Categories
English News

We still remain open for you

Changes, even from distance it’s possible
Exchange, sharing, and interaction is the base for all the VET fields. The professional areas are allowing, for as many fields as possible, a wide proposition of continuous learning where young students want to learn can find personal fulfillment at an early age.

More than 3 billion people worldwide are confined dur to the COVID-19 pandemic. Factories and stores are closed all over the world, the streets are empty, and airports are closed. A dramatic situation which leads in fact to a drastic drop in human activities.

However, many sectors remain active, through telework or reduced teamwork, certain professional sectors suffer more than others from lack of manpower, over-staffing, endless days and for some, dangerous working conditions. For some it is completely impossible to practice. Despite this, many are preparing for post-confinement in order to be able to return to a life as we have always known.

The professional sector has been developing since the beginning of the quarantine, several methods such as home deliveries to be able to continue to exercise and not to shut down.

This Is why we invite you to be part of our European ENNE project, in order to create a network where professionals could meet and collaborate together in order to make their sector more attractive for the young people who are being formed.

Categories
English News

European Statistics Olympiad: a contest that changes outlooks

We present to you team CAYENNE_Z from the National High School in Finance and Business, Sofia! They won first place at the national round of the European Statistics Olympiad in 2020 in category A (10-12-grade pupils) among 185 teams from the country. The team members are: Borislav Harizanov, Martin Zahariev and Milosh Ristich, 10th-grade pupils, with mentor Elena Ingilizova, teacher of Economics. The same team also won second place last year, then in category B (8-9-grade pupils). Well, it seems this is not a matter of luck, but of continuous development and upgrade of knowledge and skills. This is exactly the purpose of this challenging and so different Olympiad! 

Usually at such contests young people have a few hours to demonstrate the knowledge they have already obtained, while the statistics contest last about 4 months, over which new competences are continuously accumulated. The Olympiad traditionally begins in January, and preliminary registration is necessary. It is for teams of one to three pupils and one teacher-mentor. 

The event is organized by Eurostat with support by the national statistics offices of the participating countries. The idea is to increase the statistics culture of teachers and pupils. It has been held in Bulgaria for three years now, and the number of participants is constantly growing. In 2020 they were 1090, twice more compared to 2018. At the NHSFE there has also been much greater interest this year. 

The Olympiad is carried out in two roundsnational and European. The national round is split into three stages. In the first of them, within two weeks, pupils had to do three tests with 10 questions each, on an online platform. The first one included questions on the theory of mathematics and statistics, the second one – on NSI data and surveys, and in the third test, the questions were related to a specific Eurostat publication. The tests of each team were different, and wrong answers resulted in deduction of points, so no one tried to guess. The result of tests contributes 25% in the final ranking. The NHSFB teams did very well and all went on to the second stage, where within 4 weeks they had to prepare presentations of up to 8 slides, representing an analysis of a database provided by NSI specifically for this purpose.  The pupils had to determine the survey purpose, to select suitable data and indicators and to formulate conclusions. A key criterion was presenting information in a convincing and accessible manner, with appropriate visualization means – graphs, tables, diagrams, etc. The presentations were evaluated by a jury and contributed 75% in the final ranking. CAYENNE_Z impressed the jury, because their presentation is the only one since 2018 which was awarded the maximum 100 points. 

The first 5 teams from each category went on to the final stage, where each team had to prepare two presentations. In one of them, pupils presented themselves, their team and their motivation for participation. The other was a preliminary project for filming a video on a topic set by Eurostat. This year it was “Young People’s Problems”. The presentations undergo online voting, defence in front of an audience, and evaluation by a jury. This is the stage we are presently at. The two winning teams – one in each category – will represent Bulgaria at the European round, where they fill film a video supported by official statistical data, with maximum duration 2 minutes. In it, the pupils should consider the situation in their country and compare it against the other EU states. We all hope that CAYENNE_Z, NHSFE’s team, will succeed! 

