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D epartm entforCulture, M edia and Sport GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

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Page 1: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT

Keith Nichol

engage international conference

Tate Modern

17 November 2004

Page 2: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Public Expenditure Priorities

• Evidence-based policy making

• Pros and cons of measurement

• Efficiency Review

• Focus on frontline delivery

• Defence and Security

• Education

• Health

• Crime

• Transport

Page 3: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Vision for learning in museums and galleries

• We want to unlock the full potential of museums and galleries to support education and learning in schools, as well as in the FE/HE sector, and in life-long learning

Page 4: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

What DCMS and DfESneed to do

• Provide leadership for the cultural sector• Ensure our policy and delivery is soundly

based on experience of practitioners and users

• Inform museums and galleries sector about all DCMS and wider Government/Lottery activities in the educational arena

• Ensure schools are properly informed about opportunities provided by the cultural sector

Page 5: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Effective policy

• Is based on evidence and sound analysis

• Is holistic• Is sophisticated about

complexity• Is grounded in an

understanding of how the world works

• Is robust over long time periods

• Is communicated compellingly

• Is sophisticated about managing risk

• Takes into account organisational capacity and rates of behavioural change

• Takes into account deliverability

• Includes all key decision makers

Page 6: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Our target groups

• Schools

• Early Years

• Further and Higher Education

• Adult Basic Skills – literacy, numeracy, ICT, ESOL

• Lifelong Learning

Page 7: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Free admission to our sponsored museums and galleries since 2000/01 has given many more people the opportunity to learn and enjoy

Visits to sponsored museums and galleries (millions)

20

22

24

26

28

30

32

34

36

97/98 98/99 99/00 00/01 01/02 02/03 03/04

Nearly 30% more C2DE visits in the last two years

50% increase in visits from children

Page 8: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Definition of learning

“Learning is a process of active engagement with experience.   It is what people do when they want to make sense of the world.  It may involve the development or deepening of skills, knowledge understanding, awareness, values, ideas and feelings, or an increase in the capacity to reflect.   Effective learning leads to change, development and the desire to learn more.”

The Campaign for Learning

Page 9: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

‘To ensure that every young person of school age has the opportunity to experience or work with cultural and creative professionals and organisations to develop their learning across and beyond the curriculum.’

Towards a Cultural Entitlement

Page 10: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

What will an Entitlement deliver ?

• first access to culture• contribution to delivery of the National

Curriculum• out of school activity         • gifted and talented support• CPD for teachers and gallery staff

Page 11: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Why we want to do this

Evidence suggests that creative and cultural learning experiences can help:- improve academic attainment- build self-esteem and confidence- improve attendance and behaviour- develop language skills- support different learning styles- provide potential career paths- change teaching and learning practice- motivate teachers- stimulate whole school change

Page 12: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Inspiring Learning for All

A framework which enables us to measure the impact of our programmes on people’s learning

• Based on five Generic Learning Outcomes– Knowledge and understanding– Skills– Values and attitudes – Creativity, inspiration and enjoyment– Activity, behaviour and progression

Page 13: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Where we are now?

• Many excellent education projects going on around the country, but most with no established baseline of activity, or agreement on desired/actual outcomes

• Success of projects down to individual teachers/curators, and relevance to the national curriculum varies widely

• Projects have frequently been created to secure funding, not in pursuit of agreed goals/targets, or any wider strategy

• Short-termism is commonplace• In consequence – we are unable to demonstrate the collective

impact of public funding, and have a weak case for future funding

Page 14: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Fragmented funding picture

• Local authority funding• Arts Council• Creative Partnerships• Renaissance in the

Regions• NMG grant-in-aid• Heritage Lottery Fund• Big Lottery Fund• Sure Start• Learning and Skills

Councils• Connexions

• Culture Online• Curriculum Online• other ICT initiatives• Arts and Humanities

Research Board• Regional Development

Agencies• Charitable Foundations• Corporate support• EU funding• Strategic Commissioning

Page 15: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Funding in 2004/05

• Department for Education and Skills £28 billion– Schools in England £9.8 billion– Learning and Skills Council £8.7 billion– Sure Start £990 million– Connexions service £533 million

• DCMS £1.47 billion– Arts Council of England £365 million– Tate £30 million– Creative Partnerships £25 million– National Gallery £21 million– Renaissance in the Regions £20 million

Page 16: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Public Service Agreement

• Current PSA targets actually about access, not educational attainment

• There is no agreed measure of the quality of experience or educational value

• However, current targets must be achieved (by 2006)– To increase the number of Creative Partnerships

areas to 36– To increase the number of contacts between

children and hub museums by 25%– To increase the number of contacts between

children and national museums & galleries by 15%

Page 17: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Priority areas for action

• Overall funding• Advocacy and

information• Removing barriers for

schools• Building links between

galleries and schools• Building capacity in the

sector• Continuous professional

development

• Improving the gallery environment

• Supporting lifelong learning

• Setting standards• Making better use of

ICT• Working in partnership

Page 18: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Obstacles to success - 1

• Core funding levels• Lack of capacity in the sector• Lack of trained gallery educators• Mismatch between supply and demand• Perception of short-termism by Government• We talk to ourselves (poor sectoral advocacy)• Becoming diverted from our core purpose• Project funding not sustainable• Galleries paying lip service to learning

– (not seen as a core function)

Page 19: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Obstacles to success - 2

• Time constraints faced by schools• Cost constraints faced by schools• Transport for schools groups• Views of Head Teachers• Perceived tension between schools education and

life-long learning• Continued fragmentation and failure to identify

measurable outcomes

Page 20: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Renaissance in the Regions

EVIDENCE OF EARLY IMPACT

• 28% increase in the number of school children visiting Phase One Hubs

• 45% of the teachers visiting those Phase One Hubs are doing so for the first time

• 94% of teachers attending a museum activity see it directly linking to the National Curriculum.

• 46% of the visits were made by schools located in wards which fell into the 20% most deprived wards in England

Page 21: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport

Tate

Strategic Commissioning - partnership with regional galleries

New Art Gallery WalsallNorfolk Museums & Archaeology ServiceAbbot Hall Arts Gallery, KendalSheffield Galleries and Museums TrustLaing Art Gallery, Tyne & WearManchester City Art GalleryBirmingham Museum and Art Gallery

Page 22: GALLERIES CREATING LEARNING – THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT Keith Nichol engage international conference Tate Modern 17 November 2004

Department for Culture, Media and Sport