21th Century
21th Century
21th Century
Educators can adjust their teaching methods in several ways. They could:
In the 20th Century students were expected to conform to the mainstream or be excluded. But in the
21st Century, social inclusion and difference are celebrated.
Old behaviorist methods of education that were typical in the 20th Century saw learning as:
Memorization of information.
Transmission of information from teacher to student.
Filling your mind up with facts.
These methods are thrown out in a 21st Century learning approach
In the 21st Century, classrooms have changed from being teacher-centered to student-
centered.
In the past the students all focused on the teacher and listened to the teacher’s words. Now, the
teacher focuses on the students who are the center of attention. The teacher’s job is to help coach
the students as they learn.
5. Community Relationships
6. Technology
Modern technologies can be incredibly helpful in classrooms today. Walk into a classroom now and
you’ll be shocked at how much things have changed in just a decade. Technology is everywhere!
It is important to use new learning technologies in appropriate ways. Students shouldn’t use
technology to prevent them from thinking or help them cheat. Instead, technology should be used to
help students access information or think in ways they couldn’t have done so otherwise. We call
technologies that help students think harder ‘cognitive tools’ for learning.
7. Teacher Professionalization
Teaching children in this century is clearly much more complicated than it was in the last one! We
need to create personalized lessons, be inclusive, aim for eqaulity, encourage creativity, engage with
the community, use technology to enhance learning, and more!
To ensure students get the best learning possible, teachers in the 21st Century need ongoing training
and support. They need to know all the latest research on best teaching practices. They need
opportunities to ask questions themselves, try out new strategies and learn from experts throughout
their career.
One of the biggest challenges for teachers is the rapidly changing educational environment. New
technologies are quickly coming into classrooms to help us personalize and support learning for all
our students.
Teachers need time and space to learn how to use technology and new pedagogies in ways that will
best help their students
3. 3 categories of 21th Century skills and their definition
1.learning skill-The four C’s are by far the most popular 21st Century skills. These skills are also
called learning skills.More educators know about these skills because they’re universal needs for
any career. They also vary in terms of importance, depending on an individual’s career aspirations.
Information literacy is a foundational skill. It helps students understand facts, especially data
points, that they’ll encounter online. More importantly, it teaches them how to separate fact from
fiction.
Media literacy is the practice of identifying publishing methods, outlets, and sources while
distinguishing between the ones that are credible and the ones that aren’t. Just like the
previous skill, media literacy is helpful for finding truth in a world that’s saturated with information.
This is how students find trustworthy sources of information in their lives. Without it, anything
that looks credible becomes credible. But with it, they can learn which media outlets or formats to
ignore. They also learn which ones to embrace, which is equally important.
technology literacy goes another step further to teach students about the machines involved
in the Information Age.Technology literacy gives students the basic information they need to
understand what gadgets perform what tasks and why. This understanding removes the intimidating
feeling that technology tends to have. After all, if you don’t understand how the technology works, it
might as well be magic. But technology literacy unmasks the high-powered tools that run today’s
world. As a result, students can adapt to the world more effectively. They can play an important role
in its evolution
3.Life skills is the final category. Also called FLIPS, these skills all pertain to someone’s personal
life, but they also bleed into professional settings.
Leadership is someone’s penchant for setting goals, walking a team through the steps required, and
achieving those goals collaboratively.
True success also requires initiative, requiring students to be self-starters. Initiative only comes
naturally to a handful of people. As a result, students need to learn it to fully succeed. This is one of
the hardest skills to learn and practice. Initiative often means working on projects outside of regular
working hours.
Along with initiative, 21st Century skills require students to learn about productivity. That’s a
student’s ability to complete work in an appropriate amount of time. By understanding productivity
strategies at every level, students discover the ways in which they work best while gaining an
appreciation for how others work as well. That equips them with the practical means to carry out the
ideas they determine through flexibility, leadership, and initiative.
Still, there’s one last skill that ties all other 21st Century skills together.
This concept of networking is more active in some industries than others, but proper social skills are
excellent tools for forging long-lasting relationships. While these may have been implied in past
generations, the rise of social media and instant communications have changed the nature of human
interaction. As a result, today’s students possess a wide range of social skills