North of England Education Conference

North of England Education Conference
NEEC2011 Logo.
Blackpool's Logo for 2011.

The North of England Education Conference (NEEC) is the UK’s biggest annual education conference. The first Conference took place in Manchester in 1903.[1] The event provides an opportunity for senior decision makers in education, Children’s Services, the public sector, associated agencies and organisations to meet and consider the latest thinking and legislation affecting children and young people. In recent years the scope of the conference has expanded to encompass the broader children’s services agenda.

Despite the conference name, delegates attend from across the UK and beyond. In recent years the conference has taken place outside of the North of England, including Belfast and Cardiff.

The NEEC is a fixture in the diary of the Secretary of State and the shadow spokesperson from the main opposition parties.

Traditionally the event takes place from Wednesday to Friday in the first week of January and will next be hosted in Leeds in January 2012.

Contents

Conference details

Delegates

Within recent years the focus of the conference has expanded. Whilst still having education at its core, a broader children’s agenda is now embraced. As a consequence, attendees are drawn from all professions within Children’s Services. Attendees include Directors of Education, key elected members, headteachers, school governors, those engaged in research in Higher Education and partners from Health, Police and Voluntary Sector organisations.

Speakers

The conference attracts high profile speakers and notably the appropriate Secretary of State. This has included in recent years the current incumbent, Ed Balls and predecessors including Ruth Kelly, David Miliband, David Blunkett and Estelle Morris. The conference is often used as a platform to launch or 'sound out' changes in policy or legislation. Hosting authorities often work in collaboration with local universities and colleges to tap into national and international expertise and research.

Venues

Historically the Conference has taken place each January and has alternated in venue between the east and west of the Pennines. On occasion however, the Conference has been held outside the North of England. In 2004 the NEEC was held in Northern Ireland in Belfast and in 2008, the NEEC paid its first visit to Wales and Cardiff.

Development

Reflecting changes in recent years in the delivery of services to children, young people and families the conference focus has begun to reflect the wider children’s agenda encapsulated in Every Child Matters: Change for Children.[2] Whilst the conference has continued to provide high profile speakers with an education focus, it has recently included speakers from other areas of the children’s workforce such as health, the police, business and the Third Sector. A reflection of this is that the conference is now marketed as the ‘NEEC Conference’ rather than the ‘North of England Education Conference’.

Governance

The NEEC operates under the governance formed by its membership as part of the North of England Education Conference Association. This is defined as "Those English Local Authorities within the Government Office areas for the North West, the North East and Yorkshire and the Humber, and also the higher education institutions lying in this area". Representatives from the host authority, their predecessor and the following years host are represented in the governance.

Involvement of children and young people

A strong feature of the conference is the involvement of children and young people. Traditionally involved in artistic, musical and dramatic performance they have begun to play a wider role in the content of the programme. In January 2012 Blackpool had a young person co-preside over the conference for the first time along with President, Ann Widdecombe.

History of the Conference

In 1902, having seen the success of a conference for science teachers in London, JH Reynolds, Manchester City Council's Director of Technical Instruction, decided to replicate the conference in his home town. The conference, also with a science theme, was arranged for 2 and 3 January 1903 and attended by 3,200 teachers, lecturers, inspectors and local government employees.[3] Built on this success the conference widened the agenda to cover all areas of the curriculum. With short input from a range of professionals the, conference has remained true to the original template and remained a fixture in the first week of the year.

In 1924 the political dimension was added and the Secretary of the State of the day has usually been in attendance ever since, the conference often serving as a platform for announcement to changes in legislation or educational approaches. Over the course of its history this has included: Anthony Crosland, Kenneth Baker, Kenneth Clarke, Shirley Williams and Margaret Thatcher[4]. Kenneth Clarke, on assuming his post as Secretary of State, is reported to have been told it was the one conference he could not afford to miss.

2004-present

2004: The five Northern Ireland Education and Libraries Boards in Belfast

The Conference in Belfast was attended by almost 1,000 delegates and was considered one of the most successful NEECs; (the typical attendance in England is 500 delegates). Amongst the speakers was David Miliband MP who gave a speech on Personalised Learning.

2005 Manchester

The Centre for Educational Leadership at The University of Manchester hosted the Conference in 2005. The conference included the first public speech by the new Secretary of State for Education and Skills, Ruth Kelly, appointed just three weeks earlier following Charles Clarke's promotion to Home Secretary. The theme was 'Leading Together' and the aim, to demonstrate how schools, Higher Education and Local Authorities could collaborate to develop leadership potential and to lead education improvement. Speakers included Benjamin Zander, Conductor of the Boston Philharmonic and Dr Peter Senge, author of 'The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of The Learning Organisation'.

