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Benjalug Namfa Office of Basic Education Commission.

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Presentation on theme: "Benjalug Namfa Office of Basic Education Commission."— Presentation transcript:

1 Benjalug Namfa Office of Basic Education Commission

2 USA 1960’s typical classroom – teacher-centered, fragmented curriculum, students working in isolation, memorizing facts

3 A classroom at the School of Environmental Studies, aka the Zoo School, in Minneapolis. A perfect example of real-life, relevant, project- based 21 st century education.

4 teacher-centered, fragmented curriculum, students working in isolation, memorizing facts. Time-based Focus: memorization of discrete facts A classroom at the School of Environmental Studies. A perfect example of real-life, relevant, project-based 21 st century education. Outcome-based Focus: what students Know, Can Do and Are Like after all the details are forgotten.

5 Lessons focus on the lower level of Bloom’s Taxonomy – knowledge, comprehension and application. Textbook-driven Passive learning Learning is designed on upper levels of Blooms’ – synthesis, analysis and evaluation (and include lower levels as curriculum is designed down from the top.) Research-driven Active Learning

6 Learners work in isolation – classroom within 4 walls Teacher-centered: teacher is center of attention and provider of information Little to no student freedom Learners work collaboratively with classmates and others around the world – the Global Classroom Student-centered: teacher is facilitator/coach Great deal of student freedom

7 “Discipline problems – educators do not trust students and vice versa. No student motivation. Fragmented curriculum Grades averaged No “discipline problems” – students and teaches have mutually respectful relationship as co-learners; students are highly motivated. Integrated and Interdisciplinary curriculum Grades based on what was learned

8 Low expectations Teacher is judge. No one else sees student work. High expectations – “If it isn’t good it isn’t done.” We expect, and ensure, that all students succeed in learning at high levels. Some may go higher – we get out of their way to let them do that. Self, Peer and Other assessments. Public audience, authentic assessments.

9 Curriculum/School is irrelevant and meaningless to the students. Print is the primary vehicle of learning and assessment. Curriculum is connected to students’ interests, experiences, talents and the real world. Performances, projects and multiple forms of media are used for learning and assessment

10 Diversity in students is ignored Literacy is the 3 R’s – reading, writing and math Curriculum and instruction address student diversity Multiple literacies of the 21 st century – aligned to living and working in a globalized new millennium.

11 Factory model, based upon the needs of employers for the Industrial Age of the 19th century. Scientific management. Driven by the NCLB and standardized testing mania. Global model, based upon the needs of a globalized, high- tech society. Standardized testing has its place. Education is not driven by the NCLB and standardized testing mania.

12 21 st Century Learners

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15 21 st Century Learning

16 21 st Century Competencies, Skills, Curriculum & Leader

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19 21 st Century Skills Learning and Innovation Skills - Creativity and Innovation -Critical Thinking and Problem Solving -Communication and Collaboration

20 21 st Century Skills Information, Media & Technology Skills - Information Literacy -Media Literacy -ICT ( Information, Communications and Technology) Literacy

21 21 st Century Skills Life and Career Skills - Flexibility and Adaptability -Initiative and Self-Direction -Social and Cross-Culture Skills -Productivity and Accountability -Leadership and Responsibility

22 Curriculum 21 Essential Education for a Changing World

23 What year are you preparing your students for? 1973? 1995? Can you honestly say that your school’s curriculum and the program you use are preparing your students for 2015 or 2020? Are you even preparing them for today? Heidi Hayes Jacobs

24 Our responsibility is to prepare the learners in our care for their world and their future. So..about Occupation & Technology Curriculum.. What do we cut? What do we keep? What do we create?

25 WHAT ABOUT 21 ST LEADERS?

26 21st century school leadership skills The Art of High Expectations A Focus on the Fundamentals A Talent for Collaborative Problem Solving An Inventive Mind The Ability to Read Data's Story A Gift for Directing Time and Attention

27 What about Thai Education?

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