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Benefits > Making Partnerships

Objectives:

Develop Key Skills

Support Learning

Increase Confidence

Outcomes Monitored

Develop Leadership Skills

Give Insight

Increase Understanding

Network Schools

Ongoing Research

Making Partnerships

Working in partnership opens up schools, enabling them to become more risk taking environments. By bringing people from different worlds to work together, each with their own language and set of assumptions, new and exciting ways of working emerge.


Effectively planned and resourced, partnerships between schools and external individuals and organisations can

 

CAPE UK Partnerships
Central to CAPE partnerships is the commissioning of an external creative professional to work, long-term, alongside a school co-ordinator in the development of a strategy for change and innovation within the school.

Each partnership will evolve differently within its own particular context as each school has different aims in setting up a CAPE partnership. Some see the involvement of the local community and local primary schools as the highest priority, some focus on the needs of disaffected older pupils and are keen to establish or develop links with local businesses and the youth service, others want to influence the teaching and learning programmes in specific departments.

Defining Partnership
Partnership is not only about working with other people, it is about agreeing joint aims then planning, managing and reviewing activity together. It also involves a sharing of decision-making power. The purpose of CAPE partnerships is to place that decision making at the heart of a school, in the management and delivery of all teaching and learning. CAPE has demonstrated that this can happen, however it has not always happened.

What makes successful partnerships?

Most of the partnerships that have produced successful programmes have gone through similar stages of development.

Long term partnerships move back and forth between the phases, with review leading to further action or consolidation, or unexpected outcomes requiring a formal resetting of the next practical phase.

In forming partnerships it was essential to get the core conditions right.

A number of negative factors have inhibited some partnerships. It is not always easy at the outset to know if the core conditions are going to be in place in any one school. The best indicator is a school having a history of running effective development programmes, especially those with external partners. CAPE included a wide range of schools, some with a history of innovation and some without. Some of those without such a history have formed successful partnerships.

What has become clear is that partnerships in which the partners had a great deal of autonomy to manage their own affairs are the most successful, and this works best where there is already experience of managing externally funded projects. To this must be added other highly significant factors. They included:

Other partnerships needed more support and one of the lessons learnt is that we have to recognise this need earlier.

The success of a partnership has to be judged by its impact on teaching and learning for both teachers and young people . NFER (National Foundation for Education Research) evaluation of previous CAPE partnerships identified four further conditions that were deemed to be conducive to this:

Check-list of issues to consider when establishing a creative partnership: “the best CAPE artists are those who come in with their art and, after a period of time working in school, are not quite sure whether they are really still artists or teachers. Their role changes through the process of doing it and we are quite happy for that to happen. They don’t lose any of the intensity of their art, but they gain from the experience of communicating creativity to the teachers and the kids.” – Co-ordinator.