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Rona Mackenzie

Rona Mackenzie

Dr. Rona Mackenzie is Principal of Lincoln University Technical College (UTC). She has a strong background in education, having worked in six local authorities during her career, and is passionate about providing an education that meet the needs of young people and their community industries. She is a keen sportswoman and mountaineer, recently trekking to Everest Base Camp, and has an interest in photography.


It was a year ago this month that I first met Daniel Ionescu of The Lincolnite to discuss the new Lincoln UTC and initiate my relationship with this fine online newspaper. This is my twelfth monthly article and I thoroughly enjoy the opportunity to stop, reflect and put pen to paper or, more accurately, fingers to keyboard.

Much has changed in the last twelve months and I am sure that when I look back in August 2015, having celebrated the first twelve months of Lincoln UTC, I will find myself once more reflecting on huge change.

For many, August is heralded as a relatively quiet month with schools out for summer and families taking time out to spend quality time together, heading to pastures new for a break and a change of scenery. Yet August is also seen as a time for change. In this month young people from across the country will nervously receive envelopes, finding out how well they did in their summer examinations. Tomorrow we will see our newspapers filled with photos of sixth form students, clutching results forms, hugging one another in happiness and, sadly in some cases, shedding a tear due to unexpected disappointment.

Next week a similar picture will unfold as GCSE students receive similar news. Nervous yet exciting times ahead for teachers and families as much as students: the pressure of expectation is equally shared.

Beside these young people, their families will wait: having lived through the last two years, they appreciate their toil and commitment and they too will have provided great support and care to help them achieve their outcomes. In the background will stand a team of school or college staff.

The teachers, who have given so much to their students by enlightening their minds, challenging their opinions, developing their thinking and growing them both academically and personally. The array of support staff, who go unnoticed by the press at this time of year, yet who have provided the learning environment, resources, personal support, entered them for exams, fed and nourished their minds and ensured they have travelled safely to and from school each day. This is a team of unsung heroes, without whom these results would never have been possible.

These two weeks are certainly times to celebrate the achievements of students across the country; equally, they are times to congratulate all those who have supported them along the journey. As individuals we can only achieve so much – as a team, we are significantly stronger and ultimately more successful: it is true, the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.

In this month of change these young people will head off to pastures new. Whether that is to employment, apprenticeship or university, to embark on post-16 studies in a new institution or indeed to change school at 14 to join the UTC, such opportunities provide excitement and can be equally daunting. Important decisions are made and futures begin to take shape as career pathways become more refined and considered. This is a pivotal month – it is good that for many it is a time of rest, as such decisions need to be made with an uncluttered, focused mind.

Here at the UTC we are not in a period of rest – indeed, this time could not be more active! Chad Varah House is brimming with specialists in fields such as information technology, interior design, engineering and construction, to name but a few. In a little over two weeks experts in education will fill the building, preparing for the arrival of those young people who have made a life-changing decision to join us at the UTC.

They have taken a significant step in their career pathway, joining us to focus on their strengths and interests in Science and Engineering. We look forward to celebrating the GCSE results of our Year 12 students next week and welcoming them and our Year 10 students to the next exciting phase of their education. Education in Engineering, Science and Mathematics has never looked stronger in Lincolnshire.

We wish all our colleagues across the county the very best of luck for them and their students this week – we raise a glass to your collective hard work and achievements and look forward to reading of your successes.

Dr. Rona Mackenzie is Principal of Lincoln University Technical College (UTC). She has a strong background in education, having worked in six local authorities during her career, and is passionate about providing an education that meet the needs of young people and their community industries. She is a keen sportswoman and mountaineer, recently trekking to Everest Base Camp, and has an interest in photography.

Weren’t we spoilt for choice last weekend? I don’t know if the sports schedulers made a mistake, but putting the Wimbledon Finals alongside the Football World Cup matches, Silverstone Grand Prix and Tour De France a la Yorkshire made for some difficult viewing decisions. Topped off with the Waddington Air Show and the Lincoln UTC Open Day, well, I’m sure most people will have found it difficult to pick one to watch or attend!

At the end of a busy weekend of UTC activities, I managed to grab the highlights of the tennis and cycling and how I wished I could have been one of the Yorkshire spectators, watching the cycling professionals zoom past and admiring their strength, speed and skill. It never ceases to amaze me how easy professional sports men and women make their sport look.

It isn’t until I get back on my bike, filled with enthusiasm and determination to be faster and more efficient, that I remember just how physically challenging it is and how much time and effort they commit to their training and racing to be that good. And as Cavendish and Froome demonstrated in these last few days, how in the blink of an eye all their dreams can come uncontrollably crashing down around them.

Watching the Tour, one aspect that enthralls me is their ability to ‘draft’ at such high speed. As a very amateur triathlete, in our races we are not allowed to cycle closely to other riders’ wheels as this is seen as gaining an unfair advantage by being ‘pulled’ along in their slipstream.

Out on the Tour, drafting is perfectly legal and riders can be seen cycling exceedingly close to one another. They risk touching wheels at any moment, which could so easily lead to accident and potential injury. But the team of riders in the peloton, moving in harmony along the roads, benefit from their compatriots as they take a much needed rest, being pulled along by the group, and then eventually moving to take their place at the front of the group and provide welcome respite for another rider. This teamwork is simply stunning and I would love to know how it feels to move so quickly and seemingly effortlessly as a group of riders — I am sure it isn’t as easy as it looks!

This weekend we held the first of two days for our staff at the UTC, bringing them together to prepare for the UTC to open in September. In our first activity I was keen for us to explore the vision of the UTC, the values that we hold dearly and the culture that will enable us to achieve our collective goals. Watching the cycling and the efforts of the peloton, I was reminded of the importance of leadership and of teamwork.

In my role as Principal, we begin our “ride” with me at the front, leading the pack to set the pace and direction of the UTC. Close to me are those in the team who have spent considerable time preparing and planning, shaping the curriculum, opportunities and pastoral care that we will provide for our students. And in this first training session, the remaining members of the team joined the peloton for the first time, gaining a greater understanding of our journey and vision and feeling the fast pace we have set for ourselves.

Our team will move much like the peloton, with various members of the UTC team of staff taking the lead at different points, aligned to their areas of expertise and passion. We have a team of experienced, committed and dynamic professionals who come together to drive the UTC to achieve truly outstanding educational opportunities for young people in Lincolnshire. Our Peloton has ben formed in Lincolnshire — I am not sure we will be heading towards France, but I know we intend to achieve the dizzy heights of success and someday in the near future, we will be popping corks and donning the yellow jersey of celebration. Just watch us!

Dr. Rona Mackenzie is Principal of Lincoln University Technical College (UTC). She has a strong background in education, having worked in six local authorities during her career, and is passionate about providing an education that meet the needs of young people and their community industries. She is a keen sportswoman and mountaineer, recently trekking to Everest Base Camp, and has an interest in photography.

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