THE OECD SCHOOLING FOR TOMORROW SfT PROJECT - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

THE OECD SCHOOLING FOR TOMORROW SfT PROJECT

Description:

Decision-making predominantly short-term despite education and learning being ... breaching the last bastion of national sovereignty (schooling) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:37
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: davidi1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: THE OECD SCHOOLING FOR TOMORROW SfT PROJECT


1
  • THE OECD SCHOOLING FOR TOMORROW (SfT) PROJECT
  • Approaches to Futures Thinking
  • to Enhance Strategy and Leadership
  • ETSA (European Teacher Student Association)
  • Feasibility Study Conference
  • Lublin, Poland - August 27th 2005
  • Francisco Benavides

2
Why the Need for Futures Thinking in Education?
  • Education decision-making increasingly complex
    the need for new approaches
  • Decision-making predominantly short-term despite
    education and learning being fundamental to
    long-term futures
  • But prediction/forecasting is notoriously
    inaccurate
  • The CERI GB underline need to compile existing
    tools and develop new ones for long-term thinking
    in policy and practice

3
The promise of futures thinking for leadership
and policy - Why do it?
  • It can
  • Create channels of dialogue and reflection in
    contribution to participatory governance
  • Build vision, leadership and innovation capacity
    at all levels
  • Enhance strategic policy formulation and
    implementation

4
Which Way Forward? What will Shape Future
Schooling?
  • Certain heavy trends often acknowledged e.g.
  • Ageing populations
  • Knowledge societies
  • Growing ubiquity of ICT in home, work etc.
  • Even with the familiar heavy trends there are
    big questions
  • what will they mean for schooling? Radical change
    or just new challenges?
  • Willingly embraced or forced adaptation?

5
Some Drivers in the Geo-political and
International Environment
  • Globalisation, growing international inequalities
    and migration
  • impact of intensifying diversity of student
    populations and values?
  • Changing governance declining central planning
    powers, more stakeholders, complex
    decision-making
  • coherent educational reform? Chaos? Markets? but
  • growing role of the trans/supra-national
    (Internet, EU/PISA, multi-nationals)
  • breaching the last bastion of national
    sovereignty (schooling)?

6
The Cultural and Values Environment
  • Individualism
  • personalisation or fragmentation?
  • New forms of social capital
  • flexible networks for informal learning?, stark
    inequalities and isolation?
  • Secular society or religious radicalism
  • a clear role for teachers and the school?

7
Factors Closer to Education Itself
  • The graduate labour market what prospects for
    teacher recruitment
  • (women/men ratio, shortage, international teacher
    labour market, minorities?...)
  • New forms of competence recognition - customised,
    international, employer-driven- schools become
    irrelevant or liberated to focus on teaching?

8
What might this add up to?The OECD schooling
scenarios
  • 1. ATTEMPTING TO MAINTAIN THE STATUS QUO
  • Bureaucratic School Systems Continue Scenario
  • 2. DIVERSE, DYNAMIC SCHOOLS AFTER ROOT-AND-BRANCH
    REFORM (Re-schooling)
  • "Schools as Focused Learning Organisations
    Scenario
  • "Schools as Core Social Centres Scenario
  • 3. PURSUIT OF ALTERNATIVES TO SCHOOLS - SYSTEMS
    DISBAND OR DISINTEGRATE (De-schooling)
  • Radical Extension of the Market Model Scenario
  • "Learning Networks and the Network Society"
    Scenario
  • Teacher Exodus and System Meltdown Scenario

9
The OECD Schooling Scenarios
  • 1. ATTEMPTING TO MAINTAIN THE STATUS QUO
  • Bureaucratic School Systems Continue Scenario

10
Bureaucratic School Systems Continue Scenario
EMPLOYERS ORGANISATIONS, UNIONS
TERTIARY EDUCATION
CULTURAL / RELIGIOUS GROUPS
SCHOOL
PARENTS
TEACHER
TEACHER
11
The teaching profession
  • Continuation of a distinct teacher corps
  • sometimes with civil service status
  • relatively strong unions and associations
  • intended to protect and promote teacher
    interests,
  • (teachers fears about change reinforcing this
    scenario)
  • Yet, professional status and rewards
  • are problematic in many countries
  • many teachers perceiving a loss of status
  • Important ambiguities
  • High-level professional status vs.
  • the image of teacher as worker.
  • The single teacher root of their individual
    autonomy vs.
  • obstacle new forms of collective
    organisation of teaching and learning

12
The OECD Schooling Scenarios
  • 2. DIVERSE, DYNAMIC SCHOOLS AFTER ROOT-AND-BRANCH
    REFORM (Re-schooling)
  • "Schools as Focused Learning Organisations
    Scenario
  • "Schools as Core Social Centres Scenario

13
"Schools as Focused Learning Organisations
Scenario
SCHOOL
SCHOOL
SCHOOL
LEARNER
INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES
TEACHER
PARENTS
LEARNING CONSULTANT
CULTURAL / RELIGIOUS GROUPS
TERTIARY EDUCATION
TEACHER PROFESSION, TRAINING
LEARNING COMPANIES
MEDIA / IT
EMPLOYERS ORGANISATIONS, UNIONS
ENTERPRISES
14
The teaching profession
  • Highly motivated
  • Favourable working conditions
  • High levels of RD
  • professional development
  • group activities, networking
  • mobility in and out of teaching
  • a high status profession with generous staffing
    levels
  • substantial degree of flexibility (in/out) and
    diversity of teacher careers

