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Page 1: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Project management

Page 2: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Managing a school project

Objectives:

Project management, theory and practicePlanning and organisationCommunication Time managementFinance and reportingThe creative use of evaluationDisseminationStudent voiceSchool partnerships

Page 3: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Definition:

‘A project is a temporary endeavour undertaken to create a unique product, service or result.It is performed by people, constrained by limited resources, planned, executed and controlled’

PMBOK Guide

Page 4: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

An international education project .....

Usually involves pupils and teachers in contact with schools outside of their own country• Visits, exchanges and placements (face-to-face)• Joint curriculum projects• School development projects• eTwinning and/or other virtual contacts• International professional development

Page 5: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Activity: Agenda for a project planning meeting in your school

Group 1: The annual bi-lateral exchange of older students (two weeks) aimed at improving their language skills

Group 2: A new joint curriculum project on sustainable development involving 6 schools in 4 countries

Group 3: A school development project looking at sharing good practice in the teaching of ICT

Group 4: An eTwinning project (10 schools) on famous artists

Group 5: A job shadowing programme for language teachers

Page 6: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Planning: Items to discuss

Page 7: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Planning: items to discuss

General aimsStrengths of the schools involvedWho will be involved: staff and/or pupilsMethods and frequency of communicationLanguageCultural issues

Areas of the curriculum to be involved

Timing –project activities, visits, school holidays, exams

Who does what – roles

Contingency and risks

Page 8: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

An intercultural scenario

The project uses English as a working language but one of the schools always sends the Headteacher to project meetings whose language skills are ‘survival’ at best. As a result this school is constantly misunderstanding the project’s tasks.

“My partner always agrees with everything I say, but actually doesn’t always manage to follow through.”

Page 9: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

What has happened here?

•How do you think the co-ordinator and partner feel about the situation?

•Why do they feel that way?

•What assumptions have they both made?

•What actions could they take?

Page 10: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

The project plan

• Evidence that the plan has been prepared jointly with the partner school(s)

• Clear aims, objectives and milestones

• Clear links to the curriculum in all countries

• For JCPs - a sense of progression – not just a series of ‘getting to know you’ activities

• Balanced budget

Page 11: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Project management guidance

Survival Kit website:www.european-project-management.eu

With downloads: Publication in

EN, DE, FR, IT and RO

Project management tools: Templates Examples Resources

e.g. partner agreements, planning forms, staff cost sheets, evaluation tools…

Page 12: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Gantt chart – a simple planning toolSept Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb

Task 1

1.1

1.2

Task 2

2.1

2.2

= milestones (may also be pressure points for the project)

Monitoring and evaluation

Climate change events and student conference

Introductory activities

Visit in November and climate change project starts

Page 13: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Additional planning tools

Produce a simple Gantt chart:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CW_wGSFavTc

Use open source software:

http://www.scribd.com/doc/3153813/OpenOffice-ProjectManagement-with-GanttCharts

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWOT_analysis

Page 14: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Planning for communication

What means of communication are available for international project work ?

How useful are each of these?(Score 1 - 5)

What is the potential in each for intercultural misunderstandings?

What agreements and rules should we make ?

Page 15: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Financial management: some ground rules

Align the budget to the project’s aimsAlways link the budget to the work planWhat is eligible expenditure?Value for moneyCreate systems for managing financeVisit etiquette Keep all receipts and other evidence

Page 16: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Evaluation

1 Why is evaluation important?

2 Stages in evaluation

3 Collecting the evidence and implementing changes. What techniques will you use?

‘How will you evaluate, during and after the Partnership, whether the aims of the partnership have been met and the expected impact has been achieved?’

Page 17: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Why is evaluation important?

• To improve the quality of the project

• To provide a context for open discussion on project performance

• To reveal strengths as well as weaknesses and identify obstacles to progress

Page 18: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Stages in evaluation

• Planning for evaluation:

• Agree the priorities for evaluation. It is impossible to evaluate everything!

• Check that everyone shares a common vocabulary

• Agree how responsibility for evaluation will be shared across the partnership

• Discuss timing, create an evaluation workplan

Page 19: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Collecting and interpreting evidence: ‘How do we know?’

• What are we going to evaluate?

• The processes of the project(classroom activities, meetings, communications)

• The outputs of the project(materials, website, DVDs)

• The outcomes of the project - more difficult!

• Do we know the original situation?(Benchmarking of skills, knowledge, attitudes)

• What will be our indicators of change?

Page 20: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Collecting and interpreting evidence: ‘How do we know?’

Which evaluation tools should we use?