2006 Gateshead and Newcastle Councils

The 2006 North of England Education Conference was held in Gateshead and consisted of three days of speakers, workshops and receptions. Speakers included Jane Davidson AM, the Minister for Education and Lifelong Learning, Ruth Kelly MP[5] the Secretary of State for Education, Professor Al Aynsley-Green, the Children’s Commissioner for England and Dr Michael Fullan, the former Dean of the Ontario Institute for Studies for Education. There was also a formal Civic Reception and a Gala Dinner.

2007 Lancashire County Council

The Conference took place from 3–5 January 2007 at the Guildhall, Preston in Lancashire with the theme of ‘Investing for Achievement’. Jonathan Jansen, University of Pretoria, South Africa; Jude Kelly, Artistic Director, South Bank Centre and Leader of the 2012 Olympics Education and Culture Programme; Juan Manuel Moreno, Senior Education Specialist, The World Bank. The ministerial Address was given by Jim Knight MP, Minister of State for Schools and 14 - 19 Learners

2008 The Welsh Assembly and Welsh LGA

In January 2008 the NEEC once again left the North West and was held in the Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff Bay, with workshops being hosted in various locations across the city and beyond.

The programme include presentations from Professor John Field from the University of Stirling and Professor David Hopkins from the Institute of Education at London University. In addition there were speeches from the journalist Fiona Millar and the former General Secretary of the Transport and General Workers Union, Lord Bill Morris of Handsworth. A civic reception was held in the Senedd Building; the home of the National Assembly hosted by the First Minister Rhodri Morgan AM.

2009 Wirral CC and Chester City Council

The theme for the conference held in Wirral and Chester was ‘Growing People – Growing Minds’. The conference was notable in its embracing the wider children’s workforce in the programme. The conference president was Baroness Estelle Morris and speakers included Peter Fahy, Chief Contable Greater Manchester, Liz Railton CBE, Professor Sir David Watson, Dame Gillian Pugh, and with the new broader emphasis Dr David Colin Thomé giving a GPs perspective. The conference included the traditional political spot with input from David Willetts MP and Secretary of State Ed Balls who attended following a Cabinet Meeting in Liverpool. All schools in Wirral were involved in a ‘Performance Extravaganza’ held throughout Weather Head High School Media College.

2010 City of York Council

The theme for York’s conference was ‘Unlocking Children’s Potential’ and had Sir Michael Bichard as conference president. Speakers included Sir Roger Singleton, Sir John Sorrell, Sir Andrew Motion, Dylan Wiliam and Beeban Kidron, British Television and Film Director. The political slot was filled by Vernon Coaker MP, Michael Gove MP and David Laws MP. An input by York’s Member of the UK Youth Parliament was well received by delegates. Delegates attended a civic reception at York Minster with a performance by a large children’s choir. The gala dinner made innovative use of the York Railway Museum. The conference in York went ahead successfully despite falling during a period of heavy snow which caused transport problems nationally for a number of days.

2011 Blackpool Council

The theme for Blackpool’s conference theme was ‘Our World, Our Future’. The conference continued the development of previous events in opening the theme out to include aspects of the wider Children’s Services agenda.

The conference presidency was shared between Ann Widdecombe and a young person from the town. Conference speakers included Nick Gibb MP[6], Andy Burnham MP, Martin Bell, Baroness Estelle Morris, Dr Margaret Atkinson[7], Sir Paul Ennals, Steve Munby, Sharon Shoesmith[8], Sir Ian Kennedy, Saul Nasse, Professor Barry Carpenter, Sir Charles Pollard and Tanni Grey-Thompson. The conference took place between the neighbouring hotels Blackpool Hilton and The Imperial. The Gala Dinner was hosted in the Blackpool Tower Ballroom and featured dancing, circus skills and a performance on the world famous Wurlitzer.

NEEC 2012 - Leeds City Council

Leeds City Council will host the next NEEC from 4-6 January 2012 under the title of, "Passion, Potential, Performance. The conference president will be Mick Waters, former Director of Curriculum at the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority. The venue for the event is the Royal Armouries Museum.

References

  1. ^ "A history of the NEEC Conference 1902 -1992" Professor Peter Osgood, Leeds University Press
  2. ^ "Every Child Matters Agenda" Labour Government Paper enshrining the Children Act 2004 (retrieved 31 July 2010)
  3. ^ "Best wishes to our friend in the North" Times Educational Supplement, 3 January 2003, Alison Brace - Article on the History of the NEEC on its 100th anniversary (retrieved 31 July 2010)
  4. ^ "Speech to North of England Education Conference", Jan 6 1971, Margaret Thatcher
  5. ^ "Education Secretary Ruth Kelly speaks at Gateshead Conference" Gateshead Council, 16 December 2005
  6. ^ "Nick Gibb to the North of England Education Conference" DofE, 11 January 2011
  7. ^ "Young people shine at Blackpool education conference" Children’s Commissioner for England Blog, 7 January 2011
  8. ^ "Budget cuts put children at risk, says Shoesmith" Children and Young People Now, 7 January 2011

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