OECD Education Policy Outlook: Country Policy Profiles 2020EduSkills OECD
An Education Policy Outlook Profile reviews the current context and situation of the country’s education system and examines its challenges and policy responses, according to six policy levers that support improvement:
Students: How to raise outcomes for all in terms of 1) equity and quality and 2) preparing students for the future.
Institutions: How to raise quality through 3) school improvement and 4) evaluation and assessment.
System: How the system is organised to deliver education policy in terms of 5) governance and 6) funding.
Island of Ireland symposium: Socio-emotional Skills and Graduate Employability Miriam O'Regan
Research has signalled the need to embed deeper industry engagement in co-curricular activities for graduate employability (Jackson & Bridgstock, 2020). The Centre for Psychology, Education and Emotional Intelligence is collaborating with employers to develop workshops in socio-emotional skills tailored to specific sectors, from engineering and IT to health and social care. We present the findings from our recent survey of employers and discuss how employer feedback will shape our pedagogical approach and the development of workshops on Socio-Emotional Skills for Work (SES4Work).
Back to the Future of Education: Four OECD Scenarios for SchoolingEduSkills OECD
Close your eyes for a second and think of something that happened over the last 20 years and you would have never expected to occur. Be it the pandemic, smart phones or something else, the truth is that the future likes to surprise us. Our world is in a perpetual state of change. There are always multiple versions of the future—some are assumptions, others hopes and fears. To prepare, we have to consider not only the changes that appear most probable, but also the ones that we aren’t expecting. Inspired by the ground-breaking 2001 Schooling for Tomorrow scenarios, this book provides a set of scenarios on the future of schooling, showing not a single path into the future, but many. Using these scenarios can help us identify the opportunities and challenges that these futures could hold for schooling and education more broadly. We can then use those ideas to help us better prepare and act now. Whether parents or students, teachers or educational leaders, researchers or policy makers, this book has been written for all those who want to think about futures that haven’t occurred to play their part in shaping the future that will.
Authors: Claudio Dondi, President , SCIENTER; EFQUEL
For about ten years, eLearning has been a key part of the innovations characterising education and training systems throughout the world. After a phase of excessive enthusiasm and spectacularly excessive resistance, more reasonable expectations and attitudes have emerged, more attention is being paid to the issue of quality of the learning experience
Naace BSF Think Tank The Future of SchoolsNaace Naace
A personal view of what future schools might be like based on work assisting London Boroughs to develop their vision, provoke thinking about how schools can be different.
OECD Education Policy Outlook: Country Policy Profiles 2020EduSkills OECD
An Education Policy Outlook Profile reviews the current context and situation of the country’s education system and examines its challenges and policy responses, according to six policy levers that support improvement:
Students: How to raise outcomes for all in terms of 1) equity and quality and 2) preparing students for the future.
Institutions: How to raise quality through 3) school improvement and 4) evaluation and assessment.
System: How the system is organised to deliver education policy in terms of 5) governance and 6) funding.
Island of Ireland symposium: Socio-emotional Skills and Graduate Employability Miriam O'Regan
Research has signalled the need to embed deeper industry engagement in co-curricular activities for graduate employability (Jackson & Bridgstock, 2020). The Centre for Psychology, Education and Emotional Intelligence is collaborating with employers to develop workshops in socio-emotional skills tailored to specific sectors, from engineering and IT to health and social care. We present the findings from our recent survey of employers and discuss how employer feedback will shape our pedagogical approach and the development of workshops on Socio-Emotional Skills for Work (SES4Work).
Back to the Future of Education: Four OECD Scenarios for SchoolingEduSkills OECD
Close your eyes for a second and think of something that happened over the last 20 years and you would have never expected to occur. Be it the pandemic, smart phones or something else, the truth is that the future likes to surprise us. Our world is in a perpetual state of change. There are always multiple versions of the future—some are assumptions, others hopes and fears. To prepare, we have to consider not only the changes that appear most probable, but also the ones that we aren’t expecting. Inspired by the ground-breaking 2001 Schooling for Tomorrow scenarios, this book provides a set of scenarios on the future of schooling, showing not a single path into the future, but many. Using these scenarios can help us identify the opportunities and challenges that these futures could hold for schooling and education more broadly. We can then use those ideas to help us better prepare and act now. Whether parents or students, teachers or educational leaders, researchers or policy makers, this book has been written for all those who want to think about futures that haven’t occurred to play their part in shaping the future that will.
