In democratic societies, children and young people have the right to be heard and not to feel afraid to express themselves.


Schools have a key role in upholding this principle. At the same time, students need to be aware of both their rights and responsibilities.
 

Learning about human rights and democracy is a fundamental first step for becoming an informed and responsible citizen.
 

Students also need to participate in activities such as debating and community work. Skills, knowledge and critical understanding must be coupled with the attitudes and values that form part of a democratic culture. All this should be promoted through a whole-school approach.


Facts & figures

While students make up approximately 92% of any given school’s population, the decisions in school are routinely made by the remaining 8% who are adults.[1]
Students learn better when they are engaged partners throughout the educational process.[2]


What is student voice?

Student voice is the right of students to have a say in matters that affect them in their schools, and to have their views and opinions taken seriously. It encompasses all aspects of school life and decision-making where young learners are able to make a meaningful contribution, adapted to their age and stage of development. It stretches from informal situations in which students express an opinion to their peers or staff members to participation in democratic structures or mechanisms, such as student parliaments and consultations.

Student voice can vary from simple self-expression to taking on a leadership role in an aspect of school life. It can be characterised according to a 6-fold typology of increasing complexity and responsibility:

  • Expression – voice an opinion
  • Consultation – asked for an opinion
  • Participation – attend and preferably play an active role in a meeting
  • Partnership – have a formal role in decision-making
  • Activism – identify a problem, propose a solution, and advocate its adoption
  • Leadership – plan and make decisions

Given that the relevant activities are age-appropriate, student voice can be expressed anywhere in the school community, in and out of lessons, e.g., through inviting students to comment on teaching approaches and techniques, suggest topics for class discussion, participate in school policy committees and/or consultations, or just join in a casual conversation on school matters with a teacher or other staff member in their free time.


Why is student voice important at school?

Student voice is rooted in the concept of children’s rights and human rights. In particular, Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) establishes the right of every child to have a say in matters which affect them, whether in or out of school, as well as to be involved in decisions that affect them. More generally, the UNCRC includes other articles that seek to increase students’ voice, including the right to seek and receive information, to express their own views and to associate with others.
 

UN Convention on the Rights of the Child: Article 12
“Parties shall assure to the child who is capable of forming his or her own views the right to express those views freely in all matters affecting the child, the views of the child being given due weight in accordance with the age and maturity of the child.”[3]

Student voice can have many benefits both for schools and the wider society – for example:

  • Participation in school decision-making fosters a sense of citizenship in young learners, helping them to develop important competences, e.g. co-operation and communication skills, self-efficacy, responsibility, civic-mindedness and respect for the value of democracy – all of which lie at the heart of the Council of Europe Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture (RFCDC).
  • Contributing to their school community gives young learners a sense of belonging, develops self-esteem and can lead to more respectful relationships. This has a positive influence on school discipline and helps to reduce the incidence of problems such as drop-out, bullying, substance abuse and radicalisation.
  • Engaging students in active learning activities in class has a positive effect not only on the classroom atmosphere, but also on the educational achievements of students and their peers.

What are the challenges?

There are a number of major areas of challenge facing the development of student voice in schools.

The first relates to the attitudes of other school stakeholders. Parents, teachers school leaders and others who have traditional views of schooling sometimes feel that children and young people should be ‘seen and not heard’ in school. They think respect for others and for authority are best developed in a culture of deference. To counteract attitudes of this kind school leaders need to introduce elements of student voice gradually, explaining the process clearly to school stakeholders and sharing the successes with them when they take place.

Some stakeholders may see empowering young learners through student voice as undermining their own power or position of authority in the school. Teachers may sometimes feel that students have more rights than they have. This merely underlines the importance of developing a whole-school culture in which all stakeholders feel safe to express their opinions freely and openly, and to have their opinions taken seriously. Student voice goes hand in hand, therefore, with the creation of a general culture of democracy and human rights in school.

