elearning_label_schools
Projektid
Interpersonal Clues for Understanding in Schools with Interculturally Valid Education
04 Detsember 2002
It is a three year project aiming at promoting intercultural education in a broader sense or education in diversity or inclusive education.
INCLUSIVE - INterpersonal Clues for Understanding in Schools with Interculturally Valid Education, is a three year project aiming at promoting intercultural education in a broader sense or education in diversity or inclusive education.
The target groups are primary and secondary school teachers.
The objectives are:
1) to challenge exclusion (for high achievers especially)
2) to combat racism and demonstrate the principle of of advantage in diversity
3) to raise achievements and self-esteem of marginalised
4) to contribute to student-teachers' knowledge about ways to raise achievement
General introduction of inclusive strategies will be accompanied by publication of sample lessons, of self reflections and insights of teachers, and by case studies of selected children.
These outputs will be placed on a web site and collected in a special booklet accessible for Initial techer training at co-ordination institutions.
Countries involved in the project are CZ, ES, DK, GB.
The target groups are primary and secondary school teachers.
The objectives are:
1) to challenge exclusion (for high achievers especially)
2) to combat racism and demonstrate the principle of of advantage in diversity
3) to raise achievements and self-esteem of marginalised
4) to contribute to student-teachers' knowledge about ways to raise achievement
General introduction of inclusive strategies will be accompanied by publication of sample lessons, of self reflections and insights of teachers, and by case studies of selected children.
These outputs will be placed on a web site and collected in a special booklet accessible for Initial techer training at co-ordination institutions.
Countries involved in the project are CZ, ES, DK, GB.
Projektid
European, Education, Quality Benchmark System
04 Detsember 2002
The project meets the demand of schools involved in transnational projects for a benchmarking system for measuring and comparing the quality of schools.
The project embarks on the following activities:
· to develop a suitable benchmarking instrument;
· to develop and run a distance in-service training course on using the instrument to learn about school systems and school improvement in Europe;
· to develop a web-based handbook for the the benchmarking instrument;
· to use the web as a communication tool for the project and the course;
· to use portfolios for self-evaluation;
· to develop a project website.
· to develop a suitable benchmarking instrument;
· to develop and run a distance in-service training course on using the instrument to learn about school systems and school improvement in Europe;
· to develop a web-based handbook for the the benchmarking instrument;
· to use the web as a communication tool for the project and the course;
· to use portfolios for self-evaluation;
· to develop a project website.
Projektid
La Maleta Intercultural
04 Detsember 2002
The objective of the project is to produce curricular materials to address the needs of
multicultural classrooms in secondary school.
multicultural classrooms in secondary school.
The specific target group is the immigrant pupils between 14 and 16 years old who face problems of integration due to linguistic, cultural and religious differences.
The project is designed for three years and intends to carry out the following activities:
- Elaboration and realisation of a survey to single out the needs of immigrant pupils in secondary school.
- Creation of curricular materials on intercultural education.
- Implementation, evaluation and recreation of curricular materials.
- Translation and dissemination of the materials in the partner countries.
- In service-training courses on multiculturalism for teachers of the partner countries.
The project is designed for three years and intends to carry out the following activities:
- Elaboration and realisation of a survey to single out the needs of immigrant pupils in secondary school.
- Creation of curricular materials on intercultural education.
- Implementation, evaluation and recreation of curricular materials.
- Translation and dissemination of the materials in the partner countries.
- In service-training courses on multiculturalism for teachers of the partner countries.
Projektid
Empowering Mathematics Teachers for the Improvement of School Mathematics
04 Detsember 2002
It aims to improve the teaching of mathematics in school through the provision of in-service training material for teachers from primary and secondary education.
The project aims to improve the teaching of mathematics in school through the provision of in-service training material for teachers from primary and secondary education.
The partnership, coordinated by the faculty of education of the Charles University of Prague, brings together teacher training establishments in UK/ D and a school in SE which has carried out significant pilot teaching in mathematics.
The overall objective is to encourage more creative involvement amongst pupils in the process of learning and practising mathematics at school and to combat the passivity among pupils, which characterises much current practice.
The project is planned over a period of three years, with year one concentrating on gathering materials for 5 topics on which in-service courses will be based; year two focussing on the testing of the materials in a small number of schools and year three on the wide dissemination of finished modules through the WEB and other means by each of the partners.