Authors: Claudio Dondi, President , SCIENTER; EFQUEL
For about ten years, eLearning has been a key part of the innovations characterising education and training systems throughout the world. After a phase of excessive enthusiasm and spectacularly excessive resistance, more reasonable expectations and attitudes have emerged, more attention is being paid to the issue of quality of the learning experience
Naace BSF Think Tank The Future of SchoolsNaace Naace
A personal view of what future schools might be like based on work assisting London Boroughs to develop their vision, provoke thinking about how schools can be different.
Successful schools in testing times: Insights from PISA 2018 Volume VEduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher presents the latest findings from the most recent cycle of the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA).
The PISA 2018 Results Volume V report focuses on issues relating to school organisation and the policies and practices that define how education systems work and change over time. The report also covers: school governance, selecting and grouping students, and the human, financial, educational and time resources allocated to teaching and learning. Results from PISA indicate the quality and equity of learning outcomes attained around the world, and allow educators and policy makers to learn from the policies and practices applied in other countries.
Presentation shared by author at the 2018 EDEN Annual Conference "Exploring the Micro, Meso and Macro -
Navigating between dimensions in the digital learning landscape" held on 17-20 June, 2018 in Genova, Italy.
Find out more on #eden18 here: http://www.eden-online.org/2018_genova/
Curriculum Development for Online Learning: Considerations and Lessons from t...Gabriel Konayuma
The aim of the presentation is to identify key considerations and lessons from a Zambian perspective in the TVET sector of the role of curriculum development for online learning
Implementing education responses to coronavirus (COVID-19)EduSkills OECD
The coronavirus crisis has seen education systems around the world having to quickly react to the unprecedented situation. We present a toolkit to help countries continue in their efforts to design and implement education system responses during COVID-19. The toolkit can be used by individual policy makers or teams at the local, regional or national level to shape the implementation of their education response strategies.
The future of higher education a constantly moving target (11 key questions)@cristobalcobo
Closing Plenary Session at the European Distance Education Network (EDEN) summit: "Traditions and Innovations: Getting the Right Mix"
Cristobal Cobo, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
14-17 June 2016 Budapest, Hungary www.eden-online.org
Mending the Education Divide: Getting strong teachers to the schools that nee...EduSkills OECD
Teachers can shape their students' educational careers. Research shows that children taught by different teachers often experience very different educational outcomes. This begs the questions: how are teachers assigned to schools in different countries? And to what extent do students from different backgrounds have access to good teachers?
Andreas Schleicher presents the latest OECD TALIS analysis that shows how teachers with different characteristics and practices tend to concentrate in different schools, and how much access students with different socio-economic backgrounds have to good teachers. He then explores how we can change education policy to distribute strong teachers more fairly.
Read the report here https://oe.cd/EduEquity
Let Schools Decide: The Norwegian approach to school improvementEduSkills OECD
Q & A Webinar | 27 January 2021
In 2017, the government of Norway introduced new measures to provide schools and municipalities with greater freedom to carry out systematic school improvement based on what the schools themselves believe needs to change. Hege Nilssen, Head of the Directorate for Education and Training in Norway, Andreas Schleicher, OECD Director for Education and Skills, and the OECD’s Implementing Education Policies team discuss how this innovative model was designed and implemented, and what other countries can learn from it.
Connecting Students with People who Care(er): Post-Secondary Professionals as...BCcampus
Presentation by Candy Ho, Faculty, Educational Studies, Kwantlen Polytechnic University and Dr. Cindy Xin
Director of Research, Simon Fraser University
Increasingly students begin their post-secondary experience with a career in mind, and two recent studies (Environics Research Group, 2011; Ho, 2017) suggest that those paths are largely influenced by educators (e.g. Faculty) before a student even considers visiting a career centre. Consequently, these professionals have the inherent capacity to extend their care for students beyond their teaching roles: as Career Influencers, defined by the EdD study as individuals working in a higher education institution who informally provide career-related advice, guidance, and/or counselling to prospective and current students and/or alumni.
This session has two goals. It aims to help attendees recognize their influence in student career development, and consider how they can incorporate career development components into their teaching practice. Findings and implications from Ho’s (2017) EdD study will serve as a backdrop of the session (research questions are included at the end*), while attendees are guided through reflective and discussion activities that enhance the awareness of their influence in student career development.
Current planned activities include having the attendees:
-Reflect on their “constellation of life roles” (Magnusson, 2014) and how roles, events, and experiences contribute to their approach as educators
-Consider how their current activities and interactions with students (e.g., curriculum, office hours conversations) help students develop employability skills
-Discuss their impressions on the notion of the ‘Everyday Career Influencer’, pondering on questions such as:
How do they currently serve as Career Influencers and demonstrate a sense of care for student career development?
How might they further their practice as Career Influencers?
What opportunities and/or challenges do they face as Career Influencers within their institutions? What can they do to take advantage and/or overcome them?
