Creative Schools 2025
Welcome to Creative Schools 2025! This is a space for the Creative Practitioners and FORM staff to communicate and share key information and updates.
- Belmont City College
- Clarkson Primary School
- Curtin Primary School
- Joseph Banks Secondary College
- Kalamunda Senior High School
- Nannup Senior High School
- Neerigan Brook Primary School
- Piara Waters Senior High School
- Rosalie Primary School
- Rostrata Primary School
- Subiaco Primary School
- Somerly Primary School
- Walliston Primary School
The Creative Schools program provides funding for each school to work with two Creative Practitioners, who will collaborate with two classroom teachers and their students over 16 weeks (Terms 2 & 3).
Each teacher and Creative Practitioner will co-design and co-deliver a creative learning project aligned with a curriculum area of the teacher’s choice (e.g., Mathematics, HASS, Science), using an engaging, student-led, and creative approach.
Key Program Details
đč Classroom delivery:
- Term 2: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
- Term 3: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
- The final session will be allocated to planning the class presentation (no student activity).
- A showcase event will be held in the last two weeks of Term 3 to highlight the Creative Schools learning journey (details to follow).
đč Structure of each 90-minute session:
- 15-minute warm-up
- 60-minute main activity (aligned with curriculum goals)
- 15-minute reflection on learning
đč Session days/times:
- To be determined in collaboration with the teacher and Creative Practitioner.
Welcome to Creative Schools 2025! This is a space for the Creative Practitioners and FORM staff to communicate and share key information and updates.
- Belmont City College
- Clarkson Primary School
- Curtin Primary School
- Joseph Banks Secondary College
- Kalamunda Senior High School
- Nannup Senior High School
- Neerigan Brook Primary School
- Piara Waters Senior High School
- Rosalie Primary School
- Rostrata Primary School
- Subiaco Primary School
- Somerly Primary School
- Walliston Primary School
The Creative Schools program provides funding for each school to work with two Creative Practitioners, who will collaborate with two classroom teachers and their students over 16 weeks (Terms 2 & 3).
Each teacher and Creative Practitioner will co-design and co-deliver a creative learning project aligned with a curriculum area of the teacher’s choice (e.g., Mathematics, HASS, Science), using an engaging, student-led, and creative approach.
Key Program Details
đč Classroom delivery:
- Term 2: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
- Term 3: 8 sessions (90 minutes each)
- The final session will be allocated to planning the class presentation (no student activity).
- A showcase event will be held in the last two weeks of Term 3 to highlight the Creative Schools learning journey (details to follow).
đč Structure of each 90-minute session:
- 15-minute warm-up
- 60-minute main activity (aligned with curriculum goals)
- 15-minute reflection on learning
đč Session days/times:
- To be determined in collaboration with the teacher and Creative Practitioner.
-
Session 08 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher)
by Jake Bamford, 4 months agoShare Session 08 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher) on Facebook Share Session 08 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher) on Twitter Share Session 08 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher) on Linkedin Email Session 08 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher) linkSession 8
DATE - 26/06/2025
The CREATIVE PRACTITIONER is to complete this document after each session. It is a tool to use weekly with your teacher to ensure you are reflecting and documenting the process. Please ensure your weekly reflection has been completed on Google Drive prior to submitting your invoice for that session as it is part of the payment.
90-minute session in the classroom:
Warm Up (one photo)
Rewording the Story - with our main activity for this session all about planning and coming up with stories (the story behind their political figures), I thought Iâd give the students a storytelling warmup. Theyâve also been very eager to read these days, so they started the warmup by reading for 5ish minutes. After they finished, they had to pick a word from the extract they read, then write it onto the digital screen. Next step, they paired up, and they had 2-3 minutes to write a short story that used as many of the words on the board as possible (preferably not their own).
Paste your photo here.
Main Activity (one photo)
Planning the Mock Election - We gave them the brief: redesign our classroom to be ready to conduct an election. Their tasks included setting up the poster walls (featuring the three parties and ensuring each wall was appropriately labelled), getting all the videos onto three separate ipads (all of party 1 promo videos on ipad 1, all party 2 on ipad 2, and same for 3), updating any videos if they needed it (finishing animations or fixing audio), adding embellishments to the party poster walls (names of the parties). The students ended up naming the parties: Party 1: Outdoor, Party 2: Fun, Party 3: Nature. These were chosen based on the prominent theme amongst the policies, and all decided upon by the kids themselves.
