Forward July 2014 | Page 18

SENIOR SCHOOL Guildford shines at Harvard University in Boston: Catalyst in the international spotlight January 2008 seems like a lifetime ago. Little did I know back then that the work that both Guildford Grammar School and I were about to embark upon would result in the incredible and innovative Catalyst curriculum we have today. In recording the process undertaken, the product we designed, along with the thoughts and theory behind the Junior Secondary model of learning, in March this year I found myself speaking at Harvard University in Boston in the United States of America, sharing Catalyst with the world. Catalyst has been my professional, intellectual, weekend and school holiday life for the past six years. My invitation to the 21st Century Academic Forum followed the submission of my Doctoral thesis to the University of Western Australia late last year. Like my thesis, my presentation outlined both the theory and the results of our Catalyst curriculum. So, what to report? The conference days were full and busy. It was an honour to chair the first session of the conference. As well as those, like myself, who were speaking, the forum was attended by representatives of government, policy makers, academics and private industry all keen to get a glimpse of the “next big thing” in education. I spoke on three key areas of Catalyst, centred on the development of a skill set built upon over three years. I talked about the Mr Clayton Massey focus on challenge in two different ways – providing rigorous tasks that demanded boys attempt new skills and new ways of thinking. I showed how boys responded to this challenge, growing in skill, confidence and developing resilience. In conclusion, I illustrated the complex way in which skill and challenge, school community and curriculum can come together to educate boys for the demands of the 21st century. Guildford Grammar School stood alone at Harvard University - for all the right reasons. Almost without exception, every other presentation illustrated the limitations or disappointments of some technological initiative. Whilst the online and virtual world has promised a world without borders, it seems it has also created learning spaces without connection. During breaks and lunch, I spoke with educators and researchers from around the world. The overwhelming interest was in our ‘toolkit’ approach, the value of social skill development, and our students’ strong connection with their learning. The idea that we had set out to equip our boys with a wide range of diverse skills and abilities, that they could draw on to help them succeed, seemed marvellous to them. That we teach boys to know themselves as learners, to develop key 21s