-EdD study research questions and sub-questions:
How do post-secondary education professionals conceive their influence in student career development?
How do they conceptualize the term “career”?
How do they see their role as having an impact on student career development?
How do they see themselves as individuals as having an impact on student career development?
What resources and/or competencies do they believe are important in furthering their impact on student career development?
Festival of Learning 2018 - May 28 – 30 at the Pinnacle Hotel Harbourfront in Vancouver, B.C.
Presentation by Andrew Bell, OECD, 7 October 2020, Riga, Latvia. Launch of the OECD publication “OECD Skills Strategy Implementation Guidance for Latvia: Developing Latvia’s Education Development guidelines 2021-2027”.
Digital student skills workshop - 17 February 2016Jisc
As part of our digital student project, this series of consultation events will help inform our digital student: skills sector study. We are exploring the technology expectations and experiences of different learners’ including adult and community learners, work based learners, apprentices and offender learners.
How can data help students make key decisions?Jisc
Slides from a webinar held on Tuesday 13 July 2021.
This online event built on suggested themes from the audience at the Digifest Fringe online event earlier in the year on 'Data and analytics in 2030 - seismic shift or incremental change?'
The event, led by Charlie Ball, senior consultant: labour market intelligence, Jisc, explored how data can help students make key decisions. Charlie was joined by a small panel of experts with experience in HE, employability and student insights.
The role of UK higher education (HE), further education (FE) and skills sectors in developing student employability is clear. Technology can be an enabler to the development and communication of employability skills, but are organisations and employers making best use of it?
How can we support meaningful interactions in early childhood education and ...EduSkills OECD
Children’s learning, development and well-being are directly influenced by their daily interactions with other children, adults, their families and the environment. This interactive process is known as “process quality”, and leads to a key question – which policies set the best conditions for children to experience high-quality interactions in early childhood education and care (ECEC) settings? This report discusses five main policy levers and their effect on process quality, focusing particularly on curriculum and pedagogy, and workforce development. It presents indicators covering 26 countries and jurisdictions, 56 different curriculum frameworks, and more than 120 different types of ECEC settings.
Successful schools in testing times: Insights from PISA 2018 Volume VEduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher presents the latest findings from the most recent cycle of the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA).
The PISA 2018 Results Volume V report focuses on issues relating to school organisation and the policies and practices that define how education systems work and change over time. The report also covers: school governance, selecting and grouping students, and the human, financial, educational and time resources allocated to teaching and learning. Results from PISA indicate the quality and equity of learning outcomes attained around the world, and allow educators and policy makers to learn from the policies and practices applied in other countries.
Presentation shared by author at the 2018 EDEN Annual Conference "Exploring the Micro, Meso and Macro -
Navigating between dimensions in the digital learning landscape" held on 17-20 June, 2018 in Genova, Italy.
Find out more on #eden18 here: http://www.eden-online.org/2018_genova/
Curriculum Development for Online Learning: Considerations and Lessons from t...Gabriel Konayuma
The aim of the presentation is to identify key considerations and lessons from a Zambian perspective in the TVET sector of the role of curriculum development for online learning
Implementing education responses to coronavirus (COVID-19)EduSkills OECD
The coronavirus crisis has seen education systems around the world having to quickly react to the unprecedented situation. We present a toolkit to help countries continue in their efforts to design and implement education system responses during COVID-19. The toolkit can be used by individual policy makers or teams at the local, regional or national level to shape the implementation of their education response strategies.
The future of higher education a constantly moving target (11 key questions)@cristobalcobo
Closing Plenary Session at the European Distance Education Network (EDEN) summit: "Traditions and Innovations: Getting the Right Mix"
Cristobal Cobo, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
14-17 June 2016 Budapest, Hungary www.eden-online.org
Mending the Education Divide: Getting strong teachers to the schools that nee...EduSkills OECD
Teachers can shape their students' educational careers. Research shows that children taught by different teachers often experience very different educational outcomes. This begs the questions: how are teachers assigned to schools in different countries? And to what extent do students from different backgrounds have access to good teachers?
Andreas Schleicher presents the latest OECD TALIS analysis that shows how teachers with different characteristics and practices tend to concentrate in different schools, and how much access students with different socio-economic backgrounds have to good teachers. He then explores how we can change education policy to distribute strong teachers more fairly.
Read the report here https://oe.cd/EduEquity
Let Schools Decide: The Norwegian approach to school improvementEduSkills OECD
Q & A Webinar | 27 January 2021
In 2017, the government of Norway introduced new measures to provide schools and municipalities with greater freedom to carry out systematic school improvement based on what the schools themselves believe needs to change. Hege Nilssen, Head of the Directorate for Education and Training in Norway, Andreas Schleicher, OECD Director for Education and Skills, and the OECD’s Implementing Education Policies team discuss how this innovative model was designed and implemented, and what other countries can learn from it.
