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Working
systematically: Kormilda College
In
2001, Julianne Willis was Vice-Principal, Curriculum, of Kormilda
College in Darwin. At the time she wrote:
This
is a story about one Independent secondary College in Darwin.
It is based on my experiences and perceptions over the past
eight years. It is a story about the developing understandings
and practices of a school in relation to Indigenous education
within Australia today. I am not Indigenous and I do not
claim to have any answers. This is a story of struggle and
some achievements.
I
will describe our school, our students and our staff as
they were about 10 years ago. It is here that I will explore
the problems and issues we faced in our struggle to develop
an appropriate educational program for our Indigenous students.
I will then describe some of the ways we worked from a whole
school point of view to improve our programs. I am not sure
we have found 'What Works' but I am confident we are heading
in some very positive directions. We have moved from struggling
to work out who we are to knowing who we are and what we
are trying to achieve. We have consolidated many of our
programs and further developed others. This is an excellent
basis for considering fresh insights and I believe the College
has new ground to explore. I am optimistic about the future.
In
2003 Julianne is Deputy Principal of the College. The case
study here has been revised, updated and supplemented as she
continues the story.
More
about Julianne... |
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The
context
Kormilda
College is a low-fee independent Christian College situated
in Darwin. We offer secondary education programs for students
aged 13 to 18. An educational priority of the College is to
support Indigenous students to access and then be successful
in secondary education. Currently there are 800 student enrolments.
Of these, 240 are Indigenous students who reside in the College
residences during school terms.
The
College is a traditional Australian Christian Independent
secondary school and the dominant student group is Anglo-Australian.
The dominant staff group is also Anglo-Australian and many
come from places other than Darwin. Staffing is based on student
enrolments, which are volatile. Therefore, staffing is sometimes
not continuous and effective programs are not easily consolidated.
Our
Indigenous students come from approximately 40 different communities
across the Northern Territory. They represent approximately
11 distinct language groups. Many of our students have a strong
Indigenous identity and speak more than one language as well
as English. For many, English is a second language. They bring
a wealth of multi-cultural experiences and knowledge to the
College and some are willing to share these experiences with
the wider community.
More
about the students and their families... |
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The
situation 10 years ago
When
I arrived at the College, we used a model for Indigenous education
in which we implemented specialist programs and employed specialist
staff with specialist knowledge.
Everyone
employed in the College was committed and working very hard
to achieve improved educational outcomes for our students.
The College was in an incredible growth phase, trying to demonstrate
credibility to the local Darwin community while at the same
time maintaining its historical loyalty to our community parents.
I think it would be true to say that our intentions had enormous
integrity and that we were working very hard but that we were
going in different directions. We did not have a shared understanding
about who we were and what we were trying to achieve. I don't
believe we fully understood who our students were. We did
not have the range of skills or understandings necessary to
effectively engage with the issues or develop the kinds of
strategies necessary to move forward.
Many
of our students would leave before making any real progress.
Teachers had difficulty in engaging students in learning processes.
We had difficulty in communicating with our parents. Much
of the time spent in classrooms was devoted to counselling
or crowd control. We were not alone in this regard.
More
about the situation 10 years ago... |
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What
did we have going for us?
Some
general background factors:
- The College's history. Many of our parents were once our
students. Kormilda College is part of some communities'
heritage and therefore parental support is strong. Being
located in Darwin and being reasonably well known means
that we are able to access a wide range of support and opportunities
not available in small remote communities.
- A large number of Indigenous students. There is an Indigenous
presence at Kormilda College that cannot be marginalised
or ignored; and there are many pathways and opportunities
that are available to our students due to the size of our
operation and the number of Indigenous students in one place.
Because of this, the College is often used as a site for
health education programs. Well-known Indigenous people
visit us and others come to us to offer assistance.
- Our older students act as role models for all of our students
and support our younger Indigenous students to stay at school
and be successful.
- Indigenous students at Kormilda College are immersed in
Standard Australian English. Learning a language is much
easier when you are immersed in it.
- A 'captive audience'. As residential students and as teenagers,
our residential program supports consistent attendance and
learning how to learn within this kind of environment.
- Access to Commonwealth funding for education programs.
- A highly dedicated and committed staff who all go beyond
the call of duty.
