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Current Status
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July 2002
- At
least 2 schools are using LVEP school-wide and a few others are
experimenting with LVEP activities
- 10
Educator trainings since June 2000
- 1
TTT
- 1
Parent Facilitators Workshop
- More
than 65 childcare centers, primary and secondary schools served
- More
than 250 educators, trainers have attended the Educators? Training
Number of Sites Using Living Values Education
Total number of sites 6
Some
Singapore Schools and Social Organizations using LVEP
Training
and Workshops for Educators, Trainers, Parents and Parent Facilitators
Adelaide
Participants and Their Impact
LVEP
History Making 2-day Parent Facilitators Training & First Singapore
TTT
Sustenance
for Trainer Trainers & Parent Facilitators
Contribution
by Singapore-based Trainer-Trainers in the Region
Workshop
for Employers of Maids/Heads of Maid Agencies
Community
Services
Latest
Marketing Efforts
LVEP's
Singapore Co-ordinating Arm
Future
Directions of LVEP in Singapore
Other
Training Reports

Schools
and Social Organizations Using LVEP
Currently
at least two schools are using the Living Values Education programme
school-wide to enhance their life skills and character building programmes.
Both Haig Girls School and Bukit Merah Secondary started using LVEP this
year.
Haig Girls School
In Haig
Girls School, a primary school of about 1200 students, the 12 values of
LVEP will be covered school-wide over three years.
In
2002 Peace, Respect, Honesty and Responsibility
In 2003 Love, Cooperation, Happiness and Humility
In 2004 Tolerance, Simplicity, Freedom and Unity
Since
there are four terms in a year, the school focuses on one value per term.
They began with Peace in January, Respect in late March and have embarked
on Honesty this term, which began on June 24.
Students
perform skits on the value of the term during assembly and teachers
reinforce the value during pastoral care lessons in the classroom.
Wherever there is an opportunity, teachers also reinforce the value of the
term during other lessons and contact points. Some teachers, like
Discipline Master Ms. Shirleen Chin, ?squeeze in? short sessions of
reflection, visualization and story telling between lessons. Ms Chin?s
primary five students said they were ?relaxed after those short
sessions? and looked forward to them.
The
school also presents a Living Values certificate to pupils who apply the
value.
Haig
Girls is the only school in Singapore where the principal, vice-principal,
office staff and all teachers have attended the LVEP training.

Bukit Merah Secondary
School
Enthused
by their educator training in Adelaide, three teachers from Bukit Merah
Secondary School, with the co-operation of their principal, have
introduced values
including
Peace, Respect and Responsibility for the whole school.
LVEP
activities are used together with life skills and character enrichment
materials from the Ministry of Education during pastoral care lessons to
impart the values to the students.
Ms. Sew
Say Geok, one of the three teachers responsible for introducing LVEP in
Bukit Merah, says she has
seen the self esteem of her students improve as a result of using the
programme.

Raffles Girls?
Secondary School?s Integrated Approach
One of Singapore?s premier schools, Raffles Girls Secondary School, is
embarking on integrating values in all facets of its students? lives.
Starting in January, 2003, all students in Secondary One will experience a
school life where values are infused into their curriculum, co-curriculum
and extra-mural activities.
The students in 14 classes will be divided into clusters of five, five
and four classes with a pool of LVEP-trained
teachers being responsible for teaching each cluster. Each cluster will
adopt a few values which support the school?s values or the 4Ps, that is
-
People-centred
-
Professionalism
-
Principled
-
Passion
One cluster has selected Respect and Responsibility and designed the
strategy of implementation as well, while the other two clusters are
putting their plans together. The results of next year?s efforts will be
evaluated at the end of the year, says Vice-Principal Shirley Tan, to
refine the process.
The 2003 batch of Secondary One students will continue with their
values-based learning approach in a conducive environment, as the school
inducts all new students to this approach.
In 2006, the whole school will have adopted a values-based approach to
creating a learning environment.

Other
Schools
Other schools in Singapore including two primary schools ? Convent of
the Holy Infant Jesus (CHIJ) Katong Primary School and Telok Kurau Primary
School are experimenting with values activities from the LVEP Activity
Books. CHIJ Katong plans to introduce LVEP school-wide in the near future.

