I have been keenly interested in the design of learning spaces for some time. I guess my background as a designer (I attended Hereford College of Art and Design in the 70s) and my professional life as an educator draw me back to this again and again. It was with great pleasure then, that I was able to visit Albany Senior High School in North Auckland yesterday to talk to a group of educators from across the city. The vision statement of the school is simple but powerful: We nurture each other, we inspire each other, we empower each other.
The first thing that strikes you about ASHS when you arrive is the pristine condition of this new build. With an under-building car park, and serene woodland surroundings, it is in an ideal position to provide high class education for young minds. Entering the reception area via the lift, I encountered a cafeteria area similar to any found in the corporate world. Mark Osborne, the deputy principal told me: "We offer the students an environment where they are treated like adults. When they are dealt with in this way, they take on adult responsibilities and behaviour." Moving through from reception into the main school, it was evident to see that open plan, flexible spaces were the key design feature, and personalised learning the norm. Students sit in areas where they can interact with each other and the teachers, and there can be up to three separate classes taking place in the same space, with student able to move around the room, and across the curricular topics seamlessly. Gone is the silo mentality of 'Now you are in a science class'. A central tenet of the school's curriculum delivery is that students know why they are learning something, and can then connect it to real life contexts.
It was refreshing to see that the school is also fully open source in its software use. Mark Osborne told me this is because the school also practices a Bring Your Own Device option for all its students. He argued that the most equitable way to manage this to avoid any digital divides is to provide Open Source Software to all students. If they have no device of their own, there are computers available in all the spaces. I was impressed with the fully equipped dance studio and next door, another studio for audio and video projects, complete with a green screen room. ASHS even has its own YouTube channel.
Barbara Kavanagh is the principal of the school, and she is a visionary, seeing the school as one of many that will emerge in the next few years across the region. She told me that the 800 or so students have over 50 teaching staff to support them. That by any estimation is a great student to teacher ratio. The free, open, flexible spaces and the policy of BYOD ensure that the school is both an attractive and sustainable place to learn. Furthermore, all the resources the teachers create for teaching and assessment are licensed under Creative Commons for free use by other educators. My hope it that we will still other schools using this model in the future, both in New Zealand, and farther afield.
Image courtesy of Albany Senior High School
Fabulous learning spaces by Steve Wheeler is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
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