Keywords for the project are: teaching of mathematics; active learning; changing attitudes and all of this within the European dimension of a transnational project.
The partnership, coordinated by the faculty of education of the Charles University of Prague, brings together teacher training establishments in UK/ D and a school in SE which has carried out significant pilot teaching in mathematics.
The overall objective is to encourage more creative involvement amongst pupils in the process of learning and practising mathematics at school and to combat the passivity among pupils, which characterises much current practice.
The project is planned over a period of three years, with year one concentrating on gathering materials for 5 topics on which in-service courses will be based; year two focussing on the testing of the materials in a small number of schools and year three on the wide dissemination of finished modules through the WEB and other means by each of the partners.
Keywords for the project are: teaching of mathematics; active learning; changing attitudes and all of this within the European dimension of a transnational project.
Projektid
Outdoor Education. Authentic learning in the context of landscape
04 Detsember 2002
The general objective is to find and compare different perspectives on learning through
the landscape.
the landscape.
The general objective of the project OUTDOOR EDUCATION : authentic learning in the context of lanscapes is to use this knowlegde in developing a continuing course in outdoor education within the teacher training for European teachers.
The specific objectives of the project are: to view the scope of the outdoor and landscape environment as a learning environment, to train teachers to work thematically and inter-disciplinary in this context, to work in situations which can enhance self-confidence through outdoors which becomes the classroom and which replaces the textbooks, to see the outdoor classroom as a complement to the indoor environment, to know how children (and in particular childen with special needs and disabilities) relate to the environment and think about the environment.
This project will be a continuation of the main ideas resulting from an EU conference in Rimforsa (Sweden).
The project will result in in-service training tools and documents training papers and materials, seminars, exhibitions and magazines on website on the Internet: an interactive platform will be created during and after the running of the European inservice training to create a follow-up system.
The project hopes to raise the interest for the pedagogy of outdoor education by highlighting and sharing the historical/pedagogical roots of outdoor education as well as the research and empirical evidence of the health perspectives for motorical skills, concentration and personal growth.
The specific objectives of the project are: to view the scope of the outdoor and landscape environment as a learning environment, to train teachers to work thematically and inter-disciplinary in this context, to work in situations which can enhance self-confidence through outdoors which becomes the classroom and which replaces the textbooks, to see the outdoor classroom as a complement to the indoor environment, to know how children (and in particular childen with special needs and disabilities) relate to the environment and think about the environment.
This project will be a continuation of the main ideas resulting from an EU conference in Rimforsa (Sweden).
The project will result in in-service training tools and documents training papers and materials, seminars, exhibitions and magazines on website on the Internet: an interactive platform will be created during and after the running of the European inservice training to create a follow-up system.
The project hopes to raise the interest for the pedagogy of outdoor education by highlighting and sharing the historical/pedagogical roots of outdoor education as well as the research and empirical evidence of the health perspectives for motorical skills, concentration and personal growth.
Projektid
Supporting Our Families Through Change
04 Detsember 2002
To help families understand the new values in a changing world.
The project is designed to last 3 years and involves 10 partners (7 from ES, 1 from PL, 1 from GR, 1 from UK).
The main objectives of the project include:
- To address and possibly reduce the problems of absenteeism and students low academic results.
- To help families understand the new values in a changing world.
- To prepare teachers to act as mediators and guides in the learning process.
- To adapt school structures in order to encourage cooperation between the family and the school.
Following extensive research around examples of European good practices, the partners intend to publish a guide book on European best practices and design a transnational teaching programme based on the contents of the guide book.
The partnership will be targeting primary- and secondary-school teachers, educators involved in vocational training, psychologists, educational inspectors, and other interested partners.
The main objectives of the project include:
- To address and possibly reduce the problems of absenteeism and students low academic results.
- To help families understand the new values in a changing world.
- To prepare teachers to act as mediators and guides in the learning process.
- To adapt school structures in order to encourage cooperation between the family and the school.
Following extensive research around examples of European good practices, the partners intend to publish a guide book on European best practices and design a transnational teaching programme based on the contents of the guide book.
The partnership will be targeting primary- and secondary-school teachers, educators involved in vocational training, psychologists, educational inspectors, and other interested partners.
