Title: Module 6 21st Century Skills
1Module 6 - 21st Century Skills
2Objectives
- Discuss rationale for teaching and learning 21st
Century Skills - Provide process for looking more closely at
Iowas 21st Century Skills - Examine 21st Century instruction
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4Characteristics of the 21st Century Learner . .
.
- . . . will use technologies that havent been
invented - to do jobs that dont exist.
- . . . networked
- . . . multi-tasker
- . . . digitally literate
- . . . craves interactivity
- . . . strong visual-spatial skills
- . . . tethered to the Internet
- . . . wants to learn things that matter
- . . . wants to be challenged to reach own
conclusions
5Looking deeper at . . . . . . digital literacy
. . .
- information creation
- innovation
- activism
- global citizenship
- responsibility
- Born Digital Understanding the First
Generation of Digital Natives Palfrey and
Gasser, 2008 -
6Why 21st Century Skills?
- Growing consensus that schools need to be
accountable for more than basic academics. - Creativity is as important in education as
literacy, and we should treat it with the same
status. -Sir Ken Robinson, 2006 - The top 10 jobs for 2010 werent even created in
2004 - - Diana G. Oblinger, President
EDUCAUSE - Leads to reframing instructional practice
perhaps change structure of our schools -
7The Global Achievement Gap
- Our teens leave school equipped to work only in
the kinds of jobs that are fast disappearing from
the American economy. - Why even our best schools dont teach the new
survival skills our children need and what we
can do about it. - -Tony Wagner, 2008
- Harvard Graduate School of Education
8Seven Survival Skills for Teens Today(Global
Achievement Gap, 2008 by Tony Wagner)
- Critical thinking and problem-solving
- Collaboration
- Agility and adaptability
- Initiative and entrepreneurialism
- Effective oral and written communication
- Accessing and analyzing information
- Curiosity and imagination
9Connections in Iowa
- Integrating 21st century skills into teaching
and assessment, then, is not only an economic
imperative, driven by changes in the workforce,
but a vital aspect of improving student
learning. -
- Measuring Skills for the 21st
Century, 2008 - Silva
1021st Century Skills
- Iowa legislature defined 21st Century Skills as
- Financial literacy
- Health literacy
- Technology literacy
- Civic literacy
- Employability skills
- Essential concepts and skills are complex
- Will require a deep understanding by educators
- Structure of schooling will need to be
re-examined by all stakeholders
11Cross Walk Process 21st Century Skills Work
Teams
- Developed after thorough investigation
- Partnership for 21st Century Skills - 7th state
to join this initiative - enGauge - McRel
- SCANS - original report in 1990s
- Contextually related national standards
1221st Century Skills and Instruction
- Video clip The Blood Project
- 1. What 21st century skills are evident in this
example? - 2. What are students/teachers doing that
- supports 21st century learning?
- 3. What characteristics of effective
instruction are illustrated?
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14From video exampleInstruction for 21st Century
Skills
- Relevant to student outside the classroom
- Student is highly engaged
- Student has a choice and voice in his/her
learning - Student takes ownership for own learning
- Includes higher order thinking - creativity and
innovation - Learning tasks elicit evidence of learning
1521st Century Learners
- Video clip Dollars and Sense
- Math and Financial Literacy
- Charter School in Chicago
- 1. What 21st Century Skills essential concepts
and skill sets do you see? - What contributes to the level of student
engagement? - Which characteristics of effective instruction
are illustrated? - Think about possible connections to outcomes of
the implementation plan.
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17Supporting Instruction of 21st Century Skills
- Educator professional development
- 21st century instruction
- Authentic assessments
- Collaboration
- Among teachers and students
- Community
- High expectations
- Each and every student
- Educators
- Community
18Supporting Instruction of 21st Century
Skills (continued)
- Expect a changing school environment
- Project-based learning
- Time allocation
- Student ownership of learning
- Technology
- Tool for learning
- Breadth of options
- Community connections
19School wide classroom focus
District Focus
Classroom Focus
- Where are 21st Century Skills being addressing?
- At what depth are they being addressed?
- Which 21st Century Skills are not being
adequately addressed? - How might we restructure programs to ensure 21st
Century Skills are adequately addressed?
- What 21st Century Skills am I addressing in my
class? - At what depth are they being addressed?
- How do I know students are getting it?
- How do I restructure my class and instructional
activities to increase learning of the 21st
Century Skills?
20Some possibilities
- Lens of 21st Century Skills
- Using 21st Century Skills handouts
- Inventory
- Focus on Employability essential concepts
- Select a unit of study that is currently taught
- Explicit instruction/assumed understanding
- How is this assessed?
- Share findings from inventory
21Other questions to consider
- How will we operationalize the concepts embedded
in the 21st century skills? - What might we expect as evidence that students
have learned the skills? - How will our teachers collaborate to determine
alignment of learning experiences to these
skills? - To what depth (level of cognitive complexity)
will be expect the skills to be evidenced? Will
we need rubrics? Quadrant D lesson assessments?
22Some creative possibilities
- Identify creative approaches to ensure each and
every student in your school is learning the 21st
century skills. - Share out . . .
23Possibilities for incorporating 21st Century
Skills . . .
- Project based learning
- School-wide projects where students explore
passions - Internships
- Student driven action research projects
- Authentic service learning
- Creative alignment of educators
- Other . . . .
24A Final Thought . . .
- It is a world in which comfort with ideas and
abstractions is the passport to a good job, in
which creativity and innovation are the key to
the good life, in which high levels of education
- a very different kind of education than most of
us have had - are going to be the only security
there is. -
- -New Commission on the Skills of the American
Workforce, 2006
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