Paste your photo here.
Reflection with the students (one photo)
Creative Cubby Building - we're still working with the cubby idea, but this time Kirsti tried them with some popsticks! The students chose a creative habit that they used most during the session, then a popstick with that colour on it. They wrote their name on it and placed them next to our growing creative cubby. Weâre thinking these might make good fence posts, or tiles on a roof of a creative village or suburb that weâll be building during future reflection activities.
Paste your photo here.
After the session:
Planning with the Teacher
(refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)Despite some messiness with students running in lots of directions, this session ended up being a great success, with the students leading their own planning and design of the election hall, thinking about eye-catching colours for their parties, and making some targeted edits to their own videos (or helping other students edit theirs). It was a wonderful display of creative collaboration on all fronts, with students teaming up to transform the classroom and prepare for next week!
Working with students
(what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, whatâs making them curious.)It was great to see the students take the initiative during this lesson, with the extra autonomy they had been given, and the wide array of tasks to do.
Ideas moving forward
(ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)We need to shuffle some tables around to manage the queue of voters during the election day.
Resources
(do you need anything, who will source it?)We need to design new voting slips that suit the three parties the students have developed.
How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)
This mock election day will have various students and staff from around the school visiting and voting on the parties. We can gather photos of the event, and count up and announce the votes and winning party.
Go to discussion -
Session 7 Rostrata Primary School Year 6 Kristy Nita Brown and Mariya Konig
by Kristy Nita Brown, 4 months agoShare Session 7 Rostrata Primary School Year 6 Kristy Nita Brown and Mariya Konig on Facebook Share Session 7 Rostrata Primary School Year 6 Kristy Nita Brown and Mariya Konig on Twitter Share Session 7 Rostrata Primary School Year 6 Kristy Nita Brown and Mariya Konig on Linkedin Email Session 7 Rostrata Primary School Year 6 Kristy Nita Brown and Mariya Konig linkWarm Up:
Todayâs session was a little more challenging than usual. Mariya shared with me that some unexpected issues had come up with the students last week, and many of them were feeling out of sorts, tired and ready for the upcoming break. With that in mind, we were mindful about how we approached groupings for the warm up activity.
Given the recent challenges, we opted for a whole-group warm up rather than splitting students into small, changing groups. We played a game called Fruit Salad, which involved the students forming a large circle. Each student selected a fruit or vegetable name, and one person stood in the middle. That student would call out someoneâs fruit, and the named student had to try and say their fruit name three times, faster than the person in the middle.
While the game was fun and encouraged group interaction, we did encounter a few hurdles. The instructions could have been clearer at the start, which led to some confusion and a need to swap roles to help the game flow better. Additionally, because it was a large group, some students were too quiet when trying to call out their fruit names, which affected the energy of the game.
To top things off, another class began practising their assembly performance nearby, complete with loud music. This made it difficult for our group to hear, so we relocated to the other side of the building, only for it to start raining! It really felt like a series of unfortunate events were testing us today.
Despite all of this, the students stayed positive and engaged as best they could, and we adapted where needed. Today was a good reminder of the importance of flexibility and patience both for us and for the students.
No photo was taken of the warm up unfortunately due to the series of unfortunate events.
Main Activity:
For the main activity, the students were eager to continue working on their toys for their buddies. Since no one had finished their toy yet, despite my last session and the two building sessions that followed, there was a strong sense of motivation to make progress today.
We began by reviewing the safety rules and clarified expectations for working respectfully in the classroom. Once those were established, the students got straight into building.
Throughout the session, I roamed the room, checking in with students individually. I offered guidance on how they could test and improve their toy designs, encouraging problem-solving and iteration. Students were hands-on with the materials, and a significant portion of my time was also spent helping with tool use, particularly cutting materials with the hacksaw and blade to meet their design needs.
It was great to see their creativity and persistence, and despite the earlier challenges in the day, the students remained focused and engaged with the task.
Reflection:
Formal reflections did not take place today, as I made a conscious decision to read the room and respond to the studentsâ needs in the moment. The class was highly focused on their toy building and many were feeling anxious about not finishing in time. Given their level of engagement and the pressure they were feeling, I chose to prioritise their building time.
