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167 lines
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167 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2652
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Title: HPR2652: Liverpool Makefest 2018 - Interview with Caroline and John
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2652/hpr2652.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 07:02:18
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---
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This is HBR episode 2652 entitled Liverpool Makefast 2018, InterNew with Caroline and John,
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and in part on the series, InterNew.
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It is hosted by Tony Hughes aka Tony H1212 and is about seven minutes long, and Karina
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Cleanflag.
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The summary is, this is the final interview from this year's Liverpool Makefast.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by archive.org.
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University Access to All Knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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So this is Tony Hughes, still at Liverpool Makefast, and I've got with me, it's Caroline
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Keep, and Caroline, you helped set up the Liverpool Makefast in 2015, can you just tell
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us a little bit how that process got going?
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And me and the three of the founders, Mark Felton and Denise Jones, the head of the
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library, set up the first makefast.
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We wanted to run a culture event for young people because I'm a teacher to be in, have
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a look at new emerging technologies and there wasn't anything at the time, and we asked
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a few of our friends, like the current directors now, Mark, there's Sabino and Gem Phenna,
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to come and run some bits, and we thought we'd get maybe 10 people, and we ended up with
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five floors, and about 6,000 people, so today, four years later, we have a team of 28
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there, we're on makefast, me, Mark and Denise have found in roles, so we tend to do more
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observational and overseeing these days, Gem Phenna and Mark, we've done some amazing
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direction this year, so they've run a lot of great event on, and I've been concentrating
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beautifully on opening the first makefast based on a school, with my head teacher John
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Carlin who's here with me.
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So how does the make space in the school run?
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Pretty well.
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Yeah, did you run pretty well.
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To be honest, we've just got all of our kit in, so me and John have been working on
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what's called the digital creative pathway, I think we've decided with Carlin.
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Absolutely, yeah.
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We're going to embed make-er skills across the curriculum for every year, for every child.
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So what kind of kit are you using?
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Oh, currently we're using 3D printers.
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Yeah, which we've just worn.
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Yes.
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Fabulous.
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Thank you to all the make-up.
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Thank you.
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Yeah, thank you.
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Thank you, great educational to make-er.
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We've got 3D printers that I could build, and we're running as well, and Raspberry Pi,
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Santorino's, MicroBits, electronics, laser cutting, pretty much your typical make-est.
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We've got a lot of don't-so-so-sof wearing don't-sof hardware as well.
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Yeah, well we do.
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We've got quite a lot of relatively broken sausage here, and it paint this.
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Yeah, well, I think the idea is that if we utilize our sauce, then it means that people
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just can get access to themselves outside the school, so it's not about having an expensive
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kit that they have to then go and buy our sauce to continue that outside the school.
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It's available to them, and I think Spark is really there as sort of the first footsteps
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of them, to sort of excuse the point, Spark, something in them, and a passion for them
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that they can then continue beyond school, really.
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Can I just ask, do you use that ethos in other aspects of the school curriculum, like
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with word processing and things like that?
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A number of things really, I mean, as a school we're really interested and focused on
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some of those higher impacts, sort of strategies that we're identifying at the JMU conference,
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for example, about sort of engaging learners in sort of thinking, processing, metacognition
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around the learning, and really providing them with opportunities and risks and activities
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that mean that they're not just academically developing their roles, developing holistically,
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which means that they've got a level learning, a passion for learning, and really, it means
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that they're going forward, they've got an interest in things beyond just a classroom-based
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scenario, and that's really important to me, to make sure that we build the right type
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of learning characteristics in our pupils.
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So what kind of software would you use in the classroom as well as the makerspace?
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I use things like Autodesk, Autodesk 360, do a wonderful program, we use things like
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CURA for 3D printing, we're currently use things like pretty much a lot of the open-source
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software has come with education, so using things like Unity's platforms for developing
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for VR and AR, and all of the platforms, obviously, Raspberry Pi and coding and PICING and C-Sharp.
