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Programme de Citoyenneté Mondiale dans l'enseignement supérieur: la politique et la pratique en évolution et un futur programme de recherche; actes d'un colloque tenu les 9-10 Décembre 2013 à Hong Kong Année de publication: 2013 Auteur institutionnel: Bath Spa University | General Education Centre (Hong Kong) | Polytechnic University Ce symposium était une excroissance du Conseil de la recherche économique et sociale du Royaume-Uni (en. ESRC) financé Projet international de réseautage. Une collaboration entre les universitaires au Royaume-Uni / Europe, Amérique du Nord, et en Asie, ce projet répond au fait qu'il ya un intérêt croissant pour comprendre comment les universités peuvent éduquer les élèves à devenir des citoyens plus engagés et ouverts sur le monde. La prémisse est que l'enseignement supérieur doit contribuer au bien public par la formation des citoyens plus globales avec la conscience culturelle, un fort sentiment de responsabilité et les compétences civiques de participer à une économie mondiale fondée sur le savoir. Le rapport suivant documente les actes du colloque, résume les présentations et fournit des informations clés tirées des présentations. Commentaires formulés par les individus sont paraphrasés et / ou synthétisés. Repositioning and reconceptualizing the curriculum for the effective realization of Sustainable Development Goal Four, for holistic development and sustainable ways of living Année de publication: 2015 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO International Bureau of Education (IBE) The purpose of this discussion paper is two-fold, it is to reposition curriculum at the center of the national and the global development dialogue and to highlight its power to give effect to national and to global aspirational statements on the role of education in holistic development. When well designed and effectively enacted, curriculum determines the quality, inclusiveness and development-relevance of education.Second, is to reconceptualize curriculum as a fundamental force of integration of education systems and as an operational tool for giving effect to policies on lifelong learning. Curriculum leads all core aspects of education that are known to determine quality, inclusion, and relevance such as content, learning, teaching, assessment and the teaching and learning environments among others. Its horizontal and vertical articulation, as well as its articulation across learning settings is what gives effect to lifelong learning policies.This paper therefore seeks to reposition curriculum as an indispensable tool for giving effect to SDG Goal 4. Educating for global citizenship: an ETFO curriculum development inquiry initiative Année de publication: 2010 Auteur: 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 Auteur institutionnel: 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. Preparing teachers to educate for 21st century global citizenship:envisioning and enacting Année de publication: 2014 Auteur: Linyuan Guo Auteur institutionnel: Centennial College The changing educational landscape in the global context and the increasing interconnectedness and interdependence of the world have placed unprecedented demands on teacher education programs in preparing teachers to educate for 21st century global citizenship in K-12 schools. To chart the course of preparing global educators for an interconnected world, the Faculty of Education at the University of Prince Edward Island (UPEI) and UNICEF Canada have collaboratively developed an undergraduate course, entitled Educating for Global Citizenship. It focuses on preparing educators to teach for 21st century global citizenship and has been integrated into UPEI’s teacher preparation program as a compulsory course. This paper is based on a three-year study examining teacher candidates' experiences in learning to educate for global citizenship, the changes of their perceptions on global citizenship education, and the challenges and achievements they experienced in educational practices. Findings from this study indicate the unique opportunities and challenges teachers face in learning to educate for global citizenship and suggest the necessity of integrating global citizenship education in teacher education programs through a holistic approach. Contributing to peace and human development in an era of globalization Année de publication: 2002 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO The Medium-Term Strategy (2002-2007) for the countries of the Africa region is an essential programme axis of UNESCO’s new decentralization policy. It forms an integral part of the Organization’s overall strategic objectives defined by the Member States in the UNESCO MediumTerm Strategy for 2002-2007 (31 C/4), which aims to contribute to peace and human development through education, the sciences, culture and communication. The National Youth White Paper on Global Citizenship Année de publication: 2015 Auteur institutionnel: Centre for Global Citizenship Education and Research (CGCER) On March 20, 2015, over 400 students from five high schools across Canada, in partnership with the Centre for Global Citizenship Education, The Centre for Global Education and TakingITGlobal, came together to collaborate, through the use of technology, in a Virtual Town Hall to discuss the youth’s vision for Global Citizenship Education. From Alberta to Ontario, downtown Toronto to Yellowknife, the youth of Canada exchanged ideas, debated alternatives, and ultimately created a document that represents their voice on the relationship Canadians should have with the rest of the world. The Virtual Town Hall, an “archetype of grassroots democracy,” (Senator Grant Mitchell) was the culmination of over a month of online teamwork, 2000 hours of student collaboration, over 100 hours of teacher facilitation, and the passion of over 1000 youth to engage in a national conversation and have their voices heard.In the month prior to the Virtual Town Hall, student leaders, systematically chosen from each school to represent Canada’s diverse geographic and demographic population, met on a weekly basis to exchange ideas, work with and listen to experts, and create a common framework. Concurrently, the students were trained to use an arsenal of Web 2.0 tools (YouTube, Twitter, cell phone voting, Google Docs, H.323 Video Conference, discussion boards, blogs, etc.) to collaborate, build consensus, and create community regardless of time or location.Equipped with this knowledge and empowered through online technology, the student leaders facilitated a full-day virtual town hall. In the morning, 400 youth peers engaged in a dialogue with local and international experts. Following this session, the youth participated in breakout groups to address three critical questions:  What are our obligations as global citizens? What are the rights and responsibilities that we have? To what extent can well-intentioned global citizenship initiatives reinforce or resist power inequities? What types of policies/practices will enable/facilitate global citizenship?  The National Youth White Paper on Global Citizenship, written collaboratively by Canadian students, is the direct result of this full-day, interactive event. The evolution of the document involved equipping leaders with knowledge and technology, having those leaders facilitate a larger conversation among their peers, taking the data generated to their community at large for feedback and direction, and then synthesizing the results in the student white paper. It represents the voices of over one thousand youth, introduced to the complexities of global citizenship education, unified through the power of 21st century technology, and sharing a passion to contribute to the dialogue taking place on the future of Canada and its relationship to the rest of the world. Le Livre blanc de la jeunesse nationale sur la citoyenneté mondiale Année de publication: 2015 Auteur institutionnel: Centre for Global Citizenship Education and Research (CGCER) Le 20 Mars, 2015, plus de 400 élèves de cinq écoles secondaires à travers le Canada, en partenariat avec le Centre d'éducation à la citoyenneté mondiale, le Centre for Éducation globaleet TakingITGlobal, se sont réunis pour collaborer, par l'utilisation de la technologie, dans une salle virtuelle ville pour discuter de la vision de la jeunesse pour l'éducation sur la citoyenneté mondiale. De l'Alberta à l'Ontario, le centre-ville de Toronto à Yellowknife, la jeunesse du Canada a échangé des idées, débattre des solutions de rechange, et, finalement, a créé un document qui représente leur voix sur les relations Canadiens devraient avoir avec le reste du monde. Le Virtual Town Hall, un «archétype de la démocratie de base» (le sénateur Grant Mitchell) est l'aboutissement de plus d'un mois de travail d'équipe en ligne, 2000 heures de la collaboration des élèves, plus de 100 heures de facilitation des enseignants, et la passion de plus de 1000 jeunes engager dans une conversation nationale et faire entendre leurs voix dans le mois précédant l'Hôtel virtuel Ville, les leaders étudiants, systématiquement choisis parmi chaque école pour représenter la diversité population géographique et démographique du Canada, se sont réunis sur une base hebdomadaire pour échanger des idées, travailler avec et écouter les experts, et de créer un cadre commun. En même temps, les étudiants ont été formés à l'utilisation d'un arsenal d'outils Web 2.0 (YouTube, Twitter, téléphone cellulaire vote, Google Docs, H.323 Vidéo Conférence, forums de discussion, les journaux, etc.) pour collaborer, établir un consensus et créer une communauté quelle que soit de temps ou de lieu. Equipé de cette connaissance et le pouvoir grâce à la technologie en ligne, les leaders étudiants ont facilité une mairie virtuelle d'une journée complète. Dans la matinée, 400 pairs de jeunes engagés dans un dialogue avec des experts locaux et internationaux. Suite à cette session, les jeunes ont participé à des groupes de petits groupes pour répondre à trois questions essentielles: 1. Quelles sont nos obligations en tant que citoyens du monde? Quels sont les droits et les responsabilités que nous avons? 