During this session, Mariya also took the opportunity to work individually with some high-needs students, supporting them with both their planning and building processes.
No photo was taken of the reflection unfortunately due to the above reasons.
Planning With The Teacher:
I will be returning to the classroom on Wednesday and plan to structure the session differently. Weâll start with another warm up game, shift focus to developing their toy pitches, and dedicate extra time at the end for reflections. This will include working with the origami lucky stars and revisiting the Five Habits of Learning to support deeper thinking and self-awareness. I also plan on delivering a matching worksheet with photos of the students on it and the Five Habits. They will draw lines to connect themselves to the Habits.
Mariya has been unwell recently and is understandably feeling quite tired, as am I. Colds and COVID have impacted the school community significantly, affecting both staff and students. Once Mariya has had a chance to rest and recover over the holidays, weâll meet to discuss and plan what will work best for the Term 3 project.
Working With The Students:
As mentioned above, many of the students have been feeling unsettled due to an incident last week, combined with general fatigue as they head into the final days of term. Theyâve had a lot on their plates and are still facing events such as the cross country carnival and Crazy Hair Day this week. Itâs been challenging to work with them at a time when itâs clear they are in need of a break.
The needs of some students also seem more heightened than usual, and with a large class in a small classroom space, emotional regulation becomes even more difficult. In light of this, I believe itâs important to recognise when enough is enough. Allowing things to calm down and giving everyone time to reset over the holidays will be beneficial for both students and staff.
It's also worth noting that the Year 2 teacher, who coordinates with the Year 6 buddies, is currently on leave until next term. As a result, the Shark Tank event will need to be scheduled for Term 3.
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Food Fusion market day at Rostrata Primary year 7 with Claire Davenhall and Nikki Barnett
by Claire, 4 months agoShare Food Fusion market day at Rostrata Primary year 7 with Claire Davenhall and Nikki Barnett on Facebook Share Food Fusion market day at Rostrata Primary year 7 with Claire Davenhall and Nikki Barnett on Twitter Share Food Fusion market day at Rostrata Primary year 7 with Claire Davenhall and Nikki Barnett on Linkedin Email Food Fusion market day at Rostrata Primary year 7 with Claire Davenhall and Nikki Barnett linkSession 8DATE 4.7.25 90-minute session in the classroom:Warm Up (one photo)
Today is our Food Fusion market day, we started by making our chefs hats and setting up our tables. Main Activity (one photo)
We invited our buddies, parents, school leadership to come and survey our food items before spending our creative ST tokens on food items. They had to practice their sales pitch and try to persuade the customers into buying their produce, it was very busy and they did a great job. It was interesting to hear their observations and evaluation after the market had finished and most of the students had sold out!
They were able to do some quick mental arithmetic to work out their profit and loss. Nikki was careful to say that on this day⊠These are the results, but the market changes quickly. So white the sweet items sold faster than the savoury, most said they would increase their prices next time to make more profit.Paste your photo here.
Reflection with the students (one photo)
Since they had spent their tokens it was time to reflect on what they would do differently next time, some would make their food items more attractive, others would choose different ingredients, some would execute their creations with more detail. Some would donate their money to cats! After the session: Planning with the Teacher
(refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)
Wew ill meet first money i the holidays to plan next terms project Working with students
(what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, whatâs making them curious.)
The habits - they are very good at collaborating so we can focus on another. Ideas moving forward
(ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)
Nature, river, HASS⊠Iâm open to anything Resources
(do you need anything, who will source it?)
Curriculum sheets How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)Nikki can send the photos for the newsletter
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Joseph Banks Year 8 Science Session 8
by AmandaKendle, 4 months agoShare Joseph Banks Year 8 Science Session 8 on Facebook Share Joseph Banks Year 8 Science Session 8 on Twitter Share Joseph Banks Year 8 Science Session 8 on Linkedin Email Joseph Banks Year 8 Science Session 8 linkDATE Friday 4th July 2025
Warm Up
Quick drawing warm-up based on Mr Squiggle - one student knew him and a couple of others had heard of him (both - young! - teachers in the room had not!). Showed a 30-sec video of Mr Squiggle to demonstrate the concept then each pair got a page of squiggles (two variants) and instructions to turn them into some kind of mining equipment or something you would find on a minesite - fantastical if they wanted! Got some great results and students really engaged.
