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Clachan Glendaruel Kilmodan Primary School News Press & Publicity

Kilmodan Primary School Nominated for the Employability Across Learning Award

Kilmodan Primary School’s Market Garden and Tearoom project has been nominated for the award for Employability Across Learning Award. The text of the nominated reads as follows:

[Colintraive and Glendaruel is] a tiny community; the clachan that the school is in no longer has a shop, pub or cafe after recent closures. We lack opportunities to come together to meet which is a problem, especially with an aging population.

The idea for a tearoom arose organically from the pupil’s success in growing plants in their polytunnel. For the last three years they have been holding plant sales in the summer term, selling produce, young plants and hanging baskets that they have raised from seed. As well as tending the sales tables and showing visitors round the polytunnel, the pupils made cakes to sell alongside teas to add to profits. These events were well attended by parents and the wider community. Last year was decided to hold a winter tea room in aid of funds to help the Pakistan floods, again this was well attended and enjoyed by the children, and it was decided to set up a monthly event, in aid of specific school projects.

From these small beginnings, the tearoom has taken off and now sells produce from local farmers too; the profits are shared between the school and the producer. The children make crafts, greetings cards and potted cuttings to sell at the same time.

Cakes are made by the children who also serve the tea and coffee. But a micro business is being run behind the scenes; pupils are undertaking tasks such as marketing, staff management and rotas, handling money, setting prices and customer service, in line with their ages and abilities. Skills involved include maths, enterprise, commerce, retail and of course baking, but in a wider sense they are developing resilience, cooperation, politeness; all aligned to the Curriculum for Excellence core values.

We are a small school, but everyone takes part. The younger children sell the crafts, serve the cakes and count the money; the older children (P6 and 7) take on the role of marketing, management and investment. They have already decided to invest from their profits in new crockery and cake stands so it is really giving them an idea of how a business grows by ploughing money back in. Cards and crafts are now sent to be on sale every day in Colintraive’s post office; again with a desire to grow the business.

The older children hold meetings to plan each event, and discuss any problems or ideas for improvement afterwards. The teachers also bring in examples thrown up by the tearoom in subjects such as Maths, English, Art, Home Economics; it is a handy shared experience which makes the abstract real and the staff are keen to discuss what skills have been learnt after each event and relate them to the workplace. From the feedback the school has had from parents, it is clear that they think it is a worthwhile project and my own son, who is in P7, seems to have learnt more from the tearooms than any other project; hearing him talk of profits and overheads can be unnerving but it illustrates his enthusiasm and understanding. It is lovely for parents and the wider community to be able to witness and literally share in an ongoing school project too.
From the outset it was important to be a business with a conscience and a purpose beyond the financial; as well as fundraising for charity, the pupils wanted to provide a service to the community rather than just take their money. They have been delighted to form a relationship with Befrienders Dunoon, a local charity that takes out elderly people who might otherwise be housebound or lonely. Eight to ten people are brought to every tea room in a minibus, and the children have become fond of their visitors. It is a symbiotic relationship; one elderly lady came in to talk to the school about their Africa project, having been raised there and the children have performed songs and poems at each end of term tearoom.

The children have seen real results from their enterprise; the first year, starting in winter, netted over £600, this school year, they’ve raised £900 so far. They have used the money to attend a Stramash outdoors activity week before school broke up, including a night under canvas, costing £2200 and paid for in large part by the tearoom profits. This was matched funded by the local Wind Farm Trust in recognition of the children’s achievement. The Parent Council, have applauded their efforts. In such a tiny school itis often difficult to fund more expensive projects.

In terms of employability, the scheme could not have been designed better to give pupils a taste of the types of skills needed in the work place, particularly in a rural area. This part of Argyll is a centre for tourism, needs enterprising business start ups, especially in the hospitality industries. In the wider country, retail sales, and seeing how a product can go from seed to shop is a useful illustration, especially as many of our children come from farming families, so may be used to the production but not the end sales. We are an aging population too so working with the elderly is a real possibility for our pupils, it is nice to see them interacting with some quite vulnerable members of the community.