The second major area of challenge is ensuring that student participation is genuine participation and not tokenism or ‘window-dressing’. This means giving students opportunities to make a real difference to their lives and the lives of other school stakeholders, and helping staff to be more open to sharing their decision-making with young learners.
 

The Ladder of Children’s Participation
Roger Hart, in the book Children's Participation: The Theory And Practice Of Involving Young Citizens In Community Development And Environmental Care, developed the concept of a ‘ladder of participation’ which can be applied to student voice. He suggested eight different levels or degrees of student voice, from the simplest - which is little more than the manipulation of students for the school’s benefit - to activities where decision-making is genuinely shared between adults and young learners.

A third area of challenge is the difficulty of making opportunities for student voice equally open to all students. The problem arises to some extent on account of the perception that student voice applies only to formal school structures, like pupil parliaments. For stakeholders with more traditional attitudes towards teaching and learning it can be difficult to see student voice as integral to, rather than separate from the learning process in classrooms. Another aspect of this problem is that it is the more confident and out-going students who are prepared to voice their opinions openly or stand in class or school council elections. How to integrate student voice into learning and to involve a wider range of students in the process is a whole-school responsibility and needs to be taken seriously as an area of whole-school planning and as an important topic for teacher professional development.


How can schools get active?

There are a number of ways in which schools can develop more opportunities for student voice. These include:

  • Encouraging teaching staff to consider how they can involve students in the learning process in the classroom, e.g., by creating more opportunities for students to express their own opinions, debate issues, make suggestions or draw up classroom rules;
  • Creating mechanisms for student consultation on issues affecting school life, e.g., through questionnaires, suggestion boxes, surveys or focus groups;
  • Establishing formal bodies or procedures, e.g., pupil parliaments, student committees and commissions, or ‘circle time’;
  • Inviting students to sit on school policy-development committees, e.g., on gender equality, pupil safety or health and well-being;
  • Teaching young learners the skills of public speaking and debate, e.g., discussion skills, active listening or argumentation;
  • Providing opportunities for peer-led activities, e.g., peer education, peer assessment or peer counselling.
     

[1] https://soundout.org/why-student-voice-a-research-summary/

[2] https://soundout.org/why-student-voice-a-research-summary/ ; Beaudoin, N. (2005). Elevating student voice: How to enhance participation, citizenship, and leadership. Larchmont, NY: Eye on Education

[3] UN General Assembly, Convention on the Rights of the Child, 20 November 1989, United Nations

Resources on Making children’s and students’ voices heard

Multimedia

Official texts

Policy documents

Studies

Tools

Related schools projects

Back Periferiako Gymnasio Xylofagou - Cyprus

Address: Xylofagou, P.O.Box 47021, postal code 7525

Country: Cyprus

 School website


Project: Passengers on the Same Bus! No Discrimination, Segregation and Inequality!

Working language during the project:

  • English
     

Themes of the Council of Europe campaign “FREE to SPEAK, SAFE to LEARN - Democratic Schools for All” covered:

  • Making children’s and students’ voices heard
  • Preventing violence and bullying
  • Tackling discrimination
  • Improving well-being at school
     

Competences from the Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture (CDC) addressed and where / how they were integrated:

  • Valuing Cultural Diversity
    An introduction to the issues of Diversity through:
    - 1. Workshop: “Race of Life” A role-play
    - 3. Workshop: “My pot: different and unique”
    - Activity C2: Diversity unites us, it does not separate us!
    - Activity C3: Lets uproot bullying
  • Openness to Cultural otherness and to other beliefs, world views and practices
    - Sociology course connected with games against discrimination
    - A campaign against discrimination
  • Respect

    Workshop: “We are all Unique”
    Activity C4: “I am a refugee- a migrant - Not a Criminal.