Artiklid
New Literacies and e-Learning Competences
30 April 2005
The new learning possibilities requires new literacies and e-learning competencies which are central challenges.
When opening the World Forum of Unesco Chairs on the 13th November, 2002, Mr Koichiro Matsuura, Director-General of Unesco, emphasized the need to make educational materials freely available on the web and the real possibilities to do so. As a result, the Open Educational Resources initiative has been launched as a cooperation mechanism for open, non-commercial use of educational resources (Matsuura 2002).
However, the successful implementation of these new learning possibilities requires new literacies and e-learning competencies which are central challenges both world-wide and regionally. In the global level Unesco´s Education Sector gets ready to co-ordinate the UN Literacy Decade from 2003 tp 2012 with the goal to demonstrate by 2012 that there are more literate people in the world than if we had continued with business as usual (Education Today, No 2, 2002).
In Europe the goal of achieving an e-Europe and social justice and avoiding our own digital divide demand that the challenge be met by working to ensure that all sectors of the European society are able to benefit from the employment, educational and development opportunities offered by ICT (Prometeus Newsletter, No 16, March 2002).
Many definitions of literacy exist. They relate, at their core, to an individuals’ ability to understand printed text and to communicate through print. Most contemporary definitions portray literacy in relative rather than absolute terms. They assume that there is no single level of skill or knowledge that qualifies someone as literate, but rather that there are multiple levels and kinds of literacy (e.g. numeracy, technological literacy). In order to have bearing on real-life situations, definitions of literacy must be sensitive to skills needed in out-of-school contexts, as well as to school-based competency requirements (Wagner 2001). Media literacy is multidimensional (Varis 2000). Digital Literacy is the ability to understand and use information in multiple formats from a wide range of sources when it is presented via computers (Gilster 1997).
According to the Summit of 21st Century Literacies (21st Century Literacy Summit, Berlin 2002) new approaches stress the abilities to use information and knowledge that extend beyond the traditional base of reading, writing and math.
Teachers, students, employees and citizens must now incorporate the following components to enhance their knowledge and critical thinking skills:
Technology Literacy: The ability to use new media such as the Internet to access and communicate information effectively.
Information Literacy: The ability to gather, organize and evaluate information, and to form valid opinions based on the results.
Media Creativity: The growing capacity of citizens everywhere to produce and distribute content to audiences of all sizes.
Global Literacy: Understanding the interdependence among people and nations and having the ability to interact and collaborate successfully across cultures.
Literacy with Responsibility: The competence to consider the social consequences of media from the standpoint of safety, privacy and other issues.
The Challenges of 21st Century Literacies
This new concept of literacy is presenting formidable challenges in three key areas of our lives:
Education: Despite an awareness that schools and teachers must change to help students develop the necessary skills, most educational efforts still fall short of achieving this goal.
Workplace Skills: Many businesses too, lack full understanding of the need to train their employees and the implications of failing to do so.
Civic Engagement: Though governments around the world have begun delivering their services electronically, public administrations and legislative must still find ways to make such services easier and more compelling to use. The public sector and nonprofit organizations must also help citizens use the tools of the Internet to engage in public policy and community activity.
The knowledge society will be increasingly requiring new digital literacies or e-learning competencies. The American Society for Training and Development defines that e-learning is the use of Internet and digital technologies to create experiences that educate our fellow human beings. e-Technologies do not change how human beings learn but remove constraints. e-Learning is not just Web-casting lecture, and not training materials dumped online (Horton 2001).
The European eLearning Action Plan 2001 defines e-learning as the use of new multimedia technologies and the Internet to improve the quality of learning by facilitating access to resources and services as well as remote exchanges and collaboration.
This requires new e-learning competencies and literacies. The first competence is simply problem definition which defines what kind of information is needed, from where, and how to process with the information towards knowledge and its presentation and management.
When approaching e-learning competencies a basic question is: what knowledge and skills will enable people to do human resource development work? (Learningcircuits 2001). The long list of required competencies can be categorized into general competencies management competencies,distribution method competencies, and presentation method competencies.
How Should a Competent e-Learning Team Be?
