Remote Teaching and Learning at The English College in Prague during the State of Emergency

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“Conventional classes will return, however, the impact of the online switch will endure. Students and teachers will have experienced a new benchmark of contemporary education: a more interactive, real-time and innovation-oriented learning experience.” Times Higher Education

The English College in Prague is heartened by our community’s extraordinary response to the current COVID-19 situation. In the face of an abrupt school closure mandate, our students and teachers were back in class, learning virtually, in under 48 hours. We held one day of staff training and produced remote teaching and learning guidance for ECP teachers and students, which continues to evolve based on our work with @GoogleForEdu and community feedback. In order to minimise disruption to our curriculum, classes follow their normal timetable, although in Lower School we have reduced lessons by 20% in order to curtail screen time and provide wellbeing programming.  

We have made video and audio connectivity through Google Hangouts and Meet a priority as students have relayed that they appreciate the personal contact with their teachers. Tutors are regularly checking in with their tutor groups, and we get in touch with families if a student is not in their online lessons; pastoral care remains a prerogative. Our teachers are working fastidiously to provide engaging and robust learning experiences that involve student collaboration, real-world application, screencast presentations, etc. We have been speaking to school leaders in Asia and the UK, and we have shared our resources on e-learning and wellbeing on social media in the hopes that they will be of help to others in our global community. 

Both parents and students, via email and a recent survey, have given positive and supportive feedback on our e-learning programme. Some of the anonymous comments are as follows:

What are students of The English College in Prague saying about their current e-learning?

“Teachers giving us as much help as possible.”

“I think the teachers are very understanding and I wanted to mostly thank everyone for doing such a good job at trying to make us feel comfortable during lesson time and out of lesson time.”

“The materials provided by the teachers are easily accessible. Also we can ask a question even if the class is not in progress.”

“Overall, I really like the scheduling that we still have the subjects and we do work. Also the calls are working very well if the microphones are off and only the teacher is talking.”

“Every teacher is open to suggestions how to make things work better and also everyone including students have been trying very hard so far to make things work, so honestly if it continues going at this rate I will not feel that we’ve missed much content.”
Source: Student E-Learning Survey results 18/3/2020

e-Learning Experiences – Expressions of Appreciation from Parents:

“Thank you. Thumbs up for on-line teaching setup! Best regards We keep our fingers crossed.”

“Thank you very much for handling the situation with such a high level of professionalism and human attitude. With deep respect and thanks”

“I was present during a few of the lessons and I was very pleasantly surprised how not just my daughter, but also other students work nicely and responsibly. Let’s cross fingers so that everything returns back to normal as soon as possible. Wishing you good nerves and a lot of strength to all teachers and everyone who forms the wonderful support in the background.”


School Closure due to coronavirus measures

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The Ministry of Health of the Czech Republic has ruled in accordance with the Public Health Protection Act in effort to prevent the danger of rise and spread of the COVID-19 disease that starting 11 March 2020 all schools must be closed. In line with this measure, the English College in Prague is closed to students from this date as well and we will keep you informed regarding re-opening as soon as directed by relevant authorities. 

From Thursday, 12 March 2020, lessons continue remotely online using Google Suite applications. Teachers deliver their lessons as normal according to the timetable and assign work via Google Classroom. Students are expected to be online during the lessons, check their emails regularly and continue with their education.

Romeo & Juliet performance

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Romeo & Juliet performance

Kind thanks from the Arts Faculty to all students involved in the Romeo & Juliet production, and to all who came along to support. This was a combined creative effort involving Drama, Dance, Music and the Visual Arts, with a number of students active either as performers, musicians, costume designers or set designers. 

Based on recent school cross curricular themes of the environment and technology, we explored the characters of Romeo and Juliet in a post apocalyptic world with an uncertain future. Our hope is that by creatively re-interpreting the historical text through a variety of art forms our students gain knowledge and insight of how to use the Arts to explore these themes, alongside the development of valuable 21st century transferable skills, such as collaboration, confidence, imagination, innovation and risk taking. 

Romeo & Juliet performance

Romeo & Juliet  – what could possibly go wrong?

Take as many Year 4 Drama students as you can get away with, add some enterprising Art students, and a liberal sprinkling of choral enthusiasts, let the dancers in….

It seemed a daunting prospect – all those lines to learn, dance moves to choreograph, props to create, costumes to design, songs to rehearse – apocalyptic indeed! Could ECP really pull off a Shakespeare play? Would the audience understand?

Experience dictates that the more people and aspects involved in a project, the more scope for things to go wrong. Fortunately, the production of Romeo and Juliet by so many of our classmates at the English College in Prague was not the case. The acting was, in general, pretty good and it was inspiring to see some new faces making their acting debut. Yes, some lines got missed, mumbled or messed up but come on, this is Shakespeare – not exactly everyday stuff. The show went fine and although not many would claim to have understood all the lines, we grasped how the story and individual characters developed. 

ECP drama performance

Highlights

The design of the play was brilliant – the Art Department’s close attention to detail was noticeable, as were the costumes. The throne zones of the two houses, Capulets and Montagues occupying different sides of the stage was a very nice touch adding to the tension between the two rival families. Arina’s poise and Bibiana’s absolute stillness were a skillful supplement. 

