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524003652-BENLAC-Chapter-1-New (1).pdf

  1. 1. CHAPTER 1: THE 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION RECHELYN G. SALEM-MAGBANUA, MAED-MATH Course Instructor
  2. 2. LEARNING OUTCOMES: At the end of this chapter, you must have: 1. Defined the 21st Century Education 2. Described the 21st Century teacher and the needed innovative tools for learning 3. Examined the critical attributes of 21st Century education 4. Explained how 21st Century education concepts can be integrated in the classroom
  3. 3. 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION CONTEXTS 21st Century Schools. Schools in the 21st century focus on a project-based curriculum for life that would engage students in addressing real-world problems and humanity concerns and issues. The 21st Century Curriculum. It has critical attributes that are interdisciplinary, project-based and research-driven. It also integrates higher-order thinking skills, multiple intelligences, technology and multimedia, multiple literacies and authentic assessments, including service- learning.
  4. 4. 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION CONTEXTS The 21st Century Learning Environment. Tpypically, a 21st Century classroom is not confined to a literal classroom building but a learning environment where students collaborate with their peers, exchange insights, coach and mentor one another and share talents and skills with other students. Technology in the 21st Century Pedagogy. Technologies are not ends in themselves but these are tools students use to create knowledge for personal and social change.
  5. 5. 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION CONTEXTS Understanding 21st Century Learners. Today’s students are referred to as “digital natives”, while educators as “digital immigrants” (Prensky, 2001). The 21st Century Learning Implications. 21st Century skills are viewed relevant to all academic areas and the skills may be taught in a wide variety of both in-campus and community settings.
  6. 6. 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION CONTEXTS 21st Century Skills Outcome and the Demands in the Job Market. The 21st Century skills are a set of abilities that students need to develop to succeed in the information age. The Partnership for 21st Century Skills lists three types: (1) Learning Skills which comprise critical thinking, creative thinking, collaborating, and communicating; (2) Literacy Skills which is composed of information literacy, media literacy, and technology literacy; (3) Life Skills that include flexibility, initiative, social skills, productivity and leadership.
  7. 7. A Paradigm Shift for 21st Century Education Before 21st Century Education 21st Century Education Time-based Outcome-based Focus: Memorization of discrete facts Focus: what students Know, Can Do and Are Like after all the details are forgotten Lower order thinking skills in Bloom‟s Taxonomy, such as knowledge and comprehension Higher order thinking skills (metacognition), such as application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation Textbook-driven Research-driven Passive learning Active learning Learners work in isolation and confined in the classroom (walled classroom) Learners work collaboratively with classmates and others around the world (global classroom).
  8. 8. A Paradigm Shift for 21st Century Education Before 21st Century Education 21st Century Education Teacher-centered: teacher is dispenser of knowledge, information and attention. Student-centered: teacher is facilitator/coach of students‟ learning. Little to no student freedom. No “discipline problems”- Students and teachers have mutual respect and relationship as co-learners. High student motivation. Fragmented curriculum Integrated and Interdisciplinary curriculum Grades taken from formal assessment measures entered in the class record for reporting purposes Grades are based on student‟s performance as evidence of learning outcome
  9. 9. A Paradigm Shift for 21st Century Education Before 21st Century Education 21st Century Education Assessment is for marking purposes and placed as part of the plan structure Assessment is important aspect of instruction to gauge learning outcome Low expectations. What students receive is what they get. High expectations that students succeed in learning to high extent. Teacher is judge. No one else sees student work. Outputs are assessed using structure metrics. Self, peer and others serve as evaluators of student learning using wide range of metrics and authentic assessments. Curriculum is irrelevant and meaningless to the students. Curriculum is connected to students‟ interests, experiences, talents and the real world. Print is the primary vehicle of learning and assessment. Performance, projects and multiple forms of media are used for learning and assessment.
  10. 10. A Paradigm Shift for 21st Century Education Before 21st Century Education 21st Century Education Student diversity is ignored. Curriculum and instruction address student diversity. Students just follow orders and instructions while listening to teacher‟s lecture. Students are empowered to lead and initiate while creating solutions and solving problems. Literacy is the 3 R‟s (reading, writing and „rithmetic) Multiple literacies of the 21st Century aligned to living and working in a globalized new society. Factory model, based upon the needs of employers for the Industrial Age of the 19th century Global model based upon the needs of a globalized high-tech society. (Source: https://www.21stCenturySchools.com/)
  11. 11. THE EIGHT ATTRIBUTES OF 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS 1. Integrated and Interdisciplinary. Education in the 21st Century is characterized by interfacing various disciplines in an integrated manner rather than compartmentalizing its subsequent parts. 2. Technologies and Multimedia. Education in the 21st Century makes optimum use of available Information and Communication Technology (ICT), as well as multimedia to improve the teaching and learning process, including online applications and technology platforms.
  12. 12. THE EIGHT ATTRIBUTES OF 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS 3. Global Classrooms. Education in the 21st Century aims to produce global citizens by exposing students to the issues and concerns in the local, national and global societies. 4. Creating/Adapting to Constant Personal and Social Change and Lifelong Learning. Education in the 21st Century subscribes to the belief that learning does not end within the four walls of the classroom. Instead, it can take place anywhere, anytime regardless of age.
  13. 13. THE EIGHT ATTRIBUTES OF 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS 5. Student-Centered. Education in the 21st Century is focused on students as learners while addressing their needs. 6. 21st Century Skills. Education in the 21st Century demonstrates the skills needed in becoming productive members of society. Therefore, it implies that teachers shoukd possess these skills first before their students.