All teams have made a lot of effort, time and a lot of willingness are necessary to take part in such a contest. But why are pupils so motivated? The main reason is that it is a real challenge for them to analyse actual data and compete in the field of creativity and interpretation abilities. Their opinion is important, but so is the ability to present and defend it in an accurate and clear manner. Like the pupils themselves say, they also get to know many “magic tricks” working with Powerpoint, Excel and other software. They obtain skills to work with the NSI and Eurostat databases which are useful in all areas. And the award fund for the winners is very attractive!      

The contest also supports the development of teachers. Most of all because they get to know lots of additional information and the existing instruments for presentation thereof, which prompts them to apply innovative teaching method. Did you know, for instance, that there are statistics online games?  In them pupils (and the entire family) can save the world or develop the city they manage, by taking decisions based on official statistical data.  

And in conclusion: how is it possible to change outlooks on the world through an Olympiad? To begin with, its format helps the young people to learn a lot about themselves – about their strengths and weaknesses, as well as about working interactions with others – what makes them successful and what fails them. Work on a long-term project with several stages, each with deadlines and requiring different competences, certainly contributes to future work habits. The contest fully applies the Olympic principle that it is participation that matters, not ranking. Everyone wins, because them manage to develop critical thinking and information handling skills – search, analysis, and presentation – which are essential in our time. Those who have participated are much better aware what it means to have a position and support it with facts. The Olympiad creates young people who would hardly be convinced by “fake news”. The teams see the actual data but also understand the way they could be distorted in presentation, as well as the flaws of the methodology itself. The young people become citizens with better awareness, who follow and monitor public events and processes. Thus, through the perspective of statistics, which for many people is inconvenient, narrow and distorted, the teachers and pupils participating in the European Olympiad obtain a new, different, and clear view of life! 

For more information, you can visit the Olympiad’s website: 

nsi.bg/esc-2020

Categories
Italian news

Online Education: New challenges in crisis situation

Online Education, the experience of Upper Secondary Technical Vocational Institute ” F. Scarpellini” situated in Foligno (Italy).
The need of making use of distance learning, as a consequence of the school closure due to the current health emergency for the Coronavirus, caught us unprepared, disorientated, frightened, without any detailed and univocal
 set of instructions from the Ministry of Public Education. In such situation, the responsibility often lies with the School Manager.

According to MIUR estimates, 82% of the Italian Schools have experienced online learning for the very first time. 

We all started working hard and everyone, even the less experienced, took up the challenge and took action to continue to provide students with the educational activities, being aware that online learning does not have the same strong educational value of the face-to-face activities.   

By online learning we mean a set of training activities that is delivered via the internet to students using their home computers or other device (e.g. tablets, smartphones, audiovisual equipment).

Online learning (also known as FAD) is characterized by:

  • interactivity, i.e. the need to involve the learner, generally through learning by doing approach;
  • dynamism, i.e. the learner’s need to acquire new specific skills;
  • modularity, i.e. the possibility of organizing the contents of a course according to the training objectives and learner’s needs.

Having said that, it is clear that FAD involves abandoning traditional lesson, leaving the curriculum aside, creating new training contents and evaluating students’ performances using new and different types of criteria. We now focus on Learning Units and not by lesson hours. It is necessary to avoid long written essays and replace them with videos or diagrams, maps. We should plan the activities independently from the teaching hours required for the national curriculum. 

In short, a revolution that involves a difficult and fast remodulation. But no one has backed out, all of us, teachers and students, School Manager and all the School Staff is committed to face the emergency and keep working and changing. 

The preparation of our future generations has always been one of the most important challenges of our country and certainly, this experience is going to change education forever, integrating digital content and multimedia approach with traditional methods.

Categories
English News

ENNE Project, COVID-19: what are we living right now?

ENNE Project goes on during this moment where most of us are concerned due to Covid-19. Although everything is changing, this situation can offer new opportunities to improve our collaboration, knowledge and connections. 

The ENNE Project had to modify something to comply with current regulations that require to stay at home and go out only if strictly necessary. It’s clear that each country in Europe has implemented different measures to contain the spread of Covid-19, based on the situation they are living right now.
As you know, some countries, more than others, are experiencing tragic moments and, under the current conditions, no one knows when the situation will improve.

All we can do is to benefit from all the free digital tools offered by many platforms or from the applications that are available and useful for us. 

