Learning To Live Together
Learning To Live Together
Learning To Live Together
In today’s increasingly diverse societies, UNESCO continues to accomplish every day its
fundamental humanist mission to support people in understanding each other and working together
to build lasting peace. UNESCO also helps to enable people to create and use knowledge for just
and inclusive societies.
Reflecting on the Delors report's definition of "Learning to Live Together," (LTLT) i.e.
discovery of others and engaging in common experiences towards shared goals, this initiative
aims to promote education systems that impart transversal competencies for living together,
such as a better understanding of others,
If people are living in harmony with each other, they are living together peacefully rather than
fighting or arguing. ...the notion that man should dominate nature rather than live in
harmony with it. variable noun. Harmony is the pleasant combination of different notes of
music played at the same time.
It is not enough to teach children how to read, write and count. Education has
to cultivate mutual respect for others and the world in which we live, and help
people forge more just, inclusive and peaceful societies." Ban Ki-Moon, 100
Day Countdown Message for International Peace Day 2013
4) LEARNING TO LIVE TOGETHER -participation in and cooperate with other people in all
human activities. 1. Define what is Learning to Live together? 2. Why to do it? 3. How to do it?
4. Contribution of Learning Live Together to lifelong learning.
-create a safe peaceful and harmonious school climate which reflects the ideal of learning to live
together
A dynamic, holistic and lifelong process through which mutual, respect, understanding, caring and
sharing, compassion, social responsibility, solidarity, acceptance and tolerance of diversity among
individuals and groups are internalized and practices together to solve problems and to work
towards a just and free, peaceful and democratic society. This process begins with the development
of inner peace, in the minds and hearts of individuals engaged in the search for the truth, knowledge
and understanding of each cultures, and the appreciation of shared common values to achieve a
better futures. This third pillar of education implies: 1. The teacher should help students to develop
an understanding of other people and appreciation of interdependents since we live in a closely
connected world. 2. The teacher should help students to realize the value of being able to live
together in their gradually enlarging world: home, school, community, town, city, province, country,
and the world as a global village.
Flexibility and Adaptability in the classroom are two of most important qualities that every
teacher must possess. These two characteristics also go hand-in-hand with one
another. Flexibility is the idea that your plans can change very quickly, sometimes with notice
and sometimes without. Receiving criticism (good and bad) from your advisers is extremely
important in terms of flexibility because it will force you to change up what you are used to
doing. Being flexible means incorporating this feedback into your teaching. Also, on-the-spot
changes may also need to me made based on certain situations in the classroom, often without
prior realization. Adaptability is the ability to adapt to change. In general, it is being able to
acclimate yourself to changing roles, job responsibilities, material, and schedules. If you cannot
accommodate for these different aspects of teaching, it will be difficult to give your students the
best learning experience that they could possibly get, and of course that's always the goal!
Application:
Flexibility in the classroom is one of most important qualities that every teacher must possess. Receiving
feedback from your peers and administrators can be rather intimidating, and then changing your plans in
order to accommodate their feedback and criticism may seem like a daunting task - and it is. Teachers
need to be aware that they will always need to be changing up their teaching styles. Lesson plans are
great guides in the classroom, but of course the class cannot always go as smoothly as it is
planned. There will always be interruptions due to rowdy students, disadvantaged students,
misunderstandings when learning, and (more often now than ever) technical difficulties among many
other reasons. When an obstacle arises, you must be able to overcome it smoothly and this could require
changing your entire plan for the day on-the-spot. This can bring up somewhat of a "sink or swim"
situation, and knowing how to be flexible in your plans will allow you to swim!
As for adaptability, teachers need to be able to be comfortable given a different job responsibility. It is
very possible that when teaching in a district, you may be in two different schools in as many years, based
on what the district needs. It is extremely important that a comfort level is established for him/herself in
order to give the students a proper learning experience. Also, with the ever-changing technology
industry, we as teachers must be able to keep up with and understand the new innovations which could
be beneficial to students in the classroom. We must know how to use them in the best interest of our
students, which could require changing the way that you teach a particular topic, possibly
annually!
Adaptability in the workplace is when an employee can be flexible and have the ability to
adapt to changing work conditions.
adaptability. If someone is equally able to live on an iceberg, in a desert, and on top of a
mountain, you could say that she has a lot of adaptability. This means she is able to make
changes in response to her environme
Productivity is the ability to create a product using these skills: setting and meeting
goals, prioritizing needs, managing time, working ethically, collaborating and
cooperating with colleagues and clients.
Application:
Here are two lesson ideas that utilize productivity and accountability:
One of the main 21st century components that teachers want their students to use are higher-order
thinking skills. This is when students use complex ways to think about what they are learning.
