Manukau Students Show Business Skills
MEDIA RELEASE
November 18th 2009
Students from
Alfriston College talked about their involvement in the
development of Randwick Park to over 50 business leaders and
school representatives at an Education-Business forum
facilitated by COMET today.
The students have entered
into a partnership with the Manukau Beautification Trust and
Manukau City Parks Services where they have a level of
‘managerial leadership and ownership’ in future park
developments.
Today’s forum focussed on ways that
schools and businesses can work together to best prepare
students for the future and how to introduce ‘relevant
learning for real life experiences’.
Some of the
businesses involved today include Vodafone, McDonalds,
National Bank, Auckland Museum and Hawkins Construction.
Russell Stanners, CEO of Vodafone says that working
directly with school students is very rewarding. “Schools
are teaching our future workforce,” he says. “If they
can gain some knowledge and understanding of the business
world before they leave school, this will help them to
succeed in the future.”
Making learning relevant is
essential for today’s students and the revised curriculum,
which must be implemented by schools by March 2010, offers
real potential for schools to work alongside businesses,
giving students the opportunity to work on meaningful
projects with real outcomes.
Education for
Enterprise (E4E), a government initiative, is a platform for
schools and businesses to link up and work on projects
together and COMET facilitates E4E projects in a number of
schools in Manukau.
Today’s forum also showcased E4E
projects from Edgewater College, James Cook High School and
Aorere College.
ENDS