First Northland NET Conference
5 August 2004
First Northland NET Conference aims to build strong platform for enterprise education
An
innovative conference at Waitangi this week aims to provide
students with a
strong foundation of entrepreneurial
skills through providing Northland teachers with grounding
in what enterprise culture really means.
“The NET
(Northland Enterprising Teachers) Project is not about
changing the
content of the curriculum, its key focus is
rather to provide an enterprising
approach to what
schools are already doing and increasing the relevancy of
the
curriculum,” says Project Director Frank Leadley.
The aim of the NET project is to provide a programme of
specialist school-based professional development for
teachers in Northland secondary schools so that they can
develop an enterprise
approach with students.
“It’s
vital that teachers explore opportunities to make the school
curriculum
relevant to the commercial and social
community of which the school is an
integral part,” says
Mr Leadley.
Over 70 principals and school teachers
will attend the first NET Conference at
Waitangi on
August 5 and 6, to focus on ways teachers can best encourage
students in entrepreneurial activities.
The NET
conference features presentations from key industry
enterprise
advocates including Dr Lester Levy, Chief
Executive of the NZ Leadership
Institute, Auckland
University, Bernadine Vester, CEO of City of Manukau
Education Trust and Deb Gilbertson, innovation
consultant, Te Kaihau Ltd.
The NET project is designed to
build on the success of the Lion Foundation
Young
Enterprise Scheme and the Young Entrepreneurs Programme.
The Young Entrepreneurs Programme has seen many students
set up
businesses while at school and two Northland
student-operators will give
presentations on their
businesses over the two day event.
The Northland
Enterprising Teachers Project is funded by NZ Trade &
Enterprise
(via the Enterprise Culture and Skills
Activities Fund) and has substantial
additional funding
from the private sector.
The NET project, a crucial
component of Enterprise Northland’s Enterprise
Education
Strategy, came about as a result of the observation that
although
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teachers were actively involved in
encouraging entrepreneurial skills, they had
not been
personally involved in practical enterprise and
entrepreneurial activities.
“The intent of the NET
Project is to establish an incubator for life-long learning
and entrepreneurial achievement,” says Mr Leadley. “We
need to develop strong
enterprise links between the
school curriculum and the local community in order
that
business opportunities can be developed.” The project also
aims to identify
and support students to apply for and
to develop a YEP enterprise.
The conference is the first
step for the NET Project and will be followed
up by one
day regional workshops to access progress and plan new
initiatives as
well as on going work with ‘enterprise
cells’ in each Northland school.
ENDS