William Horton has elaborated a detailed example of a competent e-learning team (Horton 2001). A team for producing quality e-learning material would consist of something like 16 members. First, one person is needed for managing the whole project. Secondly, three members are needed for designing the course, including a lead designer, module designers, and subject matter experts. Thirdly, six members are needed for building the content. They would include course integrator, writers, graphics specialists, multimedia developers, html/xml coders, and programmers.
Fourthly, three members are needed to provide the technical infrastructure. These people are network/service administrators, server/database programmers, and technical support specialists. And fifthly, three members are needed for conducting e-learning. They are an administrator (curriculum), course facilitator, and online instructor.
The Prometeus conference in Paris, September 2002, discussed, among other things, the learning models and digital competence. The session tried to give answers to questions like: What are the approaches to learning in the virtual environment and how to combine traditional and new ways of life-long learning? How do different solutions like self-directed or facilitated web-based learning, virtual classrooms and discussion formats, etc. perform in practice? What is the present stage of development of experiential and interactive learning models?
The e-WSOY case from Finland by Mr Mikko Laine, Senior Vice-President and representative of the e-industry group, gave an impression on how new ways of presenting knowledge could enhance the learning experience offered by schools. In the publishing model of e-learning the producer or the designer is the teacher. A catalyst model stresses the two-way exchange in creating knowledge. The small business case “University for Industry”, presented by Professor Sam Allwinkle, Napier University, UK, covered the rollout of an educational project from planning and marketing to the operative stage and finally to the measurement of results. The paper on the new Alexandrina Virtual Library by Jaques Vauthier concentrated on the educational aspects of this project demonstrating rich opportunities for experiential and interactive learning in the field of lifelong learning.
My own approach in this Prometeus conference 2002 gave priority to a new renaissance education emphasizing the new learning culture which is rather learner than teacher centered and combines technology with the humanities, art and even religion. The new learning models and styles includes discovery and investigative learning, problem- and community-based learning, etc, when the management of yourself becomes central. The new technology and e-learning become additional tools to face-to-face traiditons and new, blended approaches can be developed to improve the quality and content of learning. Several recommendations emerge including, for example, one that when designing e-learning programmes we should begin with knowing how people learn with their own history in general both in the formal and open environments, workplaces, with the media and in real life situations.References:
However, the successful implementation of these new learning possibilities requires new literacies and e-learning competencies which are central challenges both world-wide and regionally. In the global level Unesco´s Education Sector gets ready to co-ordinate the UN Literacy Decade from 2003 tp 2012 with the goal to demonstrate by 2012 that there are more literate people in the world than if we had continued with business as usual (Education Today, No 2, 2002).
In Europe the goal of achieving an e-Europe and social justice and avoiding our own digital divide demand that the challenge be met by working to ensure that all sectors of the European society are able to benefit from the employment, educational and development opportunities offered by ICT (Prometeus Newsletter, No 16, March 2002).
Many definitions of literacy exist. They relate, at their core, to an individuals’ ability to understand printed text and to communicate through print. Most contemporary definitions portray literacy in relative rather than absolute terms. They assume that there is no single level of skill or knowledge that qualifies someone as literate, but rather that there are multiple levels and kinds of literacy (e.g. numeracy, technological literacy). In order to have bearing on real-life situations, definitions of literacy must be sensitive to skills needed in out-of-school contexts, as well as to school-based competency requirements (Wagner 2001). Media literacy is multidimensional (Varis 2000). Digital Literacy is the ability to understand and use information in multiple formats from a wide range of sources when it is presented via computers (Gilster 1997).
According to the Summit of 21st Century Literacies (21st Century Literacy Summit, Berlin 2002) new approaches stress the abilities to use information and knowledge that extend beyond the traditional base of reading, writing and math.
Teachers, students, employees and citizens must now incorporate the following components to enhance their knowledge and critical thinking skills:
Technology Literacy: The ability to use new media such as the Internet to access and communicate information effectively.
Information Literacy: The ability to gather, organize and evaluate information, and to form valid opinions based on the results.
Media Creativity: The growing capacity of citizens everywhere to produce and distribute content to audiences of all sizes.
Global Literacy: Understanding the interdependence among people and nations and having the ability to interact and collaborate successfully across cultures.
Literacy with Responsibility: The competence to consider the social consequences of media from the standpoint of safety, privacy and other issues.
