Conferences

Learning differently: new frontiers for community

collaboration, agency and identity

 

BOOK AT:  https://www.bera.ac.uk/event/new-frontiers
An interactive and dynamic one day learning exchange event on alternative approaches to learning in the vibrant cityscape of Camden Town in London. The event aims to provide a platform for challenging some of the taken for granted assumptions about learning as means to labour market ends and to consider alternative models and applications/practices used for the development of creativity, critical thinking and problem solving in a socially situated and empowering way. The topical themes of alternative learning approaches, assessment, learning communities and alternative education spaces will guide avenues for sharing practice and ideas.The event will cater to a diverse audience of BERA members, PhD students, early career and experienced researchers’ professionals as well as those engaged in the practice advocacy or educational difference. All come together with a common interest. Our dynamic collection of speakers include: Professor Peter Twinning (Open University), Dr Ian Cunningham (Self-Managed Learning College, Sussex) and Professor Peter Kraftl (University of Birmingham).

BOOK AT:  https://www.bera.ac.uk/event/new-frontiers

Programme

10:30 Registrations, refreshments and networking
11:15 Introductions
Dr Amber Fensham-Smith & Dr Harriet Pattison
11:30 Alternative assessment and reflective practice
Professor Peter Twinning, Open University
12:30 Pecha-Kucha’s:
new project development in alternative education
Pedagogies of Hope:Dr Darren Webb, University of Sheffield Innovating spaces for change:
Sophie Christophy, Phoenix Education Trust
Curriouser & Co.:
Nikki O’Rouke, The Institute of Imagination, Luke Freedman, Phoenix Education
The Light on Education Researcher Network:
Peter Humphreys, Centre for Personalised Education
13:10 Lunch
14:00 Self-managed learning
Dr Ian Cunningham, Self-Managed College, Sussex
15:00 Alternative education spaces:
Professor Peter Kraftl
16:00 Citizenship and democratic education
Mike Berril & Dr Neil Hopkins, University of Bedfordshire
16:30 Refreshments and networking
17:00 Panel discussion: reflections and new pathways
Chairs: Dr Amber Fensham-Smith & Dr Harriet Pattison
17:55 Completion of evaluation forms
18:00 Close of event

 

BOOK AT:  https://www.bera.ac.uk/event/new-frontiers

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Centre for Personalised Education in Partnership with the

Childhood Research Forum and Phoenix Education

Light on Ed Research Network.

Inaugural Learning Exchange (LEX)

Saturday 28th April 2018

Eden Building. Arbour Room, Liverpool Hope University. Hope Park, Liverpool L169JD

Times: 1030-1630

The Centre for Personalised Education  the  Childhood Research Forum (Liverpool Hope University and  Phoenix Education Trust welcome you an inaugural Learning Exchange (LEX) to launch the Light on Ed Research Network.

Facebook Group: Light on Ed Research Group

Twitter: #LightonEd

Part of the Big Education Conversation

 

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This research network aims to be something a little different, being inclusive of academia but by no means exclusive to it. Light on Ed seeks to develop a multi-level network of researchers originating from schools, colleges, universities, other organisations along with independent researchers and scholars. It seeks to be open, supportive and focussed on accessible and creative communication with mixed audiences and constituencies. The focus of the network is to shed a critical lens on our mainstream learning systems and look forward to an educational landscape where the learner is put back centre stage. In the process it will shed light on alternative educational settings and projects in addition to radical innovations from within mainstream. The network will serve as a resource for resource questions and as a ‘dating agency’ for researchers and potential research projects. Light on Ed will establish a range of platforms for dissemination including websites, social media, forums, journal, digital and hard book publishing assisting with the visibility and archiving of this kind of research. The network will contribute to and emphasise developing informed grassroots narratives and understandings.

  • Join us at this inaugural LEX. We have a diverse line up and interesting themes running throughout the day. Come along and listen, question, contribute, talk, network and enjoy!FacilitatorsDr Harriet PattisonHarriet Lectures in the Early Childhood Department at Liverpool Hope University and co-ordinates the Childhood Research Forum along with Dr Zoi Nikiforidou. She a trustee and a director of the Centre for Personalised Education.  She has researched home educated children learning to read and is fascinated by the philosophy of educational alternatives.

