaching and learning. Charlene’s Secondary deserves credit and recognition for their commitment to making their school a centre of excellence in Pastoral Care.”
Here are some of the comments made in the nominations for the other finalists in this category.
International School Ikast-Brande
International School Ikast-Brande has a high-quality approach to Pastoral Care. As one of very few international settings in Denmark, with a focal point on Pastoral Care, International School Ikast-Brande educates, prepares, inspires, and creates learners to be best equipped for their future, not only academically, but personally, socially, emotionally, and mentally. Learners at the school have the opportunity to develop themselves through.
- The spiral PSHE curriculum.
- meeting with their homeroom teachers every morning.
- acquire the skills to support one another and themselves following the SMILES programme.
- develop key knowledge of how to live a healthy life through our PE curriculum.
- learn necessary skills and techniques in mentoring.
- Participating in the unique Life Skills programme.
With a dedicated Deputy Head of School leading the pastoral care provision of the school, learners have the opportunity to access support quickly, effectively, and efficiently – be it in school or support from the local community. The school are lucky to have such an excellent pastoral provision & such an impeccable international team of staff paving the way for each and every student.
University of Malta
Over the past years, the University of Malta, have been to promoting pastoral care in education including the wellbeing, resilience and mental health of students and school staff, at an international level, through participation and contribution to experts’ groups at UNESCO and the European Commission (2022-2023). It has developed and organised programmes for schools and policy makers such as.
- the ‘Rescur Surfing the Waves Programme’, for Early Years and Primary School (revised in 2022),
- an international virtual summer school on child protection in war and conflict zone in collaboration with the UN (2022),
- three international summer schools on resilience, mental health and positive development (summer 2023)
- an evaluation of a mental health curriculum developed through an EU funded project (PROMEHS, Promoting Mental Health in Schools) (2022).
- Developed the first Master Programme in Transdisciplinary Childhood Studies (started first time in October 2020 at the University of Malta) and of the Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters in Resilience in Education (starting in October 2023).
- publication of numerous papers, research reports and book chapters on the mental health, wellbeing and resilience of school children, particularly marginalised ones.
- training of school staff in pastoral care such as teachers, support school staff and school administration.
- research projects on children’s wellbeing, mental health, children’s voices and social and emotional learning.
North London Collegiate School (NLCS) Jeju, South Korea
The school aims to create a home where individuals are nurtured and the whole personality can grow. They foster a caring and respectful community characterized by excellent relationships between staff and students regardless of age and background. Pastorally the school has an outstanding approach towards Pastoral Care and was recently awarded Safeguarding School of the Year by the ISC in 2023 in recognition of their work to keep students safe. They have ensured that all students receive digital citizenship training, there are safeguarding posters of adults who can help, meetings have safeguarding as part of the agenda, recently introduced a visitor code of conduct that also includes a safeguarding briefing when visitors come into school and continuous training throughout the year for staff.
NLCS Jeju has a vertical pastoral system and there is close collaboration between both the Junior and Senior school who are currently working together on an initiative centred around ‘seeds for success’ which based largely on the PEEC model, builds upon our preventative approach towards pastoral care by having a termly theme focusing on positive relationships, positive emotions, positive health, positive engagement, positive accomplishment, positive purpose and sense of belonging. This underpins both the House and Tutor Programme, with the Assistant Heads of House being responsible for overseeing a year group programme that focuses on pertinent issues. This builds upon the PSD (Personal Social Development) programme and ensures that they not only respond to challenges students face throughout their journey, but ensures they work collaboratively as a team to support both students and parents. This is informed largely by the use of the Six Star Survey, produced by ACER that enables us to track the wellbeing of students which is used throughout the school year.
The school has also involved students in the pastoral provision, with student voice featuring significantly in all aspects of planning. The Heads of House, hold student voice sessions with their House Committees throughout the term. The AVP Pastoral leads the Student Council which addresses significant issues affecting the school body. The Assistant Heads of House and the Head of PSD meet with year group representatives to get feedback from students on the seeds for success programme and our PSD provision each term.