Institutes have organized themselves during these weeks to continue the school year. Students, directly from home, get connected to stay in touch with their teachers, using the online platforms dedicated to school education and training

Each of us is doing a great effort, some of us work in smart mode, while for other companies it was not possible and therefore they are actually closed

Everyone is discovering a new way of organizing their day, but together we can overcome this dramatic moment.

Stay at home and learn online!

Categories
Bulgarian news

How is the coronavirus affecting the Bulgarian schools?

Like elsewhere in the world the situation in Bulgaria is dynamic due to the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic. Bulgaria is one of the countries that introduced a strategic set of measures for limiting the coronavirus spread as soon as the first cases occurred in early March. The state emergency committee actively seeks and analyses good practices that worked around the world, transfers and adapts them for the national context. Every few days new or stricter measures are introduced.

All schools and kindergartens in the country are closed since 13th March in hopes of mitigating the spread of the coronavirus disease. Each school had the liberty to organize their distance learning process individually considering the available resources. Most schools have already used the support of different electronic platforms for synchronous and asynchronous learning most popular among which are: Shkolo – 1271 schools use the platform; Ucha.se – has more than 16 000 video lessons; Оffiсе 365 from Microsoft and G Suite from Google.

The Ministry of Education has created more than 865 000 profiles of all students and teachers in Miсrоsft Tеаms in order to facilitate the online learning process. The Ministry has also created a National electronic library for teachers available at:  e-learn.mon.bg.

The Library is organized as a repository of resources for e-learning such as author’s educational, didactic and methodological materials for working in electronic environment – video tutorials, training programs, innovative methodologies, tests, short films, exercises, entertaining pedagogy, presentations and especially projects related to self-study in the electronic environment. All shared materials should correspond to the national educational standards and curricula.

Two of the biggest publishing houses in the country announced that they would guarantee free access the electronic version of all textbooks they published for the grades 1-10. Electronic diaries, e-mails, social media are also used in order to provide students with instructions how to better prepare their self-learning activities and homework exercises. The school directors have the task to analyze the adapted for electronic education school programme and make sure that the workload for students from 1-7th grade is up to 6 hours per day and for 8-12 grades up to 7 hours per day (part of these hours are not spent in the electronic environment). Additional learning resources should be foreseen outside the planned lessons time.

The distance learning in Bulgaria will continue at least by 13 April 2020. For the moment, although students perform tests they do not receive formal grades. Teachers are collecting data on the level of involvement and active participation of students, which may be used later in the formation of the final grades for the school year.

The role of the parents in the current situation is crucial. They should constantly keep in touch with the teachers; follow their instructions to the students and oversee their proper fulfilment. Parents should provide all essential conditions for productive e-learning environment: ensure a quiet place, equip the students with necessary technical devices such as tablet/laptop, headphones, microphone, good internet connection, etc. and should supervise their usage.

Categories
Italian news

Resources for students and teachers during coronavirus closures

I.S.S. “G. Penna” of Asti (Northern Italy) is making use of numerous online resources that learners can access to turn the coronavirus home isolation into a great learning experience. 

As a wide variety of free technology tools are available to support online education, the School is promoting online communication and interaction between teachers, students and parents though: 

  • Electronic class register;
  • Messaging Tools (e.g. Whatsapp);
  • Google Classroom: aimed to help organize day-to-day tasks, communication, and foster greater collaboration;
  • Edmodo: aimed to help teachers get started with distance learning.

Every week, our teachers prepare specific training material and resources to share with their classes and they also create and make video lectures.  The teachers schedule Meetings with Zoom Website, they use Zoom or Meet for remote and online learning.

They also benefit from the classroom app Socrative to review students’ understanding as well as monitor and evaluating the learning process.

Both students and teachers are very satisfied with online learning. The main weakness of online education is the internet connection, In fact, although the majority of students has internet access, the quality of the connection is bad and it may affect the learning process.  

Categories
Portuguese news

Education in Portugal during Corona Crisis

We all live a new reality. The new coronavirus is changing the world at an impressive speed. All members of society are trying to adapt to this new world. The most important goal right now is to prevent the spread of the virus, therefore we were asked to stay at home, protect ourselves and others and follow the instructions of the National Health Services.