SINDA and AWWA
A self
help group for Singapore Indians ? Singapore Indians Development
Association or SINDA ? has incorporated activities on Respect from the
Activity Book for 8 ?14 year olds in the syllabus of Project Victory.
Project Victory (PV) is a school-based programme to help improve the
behaviour and hence academic ability of Indian children aged 9 ?12 and
who exhibit non-acceptable behaviour in class. The first batch of PV
facilitators have undergone the LVEP educator training.
A
volunteer teacher in another social organisation, Asian Women?s Welfare
Association or AWWA, has started using some of the activities to help
academically weak students.
AWWA
looks into a range of community interests ranging from disabled children
to parenting programmes. There are plans to conduct LVEP educator
trainings for AWWA volunteers.

Training
and Workshops for Educators, Trainers, Parents and Parent Facilitators
Since
June 2000, 10 educator trainings have been conducted - the 10th from July 1 to July 3. In all, 250 educators in about
65 schools and childcare centers here have been introduced to LVEP through
these trainings.
Through
these sessions, word about the programme is spreading. Two years ago, the International Content Coordinator, Diane
Tillman, helped kick-start the project in Singapore with introductory
talks, a public programme on parenting, parenting workshops, and several
mini-workshops for interested principals, heads of pastoral care.
We
started slow that year with two Educator workshops; then two more in 2001.
This year the number increased ? we have conducted six educator
trainings, a Train-the-Trainer seminar (TTT) and a Parent Facilitator
Workshop by July. There are requests for more.
The class
size has also increased from as few as 6 participants to 65 a session. For
the July 1 to July 3 educator training, we conducted two LVEP introductory
sessions for 75 persons, less than two weeks before the event and yet
received applications from 45 participants.
International
LVEP trainers Ruth Liddle, Sue Emery and Shahida Samad have led
seven of the educator
training sessions. The others were led by national lead trainers Kana
Gopal and Rosa Tham. Ruth developed and conducted the two-day TTT for
those who?ve gone through an Educator Training. Sue Emery was
responsible for most of the two-day LVEP Parent Facilitator Workshop, the
first in the world.
A small
pool of internationally and locally trained Singaporean LVEP trainers now
help to co-train and facilitate at the educator training sessions.

Adelaide
Educator Training Participants and Their Impact
The
momentum picked up tremendously this year after a group of 28 Singapore
teachers returned from the educator training in Adelaide in
mid-2001. One participant -
the deputy principal of CHIJ Katong ? has become a co-creator for LVEP.
She organised an educator workshop for primary schools where Ruth was
the lead trainer.
On June
18, she put together a session to introduce LVEP to primary school
principals, vice principals and heads of departments. About 50 attended,
more than half of them principals and vice-principals.
Three
teachers from Bukit Merah Secondary School have managed to introduce
values school-wide after that trip.
(See
Reports below. LVEP Educators' Training in Adelaide, Australia by Rosa
Tham and
Report on Values Education Seminar held in Adelaide, Australia from 17TH
July - 20TH July 2001 by Sylvia Liew)

First
Singapore Train-the-Trainers Workshop
The first Singapore Train-the?Trainers workshop was help in February.
Attending the session were 22 educators, who had completed their
educators? training locally, in Vietnam and Australia (Adelaide). The
session was developed and conducted by Ruth Liddle.
Two co-trainers emerged from that session and they assisted with the
next training with Sue Emery, just three weeks later. One of them, Ms
Elsie Tan, who did her educator training in Vietnam, is heading for
Cambodia to work and assist with LVEP work in Indo China.

LVEP
History Making 2-day Parent Facilitators Training
In March, Sue Emery organized a two-day Parent Facilitators? Training
? a first for LVEP worldwide. Fifteen participants including a few of
the trainer-trainers attended.
All the participants benefited particularly from the process and Sue?s
generous sharing from her personal life.

Sustenance
for Trainer Trainers & Parent Facilitators
In March, the first session for sustaining trainer-trainers kicked off
with Sue Emery sharing tips on identifying learning styles, multiple
intelligences and personality tests.
The next session in May focused on Creative Visualization (CV) and
writing CV commentaries and a lesson on Humility from the Young Adults
Activity Book by one of the trainer-trainers.
More of such sessions have been scheduled at six to eight week intervals
for the trainer-trainers and parent facilitators. The sessions lasting
three hours on a Sunday afternoon (including tea) are meant to rekindle
the magic of LVEP, help the participants pick up new skills relevant to
LVEP and practice peer teaching.