1 Question-naire

2 Learning Log

3 Webtool

4 User Group

5 Stats Analysis

6 Interviews

Self evaluation is often highly effective

Use evaluation tools which are carefully structured and make the indicators clear:

Page 21: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Evaluation diary

Activity (including dates)

Target Groups

Brief rationale and description of activity

Impact

Future modifications

NAME SCHOOL/ORGANISATION

Page 22: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Evaluation diary

Activity (including dates)Theme or title

Target GroupsWho with?

Brief rationale and description of activityWhy did I do it? What did I do?

ImpactHow did it go?

Future modificationsIf I was to do this activity again what would I change and why.

NAME SCHOOL/ORGANISATION

Page 23: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Project self evaluation: Used at a team meeting

• The timetable has been respected • Planned activities have taken place• Communications were efficient• Partners have contributed as stated in the workplan• We have met the goals we agreed at the last meeting• The partners have learned from each other

Have we a good partnership?

Page 24: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Evaluation of a project meeting

INDICATORS:

• Sufficient information was sent before the meeting and communication was efficient

• Partners were given time for introductions (or re-introductions) and had time to update each other on their backgrounds and what they can bring to the project

• The agenda has been respected and any changes negotiated• Partners have all contributed to the meeting• The goals of the meeting were met• The working environment was adequate for the proposed tasks • Planned activities have taken place• The partners have a clear idea of their next steps• The accommodation, food and social element were adequate

Page 25: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

• Analyse results - if possible at a team meeting• Draw attention to the positives as well as the

challenges• Adapt: workplan, activities, communications,

management styles, budgets• Inform everyone involved - try not to impose!• Record all the reasons for the changes

Implementing change:‘What are we going to do next?’

Page 26: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Summary

• Begin early in the project• Involve others (possibly an external evaluator, but also

target group representatives)• Use appropriate types of evaluation• Use evaluation mechanisms that predict the

development of the project• Record all data and data analysis and use it in project

implementation

Page 27: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Sustaining the project

All funding has an end point - 1,2,3 years

Think strategically about what you want to do when the period of funding ends

What can you do to keep things moving after that?

Do partnerships have to be forever ?

Planning for sustainability should be a partnership activity

Page 28: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Life after funding

Use funded time to get systems sorted out (communication channels, IT, timetables for projects, the best curriculum areas, staff enthusiasm)

Great projects with overseas partners don’t have to cost money – e.g. e-projectsA partnership agreement?

Page 29: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

A partnership agreement

• Planning for an agreement is a joint process • The document will probably evolve during the funded

period of the project • Signing the agreement should be an important project

milestone and an occasion for celebration!• Set regular review dates as the project

moves on

Page 30: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Activity

Does the end of funding mean the end of a partnership ?

What is your most successful low-cost/free international project ?

What is the best fundraising event at your school?

Page 31: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Dissemination – initial thoughts

How do I get the partners

motivated for dissemination?

How to find suitable dissemination

channels for this project?

Website and newsletter- will it be enough?

Who would help us to spread

information about our project on the European level?

Why should we disseminate

anyway?

Isn’t it enough that the students benefit from our

work?

Page 32: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Dissemination

A special day (or other event in school) with an international theme:- Europe Day - International Day of Languages

- Spring Day

etc

Page 33: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Student voice: key questions

What does “student voice” mean to you?What is your experience of “student voice”?The voice of just some, or all students?And what do we do with what they tell us?

Page 34: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

Involving the whole community

Examples of community involvement from Comenius applications:

- Other educational institutions (including universities)- Churches, mosques, synagogues and their community groups- Local businesses- ‘Heritage’ sites - Tourist information providers- Local performers - Wildlife trusts- Media- Local Administration, Community Police

Page 35: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

A definition of a great school partnership

A great school partnership should be:

Page 36: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

A definition of a great school partnership

A great school partnership should be:

- Sustainable- Not (entirely) funding led- Soundly managed- Motivating to staff and pupils alike- Supported by senior management- Involving for the wider school community- Integrated into the curriculum- Strategically planned- Addressing global issues- Contributing to key competence development of teachers and pupils

• All of these factors contribute to the development of critical cultural awareness and intercultural learning and understanding.

Page 37: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

An intercultural scenarioOne of the partner schools has a few Roma pupils who do not appear to get the opportunity to take part in the project.

One of the other schools has many more Roma pupils and integrates them into most school activities including this project.

A teacher from the first school makes frequent negative comments about the Roma and this is causing ill feeling in the partnership.

Page 38: Project management. Managing a school project Objectives: Project management, theory and practice Planning and organisation Communication Time management

What has happened here?

• How do you think the other partners feel about the situation?

• Why do they feel that way?

• Are they making any assumptions?

• What should they do next?