  14. 14. THE EIGHT ATTRIBUTES OF 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS 7. Project-Based and Research-Driven. 21st Century Education emphasizes data, information and evidence-based decision-making through student activities that encourage active learning. 8. relevant, Rigorous and Real World. Education in the 21st Century is meaningful as it connects to real-life experiences of learners. It implies the use of current and relevant information linked to real-life situations and contexts.
  15. 15. THE CHARACTERISTICS OF A 21ST CENTURY TEACHER 1. Multi-literate. Teachers know how to use various technologies in teaching. 2. Multi-specialist. Teachers are not only knowledgeable in the course subject they teach but also in other areas so that they can help the learner build up what they gain in the classroom and outside the school and make sense of what was learned.
  16. 16. THE CHARACTERISTICS OF A 21ST CENTURY TEACHER 3. Multi-skilled. Teachers cope with the demand for widening learning opportunities by being skillful not just in teaching nut also in facilitating and organizing groups and activities. 4. Self-directed. Teachers are responsible for various aspects of school life and know how to initiate action to realize the learning goals of the students and the educational goals of the country, at large.
  17. 17. THE CHARACTERISTICS OF A 21ST CENTURY TEACHER 5. Lifelong learner. Teachers embrace the ideal that learning never ends. Therefore, teachers must be constantly updated on the latest information related to their subject and pedagogic trends. 6. Flexible. Teachers are able to adapt to various learning styles and needs of the learners. They can facilitate learner- centered teaching with flexibility using alternative modes of delivery.
  18. 18. THE CHARACTERISTICS OF A 21ST CENTURY TEACHER 7. Creative problem solver. Teachers create innovative ideas and effective solutions to the arising problems in the field, be it in the classroom, in the school or the profession as a whole. 8. Critical thinker. Teachers are critical thinkers as they encourage students to reflect on what they have learned, and rekindle in them the desire to ask questions, reason out, probe, and establish their own knowledge and belief.
  19. 19. THE CHARACTERISTICS OF A 21ST CENTURY TEACHER 9. Has a passion for excellent teaching. Teachers possess passion in the teaching profession to ensure that students are motivated to learn under their guidance and care. 10. High Emotional Quotient (EQ). Teachers do not just have the head but also the heart to teach. Teaching is emotionally taxing but an influential job as it involves interaction with human beings.
  20. 20. COMMON 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGY TOOLS FOR LEARNING 1. Affinity Groups. These are groups or communities that unite individuals with common interests. 2. Blogs. Web logs or “blogs” are interactive websites, often open to the public that can include Web links, photographs and audio and video elements. 3. E-portfolio. It refers to student’s works that are generated, selected, organized, stored and revised digitally. Often, electronic portfolios are accessible to multiple audiences and can be moved from one site to another easily.
  21. 21. COMMON 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGY TOOLS FOR LEARNING 4. Hypertext. These are electronic texts that provide multiple links and allow users to trace ideas in immediate and idiosyncratic directions. 5. Podcasts. These are digitalized audio files that are stored on the internet and downloaded to listener’s computers or most likely to MP3 player. 6. Web 2.0. This refers to a second generation of Web-based communities that demonstrate the participatory literacies that students need for the 21st century.
  22. 22. COMMON 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGY TOOLS FOR LEARNING 7. Myspace (http://www.Myspace.com). It is a social networking website that offers an interactive user-submitted network of friends, personal profiles, blogs, groups, photos, music and videos internationally. 8. Second Life (http:www.secondlife.com). It is an Internet- based 3-D virtual world that uses avatars (digital representations) to explore, socialize, participate in individual or group activities, create and trade items (virtual property) and services.
  23. 23. COMMON 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGY TOOLS FOR LEARNING 9. Semantic Web. It is an extension of the current Web that puts data into a common format so that instead of humans working with individual search engines (e.g., Google, Ask Jeeves) to locate information, the search engines themselves feed into a single mechanism that provides this searching on its own. 10. Webkinz (http://www.webkinz.com). It is an Internet simulation wherein children learn pet care and other skills.
  24. 24. COMMON 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGY TOOLS FOR LEARNING 11. Wiki. It refers to software that fosters collaboration and communication online. Wikis enable students to create, comment upon, and revise collaborative projects. 12. Youtube (http://www.Youtube.com). It is a popular website for video sharing where users can upload, view and share video footage, including movie clips, TV clips, and music videos, even student-produced videos.
  25. 25. COMMON 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGY TOOLS FOR LEARNING 13. Google Docs. It allows students to collaborate with other people and the document materials that need to be compiled, processed, transacted and analyzed. 14. Prezi. It allows individuals to use pre-made, creative presentation templates. 15. Easybib. It allows individuals to generate citations in any given format.
  26. 26. COMMON 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGY TOOLS FOR LEARNING 13. Google Docs. It allows students to collaborate with other people and the document materials that need to be compiled, processed, transacted and analyzed. 14. Prezi. It allows individuals to use pre-made, creative presentation templates. 15. Easybib. It allows individuals to generate citations in any given format.
  27. 27. COMMON 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGY TOOLS FOR LEARNING 16. Social media platforms (Facebook, Twitter, Edmodo, Schoology, Instagram, etc). These are means to communicate and share ideas among users. 17. Smartboards and audience response systems. These are replacement for traditional chalkboards or whiteboards in classrooms.
  28. 28. COMMON 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGY TOOLS FOR LEARNING 18. ReadWriteThink.org. (www.readwritethink.org). It is a repository of standards-based literacy lessons that offer teachers instructional ideas for internet integration. 19. WebQuest Page (www.webquest.org). It provides Webquests on an array of topics across content areas with a template for creating one’s own. 20. Literacy Web (http://www.literacy.uconn.edu). It is an online portal that includes a large number of new literacy’s resources for new literacies for teachers.
  29. 29. THE END!

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