2. Pour les initiatives de citoyenneté mondiale dans quelle mesure peut bien intentionnés renforcer ou résister à des inégalités de pouvoir? 3. Quels types de politiques / pratiques permettront / faciliter la citoyenneté mondiale. Le Livre blanc de la jeunesse nationale sur la citoyenneté mondiale, écrite en collaboration par les étudiants canadiens, est le résultat direct de cette journée complète, événement interactif. L'évolution du document impliqué équipant les dirigeants ayant des connaissances et de la technologie, ayant ces dirigeants facilitent une plus grande conversation entre leurs pairs, en prenant les données générées à leur communauté dans son ensemble pour la rétroaction et la direction, et ensuite la synthèse des résultats dans le livre blanc de l'étudiant. Elle représente les voix de plus de mille jeunes, présenter à la complexité de l'éducation à la citoyenneté mondiale, unifiée par la puissance de la technologie du 21e siècle, et le partage de la passion de contribuer au dialogue qui se déroule sur l'avenir du Canada et de sa relation avec le reste du monde. Global citizenship education and its implications for curriculum goals at the age of globalization Année de publication: 2010 Auteur: Shahla Zahabioun | Alireza Yousefy | Mohammad H Yarmohammadian | Narges Keshtiaray Auteur institutionnel: Canadian Center of Science and Education As the inevitable process of the 21st century, globalization has affected and altered all aspects of human life including education. Therefore, one of the main tasks of any education system is to identify the features and impacts of such process. Thus, the present study was conducted aiming to discuss and examine global citizenship education and its implications for curriculum goals.This study is firstly defining global citizenship education concept as well as its significance and necessity and then it is going to explain global citizenship education concept and its purposes and implications for curriculum goals. This is an analytical research. The results indicate that global citizen holds peculiar features and requires special education in global aspects. Accordingly, the citizenship education compatible with global standards requires an overview of curriculum goals as one of the most important components of education system Global citizenship education and its implications for curriculum goals at the age of globalization Année de publication: 2010 Auteur: Shahla Zahabioun | Alireza Yousefy | Mohammad H Yarmohammadian | Narges Keshtiaray Auteur institutionnel: Canadian Center of Science and Education Comme le processus inévitable du 21e siècle, la mondialisation a affecté et changé tous les aspects de la vie humaine, y compris l'éducation. Par conséquent, l'une des principales tâches de tout système éducatif est d'identifier les caractéristiques et les impacts d'un tel processus. Ainsi, la présente étude a été menée en vue de discuter et d'examiner l'éducation à la citoyenneté mondiale et ses implications pour les objectifs du programme d'études.Cette étude est tout d'abord de définir la citoyenneté mondiale concept de l'éducation, ainsi que son importance et de la nécessité, et il va expliquer le concept d'éducation à la citoyenneté mondiale et de ses objectifs et implications pour les objectifs du programme d'études. Ceci est une recherche analytique. Les résultats indiquent que citoyen du monde détient des caractéristiques particulières et nécessite une éducation spéciale dans les aspects mondiaux. En conséquence, l'éducation à la citoyenneté compatibles avec les normes mondiales exige un aperçu des objectifs du curriculum comme l'un des éléments les plus importants du système d'éducation. Planetary Citizenship Année de publication: 2016 Auteur: Edgar Montiel The blog contains and article where many worldiwide problems that humans are facing are described, and it states that it is necessary to modifiy the way in which we live by adopting a practical education that will enable sustainable life in the planet as it would consider environmental sustainability and peaceful international cooperation from diverse perspectives.