    Peter Humphreys

    Peter is Chair, of the Centre for Personalised Education. Peter spent 25 years as a primary teacher, 10 years as Headteacher going on to work as an educational consultant covering roles in local authority advisory service, the British Educational Communications and Technology Agency (Becta) and Futurelab. He is a visiting lecturer at Birmingham City University in teacher education.

    Contributors

    Dr Clare Lawrence (Keynote)

    Clare is Senior Lecturer in Teacher Development at Bishop Grosseteste University in Lincoln, where she is the English Secondary lead with a special interest in autism education. For the last fifteen years Clare has been working with parents, schools, universities and autism experts to explore practical solutions on how to make school make more sense for children with autism and how to help promote understanding of what having this fascinating condition might be like. Clare’s PhD thesis was on finding ways to bridge the gulf in autism expectation and aspiration between parents and schools, specifically through sharing the education of the child between home and school with flexischooling. Clare has two children. Her son has autism. https://www.clarelawrenceautism.com/  

    Dr Ian Cunningham (Keynote)

    Ian Cunningham has published six books and over 120 articles and papers in areas such as education, learning, leadership and organisational change. He chairs the Governing Body of Self Managed Learning College in Brighton. His most recent academic post has been as Visiting Professor in Organisational Learning at Kodolányi János University of Applied Science, Székesfehérvár, Hungary. Other previous academic posts include visiting professor positions in education at the University of Utah, Middlesex University and the Technical Teacher Training Institute, Bhopal. He was Chief Executive of Roffey Park Management Institute from 1987 to 1993.He chairs Strategic Developments International Ltd. In the latter capacity he has acted as a learning consultant to most of the world’s largest international companies as well as to the National Health Service, Government departments and local authorities. His current clients include Tottenham Hotspur Football Club (developing senior coaches) and St George’s, University of London (developing senior leaders). He is also running a Self Managed Learning programme for school heads

    Indra-Kaye Staunton

    Indra-Kaye Staunton has recently completed and obtained a distinction in the Masters of Developmental Psychology and Early Childhood at Liverpool Hope University under the supervision of Dr. Harriet Pattison. Her thesis is focused upon alternative methods of parenting, such as attachment parenting, and touched upon questions of feminism, stereotypes and the natural. Her work with the NSPCC has also enabled her to gain a wider understanding of the importance in educating children, from an early age, to understand and recognise abuse and neglect in every form and to provide them with the knowledge on how to protect themselves. Indra-Kaye also has a particular interest in the ways in which play has the ability to simultaneously allow children to utilize their rights whilst also impose upon their rights of others and how children’s thinking and learning about their own identity and the identity of others is impacted by cultural traits, in particular food habits.

    Michael Gilsenan.

    Michael has been involved in the field of Youth and Community work for 30 years as a practitioner and, for the last 13 years as an academic.  The focus of his work has always been, with groups and individuals, to draw out learning from informal environments.  The work often took place in open access youth centres and on the streets (known as detached youth work) and led to many community-oriented initiatives (community cafes, skate park provision, involvement in local councils, community art projects etc.). Michael has three grown up children, one of whom had a self-educated childhood.  He is currently a doctoral student at Liverpool Hope University working on a collaborative research approach exploring unplanned, incidental and spontaneous learning.

    Fiona Beavan

    Fiona is a lecturer in Further Education, home educator and trustee/director of the Centre for Personalised Education. Fiona is in the throes of doctoral research into Investigating mother’s experiences and perceptions of flexible education and educational alternatives within mainstream school. Mum to eleven lovely children. Fiona has an MA in Early Childhood and is director/ founder of charity Joshua’s Boxes. Facebook Groups – Centre for Personalised Education.

    Fe Mukwamba-Sendall

    Fe is a PhD Student/ Researcher/ Associate Lecturer at Lancaster University. Her research is focussed on Local authority education officer’s perceptions of Elective Home Education (EHE): how this impinges on both their professional practice and their professional relationships with home educators. Consideration of: officers understanding of the relevant legislation and guidance pertaining to EHE; how officer’s perception of welfare and safeguarding concerns in respect of the home educated child arise and the effect on their practice; officers understanding of the nature and practice of EHE. Consideration of how EHE families perceive the role of the officers and their practices as it affects them.