Main Activity
Two parts to this today. Firstly, we had answers from two more FIFO workers to the studentsâ questions, one on video and one via email. We showed the videos of the students asking questions and showed/read the answers. Most students very keen to hear the answers and our FIFO workers did a great job of responding, too. Later in the class we also replayed the video we had last week as many students had been away then and asked to see it. These all helped with the second part of the main activity: creating a poster illustrating what they thought the pros and cons of the FIFO life are. Some students did better than others with this task and Kylie was the only one to really create an attractive poster but it was great to see that theyâd all acquired a lot more knowledge about FIFO throughout the past few weeks.
Reflection with the students
Three of the students volunteered to come outside with me and record a quick thank you video for our FIFO workers and Tom finished off with the rest of the class. We did lose their attention very rapidly then being the final period of the term so no photos of reflection.
After the session:
Planning with the Teacher
Last period of last day of Term 2 - surprisingly we had well over class there. Tom also had to partly cover some wind-up activities for an absent staff member but was in and out, but we also had a relief teacher, Daniel, whoâs actually visual arts teacher so was really intrigued to learn about Creative Schools.
Wrapped up FIFO life now and will move on to natural disasters next term but will discuss more exact plans during school hols.
Working with students
(what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, whatâs making them curious.)Pleased we managed to make the FIFO topic really relatable with the real life answers - so will try to keep this going. In general they love any hands on activity and though a couple can get rowdy they are generally happy to do whatever we ask of them.
Ideas moving forward
(ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)Will discuss more plans for Term 3 over the break - natural disasters unit. Perhaps get some of my contacts whoâve been involved in these to give some quick answers too.
Resources
(do you need anything, who will source it?)Work in progress!
How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)
Will focus on this next term. Perhaps a quick summary of our FIFO project to be distributed in some way, will discuss further with Tom.
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Session 09 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher)
by Jake Bamford, 4 months agoShare Session 09 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher) on Facebook Share Session 09 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher) on Twitter Share Session 09 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher) on Linkedin Email Session 09 - Walliston Primary School Year 5 - HASS Civics and Citizenship - Jake Bamford (Creative) and Kirsti Harris (Teacher) linkSession 9
DATE - 03/07/2025
The CREATIVE PRACTITIONER is to complete this document after each session. It is a tool to use weekly with your teacher to ensure you are reflecting and documenting the process. Please ensure your weekly reflection has been completed on Google Drive prior to submitting your invoice for that session as it is part of the payment.
90-minute session in the classroom:
Warm Up (one photo)
Due to this session being the Mock Election day, we ended up skipping the warmup activity.
Paste your photo here.
Main Activity (one photo)
The Mock Election (or creative election⊠it went through a lot of names)! After many weeks of preparations; devising policies, designing posters, playing around with videos and voiceover, we had finally made it to the big day! Kirsti had gotten the students to redesign the layout of the classroom to suit an election hall, with a clear pathway for voters to move through. Students were given roles, from the greeters at the entrance, to the officials ticking off names of voters, and assistants asking voters if they knew how to vote, and lastly the people at the back of the hall with the box for storing votes. Representatives from each party were chosen to advertise their policies and their party just outside the hall as well, with 2-3 students per party. Some of these students also took their videos into the classroom of the other class (the main body of voters in the mock election) to show them the quick promotional videos for each party.
This session was a challenge for them, as they had to stick with their assigned roles, no matter how simple or difficult, and commit to the roleplay of this mock election. They pulled it off wonderfully, with the advertisers out front coming up with little jingles on the day to sing at voters coming through, students with less diverse jobs taking it on fully and having fun with it, and all the students really getting into the votes counting and reviews at the end of the session.
Paste your photo here.
Reflection with the students (one photo)
The reflection was a combination of a class discussion about how the Mock Election went (their personal opinion, and group opinion), and a brief creative drawing activity linked with the Creative Cubby Building weâre undergoing. We went with âdesign the lawn/gardenâ this time, giving the students small strips of paper for them to write little word clouds on, using words from the day, and giving them space to draw lots of garden-related things on it.
We recruited some students to count the votes, while others took on the âscrutineeringâ role for one particular party. The winning party was Party 3: Nature Party!