The provision of a tearoom has made a huge difference to this community; what the children have managed to do is a great lesson to those interested in development; they have seen a gap in the market and designed a product/service to suit that gap. They have adapted and grown to suit market conditions and learnt a huge amount in the process almost without noticing. As for partners, working with both local producers, a charity and consumers more than gives the experience that this award category suggests.

Well done Kilmodan PS, an example to us all!

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Clachan CRtB Forestry Glendaruel Glendaruel Hotel News Projects Stronafian Working Groups

The Next Stage of the Glendaruel Working Group

At the last meeting of the working group we spent two hours poring over the decision matrix we had developed in the previous session. With Donald’s ongoing and able help we were able to develop some ideas about the types of solutions we would need to look at for various initiatives.

Over the next week the remainder of the group will revisit several of the most important themes, score them and send those back to Donald for collation and summary. That summary will be then submitted to the DT board for consideration.

Its been a long process, but very well worth it, and has developed some decision points for the community which will be presented at our next appropriate public meeting.

Here is the present working document for download.

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Clachan CRtB Glendaruel Glendaruel Hotel Ideas News Opportunities Premises Projects Working Groups

Of Hall, Hotel and Hub: an Ongoing Discussion

One of the ongoing discussions we have been engaged in is seeing a way forward for Glendaruel what with the CRtB on the Hotel, the initial plans drawn up by the Hub Group and the ongoing progress the Village Hall Committee are making towards renewing the hall. To aid the community’s thinking we organised a session with all three groups at the Village Hall facilitated by Donald Walker and building on the decision-making matrix that the Development Trust has already developed.

Here’s Donald’s Review of the meeting:

The group listened to a short introduction of the aims and process and then heard 5 minute summaries of the activities of each of the working groups. The group were given the opportunity to ask clarifying questions and then worked through 2 set exercises which were designed to generate a consensus over next steps.

Using the presentations and the knowledge of the group, the team assembled a number of criteria which will be used to evaluate options. These criteria were forced ranked 1 to 10 although it was agreed that there could be an opportunity to combine or reclassify some of them at a later date.

The team then selected a number of “wants and needs” for the community and listed these in no particular order. The “wants and needs” were written in way that did not describe the solution; so, the community wants/needs access a licensed premises rather than the community wants/needs a pub. In this example, a pub is one possible solution to the requirement to access a location which is licensed to sell alcoholic beverages.

The team used a 1-3-9 scale to score the relationship between the “want/need” and the criteria where 1 = remote relationship/influence, 3 = moderate influence and 9 = strong relationship. This scale is designed to force a separation between items which have a big impact and those which don’t.

Next steps
The team agreed that this activity should not delay or derail any activities planned by the Village Hall team.

All those present agreed to re-convene for a further 2 hour meeting in the new year to complete the table. During this second session, the team agreed to define each of the criteria to improve clarity and to make the description more objective.

The team also agreed to complete a third session which would be designed to form solutions to each of the wants and needs. These solutions will be evaluated using the same approach as the prioritrisation matrix.

The presentation and matrix are attached so that all interested parties can see what was covered and participate in the process.

Glendaruel Discussion Presentation 5MB
This is Donald’s opening presentation outlining the method and the way outcomes are achieved.

XLS Spreadsheet
If you have Excel and would like to contribute your scores to our next discussion, please send them into us. Remember to score only 1s, 3s and 9s!

PDF of spreadsheet
For those of you who don’t have excel, here’s the pdf which you can open using Adobe Acrobat Reader, freely available from adobe.com

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Colintraive CRtB Forestry Glendaruel Glendaruel Hotel Ideas News

Happy New Year!

2012 looks like being a big year for our community and the projects we’re bringing forward.

After two fabulous evenings at our village halls (well done organisers) and a series of power cuts over the festive period which rather stymied everyone, we’re now looking at getting things moving pretty quickly.

If you have an idea for a project, event or business which would be a community enterprise, please let us know, particularly if it uses wood, forest land or hilltops! We’re available at the Village Halls during the week, and always through the contact page and the comment facility on this website.

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Glendaruel Ideas News Opportunities Press & Publicity

Glendaruel Kiosk goes National!