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So we use a lot of the free platforms because they are accessible to every school, and
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what we wanted to do with Spark, Me and Jenna Greed was muddle it so that every school
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could do this.
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Yeah, a lot of loopering there, and for a minimal cost because a lot of the software is
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open.
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Yes, and you know, we spend minimal amounts of funds on our makeshift space, we're
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very fortunate that we add a lot of support from making communities to start, and obviously
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with us have a make-fest as well, and that helped our support in putting one into a school.
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That is something every library can do, they now have a national mandate, we're looking
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with the libraries that's forced to have them, so every library has a mandate now to
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want to make first.
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So, you know, you can't go to your local library, ask them to pull your community together,
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and then ask your headteachers, well, here's my community, can we open a make-erspace?
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When you say every library, you're talking about Liverpool area, or every library in the
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country.
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You know, you're talking about the London Stoken, Chaffey, at all, every library.
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I think to go back to your original question, that's exactly the point, you know, what software
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do we use predominantly?
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It's offers based off, so it's the Microsoft suite.
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And why is that?
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Because obviously, the curriculum's so narrow in terms of what we've got to deliver,
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what the kids have got to retain in terms of knowledge that we're trying to provide
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them opportunities outside the classroom, they're broad and those are rising.
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Because otherwise, the experience they get is predominantly web-based or office, and that
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is, I mean, obviously, we're looking at some of the Microsoft suite to be able to get
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people to work in a different way, collaborate outside the classroom, so things like Microsoft
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Teams and things like that.
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But predominantly, our curriculum, you know, directly to people to use Microsoft, and that's
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about it, really.
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But that's pretty much every school.
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So, you know, and it's quite difficult to give young people that experience.
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Have you thought about moving over to maybe open source office suite, slight labour office
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and things like that?
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Yeah.
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And I mean, I think...
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We have thought about that.
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I think one of the biggest issues that is, obviously, we want to prepare people's well
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for when they go into employment, and obviously, employment suite is predominantly the
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being used in Microsoft, and that type of office environment.
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So, I think we need to prepare them for college, university and beyond, and that will be 80%
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of their experience.
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So...
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At the moment, we're trying to use the more predominant ones that we know they're going
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to find in the industry in the future, and a lot of the ones that they're going to use
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in universities.
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So, why are we trying to use this much open source software as we can?
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Right.
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If the pro-dominant uses a particular one like Microsoft Office, we do stick with that.
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Yeah.
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I think the key really is to sort of develop them on the bog standard generic stuff that
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they're going to have to use right on a day-to-day basis, but then provide them with
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why the opportunities, so the best prepared across, you know, the scope is wide, I guess,
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is the best way for you, really.
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Yeah.
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Because we do have that massive digital, it's got the digital skills, got them, we all know
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about them.
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You know, and we're not preparing our students well enough for the jobs that they are going
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to aspire to.
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And probably don't exist.
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And probably don't exist.
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Well, as I said, I said to you, I don't really want my kids doing jobs that don't exist
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all of them events in the jobs that don't exist.
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So.
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And I think that's what we're getting our kids to do at the moment though.
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I think to do as well is, it's more than just obviously what software needs to work with.
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It's also those learning characteristics, independence, resilience, curiosity, you know, we need
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to develop those things in our people, and that's what they make here.
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Of course.
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And also just, you know, general enrichment does as well to provide them with a wide scope
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of opportunity.
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Sorry, I'm just keeping an eye on my two-year-old.
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It's all a good one.
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But yeah, it's really, it's really that's what we're trying to provide.
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So it's a big scope for young people to engage with a wide range of curriculum that will
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benefit them.
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And it also does benefit their learning and their progress at school.
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Yes, well, thank you very much.
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Very welcome.
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Thank you everyone so much.
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I look forward to hearing it.
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Thank you.
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I'll look forward to the next episode.
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Thank you.
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