After the votes were counted up we conducted our class discussion, exploring various facets of the mock election, and the last 8 weeks. We discussed why the Nature Party won the election, and how the advertising through posters and videos might have been stronger for it, or weaker for the other parties. We discussed additional avenues we could have marketed our political parties, like social media campaigns, events, and running the advertising for longer periods of time, to get our messages out there.
Paste your photo here.
After the session:
Planning with the Teacher
(refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)While most aspects of the session went great, the videos the students had put together were a little lacklustre. This was largely due to minimal time being allocated to video creation and establishing better video-making techniques - we never really had a session to teach them how to make videos, we opted with letting them try to make the videos, then see the result of them through the election results. This is useful information though, as next term weâll be taking them through more video work, so theyâll need some catchup sessions of filmmaking conventions and basics.
Working with students
(what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, whatâs making them curious.)Giving the students a platform to explore politics by actually doing it (through the mock election) proved successful. The questions they asked and the points they raised at the end of the session showed a greater level of understanding of the political process, from a voter and party lens. At the start of this term they barely knew what I policy was, but during the end of class discussion they were happily chatting away about their policies they had developed and how they were marketed using the posters and other media.
Ideas moving forward
(ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)End of term 2, weâll be taking a little break to plan for the next term, and the studentsâ miniseries ideas.
Resources
(do you need anything, who will source it?)Weâll be developing a long form plan for term 3, to ensure the students can work on their miniseriesâ with better filmmaking knowledge. Likely a little more structured than this recent term, and with more discernible outcomes.
How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)
While only one class was taken through the Mock Election, many teachers from other areas (and one small group of student leaders) also cast their votes, and were able to engage with our project. Iâm hoping to circulate the news of the winning party throughout the school community, and maybe influence some decision-making on improvements/upgrades to the school.
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Dragon Myths of the Indian Ocean. Year 5/6 Walliston Primary Scholl with Claire Davenhall and Nathan Bushby
by Claire, 3 months agoShare Dragon Myths of the Indian Ocean. Year 5/6 Walliston Primary Scholl with Claire Davenhall and Nathan Bushby on Facebook Share Dragon Myths of the Indian Ocean. Year 5/6 Walliston Primary Scholl with Claire Davenhall and Nathan Bushby on Twitter Share Dragon Myths of the Indian Ocean. Year 5/6 Walliston Primary Scholl with Claire Davenhall and Nathan Bushby on Linkedin Email Dragon Myths of the Indian Ocean. Year 5/6 Walliston Primary Scholl with Claire Davenhall and Nathan Bushby linkSession 9 - DATE 22.7.25
90-minute session in the classroom:
Intro the new project Dragon Myths of the Indian Ocean.
In this 7-week creative schools project: You will dive into the cultures and ecosystems of the Indian Ocean Rim. You will invent mythical ocean creatures inspired by Asian legends and real marine animals. Then collaborate to write original legends and build shadow box stage sets to bring them to life.
The Indian Ocean Rim Association, or IORA, is a group of countries that are connected by the Indian Ocean. These countries work together like a team to help look after the ocean and support each other.
1.Protects the Ocean
They work to keep the Indian Ocean clean and healthy by stopping pollution and protecting sea animals like turtles, fish, and coral reefs.
2.Helps Countries Work Together
Countries around the Indian Ocean share ideas, trade goods, and help each other in times of need, like after a big storm or tsunami.
3.Supports Fishing and Tourism
IORA helps people who fish for a living and supports safe tourism so more people can enjoy the beautiful ocean without damaging it.
4.Teaches and Shares Knowledge
Scientists, students, and teachers from different countries learn from each other and share ways to protect the ocean and take care of the planet.
Why its important:
âąThe Indian Ocean is part of our home, especially if we live in places like Australia, Indonesia, or India.
âąTaking care of the ocean means weâre protecting animals, weather patterns, food sources, and our future.
âąGroups like IORA help us work together to solve big problems â because we canât do it alone!
Mythical Sea Dragons from Indian Ocean Rim Countries.
Many countries around the Indian Ocean have myths about dragons or powerful serpent creatures. These stories are part of the local culture and often connect with water, weather, or protection. Here are some fascinating dragons and dragon-like creatures from different places!