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The
first step: Clarifying what we were trying to achieve
We
began by clarifying our goals. After considerable discussion,
we agreed that Kormilda College would:
- identify the specific needs of our Indigenous students
when they arrived at the College and attempt to provide
open and diverse educational pathways
- provide open and diverse educational pathways for secondary-aged
Indigenous students
- support Indigenous students to access and be successful
in secondary education
- ensure that success is measured by achievement in developing
English literacy and numeracy
- ensure that success is also measured by individuals continuing
through learning pathways that lead to work or further education
- value the individual, who they are and what they bring
to the College community
- provide a living and learning context based on values
- love, dignity, trust, social justice, courage, honesty
- provide access to a range of support services (doctors,
hospital, counsellors, vocational advisers).
Building
relationships...
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The
next step: Developing policy
We
began to re-affirm structures or programs that were working
for us. We also began to develop an awareness that what we
needed was a whole school strategic approach built on the
achievement of these goals, firstly and very importantly through
establishing relevant policy:
- Two places on the College's Governing Board are reserved
for Indigenous members.
- Indigenous Education remains a priority in the College's
Mission Statement.
- The Board's Employment Policy provides a basis for increasing
the level of Indigenous employment.
- The Board's Professional Development Policy requires that
all staff must undertake professional development in cross-cultural
awareness and that all teaching staff must undertake professional
development in ESL teaching methods.
- The Board's Enrolment Policy provides for open access
to Kormilda College for Indigenous students from remote
communities.
- In the Middle School all Indigenous classes are maintained
at an average of 22 students. (Two classes are prioritised
for 15 students only).
- Strategic Plan built on IESIP and NIELNS with specific
targeted outcomes for Indigenous students is being developed
and implemented over a four year period.
Subsequently,
a number of principles of operation were discussed, agreed
and implemented.
Read
about the principles... |
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The
Third Step: Translation into practice 'We
all have the responsibility'...
Teaching
and learning
Indigenous
classes in the Middle School
Students are now grouped according to English literacy ability
and their experience with Australian school education. There
are three main programs. Generally:
- students who speak English as a first language are integrated
into mainstream programs;
- students who speak English as a second language and who
have consistent attendance backgrounds in schooling are
placed in mainstream ESL programs; and
- students who speak English as a second language and who
do not have consistent attendance backgrounds in schooling
are placed in an Intensive ESL program.
| All
these programs are designed to maintain strong Indigenous
identity while at the same time developing student understandings
and skills in Australian secondary education programs.
Students within the ESL programs become integrated into
mainstream programs as they progress.
An
accredited credential for every student
All educational programs at Kormilda College scaffold
student learning towards the completion of accredited
courses of study and work or further training. These
courses include those available through Northern Territory
Certificate of Education (which includes VET options)
and the International Baccalaureate Diploma. |
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The
VET programs include:
- Off campus: Rural Skills, Mechanics (three different courses),
Music, Fashion, Construction, Maritime and Fishing, TRAC
(three different courses).
- On campus: Certificate in Remote Area Local Government
(level II) and Certificate in Aboriginal Preparatory Education
(level II).
Read
about VET developments in 2003...
Cross-cultural
programs
We have conducted a variety of such programs for both Indigenous
and non-Indigenous students. The most successful have been
in areas not related to English literacy where students are
working together on a project and over time develop understandings
about each other. These include sporting groups, art classes,
and Outdoor Education Programs.
We
offer Australian Indigenous Languages subjects at Year 11
and 12.
ATAS/Homework
programs
Students access a specialised tutoring and homework program
four evenings a week to support effective learning in the
day school program.
Pastoral
care
Before
any child can be responsive to learning, basic needs need
to be met. Feeling loved, safe and healthy is a basis for
self respect, growth and being open to opportunities. If you
have spent your life being abused, not eating healthy food,
into drug abuse from an early age, solved problems through
violence, have inappropriate models, have been raised with
mixed and ambiguous values and no boundaries … how can
you focus on learning to read and write in English? Why would
you?
Read
about the new Student Services Centre in 2003...
More
about pastoral care...
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The
results
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1996 |
2000 |
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| Number
of Indigenous students graduating Year 12 (NTCE) |
0 |
8 |
| Number
of Indigenous students completing Year 10 |
14 |
20 |
| Percentage
of Indigenous students enrolled in specialist Literacy
and Numeracy programs (ESL profile levels 1 - 3) |
60% |
55% |
| Indigenous
students who consistently attended (returned for four
terms out of four) |
na |
84% |
| VET
programs on offer |
nil |
15 |
| Number
of Indigenous people involved in advisory committees on
a regular basis |
7 |
16 |
| Comprehensive
community liaison programs |
nil |
4 |
More
about outcomes... |
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