Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

EUROPEAN CLASSES PROJECT : A CO- EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH TO CURRICULUM INNOVATION CONFERENCE PROMOTING INNOVATION AND CREATIVITY : Schools’ Response to the.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "EUROPEAN CLASSES PROJECT : A CO- EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH TO CURRICULUM INNOVATION CONFERENCE PROMOTING INNOVATION AND CREATIVITY : Schools’ Response to the."— Presentation transcript:

1 EUROPEAN CLASSES PROJECT : A CO- EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH TO CURRICULUM INNOVATION CONFERENCE PROMOTING INNOVATION AND CREATIVITY : Schools’ Response to the Challenges of Future Societies Katja Pavli č Škerjanc, Brdo 8 -10 April 2008

2 EUROPEAN CLASSES PROJECT pilot project in upper-secondary general education (gimnazija: 4-year program, students aged 15-19): –set up to supplement the program with new program elements and innovative approaches to teaching and learning, –designed by the National Education Institute of Slovenia, –approved by the National Council of Experts for General Education, –launched in 2004/05 by the Minister of Education and Sport (to be evaluated in 2008/09), –implemented in 16 schools (out of eligible 54).

3 Purpose and aims of ECP to meet both deficiency and growth needs: –personalise the curriculum: increase its openness, ie. scope and number of options for schools and individual students (core – elective – optional → modular structure) ; –make the curriculum more authentic for the students: provide meaningful contexts – bring the real world into the classroom (and vice versa) ; –integrate the curriculum: increase its flexibility to overcome fragmentation of knowledge (set up curricular connections, eg. tranversal competences as cross-curricular goals); to provide convincing proofs of concepts and ideas and, finally, a fully functioning prototype

4 KEY CONCEPTS AUTHENTICITY OF LEARNING goals content activities assessment environment European and global dimension intercultural communication: crosscultural (intra- in inter-cultural) encounters and cooperation integrative curriculum: multidisciplinarity- interdisciplinarity - transdisciplinarity collaborative teaching (many forms, including team work and pair teaching) inquiry-based learning and project approach to teaching and learning diverse learning tools (ICT and others) information/digital/media literacy) Gimnazija program adaptation E UROPEAN CLASSES

5 Co-evolutionary approach to curriculum innovation Pilot projects are designed and implemented with three complementary goals in mind: –by aiming to improve the curricula as well as the teaching and learning process they address students, –at the same time motivating and supporting teachers in their continuous professional development and capacity building –and providing project managers (national education authorities and reasearch & development agencies) with pragmatic knowledge and skills of the teachers and headteachers (ie. aligning beliefs about the potential for effective action with the lessons of past and present experience).

6 Different roles of teachers in ECP Teachers participating in the project are expected to assume different roles: teachers, change agents, course designers, materials providers, researchers, evaluators. Teachers as reflective practitioners Schools as learning organisations

7 PT Jesenice PT Brežice PT Koper PT Nova Gorica PT Kočevje PT Lj Poljane PT Ljutomer PT Lj Bežigrad PT Kamnik PT Mb I. gimn. PT Ptuj PT Slovenj Gradec PT Celje PT Mb II. gimn. English WG Slovene language WG Intercultural Education WG European Studies WG German language WG French WG Project Team coordinators National Education Institute PROJECT TEAM Project Manager Core & Extended PG PROJECT STRUCTURE Working Groups (WG)  School Project Teams ◄ external collaborators (teachers from participating schools) Gimnazija program adaptation E UROPEAN CLASSES

8 Project structure and communication close links and interdependence between the NEI project team and participating schools/project partners; communication at and between all levels is constant and intense, both direct and indirect (via e-mail), aiming to secure not only an uninterrupted information flow on the progress of the project, but also ongoing exchanges - as well as evaluation - of project products (lesson plans, teaching materials, etc.) and examples of practice of all kinds considered illustrative and supportive: –best (tried and tested out several times by more teachers), –good (tried at least twice by one teacher) and –promising (still in the planning phase).

9 EUROPEAN CLASSES PROJECT The overarching goal is the search for new organisational solutions and innovative implementation approaches at all levels, –from the structure of the program, –the placement and role of both subject areas as well as individual subjects within the program –to the lay-out of subject syllabi, which in the case of the new electives faithfully follows a competence-based approach and differentiated levels of autonomy, as well as –the learning and teaching approaches and methods.

10 Subject modules Modular aproach: openness and flexibility 1.core 2.elective 3.optional increasing level of teacher autonomy –increasing level of flexibility optional elective core goals/content full teacher autonomy limited teacher autonomy no teacher autonomy

11 Innovations on the level of SUBJECTS can be observed in: a changed identity of the elective subjects, which are transdisciplinary in nature and based on discovery learning, requiring active methods of instruction, primarily the task-based, project-based and inquiry-based approach; –European studies, e.g., are such a subject, in the context of which students gain knowledge anddevelop skills to critically evaluate European integration processes, human and civil rights issues, the role and the activities of European institutions, as well as other relevant social and cultural issues in Europe and the nature of European inclusion into world currents; the differentiation of the learning goals of foreign languages by means of and within different subject modules (refer to the next chapter): the emphasised role of mother tongue (refer to the next chapter).

12 Le sole risposte utili sono quelle che propongono nuove domande. Vittorio Foa The only useful answers are those that pose new questions.

13 EUROPEAN CLASSES PROJECT INTRODUCING CHANGES IMPORTANT CHANGES INTRODUCED INTO –goals of the gimnazija curriculum –structure of the curriculum –subjects (structure, aims & objectives) –didactics

14 INTRODUCING CHANGES INTO CURRICULUM GOALS  European and global dimension  from Slovenia’s point of view  intercultural education / communication  by involving native speakers and/or teachers from other countries/cultures  synthetic thinking - holistic knowledge  through integrated curriculum

15 INTRODUCING CHANGES INTO CURRICULUM STRUCTURE  integrated curriculum  changed role of the flexible (elective) part  integration of elective subjects - linking their  aims and objectives  content  instruction

16 INTRODUCING CHANGES INTO SUBJECTS  new electives - ECP specific  multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approach  integrating traditionally separate disciplines into new subjects  upgrading the taxonomy of FLL goals  CBLL content-based language learning  FLAC foreign language across the curriculum

17 INTRODUCING CHANGES NEW ELECTIVES (ECP specific)  Foreign Language in Focus: English, German, French, Italian, Spanish.Russian  FL: Slovenia in the World  FL: Culture and Civilization  Slovene  Social Roles of Slovene  Slovene Literature in Translations  European Studies  citizenship & human rights education, environmental issues etc.

18 INTRODUCING CHANGES INTO THE DIDACTICS collaborative teaching authentic learning & assessment active learning inquiry-based learning problem-based learning collaborative learning project approach


Download ppt "EUROPEAN CLASSES PROJECT : A CO- EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH TO CURRICULUM INNOVATION CONFERENCE PROMOTING INNOVATION AND CREATIVITY : Schools’ Response to the."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google