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L’éducation dans un contexte mondial pour les élèves de l’Ontario : Stratégies pratiques - Sommaire de recherche Año de publicación: 2018 Autor: Caroline Manion | Nadya Weber Autor corporativo: Ontario (Canada). Ministry of Education Le présent sommaire découle de la politique énoncée dans le document Stratégie ontarienne en matière d’éducation internationale de la maternelle à la 12e année (Ministère de l’Éducation de l’Ontario, 2015). Il cible les connaissances actuelles sur les bonnes pratiques prometteuses dans le domaine de l’éducation dans un contexte mondial1 afin de proposer des stratégies pratiques visant à améliorer l’enseignement, l’apprentissage et la réussite. Le présent document s’adresse à tous les intervenants du secteur de l’éducation, c’est-à-dire les membres du milieu, les parents, les élèves, les leaders du système, les leaders scolaires et les éducateurs. Tous sont des agents de changement actifs qui appuient une stratégie d’éducation conçue dans le but d’intégrer les perspectives, les cultures et les expériences mondiales dans le curriculum et le milieu d’apprentissage. L’objectif consiste à permettre aux élèves d’acquérir les compétences dont ils auront besoin pour prospérer en tant que citoyens face à une mondialisation grandissante.L’analyse est présentée par thème. Pour souligner les raisons pour lesquelles l’éducation dans un contexte mondial est d’une importance cruciale pour les élèves de l’Ontario, nous commençons par présenter les contributions importantes que l’éducation dans un contexte mondial peut apporter au bien-être des individus et de la société dans son ensemble. Nous présentons ensuite une vue d’ensemble résumant différentes notions de « l’éducation dans un contexte mondial » et de « l’éducation à la citoyenneté mondiale », ainsi qu’un large éventail de notions secondaires qui se chevauchent.Ensuite, par une revue de la littérature internationale sur le sujet, nous présentons une série de défis et de possibilités concernant la mise en oeuvre de l’éducation dans un contexte mondial et énumérons des exemples pertinents de bonnes pratiques liées à la prestation de l’éducation dans un contexte mondial. Une autre section porte sur les bonnes pratiques en matière de renforcement des capacités et de leadership du système afin d’assurer une éducation dans un contexte mondial efficace. Nous concluons en énumérant les principaux messages et les leçons apprises. Global Education for Ontario Learners: Practical Strategies - A Summary of Research Año de publicación: 2018 Autor: Caroline Manion | Nadya Weber Autor corporativo: Ontario (Canada). Ministry of Education This summary report flows from the policy outlined in Ontario’s Strategy for K–12 International Education (OME, 2015). The report highlights current knowledge about good and/or promising practices in global education1 in order to suggest practical strategies for improved teaching, learning, and achievement. The intended audience for this piece includes all education stakeholders – community members, parents, learners, system leaders, school leaders, and educators – as active agents of change in support of an education strategy designed to integrate global perspectives, cultures, and experiences in the curriculum and learning environment. The purpose is to enable students to develop the competencies they will need to thrive as citizens in an increasingly globalized world.The discussion is organized by theme. To underline why global education is critically important for Ontario learners, we begin by outlining the significant contributions global education can make to the well-being of individuals and society as a whole. We then provide an overview synthesizing different conceptualizations of “global education” and “global citizenship education”, as well as a broad range of their overlapping sub-concepts. Next, through a review of the international literature on the subject, we present a series of challenges and opportunities for implementing global education, and list pertinent examples of good practices associated with delivering global education. A further section focuses on good practice in building system capacity and leadership for effective global education. We conclude by identifying key messages and lessons learned. Educating for global citizenship: an ETFO curriculum development inquiry initiative Año de publicación: 2010 Autor: Alice Assor-Chandler | Mali Bickley | Jim Carleton | Antonino Giambrone | Janice Gregg | Jennifer Hunter | Laura Inglis | Leigh-Anne Ingram | Angela MacDonald | Miyuki (Erica) Moizumi | Carol Peterson | Carrie Schoemer | Nadya Weber | Tonia Wojciechowski Autor corporativo: Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario (ETFO) Attention to educating for citizenship continues to expand and deepen worldwide. Many countries now include citizenship education as an important feature of their official curriculum, albeit in variant forms. Numerous research studies, policy reforms, and curriculum initiatives have been undertaken, as teachers, policy makers and researchers attempt to understand the intricate processes by which young people learn about democratic citizenship, and where and how citizenship education should be located and represented in school curricula.Educating for global citizenship has been a critical dimension of these discussions and investigations. Recent shifts in the speed and global reach of information and communication technologies, an increasingly interdependent global economy, challenges in human rights and social justice, and the impact of international tragedies and emergencies have, for example, created tensions and conditions that require more integrated, worldwide responses. Not surprisingly, understandings of global citizenship are being explored with increased intensity and, as might be expected, there has been a corresponding – and growing - interest among educators in various parts of the world to strengthen the global dimension of citizenship education in school curricula at all levels.In Canada, there has been increasing attention to what it means to educate for the global citizenship and provincial curriculum policy developments in recent years. A host of useful ideas in the form of new resource materials and websites to inform and guide teachers’ work have also emerged. The Canadian International Development Agency’s (CIDA) in the global classroom initiative, Classroom Connections’ Cultivating Peace in the 21st Century and Taking Action, Larsen’s ACT! Active Citizens Today: Global Citizenship for Local Schools, and UNICEF Canada’s Global Schoolhouse are a few examples of the many resources that have recently been developed. Despite this growing interest, there has been less attention devoted to examining practices of global citizenship education within Canadian classrooms, leaving a limited understanding of how it is applied in schools.A wide range of perspectives and practices has emerged, reflecting a considerable growth of interest in this dimension of education. In an effort to clarify the multiple dimensions of global citizenship education, below are two “working” frameworks that provide an overview of core learning goals and key teaching and learning practices associated with global citizenship education from the literature. They reveal both complexity and multidimensionality and provide a lens to analyse and reflect upon the breadth and depth of what it means to educate for global dimension of citizenship. Global Education for Ontario Learners: Practical Strategies; A Summary of Research Año de publicación: 2018 Autor: Caroline Manion | Nadya Weber Autor corporativo: Ontario (Canada). Ministry of Education This summary report flows from the policy outlined in Ontario’s Strategy for K–12 International Education (OME, 2015). The report highlights current knowledge about good and/or promising practices in global education in order to suggest practical strategies for improved teaching, learning, and achievement. The intended audience for this piece includes all education stakeholders – community members, parents, learners, system leaders, school leaders, and educators – as active agents of change in support of an education strategy designed to integrate global perspectives, cultures, and experiences in the curriculum and learning environment. The purpose is to enable students to develop the competencies they will need to thrive as citizens in an increasingly globalized world.