Teaching Life Skills and Citizenship in the Middle East and North Africa
- ํํ์ฌํญ
- 20 p.
- ์๋ ์ธ์ด
- ์๋์ด
- ๋ฐํ ์ฐ๋
- 2016
- ํค์๋
- ุงูู ูุงุฑุงุช ุงูุญูุงุชูุฉุงูู ูุงุทูุฉู ูุงุฑุงุช ุงููุฑู ุงูุญุงุฏู ูุงูุนุดุฑูู
The situation of learning in MENA calls for a holistic, lifelong and rights-based vision of education that maximizes the potential of all children and youth in the region and better equips them to create meaning out of knowledge and to face the transitions from childhood to adulthood, from education to work, and from unreflective development to responsible and active citizenship. This is what drives the MENA Life Skills and Citizenship Education (LSCE) Initiative, kicked off in 2015 with the aim of supporting the countries of the region โ conceptually, programmatically and technically โ to improve learning and to better invest such learning in individual, social and economic development.
A set of twelve core life skills for MENA has been identified using the four-dimensional learning model: โLearning to Knowโ (Cognitive Dimension), โLearning to Doโ (Instrumental Dimension), โLearning to Beโ (Individual Dimension), and โLearning to Live Togetherโ (Social Dimension). The twelve core life skills are life-long and build on evidence that underlines the importance of skills acquisition from an early age. Furthermore, the twelve core life skills are acquired and sustained through all forms of learning in a systems approach that recognizes multiple pathways of learning, formal, non-formal and informal.

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