Target group age range:

  • 11-15
     

Level of education:

  • Lower secondary education
     

Short description of the project:

Our Project K229 Erasmus+ - Strategic Partnership for school is a 24-month project which began on 1st September 2018 and will end on 31st of August 2020. Our school is the coordinating school of the whole project. It is an ambitious project under the title “Passengers on the same Bus! No place for Discrimination, Segregation and Inequality”. Our project aims to make a bridge, initially connecting four European partners-schools in Cyprus, Finland, Italy and the Czech Republic and then integrating and sharing specific experience, viewpoints, knowledge and best practices on the issues of diversity, segregation, discrimination, inequality, bullying, and on migrant students in the school environment. Our project consists of four activities. Each country has undertaken one of the activities but we all work together to carry it out. The first activity is “Adopting and developing new communication technologies” and took place in Cyprus in November 2018. The participants were introduced to the issues of diversity, discrimination, inequality, segregation, bullying and the issue of migrant students through carefully designed experiential workshops, role-plays, drama, stories, artwork etc.
The second is due to take place in the Czech Republic in March 2019 under the title “Diversity Unites us, it does not separate us!” The third one will take place in Italy in October 2019 under the title “I am a refugee, a migrant - not a criminal”. The last one will take place in Finland in April 2020 under the title “Lets uproot bullying”. Each activity lasts for 5 days and a total of 38 participants from the four schools take part in each activity. Furthermore, all the activities have been carefully designed to meet the needs of the project and make its objectives achievable.
 

Aims/objectives

  • To secure the feeling of being valued by all our children and to fight discriminatory attitudes
  • To promote social inclusion in our school environment
  • To grow respect among pupils and an understanding of diversity
     

Expected results/outcomes

  1. Knowledge and experience gained by pupils and staff as far as diversity, discrimination and segregation are concerned.
  2. Knowledge, awareness and experience gained by pupils and staff of the problem of bullying.
  3. Knowledge, awareness and experience of the inclusion of refugees in our school community.
  4. We expect pupils and staff, as well as participants to gain much knowledge and experience in thinking of ways to prevent and deter discrimination, inequality and diversity problems.
  5. Improve skills and knowledge concerning the use of new technologies to disseminate information about the work of our project.
     

Changes

So far we have managed to raise awareness among a great number of students-participants from the four partner-countries on the issue of diversity. These students work as ambassadors for the acceptance of diversity, for fighting bullying, for accepting and respecting cultural, social, religious differences and for accepting the right of refugee students to share equal rights in their countries.
Our project consists of 4 activities. We have already carried out the first activity and we are moving on to the second. But we all four schools have observed that after the first activity in Cyprus:

  • A great number of pupils have changed their attitude towards discrimination and segregation.
  • They know about bullying and have a good sense of awareness.
  • The number of cases of bullying has decreased in all four schools.
  • With the first activity in Cyprus students have been persuaded in practice that although the students of the four schools have different culture, this cannot ever be a barrier to fostering cooperation and friendship.
  • All the participants keep in touch with each other, via social network sites and they share ideas and in some cased have even developed friendship.
     

Challenges you faced

Before the pupils from the three schools arrived, our students and parents were biased, although they didn’t want to accept this. There were a lot of worries about the differences of these pupils.
On the first day, our pupils expressed their surprise about the different way the hosting pupils behaved. On the third day they were singing and dancing Cypriot, Finnish, Czech and Italian songs and dances. On the last day, they were all crying, kissing and promising to keep in touch.
Another challenge was the communication, since not all participants spoke English. However, our activities placed emphasis on many feelings and fewer words. The workshops were well designed for achieving their goals, irrespective of the level of English. Examples: “The race of Life”, the story with the cracked pot, the clever quiz on the Kahoot , the poster with the pots, which all actually let the participant experience discrimination, segregation, inequality rather than learn definitions and rules.
 

Time-frame of the project:

The whole project lasts 24 months. Each one of the 4 activities are 5 days long plus two days for travel.
 

Council of Europe materials on citizenship and human rights education used while preparing or implementing your practice:

  • Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture
  • All Different – All Equal
  • Compasito
  • We CAN!
  • Human Rights and Democracy Start with Us – Charter for All
  • Multimedia Material (ex. video “Beat Bullying”, series of cartoons “Democracy and Human Rights at School”, video “Corporal punishment at school: how two parents decided to change things”)