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Schools in Action: Global Citizens for Sustainable Development: A Guide for Teachers Année de publication: 2016 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO The Global Citizens for Sustainable Development Teachers’ guide aims to introduce teachers to Global Citizenship Education (GCED) and Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). It provides secondary school teachers with ideas and activities to help students become global citizens and sustainable development actors. The Teachers’ guide draws on the discussions and activities of almost 1,100 participants from 104 countries, including ASPnet National Coordinators, school principals, teachers, students and experts who contributed to the Online Collaborative Platform ASPnet in Action: Global Citizens Connected for Sustainable Development in 2014 and 2015 [http://en.unesco. org/aspnet/globalcitizens] with associated activities and initiatives. The Teachers’ guide provides: An overview of what it means for learners to become global citizens and of how learners can contribute to sustainable development. Ideas for classroom activities that can help secondary school students to develop knowledge, skills, values, attitudes and behaviours that promote GCED and ESD. Selected activities on GCED and ESD from ASPnet schools around the world. Escuelas en acción, ciudadanos del mundo para el desarrollo sostenible: guía para el profesorado Année de publication: 2016 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO The Global Citizens for Sustainable Development Teachers’ guide aims to introduce teachers to Global Citizenship Education (GCED) and Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). It provides secondary school teachers with ideas and activities to help students become global citizens and sustainable development actors. The Teachers’ guide draws on the discussions and activities of almost 1,100 participants from 104 countries, including ASPnet National Coordinators, school principals, teachers, students and experts who contributed to the Online Collaborative Platform ASPnet in Action: Global Citizens Connected for Sustainable Development in 2014 and 2015 [http://en.unesco. org/aspnet/globalcitizens] with associated activities and initiatives. The Teachers’ guide provides: An overview of what it means for learners to become global citizens and of how learners can contribute to sustainable development. Ideas for classroom activities that can help secondary school students to develop knowledge, skills, values, attitudes and behaviours that promote GCED and ESD. Selected activities on GCED and ESD from ASPnet schools around the world. Textbooks pave the way to sustainable development (Policy paper 28) Année de publication: 2016 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO This paper’s focus on textbooks is directly related to the global indicator established for Target 4.7, which seeks to measure the extent to which global citizenship education and education for sustainable development, including gender equality and human rights, are mainstreamed in national education policies, curricula, teacher education and student assessments. Textbooks are related mostly to policy implementation and curricular intentions but also to teacher preparation and student assessment. Informe de seguimiento de la educatión en el mundo: documento de política Année de publication: 2016 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO This paper’s focus on textbooks is directly related to the global indicator established for Target 4.7, which seeks to measure the extent to which global citizenship education and education for sustainable development, including gender equality and human rights, are mainstreamed in national education policies, curricula, teacher education and student assessments. Textbooks are related mostly to policy implementation and curricular intentions but also to teacher preparation and student assessment. Rapport mondial de suivi sur l'éducation: document d'orientation Année de publication: 2016 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO This paper’s focus on textbooks is directly related to the global indicator established for Target 4.7, which seeks to measure the extent to which global citizenship education and education for sustainable development, including gender equality and human rights, are mainstreamed in national education policies, curricula, teacher education and student assessments. Textbooks are related mostly to policy implementation and curricular intentions but also to teacher preparation and student assessment. The Role of UNESCO in the Search for Peace Année de publication: 2019 Auteur: Inuk Kang | Sunghae Kim | Jihon KIM | Jieun Seong | Seongsang YOO | Dongjoon Jo | Dongju Choi | Kyungkoo Han Auteur institutionnel: Korean National Commission for UNESCO UNESCO's international intellectual cooperation for peace has achieved substantive tangible results in education and culture. Though some problems have been politicized and have produced limitations along the way, UNESCO has played a leading role in education and culture while setting the direction of international cooperation and activities in this regard.UNESCO has regretfully not played an active role in fostering broader, more diverse, and more extensive new research and practices related to peace, even with the international Cold War realities. While UNESCO was an international organization created explicitly for peace, it has neither led to momentous peace-related academic discourse nor does it lead to theoretical development in this regard. The concept of a "Culture of Peace," for example, was first mentioned in the Ivory Coast (Cote d'Ivoire) in 1989. However, it was not until 1997 that UNESCO started its "Toward a Culture of Peace Program" and the U.N. General Assembly declaring 2000 as the "Year of Peace."UNESCO's situation provides an opportunity for South Korea to play a more active role. South Korea needs to break with its history of taking a passive stance focused on short-term national interests and its preoccupation with "situational tracking" responses aimed at fostering national prestige when such opportunities present themselves. Instead, while prioritizing a "global community" founded on world peace and the well-being of humanity-as long-term shared benefits to all nations-and by sharing the financial burdens involved, the country can increase its international status and become a moral leader raising a "global citizenship power."  