Title: TIGER%20LEAP%20PROGRAM
1 TIGER LEAP PROGRAM AS A
BEGINNING OF 21ST CENTURY EDUCATION
ENEL MÄGI Tiger
Leap Foundation
Conference e-Learning in Science and
Environmental Education
Tartu, October 1- 4, 2003
2INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY
SCHOOL - ISOLATED FROM SOCIETY
MOST INFORMATION ON SCHOOL FUNCTIONING
CONFIDENTIAL
TEACHER - WHOLE CLASS TEACHING, EVALUATES
STUDENT, PLACES LOW
EMPHASIS ON COMMUNICATION SKILLS
STUDENT - MOSTLY PASSIVE, LEARNS MOSTLY AT
SCHOOL, HARDLY ANY
TEAMWORK, TAKES QUESTIONS FROM BOOKS OR
TEACHERS, LEARNS ANSWERS TO
QUESTIONS, LOW INTEREST IN LEARNING
PARENT - HARDLY ACTIVELY INVOLVED IN LEARNING
PROCESS, NO STEERING OF INSTRUCTION, NO
LIFE-LONG LEARNING MODEL
3INFORMATION SOCIETY
SCHOOL - INTEGRATED IN SOCIETY
INFORMATION OPENLY AVAILABLE
TEACHER - HELPS STUDENTS FIND APPROPRIATE
INSTRUCTIONAL PATH, GUIDES
STUDENTS INDEPENDENT LEARNING,
HELPS STUDENT TO EVALUATE OWN PROGRESS,
PLACES HIGH EMPHASIS ON
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
STUDENT - MORE ACTIVE, LEARNS AT SCHOOL AND
OUTSIDE SCHOOL, MUCH
TEAMWORK, ASKS QUESTIONS, FINDS
ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS, HIGH INTEREST
PARENT - VERY ACTIVE IN LEARNING PROCESS,
CO-STEERING, PARENTS
PROVIDE MODEL
4ICT IN SCHOOLS AN OPPORTUNITY TO DIVERSIFY
AND ENRICH THE PEDAGOGICAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN
PUPILS, TEACHERS, PARENTS AND SCHOOL
ADMINISTRATION
5- INITIAL AIMS OF TIGER LEAP PROGRAM
- 1997-2001
- ICT INFRASTRUCTURE FOR SCHOOLS
- INTERNET CONNECTIVITY
- TEACHER IN-SERVICE TRAINING
- EDUCATIONAL SOFTWARE
6INFRASTRUCTURE
20 STUDENTS PER COMPUTER 7 TEACHERS PER
COMPUTER 1 HEADMASTER PER COMPUTER 98 OF
ALL THE COMPUTERS AT SCHOOLS CONNECTED TO
INTERNET
7(No Transcript)
8EDUCATIONAL SOFTWARE
- 100 DIFFERENT EDUCATIONAL SOFTWARE PROGRAMS
- 50 ORIGINAL ESTONIAN PROGRAMS IN MOST
- OF THE SUBJECTS
- TEACHERS NETGATE (WWW.KOOLIELU.EE) - NEWS,
- TEACHING MATERIALS, ARTICLES, CHAT
- VIRTUAL LEARNING ENVIRONMENT VIKO
9TEACHER IN-SERVICE TRAINING
10 250 EDUCATIONAL PROJECTS GLOBE MIKSIKE HELLO
SPRING CONCEPTUAL WEB BASED LEARNING MODELS
11TIGER LEAP PLUS PROGRAM 2001 - 2005
ICT COMPETENCIES VIRTUAL LEARNING SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT OF INFRASTRUCTURE COLLABORATION OF
ALL PARTIES INVOLVED
12ICT COMPETENCIES
FIXED FOR STUDENTS AND SUBJECT TEACHERS NOT
FIXED FOR SCHOOLMASTERS AND ADMINISTRATORS LACK
OF COMPETENCE TO EVALUATE THE ICT COMPETENCIES
OF TEACHERS
13PUPILS OPINIONS OF THEIR TEACHERS ICT SKILS
14PUPILS EVALUATION OF THEIR ICT COMPETENCE
15VIRTUAL LEARNING
HINDERED BY TRADITIONAL SCHOOL
ENVIRONMENT CURRICULUM OLD TEACHING METHODS
16SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF INFRASTRUCTURE
ICT IS NOT RELIABLE ICT IS VERY EXPENSIVE ICT
NEEDS CONSTANT UPGRADING
1720 THE COMPUTER
80 SOFTWARE INSTALLATION
CABLES INTERNET
CONNECTION TRAINING
TECHNICAL SUPPORT UPGRADE
USERS TIME
18COLLABORATION OF ALL PARTIES ENVOLVED
TEACHER TRAINERS AT UNIVERSITIES CURRICULUM
DEVELOPERS LOCAL MUNICIPALITIES SCHOOL
HEADMASTERS TEACHERS MINISTERY OF
EDUCATION SCHOOL INSPECTORS
19- The trends reveal a danger that the educational
- system will not be able to dictate its IT needs
- forcefully enough
- to the computer producers, who operate according
- to the principles of market economy,
- or to policy makers, for whom the preservation of
- the status quo seems to be more comfortable Â
20 21(No Transcript)
22 THANK YOU! WWW.TIIGRIHYPE.EE