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Friday, 20 April 2012
Photo montages and metaphors with Suzie
In this lesson with Suzie we finished the photo montages showing things that had meaning to us and explained our images to the class. I chose things like garden images because I used to do gardening with my uncle and I help my boyfriend on his farm. We then had to look at metaphors within songs and how songs show their meaning in that way. We chose songs like 'firework' and 'your sex is on fire'. We then looked at meaning behind images, most of which were images from advertising. We sorted the images in to our own catergories and discussed meanings with Suzie. To finish off this session we looked at metaphors used the famous Martin Luther King speech 'I have a dream'.
Guest lecture 9
Our final guest lecturer was taken by David Warner the vice chancellor at Swansea Metropolitan. He gave a lecture on the framework and background of higher education in Britain. He discussed ideas of what higher education is and the perceptions we have of higher eduction. There are two main ideas on what higher education is:
The level of work and qualification that you do
Who pays you
We also looked at the idea of university being for developing transferrable skills, not just for subject knowledge.
We were also shown a brief history of the development of universities:
- Middle ages- First university
- 1918, 22 uni's
- 1980, 47 uni's
- 1992, over 100 uni's
- 2004, New legislation
We also looked the the diversity of universities in the Uk:
- Chartered university
- Statutory universities
- Higher education institutions
- Higher ed in further ed
- Growth of the private sector
- The situation in Wales
We also discussed the other possible purposes of higher education:
- Teaching and learning
- To contribute to an economically successful and culturally diverse nation
- To advance knowledge and understanding through scholarship and research
- To contribute to regional prosperity both through technology transfer and direct contribution
- Social justice
We then looked at the current trends in higher education:
- Elite to mass system
- Female student increase
- Postgraduate fluctuations
- Part-time decrease
- Growth of international students
- Balance of funding
I found David to be a good last lecturer and I enjoyed lecture, again he did not use the assistance of slideshows and he spoke very well. I enjoyed hearing about the development of higher education as I knew nothing of the history of it.
Guest lecture 8
This guest lecture was taken by Jane Davidson, the former minister of education. She gave a lecture on The Learning Country document and the changes in the cirriculum. Jane was a writer of the learning country and is the developer of most of the ideas. The learning country is a paving document and was a document which paved the way for the current cirriculum. Jane discussed some of the key changes which were made to the education system before the foundation phase:
1983-Margret Thatcher introduced the curriculum, SAT's introduced
1997-Labour government, National curriculum too restrictive
1999-National assembly in Wales, pre 16 and post 16 committees set up
Education policy was not different in Wales to England
Jane became minister in 2000 and felt that education is the route out of poverty
"Wales should become internationally renowned as a learning country." Learning country
One of the key ideas of the learning country is lifelong learning and it focuses a lot on post 16 education.
The learning country developed a lot of the ideas we see in the foundation phase today:
Arrangements for exchanging information between primary and secondary schools- visits
Lower class sizes- 30 or below
Breakfast clubs
The foundation phase is now coming under review as a cirriculum but it still hasn't been around very long, however the startegy has now finished testing
I found this lecture useful as I did not really know how the foundation phase was developed as a cirriculum, I also found Jane to be a good speaker without the use of a slideshow.
Thursday, 19 April 2012
Guest lecture 6
This lecutre was taken by Nick Bennet who is the priciple of gower college. He gave a lecure on further education in Wales. We looked at the 1988 education act and what further education facilities came under it:
- Colleges
- School sixth forms
- Adult education institutions
- Private providers
- Voluntary sector
Further education is funded by the Welsh Goverment's department for education and skills. We then went on to discuss what it is for:
- Underpin social justice
- Support the economy
- Teaching and learning
- Equal opportunities
- Innovation
- Welsh medium
- Progression
- Flexible
- Tailored
- Local
Nick Bennet gave figures on current college stats:
184,730 learners (2009/10)
95% from Wales
5,000 different qualifications in Wales
66% of learners are in FE colleges
Twice as many in college than schools
68% of FE students are over 19
20% are full time
We also looked over the Welsh Govenment programme of 2011 for further education:
- Encourage further mergers of FE colleges
- Reform the governance of FE in Wales
- Work with FE providers to establish a new strategy
- Maintain commitment to provide financial support to students from low income households
- Ensure that borrowing for the cost of tuition fees for students resident in wales remains unchanged
- Establish a single strategic planning and funding body for HE
- Embed the university of the head of the valleys
- Establish jobs growth Wales, offering employment or training for young people
- Increase apprenticeship opportunities
- Introduce a successor to the skill build programme
- Evaluate current post 16 basic skills activity and define policy to influence future delivery
Strategic priorities
- Raise standards
- Deliver high quality opportunities
- Improve economic and social well-being
- See the Welsh language thrive
Performance will be our driver, with continued focus on improving performance and quality across the board and at entry level
Guest lecture 5
This lecture was taken by Mike Day who is a cabinet member in education. He gave a lecture on educational policy. The points he covered were:
- What
- Why
- Where
- Who
- How
Educational policy reflects:
- Political options
- Socio-economic objectives
- Tradition and values
- Over a long timescale
- Fundamental choices
Who:
Politicians or practitioners
Where:
UK level
Welsh government
Local authority
School and governing body level
Here are some policies made at school and governing body level:
- Uniforms
- Start and finish times
- Raft of policies on personal and social education, Child protection, Charging, Equal opportunities, SEN etc.
- School improvement plan
Here are examples of policies made by the Welsh Government:
- Welsh medium
- Foundation phase
- No SAT's
- No academies
- HE Tuition fees
- Pupil deprivation grant
Mike Day also discussed the idea of policy borrowing:
- A policy borrowing approach searches international policies to fit into our own
- Tailored national policy
Here are some key principles of policies:
- Stakeholder engagement
- Coherence
- Flexibility
- Objectivity
- Cost effectiveness
- Resourced
Monday, 16 April 2012
ICT project- Anime scrapbook

So I've been thinking about how I can include my blog with my scrapbook. In the scrapbook I was going to have a character on some of the pages explaning the page and my feelings. But instead I've decided to have this as th blog part. So my project topic is anime and manga. Manga artists like to have a little or 'chibi' character to talk about their feelings behind the manga and give a personal message, so heres my little character mochi! She's going to tell all about my project and the ideas and facts behind the pages. There are also some bunny drawings in the actual scrapbook so keep a look out!
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