North East Creativity Collaborative Network
The North East Creativity Collaborative Network (NECCN) is a professional learning community of twelve schools working together to test a range of innovative practices in teaching for creativity, with the explicit intention that learning is shared to facilitate system-wide change. Working alongside existing school structures, Headteachers, Creative Leads and wider teaching staff are co-developing creative strategy and pedagogy through a series of enquiries and evaluating the impact both on their own practice, and on pupils.
The network was established in 2021/2022 as part of a National Arts Council England funded three-year pilot programme consisting of eight regional collaboratives, in response to the Durham Commission recommendations. The commission looked at the role creativity and creative thinking should play in the education of young people. It was set up in response to the strength of opinion across the business, education, and public sectors that young people are emerging into a world in which the skills and knowledge of the current education system will no longer be sufficient.
In September 2023, we were thrilled to welcome five new schools to the collaborative:
Hotspur Primary School
Shillbottle Primary School
Greenhough Primary School
Benton Dene Primary School
Duke’s Secondary School
The schools in the North East Creativity Collaborative are led by Cragside Primary School. The other schools in the network are:
Duchess’s Community High School
Seahouses Primary
New York Primary
Fordley Primary
Cambois Primary
Sunningdale School
The NECCN have a shared understanding and vocabulary for creativity which was co-developed by Lucas, Claxton and Spencer (2012) at the Centre of Real-World Learning at Winchester University together with Creativity, Culture and Education (CCE). The five-dimensional model called the Creative Habits of Mind supports schools and teachers to understand how creativity can be developed in all subjects and age phases and that it’s a vital capability which supports children and young people’s learning.
The NECCN is working in partnership with CCE, an international foundation based in the region with expertise in creativity in education alongside eminent consultants such as Professor Bill Lucas and Professor Louise Stoll.