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LONGLIFE LEARNING - TEACHING AND LEARNING FROM AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE DANIELA IONELA CIOBANU COLEGIUL TEHNIC „AUREL VLAICU” GALAŢI

Longlife learning - Teaching and Learning from an international perspective

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Page 1: Longlife learning - Teaching and Learning from an international perspective

LONGLIFE LEARNING - TEACHING AND

LEARNING FROM AN INTERNATIONAL

PERSPECTIVE

DANIELA IONELA CIOBANU

COLEGIUL TEHNIC „AUREL VLAICU” GALAŢI

Page 2: Longlife learning - Teaching and Learning from an international perspective

AbstractTeaching and Learning from an International Perspective is part of the ‚Poland and

Romania Promoting Excellence in Teaching’ project, sponsored by the ArcelorMittal Foundation. The overall aim of the course is to support schools in Galaţi in maximizing the effectiveness of teaching and learning of the Romanian National Curriculum. This is supposed to be achieved through an exploration of a range of student-centered approaches to learning which have been found to be effective within the programmes of the International Baccalaureate: the Diploma Programme for 16-18 year olds, the Middle Year Programme for 11-16 year olds, and the Primary Years Programme for 3-11 year old students.

The project consisted of three face to face (F2F) and six online (Online) workshops which took place in the 2010-11 school year. Together the workshops provided a unified, holistic, sequential learning experience.

Key Words

education, blended learning, student-centered approach, longlife learning, international baccalaureate

Page 3: Longlife learning - Teaching and Learning from an international perspective

Introduction

‚Teaching and Learning from an International Perspective’, part of the ‚Poland and Romania Promoting Excellence in Teaching’ project, sponsored by the ArcelorMittal Foundation, is a project that took place in the 2010-11 school year, organized by International Baccalaureate in collaboration with Mark Twain International School from Bucharest. The overall aim of the course was to support the three participating schools in Galati – Aurel Vlaicu Technical College, Emil Racovita Theoretical High School and Alexandru Ioan Cuza National College - in maximizing the effectiveness of teaching and learning of the Romanian National Curriculum. This was to be achieved through an exploration of a range of student-centered approaches to learning which have been found to be effective within the programmes of the International Baccalaureate.

Page 4: Longlife learning - Teaching and Learning from an international perspective

‘Blended’ Learning

At a curricular level the project is a ‘blended’ model in that its fundamental design is to promote the blending of IB pedagogy with that of the Romanian National Curriculum. At the professional development level it is a ‘blending’ of two kinds of learning experiences: face to face and online workshops.

The model was designed to allow us, the participating teachers, to maximize our participation and learning by facilitating different individual learning styles and preferences in a range of contexts; some learners might prefer the two-day concentrated face to face workshop setting, while others may find online learning is more suited to their learning preferences and needs.

Page 5: Longlife learning - Teaching and Learning from an international perspective

What I most liked about this school was the unconventional learning environment: teachers and students were sitting on pillows if they needed to, they called each other on their first names, they all wore trendy clothes etc., all these framed by mutual respect. Another interesting and surprising fact is the way in which they named their classes: ‚The Hedgehogs’, ‚The Sunflowers’, ‚The Dragons’ etc. Yet nothing is perfect; they had their shortcomings, too: one of them, lack of space.

Page 6: Longlife learning - Teaching and Learning from an international perspective

In spite of the differences between face to face and online workshops identified above, the two are in substance more alike than they are different. During this course it became clear that both face to face and online workshops:

promote learner construction of meaning and personal inquiry;

put the learner at the centre of the learning process, building on prior knowledge and experience, differentiating teaching to meet a range of learning styles and needs;

promote the making of connections between teacher learning in the workshop and student learning in classrooms, between and across subjects, between school learning and real world contexts;

provide multiple and varied opportunities for learning with and from others - learning as a social activity - including discussions, sharing of materials and action research;

emphasize critical and creative thinking, analysis and synthesis, and the exploration of multiple perspectives;

emphasize varied forms of communication and collaboration including individual and group reflection;

provide opportunities for formative and summative assessment of learning and for feedback to learners;

explore the opportunities and challenges for action arising from learning in the implementation in our own classrooms and schools.

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ConclusionsIn the end, it is important to mention that the IB learner profile should

portray both students and teachers, as one of the latest tendencies in present education is long-life learning. And there is nothing more beautiful in this world than a group of people as big as possible working in the same direction (moreover, if this is a noble one)!

Hopefully, what we saw in Mark Twain International School in Bucharest will become real in a few years from now, here, in Galati. And our schools would be full-right members in the IB worldwide network!

Page 8: Longlife learning - Teaching and Learning from an international perspective

References

http://www.ibo.org/

https://onlineworkshops.ibo.org/courses/login/index.php