De Jesus - 21ST Century Skills
De Jesus - 21ST Century Skills
De Jesus - 21ST Century Skills
BSED 3-A4
Organizational skills
Organization
Time management
Multitasking
Strategy development
Information management
Notetaking
Cleaning workspace
Schedule planning
Event coordination
Productivity
Communication skills
Active listening
Situation analysis
Technological competency
Media literacy
Empathy
Persuasive argumentation
Clarification
Respect
Public speaking
Writing
Collaboration skills
Leadership
Team-oriented
Conflict resolution
Compromising
Engagement
Reliability
Resource allocation
Project management
Task delegation
Goal setting
Critical-thinking skills
Critical-thinking
Attention to detail
Evaluation
Analytical-thinking
Inferencing
Self-regulation
Annotative reading
Text interpretation
Decision-making
Comparing and contrasting
Creative skills
Problem-solving
Adaptability
Overturning
Curiosity
Innovation
Brainstorming
Entertaining
Open-mindedness
Repurposing
Creative writing
b. Literacy skills help students gain knowledge through reading as well as
using media and technology. These skills also help students create
knowledge through writing as well as developing media and technology.
Information Literacy
Students need to be able to work effectively with information, using it
at all levels of Bloom's Taxonomy (remembering, understanding,
applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating). Information literacy
involves traditional skills such as reading, researching, and writing;
but new ways to read and write have also introduced new skills:
Technology Literacy
We are living through a technological revolution, with huge changes
taking place over brief spans of time. A decade ago, Facebook didn't
exist, but now many people could not live without it. The average
cellphone is now more powerful than computers from several years
ago. We are surrounded by technology, and most of it performs
multiple functions. In Growing Up Digital: How the Net Generation Is
Changing Your World, Don Tapscott outlines the following eight
expectations that students have of technology.
2. How can the attainment of 21st century skill contributes to the realization of education
goals?
Recognizing that traditional education systems have generally not been
preparing learners to face such challenges, the global education community has
increasingly talked about and mobilized in favor of the changes required. This
has resulted in a suite of initiatives and research around the broad area of “21st
century skills,” which culminated most notably with the adoption of Sustainable
Development Goal 4 and the Education 2030 agenda, including Target 4.7,
which commits countries to ensure that learners acquire knowledge and skills in
areas such as sustainable development, human rights, gender equality, global
citizenship, and others.
3. How can you prepare, plan and deliver a lesson with an end goal of attaining 21st century
skills?
As a general guide, however, here are five “essential strategies” I would
recommend that you develop in your classroom to encourage 21st Century
thinking and learning. They may involve a change in perspective about how your
students learn best, so feel free to take small but steady steps toward these
goals. Practical information on how to implement these strategies will follow in
future blogs.
1. Let Your Students Lead The Learning
Learning takes place best in environments where students feel
empowered to learn. Effective teachers are more like moderators,
offering inspiration and guiding students to discover for
themselves. Give students the opportunity to be self-learners,
which guarantees lifelong learning. This brings us directly to the
second point.
2. Create an Inquiry-Based Classroom Environment
If students are to lead the way to learning, they need to be able to
ask questions – and then find the means to answer them.
Students (and teachers) need to “wonder out loud” as they
encounter new information. A KWL chart (What do you Know?
What do you Want to know? What have you Learned?) can guide
students toward true self-motivated learning.
3. Encourage Collaboration
“We are greater than the sum of our parts.” Herein is the heart of
collaboration. A healthy, active classroom is a sharing classroom.
Students are social beings, and even more so in a language class.
Find every opportunity to allow students to form pairs and small
groups. Not only does this encourage the development of
speaking and listening skills, but it also teaches students how to
effectively achieve goals together.
4. Develop Critical Thinking Skills
Learning is more than memorizing and remembering. Critical
thinking skills take students well beyond simple comprehension of
information. Students use these skills to solve problems in new
situations, make inferences and generalizations, combine
information in new patterns, and make judgments based on
evidence and criteria. Introduce activities in your lessons that build
critical thinking skills along with language skills.
5. Encourage Creativity
Encourage your students to be creative throughout each lesson.
Creative activities allow students to express what they’ve learned
in a new way. This synthesizing and personalizing of knowledge
consolidates learning, and creates an experience that remains
with students long after the class is over.
By keeping these strategies in mind as you plan each lesson, you will be
encouraging the development of 21st Century skills. Of course, your students
may also need time to adjust to this new way of learning. However, they will soon
begin to feel empowered to think more critically, to ask questions and seek
answers, and to express themselves creatively. Most importantly, their
communication skills will become much stronger as a result, which always
remains our main objective!
5. What activities can help learners entrance their 21st century skills?
We hear a lot about how important it is for today’s students to develop their 21st
century skills, in addition to what are often referred to as ‘the basics’. In fact, the 4Cs of
Communication, Collaboration, Critical Thinking and Creativity are often described as
the ‘new basics’. These are the skills, dispositions and attitudes that our students will
need to thrive in their future lives of work and play. At Makers Empire, we believe that
3D design and printing can help students develop these vital new basics. Here are 12 of
our favourite ways of making that happen:
Communication
-Sharing thoughts, ideas, questions and solutions in powerful ways.
1. Ask students to show their understanding of a concept or idea using Makers
Empire’s 3D design software. How can they communicate the concept of ‘a
quarter’ or ‘trust’ or ‘bias’ or ‘animal adaptations’?
2. Have students explain the processes they followed while designing in 3D.
What steps did they take? What design decisions did they make?
iPad showing Makers Empire 3D design app bedroom design and comments by
users
3. Encourage students to provide constructive feedback to help other students
improve their designs. How might they use the comments feature in Makers
Empire to do this?
Collaboration
-Achieving shared goals with others. Thinking together and harnessing the ideas, skills
and expertise of the group.
4. Provide opportunities for students to work on collaborative projects where
each student takes responsibility for an aspect of a larger group project. For example,
students at St Michael’s College worked in groups to create an awesome space station.
Each student was responsible for the design of a particular element of the space station
and for making sure this element fitted with the overall designs.
5. Provide opportunities for students to work collaboratively on solving real-world
problems. In this example from Stephen’s School, the students worked together to come
up with an effective solution to help their teacher’s toddler, who has cerebral palsy.
6. Set up design challenges where students work together on the same design.
We’ve seen some great challenges where each student adds a new element to a design.
Designs are ‘passed around’ until the end result has been contributed to by everyone in
the group.
Critical Thinking
-Looking at problems in new ways, making smart decisions and making connections to
other subjects and ideas.
7. Present students with real-world scenarios and ask them to identify possible
issues or problems. By positioning students as problem seekers and problem finders we
are encouraging them to think critically when they are identifying needs and
opportunities.
8. Develop a class question wall with student-generated questions to guide their
thinking when they are designing. E.g Is there a better way to…?, How might I make this
stronger?
9. Support students to develop criteria for success for their design projects and
use these to evaluate and improve the designs and solutions they develop.
Creativity
Generating and testing new ideas. Being innovative, inventive and enterprising.
10. Provide open-ended design challenges to encourage creativity. e.g. Design a
better way to eat spaghetti or create your dream house.
11. Add constraints to design challenges to encourage students to come up with
new ideas and alternative ways to solve problems. e.g. The dream house must use
exactly 100 blocks or the spaghetti solution must include a cog.
12. Encourage students to come up with as many ideas as they can before
selecting an idea for a designed solution.