The Challenges of 21st Century Literacies
This new concept of literacy is presenting formidable challenges in three key areas of our lives:
Education: Despite an awareness that schools and teachers must change to help students develop the necessary skills, most educational efforts still fall short of achieving this goal.
Workplace Skills: Many businesses too, lack full understanding of the need to train their employees and the implications of failing to do so.
Civic Engagement: Though governments around the world have begun delivering their services electronically, public administrations and legislative must still find ways to make such services easier and more compelling to use. The public sector and nonprofit organizations must also help citizens use the tools of the Internet to engage in public policy and community activity.
The knowledge society will be increasingly requiring new digital literacies or e-learning competencies. The American Society for Training and Development defines that e-learning is the use of Internet and digital technologies to create experiences that educate our fellow human beings. e-Technologies do not change how human beings learn but remove constraints. e-Learning is not just Web-casting lecture, and not training materials dumped online (Horton 2001).
The European eLearning Action Plan 2001 defines e-learning as the use of new multimedia technologies and the Internet to improve the quality of learning by facilitating access to resources and services as well as remote exchanges and collaboration.
This requires new e-learning competencies and literacies. The first competence is simply problem definition which defines what kind of information is needed, from where, and how to process with the information towards knowledge and its presentation and management.
When approaching e-learning competencies a basic question is: what knowledge and skills will enable people to do human resource development work? (Learningcircuits 2001). The long list of required competencies can be categorized into general competencies management competencies,distribution method competencies, and presentation method competencies.
How Should a Competent e-Learning Team Be?
William Horton has elaborated a detailed example of a competent e-learning team (Horton 2001). A team for producing quality e-learning material would consist of something like 16 members. First, one person is needed for managing the whole project. Secondly, three members are needed for designing the course, including a lead designer, module designers, and subject matter experts. Thirdly, six members are needed for building the content. They would include course integrator, writers, graphics specialists, multimedia developers, html/xml coders, and programmers.
Fourthly, three members are needed to provide the technical infrastructure. These people are network/service administrators, server/database programmers, and technical support specialists. And fifthly, three members are needed for conducting e-learning. They are an administrator (curriculum), course facilitator, and online instructor.
The Prometeus conference in Paris, September 2002, discussed, among other things, the learning models and digital competence. The session tried to give answers to questions like: What are the approaches to learning in the virtual environment and how to combine traditional and new ways of life-long learning? How do different solutions like self-directed or facilitated web-based learning, virtual classrooms and discussion formats, etc. perform in practice? What is the present stage of development of experiential and interactive learning models?
The e-WSOY case from Finland by Mr Mikko Laine, Senior Vice-President and representative of the e-industry group, gave an impression on how new ways of presenting knowledge could enhance the learning experience offered by schools. In the publishing model of e-learning the producer or the designer is the teacher. A catalyst model stresses the two-way exchange in creating knowledge. The small business case “University for Industry”, presented by Professor Sam Allwinkle, Napier University, UK, covered the rollout of an educational project from planning and marketing to the operative stage and finally to the measurement of results. The paper on the new Alexandrina Virtual Library by Jaques Vauthier concentrated on the educational aspects of this project demonstrating rich opportunities for experiential and interactive learning in the field of lifelong learning.
My own approach in this Prometeus conference 2002 gave priority to a new renaissance education emphasizing the new learning culture which is rather learner than teacher centered and combines technology with the humanities, art and even religion. The new learning models and styles includes discovery and investigative learning, problem- and community-based learning, etc, when the management of yourself becomes central. The new technology and e-learning become additional tools to face-to-face traiditons and new, blended approaches can be developed to improve the quality and content of learning. Several recommendations emerge including, for example, one that when designing e-learning programmes we should begin with knowing how people learn with their own history in general both in the formal and open environments, workplaces, with the media and in real life situations.References:
- Education Today, Newsletter No 2, July-September 2002, Unesco, Paris, 2002.
- Gilster, Paul: Digital Literacy, Wiley and Computer Publishing, 1997.
- Horton, William: Leading e-Learning, American Society for Training and Development, Alexandria, USA, 2001.
http://www.astd.org - http://www.learningcircuits.org/2001/mar2001/competencies.html
- http://www.21stcenturyliteracy.org/whatis
- http://www.prometeus.org
- Matsuura, Koichiro: Address to the World Forum of Unesco Chairs, Unesco, Paris, 13 November 2002.