Wagyl, River Nagas, Grootslang
Choose one of the mythical creatures from the table. Draw what you think it looks like! Write a short story or description about where it lives and what powers it has.
đ Country
đ Creature Name
đ Description
India
Vritra / NÄga
Water dragons or serpents. Vritra blocked rivers and was defeated by a god!
Indonesia
Naga Basuki
A guardian dragon in Balinese culture.
Sri Lanka
NÄgas of Lanka
Ancient snake-people who once ruled the land.
Thailand
Phaya Naga
River dragons who live in the Mekong River.
Malaysia
Naga Seri Gumum
A lake dragon from Lake Chini.
Myanmar
Naga
Snake spirits that live in rivers.
Bangladesh
River Nagas
Local stories tell of serpent spirits in rivers.
Iran
AĆŸi DahÄka
A three-headed dragon king defeated by a hero.
Somalia
Bu'uroow
A sea serpent that pulls ships underwater.
Madagascar
Fanamby / Ampihitra
Spirits shaped like giant snakes.
Kenya / Tanzania
Popo Bawa
Flying creature like a dragon with bat wings.
South Africa
Grootslang
Part snake, part elephant living in caves.
Australia
Rainbow Serpent
A giant rainbow-colored being who made the rivers.
UAE / Oman
Bahamut
A sea creature from Arabic stories holding up the Earth.
Mauritius
Sea Serpents
Sailors tell of dragon-like monsters in the sea.
Seychelles
Sea Spirits
Mystical beings that protect islands.
Mozambique
Chikanga
A forest and river spirit, like a naga.
France (Réunion)
La BĂȘte de l'Etang
A lake beast that lives in volcanoes.
o here.
Reflection with the students (one photo)
Colour in the Great Wave with the creative colours we used in todays session.
After the session:
Planning with the Teacher
(refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)Had to reschedule next week to Tuesday. They are all researching different creatures, some are quite scary; they had to really think about why they were scary. What are they protecting?
Working with students
(what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, whatâs making them curious.)The great wave collaborative colouring may have an interesting take on minecraft.
Ideas moving forward
(ideas for next session, future lessons, discussed with teacher, do you need the teacher to do anything before you return.)Looking at marine animals and design there own dragon.
Resources
(do you need anything, who will source it?)Ink splats, for the warm ups in the creative colours⊠turn it into a sea dragon.
Research more sea dragons, and crafting and informing there own creatures on scratch boards.
How can you share learning outcomes/stories of transformation with the wider school community (e.g. Connect newsletter, staff meeting, school newsletter, school social media platforms)
Showcase at parents evening.
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Session 7 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography
by Jodie Davidson, 3 months agoShare Session 7 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography on Facebook Share Session 7 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography on Twitter Share Session 7 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography on Linkedin Email Session 7 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography linkWarm Up
Creative Habits
You have a number of objects on your table
In your groups, you will given 60 seconds to collaborate and build the tallest tower
You can only use your left hand (the other must be kept behind your back)
Main Activity
1. Using only the coloured markers you have been allocated, in your groups, write down as many words or ideas onto the A3 sheet in the numbered box (1 for the first group, 2 for the second etc) regarding the biome you were given -
2. You only have 90 seconds
3. After the 90 second timer, take your markers and rotate clockwise to the next station
4. You have another 90 seconds to add your group ideas and words to the next sheet of paper
5. You can not repeat something that is already written
6. Continue this process until you have completed all stations
7. You have 10 seconds to rotate between rounds
8. At the last station, add up how many answers each group came up with based on their marker colour and add this to the table on the board
9. Any repeated words will not be counted
10. Optional prize for the winning group
Reflection with the students
Reflecting on Creative Habits
How did you implement a creative habit today?
Provide an example for each habit
Which habit do you most need to practice?
After the session:
Successes
The warm up provided a great opportunity for them to put into practice their creative habits without realising. They were then able to identify how they used each habit in their reflection.
The random grouping was in some instances students who had previously dug their heels in about working with particular students however this time the all collaborated, contributed to discussions, challenged each other and worked really well together
When adding up the scores, they began to question each other in other groups but also explain discrepancies in answers by expanding on why it wasnât correct but also in a positive way.
One student who barely provided input in her group last term was vocal and outspoken in her group today, taking the lead and happily engaging.