One of the school’s goals is to ensure that new students are supported and welcomed into the school. They have introduced a number of new initiatives including using peer mentors to. support students, the Student Council arranging welcoming activities including lunches and a Scavenger Hunt, induction days and support from house committees. From August, all year 7 students (in response to feedback) will be allocated an older brother or sister to offer them support and guidance throughout the first term and help them not only settle in, but also feel a valued member of the school community.
Bromsgrove International School, Thailand
At Bromsgrove International School, is a school that has pastoral care, personal-social education, and the welfare of students at its very heart. They strive to find innovative ways to support and develop students’ wellbeing. A recent tool has been the introduction of the ‘Well-Being Passport’, a document created with the child, for the child and which is editable and designed to progress through school with each individual. Each of the 120 boarders have an initial meeting with a member of boarding staff in order to receive a dedicated time slot to understand, create and ask any questions in order to promote the intrinsic value of the passport initiative. Written in the students own words, the ‘Well-Being Passport’ identifies things that are important to them and what areas in which they feel they need support as well as helping students feel they are each known and valued as an individual in her or his own right, and that school life has a meaning and purpose for them. It has proven to be a useful reflective tool with some students, empowering them in choosing to meet and discuss their wellbeing passport in order to adjust their short- and long-term goals or review what support they feel they may need in order to achieve this.
The ‘Well Being Passport’ is a working document and is to be reviewed twice each year. This allows students to reflect, review and revise their statements whenever needed. It is designed to be flexible and adaptable to suit children of any age and is written using words and terminology that they are familiar with and easily understand. They can focus on personal or academic goals, with some of the most successful applications being in student-led forms of conflict management. The information can also be shared with relevant staff and used to support students in a way that they feel works best for them, in order to create and sustain a direct link between well-being and academic achievement. As a ‘live’ document links are easily embedded for easy access. Although created originally as a way to support our boarding students, the school counsellor has also adopted the passport as part of our induction for new day students and we are positive that this will aid in the continuing development of a ‘culture’ of well-being and pastoral care throughout the whole school and the active involvement of the whole staff, teaching, non-teaching, and boarding.
The school is confident that the ‘Well Being Passport’ will develop strong, supportive relationships that provide students with the emotional resources to step out of their intellectual ‘comfort zone’ and explore new, reflective and adaptive ideas and ways of thinking, which is fundamental to both their social and emotional development and their educational achievement.
Congratulations for everybody nominated for Pastoral Member of year in 2023. The nominations for the 2024 National Awards for Pastoral Care in Education are now open. All the details are available on the NAPCE website www.napce.org.uk. Follow the link to make a nomination to recognise and value contributions to good practice in pastoral care in education.
Making a nomination for the National Awards for Pastoral Care in Education 2024 organised by NAPCE.
It is easy to make a nomination for the Awards to recognise good practice in the eight categories and it only takes a few minutes.
Here is some guidance on how to make your nomination.
- Visit our nomination page here https://napceawards.wufoo.com/forms/napce-awards-2024-entry-form/
- Or go to www.napce.org.uk and click on the link for the awards.
- This takes you to the page where you can make your nomination.
- Read the information about the criteria for each category.
- Provide your contact details as the nominee and the name of the person or organisation you are nominating with their email contact details on the form provided.
- Click on the button to select the appropriate category for your nomination.
- In the box provided provide information and any evidence to support you nomination.
You can make a nomination for another person or organisation, or self-nominations are also welcome.
You have 750 word available to describe the reasons for your nomination to the judges.
You do not have to use all 750 words and the best nominations are concise and clear.
Explain what makes your nomination an example of good practice.
Describe how it makes a difference in the learning experience of children and young people.
Give examples of actions that have been taken and outcomes that have been achieved.
Explain why you are proud of this nomination.
Make your nomination now to recognise good practice and achievements in pastoral care in education. |