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Global Education

Global Education. English Department – November 3, 2009. Global Education . Howard Gardner- there is a need for students to graduate with a great range of social and cultural skills necessary to problem solve and collaborate around the world.

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Global Education

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  1. Global Education English Department – November 3, 2009

  2. Global Education • Howard Gardner- there is a need for students to graduate with a great range of social and cultural skills necessary to problem solve and collaborate around the world. • Business community needs schools to prepare students differently

  3. Global Education • Goal- To create a more diverse and tolerant multicultural classroom

  4. Global Education • What is global education? • What does global education look like in a high school English classroom?

  5. Global Education • Definition- Global education is teaching and learning with a global perspective; • Recognizing the interdependencies and interconnections of issues, regions, peoples, places, systems and times; • Infusing global issues, such as sustainable development, environmental care, peace and human rights, into traditional subject areas; • Working toward active, responsible global citizenship toward building a more peaceful, just and sustainable world. (http://imminentshift.com/global/define.html

  6. Global Education • Five Dimensions for Global Perspective projects 1- Perspective Conscious • Examine a national issue from the perspective of another county – how did the different countries cover events in the Middle East? Hurricane Katrina? The U.S. Elections? Using newspapers and media sources taken from a search on Google News (http://news.google.com) focus on an issue in the news that students are familiar with and have students role-play people from other countries.

  7. Global Education • Five Dimensions for Global Perspective projects 2- Knowledge of World Conditions • Use a service like epals to interview students concerning their physical and economic environment. Have students produce presentations such as blogs, wikis, or podcasts that illustrate a problem faced by a community they study.

  8. Global Education • Five Dimensions for Global Perspective projects 3- Cross-Culture Awareness • Use a previous classroom connection and compare classic short stories or folk tales. Examine how they reflect qualities related to the values placed on extended families versus individual effort and achievement.

  9. Global Education • Five Dimensions for Global Perspective projects 4- Knowledge of Global Dynamics • Compare country-specific websites of globally branded companies and try to determine the differences and why they exist.

  10. Global Education • Five Dimensions for Global Perspective projects 5- Awareness of Human Choice • Pair students off between collaborating classrooms and ask them to role-play international consultants who need to develop multimedia campaigns in each other’s home country to help build public support for compromise around key issues with global impact.

  11. Global Education • More than 40% of IBM employees do not work in an office • Living in a homogeneous community narrows our perspective of the world • Teachers need to show our students that we are part of an interconnected planet

  12. Global Education • 21st Century Skills - www.21stcenturyskills.org A coalition of business and education policy leaders, ten states, and a variety of educational organizations – is beginning to define a new curriculum that meets the needs of students in a globally interconnected economy

  13. Global Education • Embed global collaboration into the curriculum • Students demand relevancy • It is extra work. • It will deepen your teaching and students’ level of engagement

  14. Global Education • Three Pathways 1- Empathy for Others 2- Finding New Ways to Enrich and Engage 3- Desire for Social Justice

  15. Global Education • Getting to Know Your Neighbor • How do events in one part of the world affect the way we live in our home environment? • What are other countries doing about the threat of climate change? • How can we lessen terrorist threats?

  16. Global Education • Support and Mentoring -Available on-line and through workshops -Necessary

  17. Global Education • Collaboration and Lesson Planning • Discuss what the students need to know and the desired outcome • How will the learning be evidenced? • What learning activities can prepare the students for the assessment?

  18. Global Education • Collaboration • Whom in the school, local, or global community can the students collaborate with?

  19. Global Education • Project Principles and Strategies: • Aligning project purpose, learning objective, content, and standards with project outcome • Scaffolding to support students in their collaborative work through the use of relevant tools and online resources • Preparing students with a knowledge of instructional design

  20. Global Education • Project Principles and Strategies: • The choice of assignments and decisions on how the assignments will be measured based on a rubric are of key importance. • Example Criteria: • Design and Technical Quality • Synthesis and construction of ideas • Online engagement and interaction with project • Reflection and evaluation

  21. Global Education • Preparing Students • Practice using communication tools within the class • Set up a class Ning or Wiki • Introduce Skype (optional) • Students should communicate • Work globally on a project

  22. Global Education • Teacher Preparation • Find a partner teacher • Email in response to a project • Allow up to 6 weeks for preparation

  23. Global Education • Module (series of linked lessons) • Create a wiki devoted to lesson • Both teachers should access this wiki • Place entire module online

  24. Global Education • Sample Module • Warm-up Activities • Introductory Profiles • Country Research • Self-Reflecting Blog • Mapping • Collaboration • Multimedia Content Sharing Tools • Assessment (http://rubistar.4teachers.org/index.php)

  25. Global Education • Projects DO NOT have to be heavy on technological sophistication. • There are many sites to help you!

