Recursos
Exploren una amplia gama de recursos valiosos en GCED para profundizar su comprensión y promover su búsqueda, incidencia, enseñanza y aprendizaje.
2,646 resultados encontrados
Peacebuilding Training Guide for Ethiopia Año de publicación: 2020 Autor corporativo: UNESCO International Institute for Capacity-Building in Africa (IICBA) This publication is a training guide for a variety of stakeholders, both inside and outside the education system, in Ethiopia on peace and resilience building. It is an adapted and updated guide for the Ethiopian context. The training guide aims to inform and empower the reader in why and how to educate others for peacebuilding. It provides a foundation of con¬ict analysis and peacebuilding and describes a learner-centered approach to peace education and community engagement. The goal of the training guide is for the reader to become a facilitator with the disposition, knowledge, skills and commitment to support others in developing their full potential as peace-builders.
Action Against Hate Speech: A Resource for Teaching and Learning About Hate Speech Año de publicación: 2017 Autor corporativo: Tony Blair Institute for Global Change | Generation Global This module is designed to prepare students for dialogue around the issue of hate speech. It builds upon other work on human rights, and explores the balancing act between freedom of expression and freedom from insult. Additionally, it prepares students for dialogue on these issues in our facilitated videoconferences and on our safe, secure, online community. This material helps you and your students to get involved in educating, advocating, and acting against hate speech in your communities.
Career guidance and counselling: the bridge from secondary school to tertiary education; a review of current guidance and counselling programmes and practices in Malawi and their support in promoting technical and vocational training for girls Año de publicación: 2017 Autor corporativo: UNESCO The objective of this report is to identify and review existing career G&C programmes and practices in secondary schools in Malawi. The review assesses to what extent such programmes and practices create an awareness of the importance of technical careers and how graduates from the secondary schools can access TEVET. Additionally, it assesses whether any affirmative action measures or approaches are used to increase girls’ interest in and applications to enter technical colleges.
Global Citizenship Education and Human Rights Education: Are They Compatible With U. S. Civic Education? (Journal of International Social Studies; Vol. 6, No. 2) Año de publicación: 2016 Autor: William R. Fernekes Autor corporativo: International Assembly of the National Council for the Social Studies Global citizenship education (GCE) and human rights education (HRE) offer substantive contributions to civic education. Interconnections between the fields exist in curricula from intergovernmental organizations (UNESCO), non-governmental organizations (Oxfam Great Britain) and national ministries (Learning and Teaching Scotland). This essay explores how civic education curricula, learning outcomes, and teacher preparation can be developed to enhance the roles played by GCE and HRE in U. S. civic education. Analysis of the relationships between GCE and HRE yields these conclusions: (1) global citizenship education programs share a philosophy of cosmopolitanism, commitments to universal human rights norms, respect for cultural diversity and sustainable development, and issues-based curriculum designs; (2) a high degree of compatibility exists between GCE program goals and the goals of the values-awareness-socialization HRE model, and (3) this strong compatibility does not extend to the accountability-professional development or the activismtransformation models of HRE. Implementing GCE faces major obstacles, notably emphases on national identity in nation-state civic education, the potential incompatibility between national interests and cosmopolitan commitments in the study of global issues, and the low commitment to GCE or HRE in teacher preparation. 