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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
August 19, 2014 5:04 AM
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No, they are not the same thing.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
July 15, 2014 1:58 PM
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 27, 2014 9:54 AM
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 27, 2014 9:42 AM
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In the areas of STEM, digital literacy, and the Maker movement, an energetic groundswell of public-private partnership initiatives is not-so-quietly remaking the future of education.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 27, 2014 9:08 AM
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To combat religious extremism and sectarian violence, Pakistan must reform its education sector by boosting resources to public schools and updating the school curriculum to improve quality and remove divisive and discriminatory narratives. “Pakistan needs to take bold steps to tackle its education crisis. ... Decades of neglect can only be reversed by overhauling Pakistan’s academic curriculum and education bureaucracy”. Jonathan Prentice, Crisis Group’s Acting Asia Program Director. Long underfunded, Pakistan's system of public education has been further devastated by militant violence and natural disasters. Passed in 2010, the eighteenth constitutional amendment mandated compulsory education for all children between the ages of five and sixteen and devolved much of the education system’s management from the centre to the provinces. But more than nine million children do not receive a primary and secondary education, and quality of instruction varies widely between both genders and rural and urban areas. Madrasas and religious schools, many of which propagate religious extremism and sectarian hatred, seek to fill the gaps. In its latest briefing, Education Reform in Pakistan, the International Crisis Group examines the dysfunctional public education system and underlines the need to reform the curriculum and hold schools and teachers to acceptable standards. The report’s major findings and recommendations are: Although its law requires Pakistan to provide free and compulsory education to all children between the ages of five and sixteen, millions are still out of school, the second highest number in the world. The quality of education in the public school sector remains abysmal, failing to prepare a fast growing population for the job market, while a deeply flawed curriculum fosters religious intolerance and xenophobia. Poorly regulated madrasas and religious schools are filling the gap of the dilapidated public education sector and contributing to religious extremism and sectarian violence The state must urgently reverse decades of neglect by increasing expenditure on the grossly-underfunded education system – ensuring that international aid to this sector is supplementary to, rather than a substitute for, the state’s financial commitment – and opt for meaningful reform of the curriculum, bureaucracy, teaching staff and methodologies. “Before the eighteenth amendment was passed, school curriculums reflected an overly centralised state’s priorities, emphasising national cohesion – within a rigid ideological framework – at the expense of regional and religious diversity” says Samina Ahmed, South Asia Project Director and Senior Asia Adviser. “Provincial governments can now reform deeply flawed curriculums that contribute to political, regional and religious intolerance, but there is also the risk that education programs will differ radically among provinces”. “Pakistan needs to take bold steps to tackle its education crisis”, says Jonathan Prentice, Acting Asia Program Director. “Millions of children are still out of school, and the quality of education for those enrolled remains poor. This is more than a question of the rights of children, vital though that is; ultimately, it goes directly to the state’s ability to combat extremism. Decades of neglect can only be reversed by overhauling Pakistan’s academic curriculum and education bureaucracy”.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 21, 2014 11:48 AM
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At present, the schools on an average spend 9% and 10% time on sports and co-scholastic activities like music, art, dance respectively. About 60% of class time is spent on learning academic subjects. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who shot to power riding a 'change' wave, recently set an ambitious reform agenda which, among other...
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 21, 2014 11:37 AM
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I'm studying subjects that are discouraged by elite universities – it's time they stopped discriminating
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 9, 2014 2:30 PM
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The challengesThere is an increasingly positive mindset regarding educating girls in Pakistan, but the infrastructure has not yet caught up. Khadim Hussain discusses how community schools can adapt to better serve girls and disabled children, and how his organization has engaged in this effort.