    Dr Babs Anderson

    Babs Anderson is a Senior Lecturer in Childhood Studies at Liverpool Hope University.

    Babs has had a varied educational career, including a number of part-time roles, such as 25 years as an early years practitioner, 12 years as a consultant for Knowsley Healthy schools programme and 20 years as a lecturer in Early Childhood in Higher Education Institutions, most recently at Liverpool Hope University. She currently leads the first year of the single honours Early Childhood course, in addition to a masters module and two modules on the educational doctorate programme at Liverpool Hope. She has an active research profile, including that of co-convenor of the Holistic Well-being Special Interest Group of the European Early Childhood Educational Research Association. Her publications include an edited volume: Philosophy for Children: Theory and Praxis in teacher education (2016), a chapter in Childhood today (2017) and a research journal article in EECERJ (2018) Young children playing together: A choice of engagement.

    Dr Tania Watson

    Tania Watson has recently completed a doctorate at Newcastle University and puts forward a Culpability Model of Disability to explain the on-going accountability levelled toward children and families for the manifestations of behavioural disability. Tania’s research interests are disability accountability and its incongruence with the tenets of anti-discrimination legislation. Tania is mother to eleven children and has extensive maternal experience of Autistic Spectrum Disorders. She is currently seeking to expand her doctoral research by exploring further the familial impact of behavioural disability and disability accountability against a backdrop of neoliberal idealism which continues to demonise rather than support those facing familial crises.

    Kate Roberts

    Kate Roberts is an MA student in Creative Practices in Education at the University of Chester, having worked in the education, arts and business sectors for 25 years as a drama practitioner, teacher, facilitator, and mentor. Kate, through her research into creativity and alternative education provision, has developed a versatile pedagogical structure – The PEC (Positive Effective Communication) Framework. The PEC Framework, developed out of experimenting with combining process drama techniques and self-managed learning approaches, can be adapted to the unique, individual requirements of groups, organizations, and businesses.

    Wendy Charles-Warner

    Wendy is a trustee / director of the   Centre for Personalised Education. Wendy is retired from a career in civil law and has been advising on Home Education law and practise for around 34 years. She has provided training to Local Authorities on the law and practise of Home Education and their duties in that regard, for the past 8 years. During this time, she has given both oral and written witness evidence to the Welsh Assembly Government, its Ministers and Members, together with UK Members of Parliament, on the subject of Home Education. Wendy has acted as an advisor on Home Education law and practice to NGOs in the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Poland and Ireland. Wendy has undertaken research in the field of home education, particularly in the area of separating fact from myth and in the creeping control of childhood by the state.

    Alice Khimasia

    Alice Khimasia, Propagator of Unschooling, TEDx Speaker, Informal Educational Researcher & Blogger. “The Spaces Between Us: An Experimental Collaborative of Autonomous Learners”

    Sharon Jones

    Sharon is in the 5th year of a part time PhD in the sociology of education. My research draws on a critical ethnographic study of five working class adults from an English town with economic, social and education disadvantages who personally experience multiple deprivations, this qualitative research, using participative methods, sets out to explore and develop a critical and sociological understanding of the participants home backgrounds and schooling experiences during childhood and how their experiences have shaped their thinking through a number of weekly observations and one-to-one interviews and following group interviews. Furthermore, informative sessions were held to expose the power relations that the participants experienced.

    In addition to this study, a ‘transformative’ intervention that uses the arts, particularly drama and film, has been implemented and tested to create a visual platform for the development of critical thinking skills amongst the participants with the intention of enabling them to deepen their critical reflection on their previous negative social and schooling/educational experiences, and thereby to promote their own individual upward social mobility and also to promote critical reflection and agency in the broader socio-political sphere.

    Luke Freedman

    Luke describes himself as an Emerging researcher / Self Directed Education Facilitator / Activist.Luke is interested in Quantitative research into outcomes of Unschooling / Play / Democratic Education and the pathways that mediate between practice / experience and long-term outcomes. Luke represents a self-managed learning community of primary age children (approx 25). 