Workshop
for Employers of Maids/Heads of Maid Agencies
In May 2000, Diane Tillman conducted a three-hour workshop for 15
Employers of Maids and Heads of Maid Agencies on how employers could train
their maids to be better caregivers by modeling the behaviour.
A representative from the Sri Lankan Embassy, who was invited to attend
the session, felt such training would improve employer-employee
relationships tremendously. She requested for such training for employers
of Sri Lankan maids but the
LVEP team in Singapore had to put that on hold as priority was to create
values-based schools and provide relevant training and support in that
area.
During a separate meeting former Nominated Member of Parliament also
requested Diane to train trainers of caregivers and maids to ensure
quality care of Singaporean children.
The demand for such service needs to be filled in Singapore.

Community
Services
In April,
2002, Kana Gopal ran a series
of five parent workshops in Tamil for the employees of Singapore's
ministry of the environment, comprising of many who were illiterate.
Moreover, each session roughly comprised of a mixed group of newly weds,
parents of young children, parents of teenagers, grandparents and single
parents.
Contrary
to her concern that the three-half days workshop may be perceived as
?too deep?, most of the some 200 participants were able to appreciate
the need for a family culture, based on their values.
The
feedback was that the sessions
- Helped
them revisit their values
- Reinforced
the importance of living their values
- Reaffirmed
their style of parenting
- Made
them feel valued as the facilitator showed regard and involved them in
the dialogue
- Helped
them learn skills such as active listening
and conflict resolution
The
sessions have given Kana the confidence to conduct LVEP educator trainings
in Tamil, as there have been requests for them.
Prior to
these sessions, two sessions of parenting programmes were conducted for a
grassroots organisation by Rosa Tham and Kana in English.
The first
session, held last year, saw more than 120 parents and children. While the
parents picked up parenting skills, the children learnt more about
communicating with their parents. When they came together, parents and
children affirmed each others in a magical moment.
The
second session, this year, focused on about 30 parents and children, who
went through the session together picking up skills in conflict resolution
and how to be a peaceful family.
Marketing
LVEP
Diane?s
marketing efforts in October, 1999 and May, 2000, opened several doors for
LVEP including an invitation to conduct an educators? training in
Raffles Girls Secondary School.
The next
one was on June 17 & 18, 2002. International LVEP trainer and Co-ordinator
for Seoul, Ruth Liddle, conducted two introductory talks to 50 principals/
heads of depts and pastoral care teachers and to 26 heads / volunteers of
help organisations that look after marginalised children or children who
require before and after school care, etc. The women's prison
director also attended to see how LVEP could be used to help prisoners,
who are youths. The participants felt that LVEP was practical. They
responded by enrolling themselves or sending their representatives to the
next LVEP educator training from July 1 to July 3.
Ruth was
also invited at one of the sessions to give an introductory talk to
officers of the Legal Aid Bureau, whose portfolio also includes handling
severe marital conflict among the lower income group people.

Brief
background
LVEP's Singapore Co-ordinating Arm
Living Values Educational Services (LiVES) is the co-ordinating arm for
Living Values: an Educational Program (LVEP) in Singapore.
It was set up as a partnership on 18 January, 2000 to deal with all
aspects of LVEP. The firm focuses only on co-ordinating trainings for the
LVEP.
The Directors of LiVES, Rosa Tham and Kana Gopal are also LVEP national
lead trainers. Kana is the National Co-ordinator for Singapore as well.
LiVES contact:
Contact Person: Rosa Tham
Email:
lvepsgpr@singnet.com.sg
Tel:
65 6775 2626
If urgent, call Kana Gopal on HP 65 9456 5494
Fax:
65 6777 4626