Higher-order thinking takes thinking to a whole new level. Students using it are understanding higher
levels rather than just memorizing math facts. They would have to understand the facts, infer them, and
connect them to other concepts.
Here are 10 teaching strategies to enhance higher-order thinking skills in your students.
Help students understand what higher-order thinking is. Explain to them what it is and why they need it.
Help them understand their own strengths and challenges. You can do this by showing them how they
can ask themselves good questions. That leads us to the next strategy.
2. Encourage Questioning
A classroom where students feel free to ask questions without any negative reactions from their peers or
their teachers is a classroom where students feel free to be creative. Encourage students to ask
questions, and if for some reason you can’t get to their question during class time, then show them how
they can answer it themselves, or have them save the question until the following day.
3. Connect Concepts
Lead students through the process of how to connect one concept to another. By doing this you are
teaching them to connect what they already know with what they are learning. This level of thinking will
help students learn to make connections whenever it is possible, which will help them gain even more
understanding. For example, let’s say that the concept they are learning is “Chinese New Year.” An even
broader concept would be “Holidays,” and if you take it one step further it can be “Celebrations.” Each
small concept can be connected to a bigger, broader concept.
Teach students to make inferences by giving them “Real-world” examples. You can start by giving
students a picture of a people standing in line at a soup kitchen. Ask them to look at the picture and focus
on the details. Then, ask them to make inferences based on what they see in the picture. Another way to
teach young students about how to infer is to teach an easy concept like weather. Ask students to put on
their raincoat and boots, then ask them to infer what they think the weather looks like outside.
Graphic organizers provide students with a nice way to frame their thoughts in an organized manner. By
drawing diagrams or mind maps, students are able to better connect concepts and see their relationships.
This will help students develop a habit of connecting concepts.
Creative thinking is when students invent, imagine, and design what they are thinking. Using your creative
senses help students process and understand information better. Research shows that when students
utilize creative higher order thinking skills, it indeed increases their understanding. Encourage students to
think “Outside of the box.”
When concepts that are being learned are hard, encourage students to create a movie in their mind.
Teach them to close their eyes and picture it like a movie playing. This way of higher order thinking will
truly help them understand in a powerful, unique way.
Higher-order thinking requires students to really understand a concept not repeat it or memorize it.
Encourage students to elaborate their answers and talk about what they are learning. Ask parents to
reinforce this at home, as well by asking the right questions that make students explain their answers in
more detail, or to answer their child’s question with a more detailed response.
Question-Answer-Relationships, or QARs, teach students to label the type of question that is being asked,
then use that information to help them formulate an answer. Students must decipher if the answer can
be found in a text or on the Internet, or if they must rely on their own prior knowledge to answer it. This
strategy has been found to be effective for higher-order thinking because students become more aware
of the relationship between the information in a text and their prior knowledge, which helps them
decipher which strategy to use when they need to seek an answer.
How do you enhance higher order thinking skills in your classroom? Do you have any tips that you would
like to share? Please feel free to leave a comment in the section below, we would love to hear your
thoughts on this topic.
Janelle Cox is an education writer who uses her experience and knowledge to provide creative and
original writing in the field of education. Janelle holds a Master's of Science in Education from the State
University of New York College at Buffalo. She is also the Elementary Education Expert for About.com, as
well as a contributing writer to TeachHUB.com and TeachHUB Magazine. You can follow her at
Twitter @Empoweringk6ed, or on Facebook at Empowering K6 Educators.
. Why Do We Want to Teach Higher-Order Thinking?
- We push toward higher-order thinking skills in the classroom because they have enormous benefits for
our students. The reasoning here is similar to the rationale for pushing knowledge into our long-term
memory.
It is used to refer to the process of gathering data and assembling evidence so that
judgments of value can be made. We often refer to "assessment of student learning,"
which means measuring what students have learned and assigning a judgment to that
measurement.
Critical thinking
Another way to form ideas is to use critical thinking. This involves a person using his own
knowledge or point of view to decide what is right or wrong about someone else's ideas. This is
sometimes called "having a mind of your own." It means that a person doesn't have to believe or
accept everything that someone else says or writes. For example, a friend decides that Babe
Ruth is the best baseball player who ever lived. But another friend may feel that Mark McGuire
deserves that title, and he may have lots of facts to support his position.
In addition to evaluating other people's ideas, critical thinking can also be used to evaluate
things. A person does this when he is deciding which new telephone or book to buy. Of course,
critical thinking can sometimes be carried too far. Nobody likes the person who argues about
everything and only feels his point of view is right. If used reasonably, however, critical thinking
can help a student be successful in school and elsewhere.
CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
ffective Teaching
A disorganized classroom without routines and expectations makes it difficult for the teacher to do her
job. Students don't know what to do, so they might get off task or cause disruptions. When the teacher is
constantly redirecting students or handling behavior problems, she loses crucial teaching time. Classroom
management strategies help create an organized classroom environment that's conducive to teaching.