Both the music and the dance scenes made a great impression and the audience was appreciative of that. In fact, we wanted more! Couldn’t we have been treated to another routine in the second half? The Fight song was rousingly motivational but perhaps a more energetic and violent song would have conveyed the mood more appropriately. We loved the simple but so effective sound-compilations that the cast produced using just their hands as musical instruments – it made for a magically moody finale. Scenes and acting that stood out for us were Nicholas Roussouw as Friar Laurence, Bibiana Nesvadbová’s monologue and the sensational scene as Romeo’s lips met Juliet’s sending a buzz of electric tension whistling through the audience. Training the fight scenes paid off as resounding thwacks, whacks and smacks reverberated from the stage. 

So we would like to congratulate the ECP Drama, Music and Art Departments for putting together a wonderful performance which was very unique in its presentation. It was most entertaining to see a traditional Shakespearean play done in such a different, yet entertaining way.

Members of the Theatre-Going ECA

Mentoring Programme

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Starting at a new school is always an unsettling time. Children are afraid that they will not make new friends and that everything will be difficult. But all these worries disappear if you have an older friend you can turn to and who gives you advice in any school situation. At the ECP, mentors – students from Year 6 – take care of Year 1 students. They meet them regularly, once a month, and at the Graduation Ball, they officially welcome them to the ECP. In order to prepare the Mentors for their role we prepare for them Child protection Course and several insets.

Clearly, it is a great opportunity for mentors to experience a new role; the Mentoring Programme helps them to become more responsible and to experience how important strong relationships are. And for year 1 students, the Mentoring programme makes a big difference in starting a new school – with joy and without fear.

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Student Council and other positions

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At the English College in Prague, we work with our students to develop leadership at all levels. We believe that students can show positive leadership in a variety of different ways, so we have built a structure which gives students the opportunity to take on leadership roles and develop their skills. Our House system has a range of opportunities for students to take on roles in sport, culture and mentoring. As well as giving our students responsibility, we also provide training opportunities so that they can develop and refine their leadership skills. We think that people can lead in different ways and with different styles. We encourage our students to lead with integrity in an inclusive and supportive manner. 

Student Council Mission and Events

The Student Council is an important student body which cooperates with the management of the school on improving the student experience and  plays an important role in school life. It represents students’ views and supports the student community. It consists of Year group and Houses representatives and is led by the President, who is elected by the whole student community in September. The President and Vice President regularly meet the Headmaster and discuss Student Council proposals for improving school life or any issues that may occur from time to time.  The Student Council also organises many events and chooses the charity supported by students during the academic year. 

Student Council Presidential Campaign

Like any team, the Student Council also needs a good leader, therefore In September a new Student Council President is elected. The Student Council President not only leads the Student Council, but also carries out many responsibilities and represents the student body on formal occasions such as Founders’ Day or meetings with the Governors. It is therefore very important to choose the right person. All the candidates present their programmes at year group assemblies, this is usually followed by many discussions among students, and each candidate has to convince others that they are able to undertake this prestigious role. 

Roles in Student Council

House Captain

The role of the House Captains is:

To decide vision for the house

To lead the house leadership team

To chair a house leadership team meeting once a half-term

To communicate to house members in registrations and assemblies.

To attend all scheduled house captains meetings. 

To attend all house events.

Culture Captain 

The role of the Culture Captain is:

To be a visible ambassadors for the Arts within ECP

To work closely with the Arts Faculty and Senior Tutors

To lead on the Cultural Olympiad event organisation

To maintain active links with tutor groups to promote the Olympiad and inspire participation

To occasionally speak at assemblies in their role/ capacity as Culture Captain 

To attend all scheduled meetings and take an active role in planning 

Sports Captain 

The role of the Sports Captains is:

To promote the interhouse sports events in their house

To promote participation in interhouse sports competitions among all year groups

To organise the teams to represent the house at each competition

To be a visible ambassador and participant for the house at each sports competition

To assist the PE Department with the organisation of each competition

To attend all scheduled sports captain meetings

Student Council Events

Christmas Fair

The annual Christmas Fair is an informal occasion. Each tutor group takes part, encouraged and supported by the  Tutor. Money raised at the Fair is donated to a charity chosen by students at the beginning of the school year. 

Cake Sales

Each term there are cake sales during morning break, organised by the Student Council, individual tutor or charity groups. 

Valentine Roses

Students organise the sale of roses for those who would like to give a rose for Valentine’s Day. “Spreading the Love”, as it is sometimes called, makes the day very special. 

Halloween event

Students organise stalls with food and activities connected with Halloween. 

Barbecue for Year 6 and ‘Last Bell’ Celebrations

The Student Council organises a barbecue for the whole school farewell to Year 6 students. 


Library positions

The role of Student Librarians is:

To be responsible for a small section of the library

To help process new books

To be an active reader – recommending and promoting titles

To write AR quizzes for new books

To create displays for special events

To assist with the training of new student librarians

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