Socioeconomic data indicates a number of interesting factors that contribute to our school community. Using data from the 2013 Census and as a Decile 4 school, factors that stand out are that 24.8% of our community are one parent families, 46.4% of income earners over the age of 15 earn $20,000 or less per year resulting in a low household income and our school ethnic breakdown includes 46% of our students who identify as Maori. When considering the educational status of many in our community, which the American Psycholgical Association (2016) also highlight as contributing to socioeconomic status, we see that only 14.9% of our community aged 15 or over hold a Bachelors degree or higher.
As a school we are similar to some of those around us. Two of our contributing schools are Decile 4 also, while a third is Decile 9. The Decile 9 school was allowed to recapitate in recent years to also have Year 7 & 8 students. This had a small impact on our numbers of students entering at this level. However, in recent years, we have seen a growing number of Year 9s choosing our College over two others in the wider region that were previously their schools of choice. I believe that this is a reflection of the positive gains we have made through changing our school culture to better meet the needs of our students and wider community as well as raising student achievement through these changes.
So where does our school culture fit in? According to Wilson (2013), a school culture has three key facets; a vision, unity and empowerment. For myself, I believe our school vision encompasses all three of these factors and these contribute fully to developing our school cuture. We are striving for a school where all students feel valued, safe and secure, while also wanting them to have the skills required for the future. Our mission statement supports this where we say we want to develop young people who strive always to be the best they can be. We manifest our culture through a combination of our school values - Respect, OC Pride, Active Learner and Responsibility, our school motto - ‘Kia Kaha’, our use of Te Kawa o Te Ako which acknowledges our connection with our local iwi and of course the way we demonstrate these through our everyday teaching, learning and actions. Our culture does not start and end in the classroom, it carries over in to our wider school and local community when our students and staff represent the college at sporting and academic endeavours or just in day to day life. A recent ERO report highlighted the welcoming feel our school has and how students actions and in class learning reflect our values and vision on a daily basis. Recently, when showing a prospective family with three children around our school, they commented on how welcoming and positive their experience had been. The children also commented on how different it felt to their current schools and how they could see the positive interactions between both staff and students.
The professional environment within my school also plays a key part in developing, and maintaining our school culture. When we consider the norms of improving schools as cited in Stoll (1998), I think these are reflected within and by staff and students. For the professional environment, the way in which the staff work together in a collegial manner is vital as a way of moving our school forward. While the fourth level of collegiality as identified by Stoll (2008) where joint work is highlighted has not always been present, in the last few years this is something that we have developed. Changes in leadership and the way in which decisions are made has had a major impact on our professional environment. Staff are now willing to work together to move the school and themselves forward in a professional manner. People are having the ‘hard conversations’ which would previously have been very difficult to have and know that it is not about an individual person, but actually to help us become better teachers. We are becoming more open in our practice in order to acknowledge and identify thing we need to change but also to celebrate the things that are going well.
When considering the socioeconomic status of our community, it helps us to better understand many of the issues our young people and their families face, when they come through our front gates as well as helping to identify areas in which we want to help facilitate change in order to help not only our students but the wider community. Gargiulo (pg 7, 2014), identified a number of strategies, many of which we have also introduced within our school, which have contributed to and had a positive impact on our school culture. For example, we are a Positive Behaviour for Learning School. In conjunction with restorative practice, our students and staff are fully involved in putting things right when they are not going so well. We have introduced Pre-Trade and UCOL courses which operate in conjunction with local businesses and Tertiary providers, meeting a gap that previously exisited for some of our students. We have food available for students who come to school hungry and staff are always available for supporting students in need. By introducing these programmes and developing our school culture to be a nurturing one, we are breaking down many of the barriers that the socioeconomic status of our community creates in order for genuine learning to occur.
References
Gargiulo, S. (2014). Principal sabbatical report. Retrieved from http://www.educationalleaders.govt.nz/Leadership-development/Professional-information/Principals-sabbatical-reports/Report-archives-for-2007-2014/Secondary-award-recipients-2014/Gargiulo-Salvatore
Stoll (1998). School Culture. School Improvement Network’s Bulletin 9. Institute of Education, University of London. Retrieved from http://www.educationalleaders.govt.nz/Culture/Understanding-school-cultures/School-Culture
TEdEd.(2013, Jun 21). Building a culture of success- Mark Wilson.[video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_8Bjz-OCD8
Statistics New Zealand (2016) 2013 Quick Stats About a Place - Otaki. Retrieved from
It sounds like a positive and collaborative environment to work in!
ReplyDeleteI get what you're saying with the introduction of UCOL courses filling a hole in our community but it makes me wonder if in the following couple of years, whether the influence these outside organisations has on the school's culture could shift slightly?
ReplyDeleteLike anything, we all come in with our own agendas, preconceived ideas etc, I just wonder whether these will align with what is already ingrained within the school (if any of this makes sense at all).