Kids know the expectations in different types of learning situations. For example, kids would know that
when working in small groups, they talk in quiet voices and take turns talking. They might each have a
specific job within the group.
Taking time before school starts to create routines and procedures saves you time in the long run. When
the children know what to do, it becomes a natural part of the routine. After a few weeks, you don't need
to tell them what to do. The students know they get their planners out, write in homework assignments
and gather all of their materials at the end of the day, for example. You can get your kids out the door
faster at the end of the day. When you train them how to do each part of the school day, you don't spend
as much time giving directions.
Consistency
A teacher with strong classroom management skills creates consistency for his students. The kids know
what to expect every day when it comes to the routine activities. Your students may fare better when
you're gone if you have set expectations for everyday tasks. They know how the classroom runs so they
are able to help the substitute run the classroom. For example, if the kids know they're supposed to enter
the room and start working on a math problem on the board, a substitute doesn't have to spend his time
corralling the kids or trying to keep them occupied while everyone arrives. You can also create
consistency throughout the school by aligning your management strategies with the schoolwide
standards. If your school focuses on respect and responsibility, incorporate them into your classroom
management techniques. The students will hear those words throughout the school and know that the
expectations are the same anywhere in the building.
The main goal of classroom management is to reduce misbehavior in the classroom. Effective classroom
management gives the students little time to misbehave. Because the expectations are clearly explained,
the students know what they need to do. Transitions in particular are easier to control when a teacher has
strong classroom management skills.The expectations for behaviors that are part of a classroom
management plan give students boundaries, as well as consequences.
Classroom Management
Description
The term classroom management refers to the procedures, strategies, and instructional techniques
teachers use to manage student behavior and learning activities. Effective classroom management
creates an environment that is conducive to teaching and learning. Ineffective classroom
management often creates chaos. Effective classroom management is the most important -- and the
most difficult -- skill a new teacher has to master. Even veteran teachers often find themselves faced
with a student -- or an entire class -- who challenges their established management skills and forces
them to find new ways of dealing with classroom situations.
CONTEXTUALIZATION/LOCALIZATION
LOCALIZATION
Freedom for schools or local authorities to adapt the curriculum to local conditions and relating
the context of the curriculum and the process of teaching and learning to the local environment
---Taylor, 2004
Contextualization refers to the educational process of relating the curriculum to a particular setting, situation or area of
application to make the competencies relevant, meaningful and useful to the learners
Localization the process of relating learning content specified in the curriculum to local information and materials from
the learner’s community.
Active learning" means students engage with the material, participate in the class, and
collaborate with each other. Don't expect your students simply to listen and memorize;
instead, have them help demonstrate a process, analyze an argument, or apply a
concept to a real-world situation.
‘Active learning’ approaches form a key alternative. Simply put, active learning is the
process of learning via engaging with the content. It means students are interacting with
the material in any way that can promote active thought, via ‘activities’ for learning or via
re-framing the note-taking process to encouraging thinking about the material rather
than transcribing the content. While definitions of active learning vary, they share
common priorities: students are doing more than simply listening; the aim is skills-
development rather than just conveying information; students engage in activities (e.g.
discussion, debate, application of principles) aimed to promote higher-order thinking
(such as critical thinking, analysis etc). Simulations are becomingly increasingly used in
International Relations as tools for active learning, and are well suited to particular
topics, however here I wanted to think more broadly about the ways in which active
learning could be integrated into any and all lecture topics. Next week I will post a list of
strategies for active learning that could be easily integrated into large lectures, including
a wide variety of ideas for varying what students are doing, seeing and hearing.
Promoting active learning in lectures has many benefits for student learning. The drop-
off in concentration can be limited by using a different approach to learning each 15
minutes (which means changing the way students are engaged, rather than changing
topics). Active learning promotes recall and deeper understanding of material, as
students are engaging with the content rather than simply listening to it. There are also
equity benefits that flow from active learning, as lower-performing students have greater
benefits from active learning than students who are already achieving high grades.
Another equity outcome from active learning is that using different modes of delivery
supports students who have different learning styles. There are clear ethical as well as
pedagogical benefits to the use of active learning techniques.
Interacting with content through active learning has some compelling advantages over
‘delivery mode’ lectures. It helps to maintain student concentration and deepens
learning towards the higher-level skills like critical thinking. It also helps to engage
students who might otherwise struggle. This does not mean doing away with spoken
lectures, rather it means integrating different ways of engaging with the material at
regular intervals throughout the lecture. Next week I will offer a range of possible
strategies for making lectures more interactive. Students report that active learning
can enhance learning, be more fun, and can help maintain concentration.