Their knowledge of biomes, we were able to establish that they had a good understanding even though nothing has been done in class. This gives Fiona somewhere to go now without having to repeat content.
Challenges
There are still a couple of much quieter students who may feel out of their comfort zone when in a very strong willed group. We did notice though that they were still listening even though they may not provide much input.
Too many talking at once is sometimes difficult when we are trying to listen to each group presenting
Working with students
Group work and collaboration continues to improve. As we repeated the activity we had started with in term two but with different content, the immediately understood what to do and didnât dispute any of the groupings. We were also able to improve our part with columns and ease of scoring reflecting on what worked and what didn't last term.
We might have to find a way to move between the group work where conversation is generally a bit louder to being respectful of groups when they are talking
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Session 6 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography
by Jodie Davidson, 3 months agoShare Session 6 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography on Facebook Share Session 6 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography on Twitter Share Session 6 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography on Linkedin Email Session 6 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography linkWarm Up
Find your political party from last session
Which 3 items of campaign material will your party somehow use in your own campaign?
Set up your Party office - chairs/tables
Main Activity
Your challenge for each party is to come up with a policy for each of the following:- Education, Community, Healthcare, Childcare, Cost of Living, Housing, Climate, Other
You must decide on a way to physically incorporate/use something from each of the three selected flyers.
Expand on your policies
How would you implement each one?
How would you pay for it?
Create your own campaign flyer for your party (can use existing flyers to collage)
Part 4 can roll over to our next session if required
Reflection with the students (one photo)
Q and A (allow extra time for this)
Write a question on a piece of paper/post it note to something about todayâs session that you donât know the answer to or a question on the board under the Question column
Your leave pass today is to answer one of the questions
As you leave, hold up your fingers to show a score for discovering something you didnât already know
After the session:
Planning with the Teacher
(refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)Successes
They are working with people who force them to bring out opinions
They donât think they are learning because there isnât a book in front of them but we are seeing that they are
Learning to listen to other opinions
Learning to delegate (collaboration)
How quickly everybody formed their groups and got on with their task
No talking as a class
Challenges
Group dynamics in a couple of groups are still divided with girls doing most of the work and limited collaboration.
What the kids need to work out is how to give jobs to each other
The boys repeat a lot of the media statements rather than coming up with their own
Some groups still arenât listening to guidelines
Working with students
(what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, whatâs making them curious.)What is our budget? Where is is coming from? So many interesting conversations from reducing electric cars because they arenât safe for pedestrians and are not climate friendly to build to taking funding away from private schools to distribute to public schools and free TAFE places. One group wanted more green spaces for communities and an education system with a higher focus on creative learning rather than text books and assessments. How long have we got to do this? Can we have another session? The students are genuinely excited to be in a Creative Schools classroom, even stopping me on the way to class to make sure that we have a session today.
This is the first time I have noticed how mentally developed the girls are ⊠prac teacher
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Session 8 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography
by Jodie Davidson, 3 months agoShare Session 8 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography on Facebook Share Session 8 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography on Twitter Share Session 8 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography on Linkedin Email Session 8 - Belmont City College Year 9 HASS - Geography linkWarm Up
You will each be given a plant name - fern, oak, grass, cycad, gingko, pine, moss
Find you plant group and choose a table to sit at
How can you use the materials on the desk to represent human interaction with the environment?
Explain what you have presented
Main Activity
Remain in your groups
How do you think humans alter individual biomes in their production of food and/or fibre production?
Create eight quick drawings to represent one impact per biome - temperate deciduous forest, temperate grassland, coniferous forest, tundra, tropical forest, savannah grassland, mediterranean, desert ? You have 5 minutes
How would you order these human impacts? Which biome do you think is most impacted through to which is least - in groups
Put your images/drawings in order to represent this
OPTIONAL
Combine with another group and incorporate their drawings in order of impact
Explain your reasoning
Reflection with the students
Each group has a challenge
Use a post it note throughout the session to provide a specific example of how your group implements each of the creative habits
One habit per post it. Refrain from copying examples directly from the poster.
After the session:
Planning with the Teacher
(refer back to your original Term Plan document, discuss successes, explore challenges and make changes.)Successes
Students are looking through the window before each class trying to work out what we are going to be doing.
