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Mail :
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The Outdoor Education Adviser Dept. for Children's Services Plymouth City Council Plymouth PL1 2AA |
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Phone :
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01752 307435 |
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Email :
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childrens.services@plymouth.gov.uk |
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Fax :
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01752 307403 |
On this page you will find details of frequently asked questions about educational visits.
We recognise the valuable contribution to learning and achievement offered by educational visits and out of the classroom learning. Millions of young people take part in these activities each year, without incident. Compared to other sources of risk in everyday life educational visits are still very safe and are often the time at school that young people remember most vividly.
Certainly many young people are influenced by the time they share with the adults they encounter through school, often helping them to shape future decisions. Staff who support trips which are residential, especially in secondary schools, have a greater chance of getting to know students and appreciate them more fully as a person.
There is compelling evidence that offering a programme can change the culture in a school and for some people provide incentive, the motivation to continue to attend and recognition and reward for their efforts. The experience that going offsite into the real world provides makes a significant contribution to the life skills agenda and in particular the steps young people can take to measure and manage risk for themselves.
Developing an active life style, and for some developing an interest they are introduced to through a school trip, has immediate benefits and is increasingly seen as essential to sustaining good health later in life.
School governors and youth work managers give guidance to ensure that activities support the curriculum and are subject to an effective internal approval process. Plymouth City Council commits to providing the policy framework and additional guidance for staff, obtained through, selecting from and contributing to national strategies. Monitoring of trips, on a sample basis, takes place to confirm that they are meeting these commitments and are achieving accepted good practice.
This monitoring is conducted by the Outdoor Education Adviser who works closely with Head Teachers, Youth Work Managers and Educational Visits Coordinators. They form a network that extends to all establishments and to some with whom the Council works in partnership. This ensures that there is a person in each organisation who is aware of what is best practice and who can therefore guide their colleagues in preparing for an educational visit or activity.
As a parent you have a choice, parents might like to check for example whether the activities the school or youth club offers are those, that as a typical parents, you are unlikely to provide.
School day time activities are linked to the work your child is currently undertaking and letters home explain this. Evenings, weekends and overnight activities have a wider agenda and even though some of the activities maybe familiar to you the time spent with their classmates should help young people to broaden their social, community and independence skills. Travel away, especially out of the country, should enable participants to appreciate different environments and cultures. Well organised trips will not leave this to chance and this should be evident in the trip's plans.
Parents can help their child prepare for the trip by talking through with them the objectives, this may also help the child understand what they need to do prepare for the experience. Educational trips where young people are asked to take responsibility for themselves are of particular value.
The Council helps through its training and monitoring to ensure that:
This is achieved by establishing, through training and monitoring, the information parents should be given. Parents can only consent when they are fully aware of what an activity involves and particularly of any risk it entails. This should ensure:
The Council has an outdoor education advisor who primarily oversees the more demanding activities. Within schools and other areas of the service there are Educational Visits Coordinators (EVCs). Each EVC has been trained in the risk assessment and planning process and has appropriate experience as a party leader. Together with teachers and youth workers leading trips, head teachers, governors and other specific council officers all contribute to safety.
Together they provide guidance on a range of different aspects of which the following are examples:
For details on the following areas please contact the Outdoor Education Adviser:
The Outdoor Education Advisors Panel website also provides useful information for the public and organisers of educational visits.
For more information on local trips please contact the school or youth and community centre directly and ask for either the EVC, the head teacher or manager.
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