4 Pillars of Learning
4 Pillars of Learning
4 Pillars of Learning
China
Outline of Presentation
I. INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
Landmarks in Educational Rethinking:
Learning To
The alienation and de-humanization in the process of material progresses Educational aim as the development of a complete person as the fundamental aim of education Lifelong education
Between personal and societal Between the local and the global Between cooperation and competition Between the infinity of information and the
limitation of human capacity to assimilate knowledge Between spiritual and material
Education is a fundamental means to personal and societal development Education providing maps of a complex world in constant turmoil Education providing simultaneously the
compass that will enable people to find their way in it Learning throughout life as a key to the 21st century Full flowering of human potential of individual learner and tapping talents hidden like buried treasure in every person
from subject knowledge towards intellectual abilities from disciplinary-based curriculum to integrated, interdisciplinary learning from supply-driven to demand-driven learning content from individual learning to cooperative learning from mastery of itemized information or factual knowledge to acquisition of instruments of knowing a new balance of scientific-technological and socialhumanistic-cultural content of education a new balance of general vs. vocational components of education and general vs. specialized training
paradigm of study-work alternation and lifelong pursuit of learning from one-stop knowledge/degree acquisition at schools/universities to more diversified entries into learning opportunities from rote learning, man-machine interaction to more teacher-pupil, pupil-pupil interaction/dialogue and collaborative team learning.
new
learners in generation gaps, with different values, languages, and pop-cultures, and in different ways of thinking, reacting, responding and getting motivated new generation of learners growing digital on the net, with skills and competencies oftentimes better than their teachers in using ICT as powerful learning tools new generation of learners of more diverse backgrounds and cultural identities (age, ethnicity, linguistic, economic, religions, working experience, etc.) new learners with new traits of independence, creativity, open-mindedness, and enterprising minds
Horizontally:
from schools to work-places, communities, mass media, and other social learning environment
from early childhood through adulthood to post-retirement years (lifelong)
Longitudinally:
Vertically:
learning at all levels of formal/nonformula education and for all phases of life
Learning To Know
Mastering the Instrument of Knowing and Understanding: to learn to learn and to discover to understand about his/her environment to think in a coherent and critical way to acquire a knowledge of the scientific method and instruments to develop a scientific spirit and an inquiring mind to acquire independence of judgement
From skill and practical know-how to competence T o a pply in p r acti ce w h at h as b e en l ear n ed To develop ability to transform knowledge into innovations and job-creation To develop competence, a mix of higher skills, of social
behaviour, of an aptitude for team work, and initiative/readiness to take risks New types of skills, more behavioural than intellectual Function of learning no longer limited to work but responds to participation in development; a matter of social as of occupational skills Ability to communicate, to work with others, and to manage and resolve conflicts
LEARNING TO DO
To discover others To appreciate the diversity of the human race To know oneself To be receptive to others and to
encounter others through dialogue and debate To care and share To work toward common objectives in cooperative undertakings To manage and resolve conflicts
LEARNING TO BE
and body, intelligence, sensitivity, aesthetic sense, personal responsibility and spiritual values To develop the qualities of imagination and creativity The complete fulfillment of man, in all the richness of his personality The full flowering of human potential, the tapping of the hidden treasure within each individual a very individualized process and at the same time one of constructing social interaction
Using the pillars to define fundamental competencies for a competency-based curriculum Using the pillars to develop conceptual framework for re-organization of content Translating the competences into learning
FUNDAMENAL COMPETENCIES: a mix of higher skills acquired through technical-vocational training, of social behaviour, of an aptitude for team work, adaptabilities to change, problem solving, and readiness to risks skills.
Acquiring basic knowledge of physical laws, chemical formula, Acquiring basic skills in doing scientific experiments, etc. Developing values of a scientific spirit in the pursuit of truth Mastering methodology of scientific inquiry Applying the knowledge, skills, values and competencies in solving problems in real situations Understanding ethics in the use of scientific discoveries for the
interest of human development
Learning Outcomes
(To include the four pillars of learning)
Teaching Approaches
(To highlight holistic / interdisciplinal approaches)
Chart on the Relationship between Education Content and Fundamental Competencies: a Mongolian Model
Technology
Content domain
Mathematics
Humanistic science
Competence
To know To be To do To live socially together
[Source: Mongolian country report to the Regional Workshop on Management of Curriculum Change, Tokyo, February 2005]
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