Strengths
and Weaknesses in SJI’s Physical Learning and Teaching Spaces
Background:
St
Joseph’s Institution (SJI) was founded in Singapore in 1852 as a secondary
school for boys. By the mid-1980s, the school building was deemed an unsatisfactory
environment for conducive teaching and learning as the building was situated
along Singapore’s busy Bras Basah Road
and was literally just 50 metres from the noisy main road and the classrooms
were crowded. Classrooms were of traditional design (Warger & Dobbin, 2009) possibly fitted out to facilitate De La Salle's simultaneous method of instruction ( Battersby,1949; Wright, 2000) now synonymous with the traditional classroom setting.
The
old Bras Basah Campus very near the main road
In 1988, SJI relocated to a
more spacious campus at Malcolm Road. Here the physical learning environment
was a great improvement from the 1852 building. New and improved modern
facilities included computer labs, a spacious library, special interactive classrooms
and school-wide Wifi accessibility.
SJI
Library: A comfortable learning environment
In 2013, it was decided that
more classrooms were needed to be added to the existing campus because of “an
increase in student population from 1,600 to 2,200 students” (Surbana, n.d. p.
A2) as the new International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme would necessitate
this. Presently, besides building more classrooms, the decision was taken to
redevelop the whole campus. Building plans include refurbishment of the
existing building as well as adding new educational blocks for the students of
the International Baccalaureate Programme based on the philosophy of
“[creating] a sustainable and environmentally sound design, in tune with the
Global Energy & Emission Concerns” (Surbana, n.d.).
![]() |
| Surbana Artists' impressions of the new campus |
Considerations:
I am very impressed by the
process taken by the school in consulting the various stakeholders (teachers,
parents and alumni) in the conceptualising of the new school building.
However, it might be good
also to consider the views of the students seeing that they will be the ones
benefiting most from the new building. As it is likely that the student of the future will be a networked student (Jonassen, Howland, Moore & Marra, 2003), IT support needs to be reflected clearly in the planning of a new campus building.
Also, as the new campus will be a
teaching-learning space, perhaps more emphasis should be placed on the
requirements/ desires of teachers. It would be good to allow teachers a ‘free
hand’ in generating ideas for maximising the teaching-learning experience in
the classroom. By extension, perhaps each teacher could be given a budget for
purchasing items needed for achieving this objective.
For further consideration
With the changing nature of the student, what
learning environment (virtual or real) might be detrimental and/or beneficial
to the student and are these environments economically viable to administrators
of educational institutions? Has there been research into the effects of home
schooling/ distance education (non brick and mortar type education) on the
learner and the educator?
References
Battersby, W.J. (1949). De La Salle: A pioneer of modern education. London, New York: Longmans, Green.
Jonassen, D.H., Howland, J., Moore, J. & Marra,R.M. (2003). Learning to solve problems with technology: A constructivist perspective. (2nd ed.). Prentice Hall
St Joseph's Institution. (2009). Open House day. Retrieved from http://www.sji.edu.sg/subpage.php?id=465
St Joseph's Institution. (2009). ArtScience Workshop. Retrieved from http://www.sji.edu.sg/subpage.php?id=307
St Joseph's Institution. (2009). Tan Ser Yung. Retrieved from http://www.sji.edu.sg/subpage.php?id=351
Surbana.(n.d.) Architectural
Report
Warger, T. & Dobbin, G. (2009). Learning Environments: Where space, technology, and culture converge. Educause.
Wright, G. (2000). John Baptist de La Salle: a 17th century educational innovator. Philippines: De La Salle University Press
Warger, T. & Dobbin, G. (2009). Learning Environments: Where space, technology, and culture converge. Educause.
Wright, G. (2000). John Baptist de La Salle: a 17th century educational innovator. Philippines: De La Salle University Press






Your school have a very comfortable library and I am very impressed with the plan for your new campus. It looks very outstanding building. However, you are right that they should consider the views of the students as what Adam Fletcher the Youth Ambassador, Youth Leadership & Service Team in his presentation paper mention, that students will have ownership in their learning if they been given empowering opportunities to use their voice, experience and knowledge to make meaningful decisions. (Meaningful Student Involvement. http://www.soundout.org/MSIIdeaGuide.pdf )
ReplyDeleteThanks Mushala. I totally agree with the idea of consulting students for valid input but due to other considerations such as finance, budgeting, and the time factor involved, it is not possible to please all stakeholders. I guess the role of the leader is to listen to everyone, form priorities, aim for consensus and get on with the task at hand.
DeleteThanks for bringing your case, Jason. Physical spaces are just the tip of the iceberg - and the ones that are easier to make sense of. As there is more in learning than just beautifully designed spaces, this may be a fantastic opportunity to evaluate the current/future role of teachers along with the process of conceiving/building new spaces.
ReplyDeleteTotally agree with you Lenice. The physical learning space is but a shallow necessity for learning to actually take place. Considerations such as student-teacher rapport, motivation are but other considerations. I like O'Neil's holistic NARCMO model when considering the totality of education (Nature of the student, Aims of education, Role of the teacher, Curriculum, Method of Instruction and Outcome(s) of education)
DeleteA very comprehensive overview of your learning spaces. Were the teachers consulted in the design of the new spaces. As often can be the space "experts" can determine a certain look or design - and often not include the valuable resources of teacher/lecturer/student.
ReplyDeleteYes, teachers were consulted but only at the initial stages of planning. Thereafter the 'space experts' took over.
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ReplyDeleteHi Jason! I see that your institution has a beautiful physical learning space. As you said that the increase in number of students led to redevelop the whole campus, is evident that your school is improving a lot. I agree with you that students should be given an opportunity to voice their opinions in redesigning process.In my view the best thing would have been some sort of student survey conducted before redesigning infrastructure. Thanks..
ReplyDeleteFrom memory, I think students were consulted at the mid-stage of the planning timeframe. By then, other more important considerations were at play.
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