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Leading Curriculum Change. John West-Burnham. Why Change?. From 19 th Century schools to 21 st Century education Learning for the 21 st Century The impact of information technology Social change Economic change A new political order Global warming. Educating for the 21 st Century.
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Leading Curriculum Change John West-Burnham
Why Change? • From 19th Century schools to 21st Century education • Learning for the 21st Century • The impact of information technology • Social change • Economic change • A new political order • Global warming
Educating for the 21st Century • From information to knowledge • From content to skills and qualities • Literacy and numeracy as the core A new curriculum • Thinking, problem solving and decision making • Self management • Working with others, emotional literacy • Managing information, ICT • Creativity
Developing a Curriculum for the 21st Century • Build on existing strengths • Empower teachers to use professional judgement • Rethink the learning process • Recognise the changing context of schools • See schooling as a cumulative process
Levels of change Shallow Deep Profound
Fallacies in the management of change • Change is linear • Change is predictable • Change can be controlled • Change can be managed
The 6i’s • Introspection • Investigation • Inclusion • Innovation • Implementation • Insight Philadelphia School of the Future Microsoft Innovative Schools Program
The qualities of change leaders • A commitment to personal change • Comfort with complexity and ambiguity • High moral confidence • A compelling vision • Interpersonal engagement • A willingness to challenge authority • Personal resilience and sustainability
Change as an emotional experience • Investment in the status-quo • Life histories • Psychological contracts • Cultural imperatives
Creating a culture for innovation • Alignment on purpose and values • High trust – a learning community • Collaboration and interdependence • Openness to innovation and risk • Shared leadership • Celebration