Connecting Students with People who Care(er): Post-Secondary Professionals as...BCcampus
Presentation by Candy Ho, Faculty, Educational Studies, Kwantlen Polytechnic University and Dr. Cindy Xin
Director of Research, Simon Fraser University
Increasingly students begin their post-secondary experience with a career in mind, and two recent studies (Environics Research Group, 2011; Ho, 2017) suggest that those paths are largely influenced by educators (e.g. Faculty) before a student even considers visiting a career centre. Consequently, these professionals have the inherent capacity to extend their care for students beyond their teaching roles: as Career Influencers, defined by the EdD study as individuals working in a higher education institution who informally provide career-related advice, guidance, and/or counselling to prospective and current students and/or alumni.
This session has two goals. It aims to help attendees recognize their influence in student career development, and consider how they can incorporate career development components into their teaching practice. Findings and implications from Ho’s (2017) EdD study will serve as a backdrop of the session (research questions are included at the end*), while attendees are guided through reflective and discussion activities that enhance the awareness of their influence in student career development.
Current planned activities include having the attendees:
-Reflect on their “constellation of life roles” (Magnusson, 2014) and how roles, events, and experiences contribute to their approach as educators
-Consider how their current activities and interactions with students (e.g., curriculum, office hours conversations) help students develop employability skills
-Discuss their impressions on the notion of the ‘Everyday Career Influencer’, pondering on questions such as:
How do they currently serve as Career Influencers and demonstrate a sense of care for student career development?
How might they further their practice as Career Influencers?
What opportunities and/or challenges do they face as Career Influencers within their institutions? What can they do to take advantage and/or overcome them?
-EdD study research questions and sub-questions:
How do post-secondary education professionals conceive their influence in student career development?
How do they conceptualize the term “career”?
How do they see their role as having an impact on student career development?
How do they see themselves as individuals as having an impact on student career development?
What resources and/or competencies do they believe are important in furthering their impact on student career development?
Festival of Learning 2018 - May 28 – 30 at the Pinnacle Hotel Harbourfront in Vancouver, B.C.
Presentation by Andrew Bell, OECD, 7 October 2020, Riga, Latvia. Launch of the OECD publication “OECD Skills Strategy Implementation Guidance for Latvia: Developing Latvia’s Education Development guidelines 2021-2027”.
Digital student skills workshop - 17 February 2016Jisc
As part of our digital student project, this series of consultation events will help inform our digital student: skills sector study. We are exploring the technology expectations and experiences of different learners’ including adult and community learners, work based learners, apprentices and offender learners.
How can data help students make key decisions?Jisc
Slides from a webinar held on Tuesday 13 July 2021.
This online event built on suggested themes from the audience at the Digifest Fringe online event earlier in the year on 'Data and analytics in 2030 - seismic shift or incremental change?'
The event, led by Charlie Ball, senior consultant: labour market intelligence, Jisc, explored how data can help students make key decisions. Charlie was joined by a small panel of experts with experience in HE, employability and student insights.
The role of UK higher education (HE), further education (FE) and skills sectors in developing student employability is clear. Technology can be an enabler to the development and communication of employability skills, but are organisations and employers making best use of it?
How can we support meaningful interactions in early childhood education and ...EduSkills OECD
Children’s learning, development and well-being are directly influenced by their daily interactions with other children, adults, their families and the environment. This interactive process is known as “process quality”, and leads to a key question – which policies set the best conditions for children to experience high-quality interactions in early childhood education and care (ECEC) settings? This report discusses five main policy levers and their effect on process quality, focusing particularly on curriculum and pedagogy, and workforce development. It presents indicators covering 26 countries and jurisdictions, 56 different curriculum frameworks, and more than 120 different types of ECEC settings.
Zagami, J. & Becker, S. (2016, September). ACCE Leadership Forum. Forum conducted at the Australian Council for Computers in Education Conference, Brisbane, Australia.
It's Time for Learning to Go Back to School: Next-Generation Approaches Enric...Cognizant
Major structural shifts in offline and online learning delivery will lead to integrated systems that enable adaptive and holistic higher-education learning environments. Digital footprints will pave way for schools and, eventually, employers to discover learners' competencies and interests and match it to their own offerings and talent needs.
This presentation was given to the faculty of Benton High School. After a year-long educational technology integration plan moved a cohort of 20 teachers into a place to bring the whole of the staff into the fold... we are ready to take the next step for our kids.