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John Gougoulis
May 25, 2014 1:03 PM
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The COAG Reform Council report into Indigenous performance has found the gap in Year 12 attainment since 2008 has significantly narrowed while gaps in numeracy and literacy have closed in most year groups. But the gap between Indigenous Australians and the wider population on unemployment has widened. The report shows the rate of unemployment is four times higher for Indigenous Australians when compared to the national average. Greg Craven, the Deputy Chair of the COAG Reform Council, speaks with Peggy Giakoumelos about the report.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
April 5, 2014 12:37 PM
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
April 5, 2014 11:09 AM
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It’s no longer enough for children just to be able to read, count or multiply. With computers now doing many mundane repetitive tasks for us, many jobs in today’s world require analytical skills and the…
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John Gougoulis
March 29, 2014 10:36 AM
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In an excerpt from her book Reign of Error, Diane Ravitch reveals the individuals and corporations behind education reform movement.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
March 28, 2014 3:59 PM
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Telegraph.co.uk Four-year-olds to be tested within days of starting school Telegraph.co.uk Four-year-olds will face new school assessments just days after starting full-time education under a major Government reform of the exams system, it was...
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
August 19, 2014 4:54 AM
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Business Review Australia Why Online Education Is Good News for Australian Employers Business Review Australia The online education market is growing rapidly, making the digital form of education big news for Australian businesses.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
July 15, 2014 1:49 PM
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The University of Melbourne’s Graduate School of Education (MGSE) has launched a Massive Open Online Course – or MOOC – on how to give school children the skills to survive in a world of ever-changing technology. More than 15,000 people have enrolled in the course, titled Assessment and Teaching of 21st Century Skills. They are among 500,000 who have enrolled in the university’s MOOCs since it joined international platform Coursera in 2012. Course coordinator Professor Patrick Griffin said the scale was unimaginable for face-to-face teaching.
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John Gougoulis
June 27, 2014 9:50 AM
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While we’ve been in Finland these past two weeks, we’ve been learning about the “renewal” of the Finnish Core Curriculum. In a recent post for Diane Ravitch, Pasi Sahlberg gave a Finnish perspectiv...
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 27, 2014 9:32 AM
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PrettyFrom 2009 to 2013, there was a rush to develop, embrace and implement the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for K-12 education. Since then, there has been a rush to reject, resist and rewrite the CCSS.
The rush to judgment in both instances was an...
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 27, 2014 8:58 AM
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good points made or implied hereBusiness leaders call on K-12 and higher education institutions to graduate students with the skills demanded by the marketplace.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 21, 2014 11:42 AM
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Schools should teach kids how to write computer code as a basic part of the education curriculum or risk Australia falling behind, technology leaders argued on Tuesday at The Australian Financial Review and Macquarie Future Forum in Sydney.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
June 9, 2014 3:04 PM
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Partnerships between tech companies and publishers are turning an ed tech buzzword into a reality, but, as one expert says, "It's going to take some time to get it right."
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
May 25, 2014 1:05 PM
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Jerry Rothwell has spent the past year trailing TED Prize winner Sugata Mitra as he sets up the School in the Cloud.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
May 25, 2014 12:56 PM
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Suppose you are teaching an introductory biology course and your next lesson deals with genetics. You would like to prepare your students for the upcoming class by asking them to think about the topi
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John Gougoulis
April 5, 2014 11:12 AM
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Developing Rich Assessment Tasks, a free webinar presented by Jay McTighe
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
April 5, 2014 11:00 AM
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According to Adobe's 'Education, Creativity and Employability' study, there is a "strong correlation between employability and creativity" in Asia Pacific's workforce of the 21st Century. Details of Adobe's study-which was based on a survey of 1,531 educators (from "the K-12 and higher education segment") in Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam-were released today (Tuesday, April 01, 2014) at the 9th Annual Adobe Education Leadership Forum in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
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Scooped by
John Gougoulis
March 29, 2014 10:25 AM
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- What's on the new Common Core-based exams? More than 4 million kids in U.S. schools soon will have a clue.
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Hence the complexity or is it the complication of applying business models to education services!