    Kay Sidebottom

    Kay is Programme Manager at the Lifelong Learning Centre, University of Leeds. She is involved in teaching and managing BA and Foundation degrees in Learning and Teaching and SEND (Special Educational Needs and Disabilities).  Kay’s current research practices, are based around the use of posthuman, post-qualitative methodologies (‘anti-methodologies!)

    Alison Sauer (F. Inst. Pa.)

    Alison Sauer has been practising in the area of home education for approximately 17 years. She has provided training to local authorities on the law and practice of home education and their duties in that regard, for much of the past 12 years. She works with colleagues to provide an advisory service along for home educating parents involving, amongst other aspects, independent, third party assessment of educational provision and writing expert reports in respect of the standard of that provision, to local authorities and the courts. The advice also extends to supporting home educating families in their dealings with social services and other agencies. She is a trustee for ‘The Centre for Personalised Education’. On several occasions over last 5 years she has given witness evidence to the House of Commons Education Select Committee on the subject of home education. She has also acted as an advisor on home education law and practice to NGOs in the UK and abroad.

    Learning Exchange Format

    After the introduction to the Light on Ed Research Network the format for this inaugural LEX will comprise morning and afternoon sessions initiated by two keynotes to the conference followed by a carousel of research presentations / group discussions / Q&A with table groups. The LEX will end with a closing discussion / feedback / next steps.

     PROGRAMME

    1000-1030 Arrival, registration, refreshments, networking, Educational Heretics Press bookstall

    1030 –1045 Welcome, Domestics, The Network. Dr Harriet Pattison / Peter Humphreys 

    1045-1130 Keynote 1. Dr Clare Lawrence. Flexischooling and Autism

    1130-1230 Research Carousel 1.

    1130-1215 (45 mins) Presentations to table groups followed by discussion

    1. * Indra Kaye-Staunton. ‘A Feminist Analysis of Attachment Parenting’.
    2. Michael Gilsenan. Unplanned, Incidental and Spontaneous Learning: a Collaborative Exploration.
    3. * Dr Tania Watson. Disability and Challenging Behaviour in Schools; the Need for a Culpability Model of Disability.
    4. Sharon Jones. Creating a visual platform for developing critical thinking.

    1215-1230 Researchers briefly share table discussions to whole event

    1230-1315 Lunch, refreshments, networking, Educational Heretics Press bookstall

    1315-1345 Keynote 2. Dr Ian Cunningham.  ‘Skin in the Game; involved person-centred research’

    1345-1445 Research Carousel 2.

    1345-1430 (45 mins) Presentations to table groups followed by discussion

    1. Fe Mukwumba-Sendall. Local authority education officer’s perceptions of Elective Home Education (EHE).
    2. Dr Babs Anderson. The outdoor nursery: Experiential learning in a forest setting
    3. Fiona Beavan. An investigation into mothers’ perceptions of the role of flexible education.
    4. Kate Roberts. Process Drama and Self-Managed Learning: A Pedagogical Fusion.

    1430-1445 Researchers briefly share table discussions to whole event

    1445-1505 Break, refreshments, Educational Heretics Press bookstall

    1505-1535 Threads and Themes. Dr Harriet Pattison / Peter Humphreys / Danny Whitehouse.

    1535-1605 Open Forum Event participants can briefly share any research they’re involved with or know of. Also, opportunity for educational projects and innovations to share research needs. Pre-booked inputs….

    • Alice Khimasia. The Spaces Between Us: An Experimental Collaborative of Autonomous Learners.
    • Alison Sauer. Child of the Parent or Child of the State?
    • Luke Freedman. A proposal to initiate research into the development of ‘non-cognitive skills’ in young people involved in Self-Directed Education (SDE) and in the previous research theory that underpins this.
    • Kay Sidebottom.  The use of posthuman, post-qualitative methodologies (or should I say ‘anti-methodologies!) May be of interest particularly for those frustrated by the restrictions of classical research approaches and wanting to try new ideas.