TV and newspapers all wanted to know more about the Adopt a Kiosk scheme and Heather Munro’s idea to house a defibrillator in one of ours. Brilliant stuff!

Here’s the BBC Story & Report

Here’s the Scotsman story

Here’s the link to the BT Adopt a Kiosk scheme

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CRtB Forestry Glendaruel News Opportunities Press & Publicity Renewables Stronafian

Presentation to LACPG in Cowal Courier

New local news website Cowal Courier has a report on the presentation CGDT’s chair Charles Dixon-Spain recently made to the Local Area Community Planning Group regarding our plans for Stronafian Forest and a medium scale community Windfarm.

The presentation, which seemed to be well-received by the committee of over 20 people and audience, is reported on the pay-for-news website here.

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Clachan Glendaruel News Opportunities Projects Working Groups

Of Hubs, Hydro and Ships-to-Shore

A quick digest on some of the projects which we are working on at the moment:

  • The group looking at the Clachan pavilion or hub on the eastern end of the shinty pitch have recently received from the architect the building brief which resulted from a meeting between him and the ‘Hub Group’. Once this has been approved schematics will be produced, and then we’ll get a visual as to how this building might look and work.
  • We’re moving forward with the recommendations made to us by the Ship-to-shore group and Rhona has made contact with various stakeholders.
  • We’re also looking at micro-hydro schemes in Colintraive and Glendaruel and have identified with Community Energy Scotland 8 possible watercourses where this might happen. Once a desktop assessment has been made we’ll be contacting the landowners associated with the water courses to discuss possibilities.
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Clachan Colintraive CRtB Forestry Glendaruel Glendaruel Hotel Kilmodan Primary School News Projects Stronafian

A Community Working Together

Over the last weeks there has been an unprecedented level of activity in the community looking at our future and the projects we might like to take forward. The ‘Ship-to-shore’ and the ‘Colintraive Gateway’ steering groups have met and made reports to the board, while the Clachan working groups have both reconvened and made recommendations as to the next steps they would like to take to further their work.

The board has also pushed forward with the process to purchase Stronafian Forest, on which we have a right to buy, as well as the community windfarm.

Russell Gill our intern has been working hard to put some shape on initiatives and ideas that have emanated in the community, and we hope to have some papers on matters as varied as mountain-biking, astronomy, and bridleways in hand by the end of the month.

Lastly, Russell and Rhona spent a very enjoyable morning with the Kilmodan school children as they had a forest school session. Both came back damp but delighted!

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Colintraive Glendaruel Opportunities Working Groups

Calling all Interested Parties!

Are you involved in the tourist industry in Colintraive and Glandaruel?

Russell, working for the CGDT for two months on a government funded placement, wants to hear from you!

I’m looking to organise a focus group of anyone whose business interests are related to tourism.  The group will try to collate your opinions and the day-to-day feedback you get from visitors to help the tourist industry in Colintraive and Glendaruel identify what can be done to improve and expand the facilities and attractions for visitors in a way that is sensitive to local concerns.

The results of the focus group will be invaluable in informing the long-term goals of the Development Trust as it progresses with present and future projects.

The meeting will be held at 7pm on Wednesday the 14th of September at Glendaruel Village Hall.  If you intend to attend please contact me at russell.p.gill@googlemail.com or on 01369 820344.  I hope as many of you can make it as possible.  If you are unable to make this date but have ideas you want to share with the group please let me know and we’ll arrange an alternative time to meet up and have a chat.

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Forestry Glendaruel News Stronafian

Progress on the Application to Acquire the Right to Buy Stronafian

At the last NFLS panel meeting in late January, at which the decision on our application was to be taken, important questions were raised regarding the timescales of the purchase and how that would affect our business plan for the forest, in particular our management of the forest itself. The panel therefore decided to defer their decision until 5th May to allow us to look at the implications of this.

The Development Trust has now fed back regarding the changes it has made to its business plan to effect purchase of the entire forest within 18 months of the approval of our application.

We will communicate the panel’s decision as soon as we have news but in the meantime will keep our fingers crossed.