The Scotsman

Flourishin­g school partnershi­p enriches lives from both communitie­s

The Penicuik-namadzi connection grows , sharing culture and working together designing learning experience­s, says Keith Murphy

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‘Enriching’, ‘engaging’, ‘friendship’, ‘respect’ and ‘empowermen­t’. Just some of the words that come to mind when I think about Penicuik High School’s partnershi­p with our sister school in the southern Malawian town of Namadzi.

Our most recent partnershi­p with Namadzi Community Day Secondary School was set in motion in early 2016, leading to a visit by two students and two members of staff in June 2017. From here our partnershi­p has continued to grow in strength and has seen additional teacher and pupil reciprocal visits.

Our partnershi­p is very important to the communitie­s both here at home and in Malawi. It enriches the lives of the young people in both schools, allowing them to connect with people their own age but from a different cultural background and see both the similariti­es and difference­s of being a young person growing up in a different country.

There have also been opportunit­ies to meet with the wider communitie­s through the visits and to participat­e in whole school events. While only part of the story, the reciprocal visits do provide a level of whole school engagement with the partnershi­p which would be difficult to replicate in any other way.

Staff are able to have honest conversati­ons and gain much better insights into the issues affecting the lives and education in each other’s country. We are then able to reflect this in our mutually designed and reviewed partnershi­p agreement.

Face-to-face contact supports the building of friendship­s across continents which develop quickly through our visits and other channels of communicat­ion. While it is recognised in both schools that issues around equity exist, a respectful partnershi­p can go some way to addressing these. Mutual respect and understand­ing, however, is the cornerston­e of a dignified partnershi­p.

It has been important to recognise across both schools that the partnershi­p belongs to the pupils. It can support their learning both locally and globally providing an opportunit­y to view life through the lens of their partner and empowers them to lead on projects to support the partnershi­p.

Pupils have been at the forefront of organising whole school events, sharing culture, and working together though the visits to design shared learning experience­s such as sports, classroom-based activities, song and recording, and joint assemblies to promote the partnershi­p to the school community.

We were fortunate this year to have received a reciprocal visit grant from the British Council through the ‘Connecting Classrooms,’ programme, which contribute­d significan­tly towards the travel and associated costs for one teacher from each school to undertake the visits. It allowed us to design a whole school project based around the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals which we explored when we visited each other’s school.

The British Council also provided opportunit­ies to undertake profession­al learning and supported our partners through the visa applicatio­n process and we met with representa­tives from both the British Council here and when we visited Malawi.

We are extremely fortunate to be active beneficiar­ies from the Cooperatio­n Agreement signed by both the Malawian and Scottish government­s in 2005 and updated in 2018. This opened up opportunit­ies for partnershi­ps to be establishe­d and developed between our two countries.

The Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p and their sister organisati­on the Malawi Scotland Partnershi­p have supported us on our journey. They continue to provide invaluable advice and guidance, and the future of our partnershi­p looks set to continue blossoming – we are already in the early stages of planning the next set of reciprocal visits scheduled for 2021.

Through this, both schools continwrit­ing

ue to demonstrat­e their commitment to growing our friendship and learning from one another and we are connecting subject staff in each school, building relationsh­ips and ensuring that our partnershi­p is something enjoyed by the whole school.

We are sharing different aspects of our school life through a joint blog, but most of all we are enjoying the experience of learning together as friends.

Keith Murphy is Principal Teacher of Music at Penicuik High School

 ??  ?? 0 Penicuik High School staff and pupils with their hosts from Namadzi Community
0 Penicuik High School staff and pupils with their hosts from Namadzi Community
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