    1605-1630 Closing discussion / feedback / next steps – network / publications / archive etc Dr Harriet Pattison / Peter Humphreys / Danny Whitehouse

    Join Light on Ed Research Network

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Centre for Personalised Education

        Learning Exchange (LEX) – Alternative Educational Futures

           Saturday 25th March 1030-1630

           Twitter: #AlternativeEducationalFutures

Venue : Walsall College Hub

After our enormously successful Centre for Personalised Education Alternative Educational Futures Conference last June at Birmingham City University join us for our latest Learning Exchange (LEX) event. We have a diverse line up and interesting themes running throughout the day. Come along and listen, question, contribute, talk, network and enjoy!

Dr Rachel Sara LewisRadicalisation in Education. Peter Humphreys – Centre for Personalised Education. Emma DykeFlexischooling update. Dr Harriet Pattison – Some Reflections on Fundamental British Values and the Alternative. Nikki O’Rourke‘Curious Minds’ Pop-up Learning Space / Re-imagining School / Self-directed Education.  Dr Tim Rudd – Negotiating Neoliberalism. Developing Alternative Educational Visions. Fiona Beavan – PhD research: Transition at 5 years to Full-time School. Alison Sauer – Home Education – the Spectrum. Mike Wood – Regulation: An Anathema to Self-directed Education.

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Contributors

Fiona Beavan

Fiona is a lecturer in Further Education, home educator and trustee/director of the Centre for Personalised Education. Fiona is embarking on her PhD into Transition at 5 years to Full-time School. Mum to eleven lovely children. Fiona has an MA in a Early Childhood and is director/ founder of charity Joshua’s Boxes. Facebook Groups – Centre for Personalised Education

Emma Dyke

Emma is a home educator and trustee/director of the Centre for Personalised Education. Emma leads and co-ordinates the Flexischooling Strategy Group and moderates and supports the Flexischooling Facebook forums. She is currently working with Peter Humphreys and Alison Sauer on a Flexischooling Handbook for parents, learners and schools. Facebook Groups – Flexischooling Families UK, Flexischooling Practitioners, Flexischooling.

Peter Humphreys

Peter is Chair, trustee and a director of the Centre for Personalised Education – Personalised Education Now (CPE-PEN). Peter spent 25 years as a primary teacher, 10 years as Headteacher going on to work as an educational consultant covering roles in local authority advisory service, the British Educational Communications and Technology Agency (Becta) and Futurelab. He is a visiting lecturer at Birmingham City University in teacher education. Peter co-authored the 2005 Futurelab Report: Personalisation and Digital Technologies and the Learner’s Charter for a Personalised Learning Environment following in 2006 with his own article Towards a Personalised Educational Landscape. Other writing includes: Personalised Education: A Framework for Evaluation and Educational Reconstruction, in Taking Choice Seriously, Webster, M (2008); a Futurelab report:  Fountaineers: Exploring the impact of a whole-school co-design project Emerging issues and implications for pedagogy, curriculum and learning space design (2009).  He was editor of the CPE-PEN Journal 2004-2016 writing regularly… Personalised Education, (2004); Landscapes, Travellers and Technology, (2005); Recycling Schools, Special Journal (2007); Evolutionary Development …letting it grow, (2009); BBC’s ‘The Classroom Experiment – obscuring the real issues (2011);  Flexischoolng,  Special Journal (2012); Flexischooling Guidance, Special Journal (2012); Christopher Shute, Special Journal (2013); Philip Toogood, Special Journal (2013); Roland Meighan, Special Journal (2014); Personalised Education and Co-operation. Connections, Journal of Co-operative Studies. Special Ed. Co-operative Learning in Education. Vol 44. No.3 (2011). Peter’s most recent work includes Rethinking Learning and Lives 2040: Educational Technologies and Personalised Learning Landscapes (2014) and Neoliberal Schooling, Dehumanisation and an Education (2017) in Rudd, T. & Goodson, I. F. [Eds.] (2017). Negotiating Neoliberalism: Developing Alternative Educational Visions. Sense Publishers. Rotterdam/Boston/Taipei.

Centre for Personalised Education – Personalised Education Now.