  26. Global Education

  27. Global Education • Web 2.0 • Free Web 2.0 tools for Discovery Education: http://school.discoveryeducation.com/schrockguide/edtools.html • Kids already share multimedia • All students can use these tools to experience global communications • Can generate higher level of motivation

  28. Global Education • Wikispaces: www.wikispaces.com and www.wikispaces.com/site/for/teachers • Purpose: Students can collaborate through digital editing tools • Definition: Collection of interlinked webpages enabling participants to add and edit content using simplified markup language. • Wikipedia is the most well-known example of a wiki.

  29. Global Education • Blogs • Definition: website hosted by an individual or a group who posts regular entries as a running commentary. In addition to text, other materials, such as graphics, links, and videos may be included in posts. From the original term “web log.”

  30. Global Education • Blogs • Purpose: • Teacher can read it like a log of student progress • Everyone can exchange information • Material can be archived and reviewed anytime

  31. Global Education • Ning -(www.ning.com) a social networking tool that functions much like a wiki- with interlinked webpages that create room for dialogue among those with an account. A student can personalize his or her page.

  32. Global Education • Second Life- (http://teen.secondlife.com) By 2011, it is estimated that 80% of all active Internet users will have a virtual “second life.” Second life provides a virtual reality • One project is to role-play a poor Haitian family (www.tigweb.org/tiged/projects/ayiti/game.html). They ask the question: “What is it like to live in poverty, struggling everyday to stay healthy, keep out of debt, and get educated?”

  33. Global Education • iEARN (International Education and Resource Network)- (http://iearn.org) • Largest school network, which features a more expansive international and professional development mission than any other network. • It focuses more than any other network on the pedagogies involved in creating collaborative, project-based work. • iEARN stresses that it helps students not only develop awareness of other cultures, but deepens their appreciation for their own culture and increases compassion.

  34. Global Education • Global Schoolhouse (www.globalschoolnet.org) • Showcases online collaborative learning. • Far less elaborate procedures to engage in projects than iEARN • Provides an easier entry point for a novice teacher than iEARN because there are some ready-made projects that involve flexible time commitments – as much or as little time as the teacher can afford to devote to the project

  35. Global Education • ePals (http://www.epals.com) • A way to allow students to find “pen pals” on the web • The site is secure, so students and parents do not have to worry about email getting into unauthorized hands. • Easy to use student and teacher interface. • Has a translation tool, so communicating in most of the common Indo-European languages is no loner a barrier. • ePal sample lesson: • http://content.epals.com/projects/info.aspx?DivID=GlobalWarming_overview • List of other lesson plans: • http://content.epals.com/projects/info.aspx?DivID=index

  36. Global Education • TakingITGlobal (www.tigweb.org) • Organized for students in school settings and in independent learning situations • Helps students find information and inspiration to get involved in improving their local and global communities • Extensive topics for threaded discussions in multiple languages

  37. Global Education • CNN Student News (www.cnn.com/student news/) • Geared towards K-12 learners • Provides global stories, useful quizzes, and classroom exercises • Newseum (www.newseum.org/todaysfrontpages/default.asp) • Contains newspaper front pages from 45 countries • Amnesty International (www.amnesty.org.au/hre/comments/2310) • Provides detailed lesson plans

  38. Global Education • Oxfam (www.oxfam.org.uk/education • Contains online materials, lesson plans, and resources for global awareness. • Coverdell World Wise Schools (www.peacecorps.gov/wws) • Organized lesson plans by grade level, region, and subject area. • Teacher’s Guide to International Collaboration (www.ed.gov/teachers/how/tech/international/index.html • Developed to help teachers use the Internet to reach out globally

  39. Global Education • Global Gateway (www.globalgateway.org.uk/default.aspx?page=325) • Easy way to find schools to partner with to collaborate on projects or communicate about common interests • Global Learning Communities (www.glc.me.uk) • Shared learning links around the time zones of the world • Associated Schools Project Network (www.unesco.org/education/asp) • Students are encouraged to conduct pilot projects on four main themes

  40. Global Education • Amnesty International (www.amnestyuse.org/educate/lesson-plans/page.do?id=1102163) • Lesson plans and teaching guides • Cyber UN Schoolbus (www.un.org/Pubs/CyberSchoolBus/cur.html) • Curriculum units are available • New York Times (www.nytimes.com/learning/teachers/lessons/globalhistory.html) • Lesson plan library

  41. Global Education • PBS The WIDE ANGLE Global Classroom (www.pbs.org/wnet/wideangle/classroom/index.html) • Lesson plans and activities for high school students • Peace Corps (www.csun.edu/~hcedu013/plans.html#Lesson%20Plans) or (www.peacecorps.gov/wws/educators) • Lesson to help teachers integrate global education into daily lessons • Telecollaborate! (http://nschubert.home.mchsi.com) • Global Nomads Group (www.gng.org)

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