Ressources
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Savoirs locaux, objectifs globaux Année de publication: 2017 Auteur: Douglas Nakashima | Jennifer Rubis | Peter Bates | Bárbara Ávila Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO Les savoirs locaux et autochtones font référence aux connaissances, compétences et philosophies développées par des sociétés interagissant depuis de multiples générations avec leur environnement naturel. Pour les populations rurales et autochtones, les savoirs locaux aident à la prise de décision autour d’aspects fondamentaux de la vie quotidienne. Ces savoirs font partie intégrante d’un complexe culturel qui comprend la langue, des systèmes de classification, des pratiques liées à l’utilisation des ressources, des interactions sociales, des rituels et la spiritualité. Ces modes de savoirs uniques sont des composantes importantes de la diversité culturelle mondiale, et contribuent à la réalisation de l’Agenda 2030 et l’Accord de Paris.
Rethinking Learning: A Review of Social and Emotional Learning for Education Systems Année de publication: 2020 Auteur: Nandini Chatterjee Singh | Anantha Duraiappah Auteur institutionnel: Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable Development (MGIEP) This publication titled ‘Rethinking Learning: A Review of Social and Emotional Learning for Education Systems’, published by the UNESCO Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable Development (MGIEP) reviews the latest research on Social and Emotional Learning (SEL), its impact on student health and school climate and its transformative role in building happier classrooms. It seeks to inform and impress upon Member States the urgent need to mainstream social and emotional learning in education systems.
Combating Violence and Bullying in Schools: UNESCO's Action Année de publication: 2017 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO This item has been included in the provisional agenda of the 201st session of the Executive Board at the request of Morocco, with the support of Algeria, Cambodia, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, France, Italy, Lebanon, Qatar and Sudan.
UNESCO's Education Evaluation in 2016: A Review Année de publication: 2017 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO UNESCO completed 12 education related evaluations in 2016. Part A of this review presents the key insights and lessons learned from those evaluations. These learnings are designed to help enhance UNESCO’s leadership and coordination of the SDG 4 – Education 2030 Agenda. Part B of the review provides an assessment of the quality and usefulness of these evaluations based on the UNEG and OECD quality standards for evaluation reports.
Youth Report 2020: Inclusion and Education; All Means All Année de publication: 2020 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO | Global Education Monitoring Report Team This Youth Report is designed to help you learn about the social, economic and cultural factors that cause vulnerable children, youth and adults to be discriminated against and marginalized in education. It tells the stories of the people who fight to ensure that everyone is included in education, and of those who fought to uphold their own right to education. It brings to life the recommendations of the 2020 Global Education Monitoring Report: Inclusion and education: All means all and calls on youth and teachers to share and discuss the stories and messages, to use them in campaigns and as a teaching tool in class. An open letter to education ministers is included calling, for education systems to be built back more inclusive after the school closures during Covid-19.
Education for Global Citizenship Année de publication: 2012 Auteur institutionnel: Education Above All (Qatar) This book shows that transformative education for local, national and global citizenship and peace can be implemented even under difficult conditions if there is a policy commitment to do so. Authors have provided examples and lessons learned from their own experiences as eminent practitioners in the field. The book is divided into three parts: Part One provides a brief overview of education for global citizenship; including in chapter 1, the subject matter and sub-themes; in chapter 2 the challenges of teaching for personal values and behavior development; and in chapter 3 the importance of having a clearly defined and holistic policy accepted by key stakeholders, and effective implementation.Part Two comprises chapters contributed by practitioners and specialists. Section A of Part Two presents some reflections on the challenges of teaching for values development and behavior change, and on the use of textbooks in this regard. Section B comprises four case studies that focus on or include education for citizenship and civics. Section C presents three cases focused on education for peace, together with a review of peace education in Muslim societies. Section D introduces human rights education and education designed to explore humanitarian law. Section E reviews problems of and possibilities for teaching about a conflictual past. Section F focuses on the development of national and international policy and planning for education to be supportive of peacebuilding and of respect for human rights.Finally, Part Three offers some recommendations for future action
Address by Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO, on the occasion of the lecture: Preventing violent-extremism in the 21st century: fostering a new generation of global citizens at the Center for Conflict Resolution; Salisbury University, 4 April 2017 Année de publication: 2017 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO. Director-General, 2009-2017 (Bokova, I.G.) This address was given by Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO on the occasion of the lecture “Preventing violent-extremism in the 21st century: fostering a new generation of global citizens” at the Center for Conflict Resolution.
Local Knowledge, Global Goals Année de publication: 2017 Auteur: Douglas Nakashima | Jennifer Rubis | Peter Bates | Bárbara Ávila Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO Local and indigenous knowledge refers to the understandings, skills and philosophies developed by societies with long histories of interaction with their natural surroundings. For rural and indigenous peoples, local knowledge informs decision-making about fundamental aspects of day-to-day life. This knowledge is integral to a cultural complex that also encompasses language, systems of classification, resource use practices, social interactions, rituals and spirituality. These unique ways of knowing are important components of the world’s cultural diversity, and contribute to the achievement of Agenda 2030 and the Paris Agreement.
UNESCO and Education Année de publication: 2017 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO Education is a fundamental human right and
a public good and, as such, has been at the core of UNESCO’s work since its inception.Education is also the path to sustainability – to poverty alleviation, better health, environmental protection and gender equality.As the only United Nations agency with a mandate to cover all aspects of education, UNESCO was entrusted in 2015 to lead the coordination and monitoring of Sustainable Development Goal 4, as part of the new Global Education 2030 Agenda.Goal 4 aims to “ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all,” and renewed UNESCO’s and Member States’ commitment to a vision of education that is holistic, inspirational and which leaves no one behind.This commitment is reflected in the size and scope of the Education Sector, the largest in UNESCO, with staff working at its Paris Headquarters and spread across a global network of field offices and specialized institutes and centres. With its close links with education ministries and other partners, UNESCO is strongly placed to press for action and change.UNESCO’s Education Sector supports Member States in developing education systems that foster high-quality and inclusive lifelong learning for all, empowering learners to be creative and responsible global citizens while leading the debate to help shape the future international education agenda.There is no stronger, no more lasting, investment a country can make than educating its citizens. The Education Sector exists to further this collective vision worldwide by transforming lives one by one. 