Facebook Groups – Centre for Personalised Education, Flexischooling Families UK, Flexischooling Practitioners, Flexischooling. Twitter: Centre for Person Ed @cpe_pen

Dr Rachel Sara Lewis

Forever practicing to be perfect Muslim, qualified secondary school religious studies teacher, with a PhD in theology. Education activist, home educating mother of four, an avid traveller living and working in Leeds. As a home educating parent I look at education from the perspective that it is my right and my choice to educate my children within the ‘village’ of my choice, but I respect the choice of others to send their children to school and reserve the right to do so myself within stringent perimeters. Education is a passion of mine and I enjoy it so much, that I open my home up to paying customers while tutoring those in my community who cannot afford to pay.

Nikki O’Rourke

Nikki’s Twitter feed states she is an education geek and slightly neurotic mum to two lovely/lively little boys. She is also a qualified primary, early years’ teacher. She has had varied experience in state education from nurturing to less so. Nikki stopped teaching 7 years ago, when she became a mother. She later tried to set up a free school.. Nikki is currently a home educator and working looking to set up the ‘Curious Minds’ Pop-up Learning Space / Re-imagining School / Self-directed Education. Nikki is a trustee / director of the Centre for Personalised Education. Facebook Groups – Centre for Personalised Education.

Dr Harriet Pattison

I am now an erstwhile home educator lecturing in the Early Childhood Department at Liverpool Hope University and flying the flag of the alternative to a surprisingly receptive audience.  I completed my doctoral thesis on home educated children learning to read and am very pleased to be finally able to return this work to the home educating community who made it possible.  It has been a work of endless fascination to me and I shall be continuing to write and think about reading and the wider implications of the research in the time ahead.  I have also become equally fascinated by the philosophy of the alternative and am developing work in this area too.  My writing includes: Pattison, H (2016) Education and the Time of our Lives in Other Education Special Issue ed N. Peim. (forthcoming) ; Pattison, H and Thomas A (2016) Great Expectations:  Agenda and Authority in Technological, Hidden and Cultural  Curriculums in eds  Noddings, N and Lees, H in Palgrave International Handbook of Alternative Education Basingstoke, Palgrave MacMillan; Pattison, H (2015) How to Desire Differently: Home Education as a Heterotopia in The Journal of Philosophy of Education,  (49)  4; Thomas, A and Pattison, H (2015) The Informal Acquisition and Development of Literacy in: P. Rothermel (Ed.) International Perspectives on Home Education, Basingstoke, Palgrave MacMillan; Thomas, A. & Pattison, H. (2013) Informal home education: philosophical aspirations put into practice. Studies in Philosophy and Education, 32, 141-154

http://www.othereducation.org/index.php/OE Harriet’s latest title is Pattison, H (2016) Rethinking Learning to Read: The Challenge from Children Educated at Home. Educational Heretics Press.

Dr Tim Rudd

Tim was Head of Evidence and Research at the British Educational and Communications Technology Agency (Becta) and then appointed Senior Researcher at Futurelab, a world leading research and development charity focussing on innovation and educational transformation utilising new technologies. Currently, Tim is Principal Lecturer at the Education Research Centre at the University of Brighton. His research interests include: the sociology of education; educational technology; the politics and ideology of educational technology; learner voice and empowerment; alternative educational discourse and practice; and equity and social justice in education.

Tim is currently working on research activities relating to: ‘critical perspectives on educational technology’, and ‘resisting neo liberal education and alternative educational discourse, systems and practice’.

Rudd, T. & Goodson, I. F. [Eds.] (2017). Negotiating Neoliberalism: Developing Alternative Educational Visions. Sense Publishers. Rotterdam/Boston/Taipei.

http://about.brighton.ac.uk/education/contact/details.php?uid=tpr10

http://www.livelab.org.uk/page2.htm

Alison Sauer (F. Inst. Pa.)

Alison Sauer has been practising in the area of home education for approximately 17 years. She has provided training to local authorities on the law and practice of home education and their duties in that regard, for much of the past 12 years. She provides an advisory service along with Wendy Charles Warner for home educating parents involving, amongst other aspects, independent, third party assessment of educational provision and writing expert reports in respect of the standard of that provision, to local authorities and the courts. The advice also extends to supporting home educating families in their dealings with social services and other agencies. She is a trustee for ‘The Centre for Personalised Education’. On several occasions over last 5 years she has given witness evidence to the House of Commons Education Select Committee on the subject of home education. She has also acted as an advisor on home education law and practice to NGOs in the UK and abroad.  Alison additionally campaigns for and supports families and schools in developing flexischooling. Alison is currently working with Peter Humphreys and Emma Dyke on a Flexischooling Handbook for parents, learners and schools. 

