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Local Work

Local Work. Kent & Medway Progression Federation Lisa Clements. COLLABORATIVE OUTREACH Partnership Working. Introduction.

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Local Work

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  1. Local Work • Kent & Medway Progression Federation • Lisa Clements

  2. COLLABORATIVE OUTREACH Partnership Working

  3. Introduction The Kent & Medway Progression Federation is a partnership between Canterbury Christ Church University, the University of Greenwich, the University of Kent, the University for the Creative Arts, Kent County Council, Medway Council and 40 partner schools, working together to raise the aspirations and attainment of young people in Kent and Medway who may not otherwise consider higher education as a route to success.

  4. Partnership Characteristics • Equality of governance • Cost effectiveness of collaboration - pooling resources rather than funds - Joined up approach to monitoring and evaluation • Sharing of expertise • Prioritising student need over institutional agenda

  5. The School Perspective “KMPF have continued to support significant culture change in Kent High Schools, providing a vehicle for schools to access HE institutions. Given the need for HE to develop Access Agreements which includes attracting and including the disadvantaged within HE admissions, the mutual benefits from collaboration have never been more tangible and important for all institution phases.” Partner school head teacher • Equal voice • On site progression mentor • Bespoke activities • Direct access to universities • Staff training

  6. Targeting a cohort for KMPF • All students should be identified according to the following criteria: • First generation HE students with no parental background in HE • Students live in a deprived neighborhood (according to student post code profile which KMPF can supply) • Academic potential to progress to Higher Education level using FFT data or current actual data • In addition, the following students should be targeted: • Looked after children and students with disabilities who have the potential to progress to Higher Education level

  7. Progression framework

  8. Student Experience - Individual activity • Issues: • Balancing school timetables with delivery of a sequenced, complementary set of activities • Activities can have a detrimental effect if the student has a negative experience • What are the key components of an effective activity: (interactive; focused; involve trained HE ambassadors Campus visits. These were regarded as one of the most important activities because of the effect they are perceived to have on widening learners’ horizons. NfER 52 out of 60 staff surveyed said that HE Tasters and Campus Visits were the most useful for students

  9. Student Experience - Activity feedback What students would like to see more of What students thought generally • Appreciated opportunity to meet an undergraduate • Good fun and different from school environment • Mixed views on campus tour – either too long or too short • Tailored Information on subjects and a wider range of subjects • More input from undergraduate students • A chance to mix with other schools on the activity Campus Visits • Interactive sessions and less talking • A chance to see a lecture (sixth form students) • Hear more from students studying this subject at university and career options Master classes • Gives deeper understanding of subject • Gives insight into difference between learning in a school and in a university • Encourages students to think about their future study • Shorter workshop • A variety of workshops and subjects rather than one subject • Talks from students studying these subjects • Subjects that they have personally chosen • Students missing out on attending a specific taster because it was full would like the opportunity to attend an alternative day • Fun and new • Opportunity to find out new information about university life • Encourages students to think about their future HE Tasters

  10. Participation and attainment

  11. Commitment to continue to 2016. • Flexible and responsive strategic plan. • Sharing collaborative data base. • Every partner has an equal voice. • Cohesive organisation.

  12. Lisa Clements Schools Manager lisa.clements@canterbury.ac.uk 01227 782565 07921 404239

  13. Local Work • Kent Youth County Council • Nabhan S. Malik

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