- Prometeus Newsletter, No 16, (March 2002).
- Wagner, Daniel: Literacy and Adult Education, Unesco, Paris, 2001.
- Varis, Tapio: "Image Education and Media Literacy" in Approaches to Media Literacy and e-Learning: European Commission Workshop, Brussels, November 16th, 2000.
Contact:
Tapio Varis website
Projektid
Joint Unifying Strategies for Training in InterCultural Education
04 Detsember 2002
The overall purpose is to offer an in-service accredited training course for teachers that aims to raise awareness of intercultural and inclusive education practices.
''JUSTICE - Joint Unifying Strategies for Training in InterCultural Education'' is a transnational collaborative initiative to develop and deliver a training programme on Intercultural Education for teachers and educational administrators working in primary, secondary and higher education.
The activities that would lead to the above achievements will be the production of an agreed course module and the development of a framework for course delivery accredited at higher education credit levels. The course will be delivered at least four times in participating countries over the duration of the project.
The products include: a 100 hours training course; a course handbook; a course resource pack; and a website.
The target group consists of teachers in primary, secondary and adult education sectors and staff with specific responsibilities for managing education provision for ethnic minority learners.
The activities that would lead to the above achievements will be the production of an agreed course module and the development of a framework for course delivery accredited at higher education credit levels. The course will be delivered at least four times in participating countries over the duration of the project.
The products include: a 100 hours training course; a course handbook; a course resource pack; and a website.
The target group consists of teachers in primary, secondary and adult education sectors and staff with specific responsibilities for managing education provision for ethnic minority learners.
Projektid
Euromaths
04 Detsember 2002
The project aims to create materials for teaching about the EURO and to use the process to enhance generally pupils' motivation towards the learning of mathematics.
Learning about the Euro will not only provide young people with necessary information for life in Europe but also stimulate interest in Europe generally and feelings of kinship. Not least, the project aims to improve standards of mathematics teaching in schools about which considerable concern is often expressed in most Member States.
The partnership consists of mathematics departments in six teacher-training establishments in FI/DE/PT/UK/IT and HU.
The project will create a network between a number of maths teachers throughout partner countries who will collect examples of how to teach about money and then divide into three sub-networks, each covering three different themes:
-Leaning how to use the Euro and the use of money in general in Europe
-Dealing with money (exchange/tourism etc)
-Money matters in Europe (Stock exchange, black market etc).
This will be shared through a learning environment on the Internet. A course for maths teachers will be planned and implemented and an interactive CD-ROM and paper report in all languages of the partnership.
The partnership consists of mathematics departments in six teacher-training establishments in FI/DE/PT/UK/IT and HU.
The project will create a network between a number of maths teachers throughout partner countries who will collect examples of how to teach about money and then divide into three sub-networks, each covering three different themes:
-Leaning how to use the Euro and the use of money in general in Europe
-Dealing with money (exchange/tourism etc)
-Money matters in Europe (Stock exchange, black market etc).
This will be shared through a learning environment on the Internet. A course for maths teachers will be planned and implemented and an interactive CD-ROM and paper report in all languages of the partnership.
Projektid
El uso de TIC para mejorar la lecto-escritura de alumnos/as con NEE en integración
04 Detsember 2002
It expects to develop the ICT abilities of teachers as a tool to improve the reading and writing skills of pupils between 7 and 14 years old with special educational needs.
The project is designed for 3 years and involves partners from ES, SE, UK, IE and CZ.
The main objectives of the project include:
- training of teachers
- improving the level of reading and writing of pupils of selected pilot groups
- encouraging the use of ICT as a tool for the improvement of the learning process
- Giving a European dimension to the project.
The partners intend to design a European Training Course for teachers, produce a CD-ROM and a web site, and hold a conference to disseminate results.
The main objectives of the project include:
- training of teachers
- improving the level of reading and writing of pupils of selected pilot groups
- encouraging the use of ICT as a tool for the improvement of the learning process
- Giving a European dimension to the project.
The partners intend to design a European Training Course for teachers, produce a CD-ROM and a web site, and hold a conference to disseminate results.