Facebook Groups: Home Education and your Local Authority: Help with dealing with officialdom, https://www.facebook.com/groups/239232119524989/  Flexischooling Families UK, Flexischooling Practitioners, Flexischooling, Centre for Personalised Education.

Mike Wood

Mike is an experienced home educator, author, researcher, speaker and publisher. Mike runs Home Education UK, the largest home education support site in the country. Mike runs Educational Heretics Press and is developing a broader web presence and is moving into eBooks alongside hard copy contents. Mike’s own books include his research on home-based education: The Face of Home-based Education 1, 2005; The Face of Home-based Education 2, 2006; Can’t Go Won’t Go, 2007. His latest work  – all published with Educational Heretics Press.

EHP Facebook Page

 

PROGRAMME

  • 1030-1100 Arrival, registration, refreshments, networking, bookstall (Educational Heretics Press).
  • 1100 –1110 Centre for Personalised Education, welcome, domestics. Peter Humphreys
  • 1110-1130 Radicalisation in Education input. Dr Rachel Sara Lewis
  • 1130-1230 Radicalisation discussion.
  • 1230-1315 Lunch, refreshments, networking, bookstall (Educational Heretics Press)
  • 1315-1325 Centre for Personalised Education. Current activity. Peter Humphreys
  • 1325-1335 Centre for Personalised Education Flexischooling update, social media, website section, e-handbook. Emma Dyke / Peter Humphreys
  • 1335-1415 Some reflections on Fundamental British Values and the Alternative. Dr Harriet Pattison
  • 1415-1440 ‘Curious Minds’ Pop up Learning Space Re-imagining School / Self -directed Education- Nikki O’Rourke
  • 1440-1500 Negotiating Neoliberalism – Dr Tim Rudd
  • 1500-1520 Doctoral Research. Transition at 5 years old to Full-time Education – Fiona Beavan
  • 1520-1540 The Home Education SpectrumAlison Sauer
  • 1540-1600 Regulation: An anathema to Self-Directed Education – Mike Wood
  • 1600-1630 Final Comments. Peter Humphreys. Refreshments, networking, bookstall (Educational Heretics Press)

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Audience

  • 60… Inclusive of academics, teachers, other educators, students, parents and learners from the mainstream and alternatives and interested citizens. Rather than talking within bubbles and silos we seek to network these constituencies.  Learning with and from each other creating a shared dialogue, mutual respect and understanding whilst generating visions of a future personalised, educational landscape. Listen, question, contribute, talk, network, enjoy!

Venue

Accessibility

  • The venue is disability accessible with gentle ramps from the outside. The event room is first floor but disability accessible with lifts.
  • There are disabled toilet facilities

Car Parking

  • There is secure on campus car parking at the rear of the College Hub. Press the intercom at barrier and explain you are attending the event you will then have access.

Children

  • We do not have a dedicated crèche and if attending, young children will be the responsibility of parents. There are a number of common areas that children / parents / guardians could use. Walsall town centre with every shop imaginable is just 5 mins away.
  • Cultural attractions close by…. The world famous Walsall New Art Gallery (5 mins walk) ; the  Walsall Leather Museum (2 mins walk) Light Cinema (5 mins)  Walsall Library (inc Children’s library) (5 mins walk), Walsall Arboretum (amazing park, café etc) (5 mins walk)

Refreshments and Food

  • We try to keep costs to a minimum. Participants can choose to purchase their own lunchtime refreshments and food from a ground floor food outlet, alternatively, attendees can bring their own sandwiches and eat in the event rooms / other Hub areas.
  • CPE will provide drinks (tea/coffee/water/ juice etc.) throughout the event and on arrival, lunchtime and at the end of the programme.

Security

  • All participants will need a learning badge (collect on arrival) to move in / out and around the building. Please return these at the end of the day.

Costs

  • – Current Centre for Personalised Education paid up members: FREE
  • – Non CPE Members. We have a sliding scale. A minimum of £6 per adult but we would welcome £11 / £16 according to your ability to pay. (Children and young people free).

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