Repenser l'éducation: vers un bien commun mondial? Année de publication: 2015 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO The changes in the world today are characterized by new levels of complexity and contradiction. These changes generate tensions for which education is expected to prepare individuals and communities by giving them the capability to adapt and to respond. This publication contributes to rethinking education and learning in this context. It builds on one of UNESCO’s main tasks as a global observatory of social transformation with the objective of stimulating public policy debate. It is a call for dialogue among all stakeholders. It is inspired by a humanistic vision of education and development, based on respect for life and human dignity, equal rights, social justice, cultural diversity, international solidarity, and shared responsibility for a sustainable future. These are the fundamentals of our common humanity. This book enhances the vision provided by the two landmark UNESCO publications: Learning to Be: The world of education today and tomorrow (1972), the ‘Faure Report’, and Learning: The treasure within (1996), the ‘Delors Report’. Conferencia Mundial de la UNESCO sobre la Educación para el Desarrollo Sostenible: Informe de la Conferencia elaborado por la Relatora General Année de publication: 2015 Auteur: Heila Lotz-Sisitka Bajo el título de “Aprender hoy para un futuro sostenible”, la Conferencia Mundial sobre la Educación para el Desarrollo Sostenible, celebrada en Aichi-Nagoya del 10 al 12 de noviembre de 2014, señaló y celebró el final del Decenio de las Naciones Unidas de la Educación para el Desarrollo Sostenible (DEDS, 2005-2014). Asimismo, en la conferencia se puso en marcha el Programa de acción mundial de Educación para el Desarrollo Sostenible y se adoptó la Declaración de Aichi-Nagoya. El DEDS nació de un acuerdo suscrito por los Estados Miembros en 2002 en la Cumbre Mundial sobre Desarrollo Sostenible encaminado a fortalecer la función que desempeña la educación en el logro del desarrollo sostenible. En 2002, mediante la aprobación de la resolución 57/254, la Asamblea General de las Naciones Unidas proclamó el DEDS, que se extendería de 2005 a 2014, y designó a la UNESCO organismo rector del Decenio. La Conferencia Mundial sobre la Educación para el Desarrollo Sostenible, organizada por la UNESCO y el Gobierno del Japón al final del DEDS, brindó una importante oportunidad para consolidar los resultados del DEDS y marcar el camino a seguir en materia de Educación para el Desarrollo Sostenible (EDS) en el plano mundial. Conférence mondiale de l'UNESCO sur l'éducation au développement durable: rapport de la Conférence établi par la Rapporteure Année de publication: 2015 Auteur: Heila Lotz-Sisitka Placée sous le thème « Apprendre aujourd'hui pour un avenir viable », la Conférence mondiale sur l’éducation au développement durable s’est tenue à Aichi-Nagoya du 10 au 12 novembre 2014 pour marquer, et célébrer, la fin de la Décennie des Nations Unies pour l'éducation au service du développement durable (DEDD, 2005-2014). La Conférence a également été l’occasion de lancer le Programme d'action global pour l'éducation en vue du développement durable et d’adopter la Déclaration d’Aichi-Nagoya sur l’éducation au développement durable. La DEDD a été proclamée suite au Sommet mondial sur le développement durable de 2002 sur la base d’un accord entre les États membres visant à renforcer le rôle de l’éducation afin de parvenir au développement durable. L'Assemblée générale des Nations Unies a adopté la résolution 57/254 proclamant la DEDD de 2005 à 2014 et chargé l'UNESCO de la coordonner. La Conférence mondiale sur l’éducation au développement durable, organisée au terme de la DEDD par l’UNESCO et le Gouvernement du Japon, a été l’occasion de consolider les résultats de la DEDD et de définir la voie à suivre à l’avenir pour l’éducation au développement durable à l’échelle mondiale. Globalising the school curriculum: gender, EFA and global citizenship education (RECOUP working paper 17) Année de publication: 2008 Auteur: Harriet Marshall | Madeleine Arnot Auteur institutionnel: Research Consortium on Educational Outcomes and Poverty (RECOUP) This paper aims to bring the school curriculum into the analysis of gender, education and development. There is a marked absence of discussion both in the academic field of development studies and in the political domain of educational policy making around Education for All about what is required of the school curriculum so that it could help promote gender equality. All too often national school curricula reproduce gender inequalities in the public and private sphere and sustain hegemonic male regimes on a national and global scale (Arnot, 2002). Curriculum research, however, can challenge these social messages embedded in curricular formations as well as raise deeper questions about whose forms of knowledge should be transmitted through official forms of schooling. Critical sociological research, for example, recognises the importance of the rules governing the access and redistribution of knowledge, and also the politics behind the selection, organisation and evaluation of legitimate knowledge through formal national educational institutions within developing economies and the impact these have on indigenous social stratifications. It can also critically assess new global interventions into the school curriculum whether in the name of economic progress, human rights or social justice. These global developments are controversial not least because of the challenge they represent to what has been considered the prerogative of national governments – to transmit its own selection of educational knowledge to its citizens, using its own contextualised pedagogic style. The study of national curricula therefore offers the possibility of exploring the equity dimensions of global–national and local educational interfaces and policy agendas. The paper has limited but hopefully valuable ambitions. It aims to initiate discussion of the curriculum in relation to gender, education and development by exploring the global significance of recent interventions on gender, and in particular girls’ education. The first section briefly considers the implications of globalisation as a transformative process on the development of educational knowledge and queries whether the school curricula could address persistent worldwide gender disparities, inequalities and female subjugation. In the second section, we focus specifically on whether new global declarations around gender equality such as those analysed in the UNESCO Education for All Global Monitoring Reports imply certain roles for the school curriculum. The final section addresses the possibilities for gender equality implied by recent interest global citizenship education – a new curriculum subject and approach that promises much. We consider in a preliminary way whether these new developments represent a move towards forms of educational knowledge that are critical rather than legitimating and ‘normalising’ in relation to gender inequalities.