Future Directions of LVEP in Singapore
There are
requests for more trainings in English and Mandarin. Rosa Tham will take
charge of the educator trainings in Mandarin and plans to conduct one in
September with help from Mandarin speaking trainers from Beijing.
Several
teachers have also suggested that LVEP should be taught as a module at the
National Institute of Education. One of the trainer-trainers is working on
this proposal.
Report
on LVEP Educators' Training in Adelaide, Australia
by
Rosa Tham, who joined the Singapore educators
On Tuesday 17 July 2001, in the Wattle Room of Balayana Conference
Centre, Adelaide, 58 educators, in groups of 6-7 people, swapped recipes.
In the midst of laughter, happiness and camaraderie they shared their
world cake recipes that could bring peace and love to the whole world. The
groups drew pictures of round cakes, multi-layered cakes topped with
icing, etc with ingredients such as happiness, peace, love, respect,
tolerance, unity, oneness, responsibility, joy and humour. While the peace
value activity was designed for children aged 3-7 years, those educators
experienced the activity to be just as relevant to them.
International LVEP trainer Ruth Liddle led the four-day non-residential
Educators' Training workshop, that was partly sponsored by the
Asia-Pacific Network of International Educators and Values Educators (APNIEVE).
Twenty eight educators from Singapore joined their counterpart to learn
how to create and sustain a values-based classroom environment using
teaching methods that would enable their students to feel safe, loved,
respected, understood and valued.
Ruth and her co-trainer brought the participants through the peace,
respect and freedom values activities using a variety of teaching methods
such as visualization, reflection, discussion, expression like drawing,
story-telling, and values-based songs. Each participant explored and
gained insights into their own understanding of those values. A few
educators felt they needed to appreciate and understand what those values
meant to them before they could teach them. The participants found how
easy it was to use the manuals to teach the 12 values.
Participants also experimented with active listening and conflict
resolution skills. In particular, the educators felt that the conflict
resolution method helped students to be truthful without fearing
punishment. The methodology shifted the power balance from the teachers to
the "warring" students themselves. It enabled the students to be
responsible for solving conflicts with their classmates. One educator felt
that this shift in ownership and responsibility would have a profound
impact on discipline and on society as a whole.
On the last day, the educators commended Ruth's teaching style as
values-based, that she "walked her talk". She was fully present
with the participants' needs and fulfilled their "wish" by
adjusting the programme schedule to allow educators more time for sharing
their teaching experiences and to network. She included ideas from the
participants, encouraged discussion and sharing of experiences during the
plenary sessions, thus enriching the learning. Co-trainer Sally's warm,
quiet, calm and gentle manner was personable and participants approached
her for advice on their classroom problems. The mix of Australian and
Singaporean nationalities and different teaching environments enabled the
educators to learn different ways to deliver lessons. All participants
said they would like to implement living values in their schools.
Singapore educators were encouraged to implement the LVEP programme one
step at a time in their schools.
Throughout the workshop, participants' spirits were high. At the
certificate presentation ceremony, the educators said that the workshop
was "fantastic", "wonderful", "terrific",
"marvellous" and "great". The superlatives were apt
expressions of a successful and enriching LVEP Educators' Training
workshop.