15
"Schools as Core Social Centres Scenario
COMMUNITY
COMMUNITY
SCHOOL
SCHOOL
CULTURAL / RELIGIOUS GROUPS
TERTIARY EDUCATION
LEARNER
TERTIARY EDUCATION
INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES
TEACHER
ENTERPRISES
LEARNING CONSULTANT
CULTURAL / RELIGIOUS GROUPS
PARENTS
TEACHER PROFESSION, TRAINING
LEARNING COMPANIES
MEDIA / IT
EMPLOYERS ORGANISATIONS, UNIONS
ENTERPRISES
16
The teaching profession
  • A core of high-status teaching professionals
  • with varied arrangements and conditions
  • but good rewards for all
  • Many others around the core
  • other professionals, community players, parents,
    organisations
  • Leadership more widely distributed and collective

17
The OECD Schooling Scenarios
  • 3. PURSUIT OF ALTERNATIVES TO SCHOOLS - SYSTEMS
    DISBAND OR DISINTEGRATE (De-schooling)
  • Radical Extension of the Market Model Scenario
  • "Learning Networks and the Network Society"
    Scenario
  • Teacher Exodus and System Meltdown Scenario

18
Radical Extension of the Market Model Scenario
TERTIARY EDUCATION
TEACHER DEVT CERT
LEARNING COMPANIES / CONSULTANT
SCHOOL
G O V E R N M E N T
INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES
SCHOOL
CULTURAL / RELIGIOUS GROUPS
FUNDING AGENCY
INDEPENDANT LEARNING CONSULTANT
ENTERPRISES
PRIVATE LEARNING COMPANIES
MEDIA / IT
19
Market Model Government Inequality?
TERTIARY EDUCATION
TEACHER DEVT CERT
LEARNING COMPANIES / CONSULTANT
SCHOOL
G O V E R N M E N T
INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES
SCHOOL
CULTURAL / RELIGIOUS GROUPS
FUNDING AGENCY
INDEPENDANT LEARNING CONSULTANT
ENTERPRISES
PRIVATE LEARNING COMPANIES
MEDIA / IT
20
The teaching profession
  • New learning professionals are created
  • public, private full-time, part-time
  • Flourishing training arrangements and
    accreditation spring up
  • great deal of innovation but
  • clear risks in teacher quality and variations
  • Teacher careers would match the diversity of the
    market itself
  • and indeed no longer a clear notion of a teacher
    career at all.
  • Increasing development of the international
    teacher market

21
Learning Networks and the Network Society
Scenario
TERTIARY EDUCATION
INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES
G O V E R N M E N T
LEARNER
PARENTS
LEARNER
PARENTS
LEARNER
LEARNER
LEARNER
LEARNER
CULTURAL / RELIGIOUS GROUPS
LEARNER
PARENTS
MEDIA / IT
LEARNER
LEARNER
EMPLOYERS ORGANISATIONS, UNIONS
ENTERPRISES
22
The teaching profession
  • Specific professionals called "teachers"
    disappear
  • Demarcations - between teacher and student,
    parent and teacher, education and community -
    blur and break down.
  • New learning professionals emerge.
  • Media and ICT companies become active in the
    learning networks
  • operating help-line home visits.

23
Bureaucratic School Systems Continue Scenario
Teacher Exodus and System Meltdown Scenario
EMPLOYERS ORGANISATIONS, UNIONS
TERTIARY EDUCATION
CULTURAL / RELIGIOUS GROUPS
SCHOOL
PARENTS
TEACHER
TEACHER
24
The teaching profession
  • In the beginning of the crises
  • In general rewards would increase in the drive to
    tackle shortages.
  • Distinctiveness of the teacher corps and role of
    unions/associations increase but established
    arrangements and career structures would erode
  • As the crisis gathers pace
  • conditions of teaching worsen
  • problems acute in the worst affected areas
  • efforts to bring trained, especially retired,
    teachers back into schools have disappointing
    results

25
The teaching profession
  • As the teacher exodus takes hold and the scale of
    the meltdown crisis is recognised, very
    different outcomes
  • At one extreme, a vicious circle of retrenchment
  • Conflict, and decline sets in, exacerbating the
    inequalities and problems further
  • At the other, radical innovation and change
  • different stakeholders joining forces behind
    far-reaching emergency strategies
  • More evolutionary responses could lie between the
    two extremes
  • Substantial difference to the position of
    teachers.

26
Perceptions about Scenario Desirability and
Probability
  • Educators from SfT events overwhelmingly support
    re-schooling.
  • But many believe systems still nearest to
    bureaucratic model, for some VERY close.
  • In general educators reject de-schooling not
    just as undesirable but even as unlikely -
    especially market models.
  • Perhaps too quickly is this an unhealthy
    preference for reassuring visions over
    uncomfortable possibilities?

27
What are we doing now?SfT enters a Third Phase
  • Phase One - analytical and methodological
    development building the scenarios, and
    parallel work on networks and innovation and on
    ICT.
  • Phase Two - operational and analytical. The
    inner-core countries work on futures thinking
    in action.
  • Phase Three - Building the Knowledge Base,
    Broadening Participation and Disseminating
    Results.

28
SfT Lines of Development and Analysis
  • Futures thinking in Action Building the
    knowledge base, broadening participation
  • Understanding Demand, Personalisation of Learning
    publications/future conference
  • Radical Innovations in Learning (the micro
    level - going beyond earlier studies on
    innovation, networks and ICT Mexico initiative)
  • Further Analysis of Trends, Driving Forces,
    Scenarios with university futures and wider
    OECD analysis

29
Schooling for Tomorrow questions
  • Deep forces, new trends new scenarios?
  • How to recongnize them? Incipients forces?
  • Inspiring models
  • Where to look for them? Esay to copy? Pertinent?
  • New partners
  • Teacher students
  • But also, NGOs?, companies?, churches?
  • How to get closer?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com