Reg.Nr. HA-2016/UK/07

Heritage Schools in Bristol

This educational initiative brings heritage into the classroom, reaching 120,000 students in 250 schools across England to date. The project has recorded impressive tangible results. The vast majority of the teachers involved with the project reported that their knowledge of the ...
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Project details

Title:Heritage Schools in Bristol
Entr. year: 2016
Result:Award
Country: United Kingdom
Town: Bristol
Category type: education
Architect / Proj.leader: Sandra Stancliffe, Head of Education and inclusion (Historic England)
The Jury's citation: "This project aims to enrich the curriculum in schools and provides teachers with the knowledge to bring heritage into the classroom. With a focus on equipping teachers with the necessary skills, the initiative is sustainable with teachers being able to use the methods that they have learned with future classes of schoolchildren". "Heritage Schools has unlocked local heritage for young people by creating links with heritage sites. The project has also demonstrated to teachers how heritage is cross-curricular and how it can be used as a means to teach many subjects through real world scenarios". "The project involves a significant number of children and stakeholders in the wider community and focuses on the importance of teaching about cultural heritage at an early stage in school. This is important as it contributes to encouraging the next generation to appreciate the need to protect our heritage".
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Description:
This educational initiative brings heritage into the classroom, reaching 120,000 students in 250 schools across England to date. The project has recorded impressive tangible results. The vast majority of the teachers involved with the project reported that their knowledge of the surrounding local history had increased, that they are now aware of how local history can be used to illustrate the wider history of England and that they now know how to use local history successfully to deliver the school's curriculum. Heritage Schools also reported that teachers felt that their students had increased their understanding of their own local heritage and how it is connected to national history. The reach of the project in a European context is considerable and its focus is applicable to any other country. Indeed it is an entirely transferrable model and its ethos sets a good example to follow. As well as reaching schoolchildren themselves, the project has aimed to reach further corners of the community by involving the children's families in family history projects, an approach which has proved to be a great success and no doubt has a marked effect in fostering civic pride and a sense of local identity in these communities.