Report
on Values Education Seminar Held in Adelaide,
Australia
from 17th July - 20th July 2001
Submitted by Mrs Sylvia Liew, Vice-Principal,
CHIJ Katong Primary, E7 Cluster
Introduction
Three Vice Principals and 25 teachers from three cluster schools - E4,
E7 and S5 were selected to attend a training workshop on Living Values: An
Educational Programme Seminar at Adelaide, Australia from 17th - 20th July
2001. The 4 day intensive programme was conducted by international
programme facilitator Ms Ruth Liddle.
Objectives
The objectives of the training workshop were to
-
help participants become acquainted with the Living Values framework,
within which values-based learning can be implemented
-
explore skills to create a values-based atmosphere or ethos
-
explore ways in which values can be expressed and modelled
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explore how educators can integrate Living Values into existing
programmes e.g. CME, Pastoral Care, Ethics
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network with other educators committed to positive self-development
of children and prepare them for life long
learning
Activities
Conducted
and Evaluation
The history and the overview of LVEP were explained to participants
before they attempted a definition of values in groups. Each participant
was taken through a self-reflection process on value awareness. They
explored the values they would model in class as a teacher and how to
create a values-based atmosphere.
Ruth Liddle drew a mindmap to summarize the variety of values activities
before embarking on values activities, processing the experience and
sharing ideas.
1.
Imagining
A few values units ask children to imagine.
For example, students are asked to imagine a peaceful world or a happy
world and share their experiences or draw or paint a picture. This
imagination or visualization exercise makes the values more relevant to
students as they find a place from within where they experience that
quality and create ideas they know are their own.
In Singapore most of our children are not
accustomed to using this right brain activity. Therefore, it would be a
good activity to introduce.
2.
Reflection
Points
These
are at the beginning of every value unit and are incorporated in the lessons:
For
children between the ages of 3-7, a reflection point in the unit on
Respect could
be: Respect is knowing I am unique
and valuable or Respect is knowing
others are valuable too.
For the
8-14, Respect would be: Everyone in the world has the right to live with
respect and dignity, including myself.
Although
this aspect of the programme is useful, many of us feel that it is similar
to the
current Pastoral Care syllabus.
3.
Quietly Being/Relaxation/Focusing Exercises
Children, very often, do not like to be quiet
because it means their fun is being curtailed. In the unit on Peace,
children 3-7 will listen to a story about Peace Stars while they are being
silent and peaceful like stars. For
children 8 - 14 they go through a relaxation exercise. Participants were
told to imagine a peaceful world and worked on two exercises - Baking a
World Cake of human qualities and characteristics that would lead to a
better world and What Would Constitute a Peaceful World.
In the latter exercise, participants within a group had to
work/draw in silence without criticism or comment. All groups had to list
10 items that they would like to put in a time capsule to show the future
what comprised a peaceful world. Singapore children would need to be
trained for this aspect of the programme that may be uncomfortable
initially.
4.
Social Skills
Active
Listening : Participants had to do a role play in groups of three and take on the
roles of listener, talker and observer.
This activity was familiar to us because we had encountered it in
Basic Counselling Skills Workshop.
Conflict
Resolution was another skill that was taught in the values units and this was
demonstrated in role play among the groups. Some of the participants had
gone through such an activity in their counselling modules.
Praise
:We were also made aware that learning to give praise when the situation
calls for it always leaves a positive feeling within the receiving person.
Culturally, in Singapore, we stint on praise.
We were reminded that the praise given must be genuine.
5.
Lesson
Planning
This aspect of the seminar was much appreciated by all participants. The
practical hands-on sessions proved invaluable to participants and there
was much teamwork, collaboration on lesson planning and participation in
lessons
We went through a value-based lesson for different age groups - for 3-7,
8-14 and Young Adults on Respect. Thereafter,
each age group planned lessons for the following values on Responsibility,
Happiness and Inner Freedom. There
was practical teaching by the various groups and this was followed by
review and evaluation. The activities that were deployed for most of the
lessons were: sharing/discussion,
singing or playing a song, relaxation/focusing exercise, reading a story
selection from a book, imagination/visualization exercise, artistic
expression (where students are encouraged to reflect about values and
experience these artistically and creatively through the arts) creative or
reflective writing, or self-development activities (where students explore
the value in relation to themselves or build skills in relation to the
value) . Social skills are also taught and students are encouraged,
through cognitive awareness of social justice, to look at the effect of an
individual's actions on others and at how individuals can make a
difference.
6.
Focus
Group
Discussion
There were discussion groups to elicit views on the following:
-
Integrating LVEP into civics or religion
-
Discipline and Children at Risk
-
Ideology Beyond the Classroom
-
School Model for Implementing Living Values in New Zealand
This was a weak area in the seminar as it was not well planned and
not all participants were well prepared to discuss the topics in depth
expressed on how to handle discipline.
7.
Sharing
Participants viewed a documentary on schools in Kuwait, India,
Johannesburg, UK, Mauritius and Kenya that have implemented LVEP.
We were also given various other resources e.g. websites to connect us
to information, programmes and activities for LVEP.
A very important part of the programme was evaluation and participants
were
Conclusion
We all agreed that the seminar brought about a diversity of experiences,
made us all more aware of the varying perceptions of values, built
relationships and teamwork during the experiential learning, boosted
communication with our Australian counterparts and gave us invaluable
insights and interesting activities that we can deploy should we decide to
implement the programme in Singapore
However, each school has to explore how we can implement the programme
-
whether a school-wide approach should be employed
-
perhaps it should be done strictly in certain classrooms
-
we could introduce it as an assembly programme or
-
incorporate it within the curriculum.
Such issues need to be critically examined so that each school and their
pupils can benefit from such a programme
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