They get straight into their groups regardless who they are grouped with
Discussion today was much quieter overall but with equal collaboration from each person
When given extended time, they worked out that it was better to each draw two images
Giving a time limit for each component of the activity is resulting in higher participation and more active collaboration within groups
Great sharing of explanations and reasonings for decisions
They were surprised that doing something unconventional such as cutting the paper wasnât against the rules
âI liked the shock of âam I allowed?â...Teacher
Challenges
We forgot the âwithout wordsâ when getting into groups
Students still attempted to only have one or two in their group do all of the drawings
The amount of knowledge they have about each of the biomes is limited and without depth (superficial) however they are only in their second week of the subject so it also provides Fiona (Teacher) with a starting point for what she needs to cover and a comparison for their knowledge at the end of the term
A couple students are still averse to working outside of their friendship groups
Working with students
(what is emerging, what is engaging them/not, whatâs making them curious.)They are curious each week what we are going to be doing, particularly for the warm up where they are getting to arrange different objects
âGuys, itâs not about who is doing it, itâs about getting it all doneâ... student
Even when they worked in larger groups of between 8 and 12, they still did so with really positive collaboration and conversation and checking with others for opinions
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Session 9 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Health and Technologies
by Jodie Davidson, 3 months agoShare Session 9 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Health and Technologies on Facebook Share Session 9 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Health and Technologies on Twitter Share Session 9 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Health and Technologies on Linkedin Email Session 9 - Somerly Primary School Year 3 - Health and Technologies linkWarm Up
PASS THE CLAP - Working as a whole class
Get into a large circle
One person is going to start by clapping towards the person next to them
This person must receive the clap and pass it to the next person
The challenge is how well we can work together to pass the clap around the whole circle
Shall we time it? What is our goal?
Main Activity
What do we know?
You will be given a word. Remember the word (to be placed into smaller groups) - animal, water, plant, rock, place, monument
Fold your piece of paper into four
In your groups, your challenge is to draw/name as many things that you can that relates to your word - eg: place can be a town, city, destination
Put one in each rectangle - 10 minutes
We are going to move to a new group in a clockwise direction
Fold a new piece of paper. How many new things can you come up with to add to the list started by the previous group (animal group moves to water group and adds to their topic)
Continue to rotate until each group has had a turn at each station
Crunch and Sip
Read âOur Country, Where History Happenedâ by Mark Greenwood and Frane Lessac
Reflection with the students
Ongoing Reflection
In each activity, which creative habit do we need to use?
Using your imagination and our activities today, how could/would you like to learn more about Geography and Australia?
After the session:
Successes
The new student who has moved into the class was comfortable enough to participate straight away in the warm up even though he came in late
The students were able to explain to the three students who joined late, how to play âPass the Clapâ
They were able to improve their technique each time and improved their timing
Reading of the book during Crunch and Sip promoted conversation on Australia and made them realise that they knew more than they thought they did during the Main Activity
We went way over time because they were all interested in the book even though it was non-fiction
Challenges
Ability to fully understand the activity - meanings of rocks (mountains, mountain ranges), water (specific bodies of water), monuments/attractions and places (they didnât initially relate these to locations they may have been on holidays
More unsettled during the Main Activity however this may have been because it was something new, there has been a long break in between sessions and it went for quite a long time even with them moving between stations
Groups were working independently rather than collaboratively
Working with students
Less focus on collaboration in the Main Activity even though they collaborated well in the warm up. There was some confusion as to where you could find rocks or mountains apart from Uluru (one student drew a picture of a front garden), places (someone put Bunnings and Aldi) and water (there were a couple of fish tank drawings). In general, they were only able to make limited connections between what they knew and what we were asking them. This may be because when we provided an example, it was an overseas example rather than an Australian one. It did however, provide us with a starting point and a further understanding of what they already know and where we can go from here. They (particularly the boys) were interested in the formation of the different landforms around Australia and how old they were.
Key Dates
FORM's Creative Schools Team
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Phone 0400 922 611 Email vanessa.bradley@form.net.au -
Phone 0480 296 362 Email emily@scribblersfestival.com.au -
Phone 9385 2200 Email erika.jacobson@form.net.au -
Phone 9385 2200 Email laura.motherway@form.net.au