North-South Student Teacher Exchange (sixth exchange) 2009-2010

The 2009-2010 North-South Student Teacher Exchange project involved 19 students from seven colleges of primary education: Stranmillis University College and St Mary’s University College in Belfast; St Patrick’s College Drumcondra, Church of Ireland College of Education, Coláiste Mhuire Marino and Froebel College of Education, all in Dublin, and Mary Immaculate College in Limerick. The aim of this project, which began in 2002-2003, is to create a cohort of young teachers, North and South, who have had experience of working in schools in the other jurisdiction as part of their teaching practice, and will thus be able to influence future generations of pupils in prejudice reduction and greater mutual understanding, both vital for long-term peace and reconciliation on the island of Ireland.

2010 brought to 142 the number of students who have participated in the exchange.  This year’s exchange is being funded by the Standing Conference on Teacher Education North and South (SCoTENS) which has taken over from the EU Peace Two programme. A longitudinal study of the first five years of the programme (2002-2007), and its impact on the personal attitudes and professional practices of the participating students, by Dr Maeve Martin of NUI Maynooth, was published in October 2008 (see www.crossborder.ie/cbnews/ste-study.php).

See details of the previous phase.

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Notes from the Next Door Neighbours

Notes from the Next Door Neighbours

WHAT THEY SAY…

The Centre for Cross Border Studies is an important catalyst for bringing people to work together across a range of social and economic issues and thus find out what they have in common. The tragedy of the recent past on this island is that we turned our backs on each other and did everything separately. The value the Centre adds is to show how much more we can achieve by working together. — THE TAOISEACH, MR BRIAN COWEN TD, 11 March 2009