A branch newsletter issued by the Canterbury Branch of the TEU in September 2010.
A branch newsletter issued by the Canterbury Branch of the TEU in December 2012.
A branch newsletter issued by the Canterbury Branch of the TEU in November 2010.
A branch newsletter issued by the Canterbury Branch of the TEU in September 2014.
A branch newsletter issued by the Canterbury Branch of the TEU in July 2014.
A branch newsletter issued by the Canterbury Branch of the TEU in February 2014.
A branch newsletter issued by the Canterbury Branch of the TEU in April 2013.
Printing information for Computer Workrooms in Otakaro at College of Education.
A class underway in Avon 205 at the College of Education.
A class underway in Avon 205 at the College of Education.
A class underway in Avon 205 at the College of Education.
A class underway in Avon 205 at the College of Education.
A class underway in Avon 205 at the College of Education.
Students study in a Computer Workrooms in Otakaro at College of Education.
A worker helps construct a temporary classroom at the College of Education.
Piles propped up while the cement dries at the College of Education.
A worker helps construct a temporary classroom at the College of Education.
Students study in a Computer Workrooms in Otakaro at College of Education.
Laws 205 classes being taught in Otakaro at the College of Education.
A worker helps construct a temporary classroom at the College of Education.
A worker helps construct a temporary classroom at the College of Education.
A worker helps construct a temporary classroom at the College of Education.
Students study in a Computer Workrooms in Otakaro at College of Education.
Laws 205 classes being taught in Otakaro at the College of Education.
The Bachelor of Youth and Community Leadership (BYCL) was launched by the University of Canterbury (UC) in 2020. The genesis of this new degree was a Stage One service-learning course that, in turn, arose from the innovative and active response of many of the university’s students in the aftermath of the Christchurch earthquakes in 2010 and 2011. That innovative action saw the formation of the Student Volunteer Army as well as the adoption of a new set of Graduate Attributes for every undergraduate at the university. The idea of a specialist undergraduate degree that captured this unique chain of events began to take form from 2016. The resulting degree was developed as a flexible, transdisciplinary programme for young (and not so young) leaders wanting an academic grounding for their passions in community leadership and social action. In 2020, the inaugural intake of students commenced their studies. In this reflection, we discuss our experience of teaching within the BYCL for the first time, using a collaborative approach to teaching that we based on what we understand, individually and collectively, to draw on principles of democratic pedagogy.
A branch newsletter issued by the Canterbury Branch of the TEU in November 2013. The newsletter is erroneously dated November 2011.
Tools used during the contruction of temporary classrooms at the College of Education.
Students study in a Computer workroom in Kotuku at the College of Education.
A video of an interview with Tony Simpson, Principal of Phillipstown School, about the technology centre at the school. This video is part of a series which looks at the innovative projects which will be lost if the Ministry of Education pushes ahead with its school closure and merger plans.
A video of an interview with Grant Ross, teacher at Branston Intermediate School, about the boys-only class he set up to encourage learning for boys. This video is part of a series which looks at the innovative projects which will be lost if the Ministry of Education pushes ahead with its school closure and merger plans.