One of the first measures taken by the Portuguese government to fight the spread of COVID-19 was to close all educational establishments in the country. Since March 16th, teachers and students are doing their best to keep classes going on, now at distance and using technologies and digital tools to support their activities.

Many parents are working from home, others had to stay at home, even if their jobs cannot be performed there, because they have to look after their children who had no school to go to.

The Ministry of Education has developed an Educational website, under the slogan – “We did not stop! We are ON to support the educational community, where they are sharing resources, digital tools and distance learning tutorials, but also a direct telephone contact and  motivational videos made by students to their pairs. 

The Portuguese educational communities are exploring the many tools available online in order to communicate with parents and students and, somehow, continue teaching and learning activities. Schools from our National Network are not different and some have shared their experience with us.

For instance, Francisco de Holanda secondary school is currently using text messages, group chats on WhatsApp and emails to communicate with students and parents. The school is also trying to continue some activities that were running during classes by allowing students to finish their work, clear up doubts and deliver their essays by email. The major problem is the lack of direct contact between teacher and student, which is crucial in the educational process. To get around this, they have been recording lectures in podcasts and/or video and sharing them on several platforms like Google Classroom, Moodle or Edmodo. They use ZOOM, WebEx and Skype to maintain a certain class regularity by doing videoconferencing. Practical and laboratory classes were replaced by works on simulators such as Fritzing, MultiSim, 123DCircuits, as well as other applications available.

Teachers provide study material, such as worksheets, notes, book references, educational media for students to do at home, but they also suggest books, movies, TV shows that students can enjoy by their own or together with their families.  

Similarly, the other schools are continuing their mission by reinforcing their online presence, by sharing interesting educational content by email or on their Facebook pages and websites.

The main concern of these schools is to keep common sense and balance in order to not increase the already existing social stress, resulting from this pandemic, and not to harm the students with fewer resources, less parental support and/or less access to technologies, which could cause social inequalities and, consequently, inequality in learning opportunities.

We are all living difficult times, but we are also becoming better human beings – Sharing more, collaborating more, helping more – “Divided we fight, but united we stand”, as the lyrics of this song says.

To all our friends,
Stay home, stay safe! Everything will be fine, soon.

Categories
Belgian news

COVID19: How we deal with you

For the past few days Belgium has been living in containment. We are not (yet) in complete containment, but we have been recommended to stay home as much as possible. The government has therefore taken the decision to close establishments and provide telework to certain sectors. As far as education is concerned, primary and secondary schools are open, but teachers do not give lessons. Schools remain open for children who have no choice but to come to school because the parents work in the medical sector, in supermarkets, police, education etc. Regarding the courses, in schools where there is an online platform, teachers and students continue their courses online.

But this is only in schools where students and parents come from a social middle class. The children all have internet and a computer at home. For many public schools, this is not the case, teachers send lessons by email, for those who have one, and others send it by mail. A much more critical situation in terms of equal opportunities.

Fortunately for the students, teachers are not allowed to give new subjects but mostly revision, so students will not be stuck on it. At least that is the case so far. Parents, students and faculty remain very concerned by this situation which is very close to the end of the year exams.

For Erasmus+ students abroad, they have all been repatriated. At the moment there is no more news on the situation. This is also the case for students doing their internship in Belgium. Students do not know if the exams and internships will be postponed, validated or cancelled.

We are therefore more in fear of the future than the present regarding the continuity of learning and teaching. Those measures put in place don’t really reassure and convince parents and students.

www.rtbf.be

Categories
English News

VET in Germany during the corona crisis

Decisive for the situation of VET students during the corona crisis in Germany is the dual VET system. Vocational education and training only partly takes place in VET schools. The practical training takes place in companies and the VET students get paid for working there. All schools in Germany are closed right now, including the VET schools.

Therefore, VET students are solely in their companies now. If the company is still able to work depends on the sector. The craft businesses are working, since they are often working in small teams. Especially important are the VET students in the health and social sector (e.g. child care workers, nurses, etc.), which can be of additional help in system-relevant institutions like children’s homes, care homes, hospitals, etc.

The German Trade Union Youth published important information for VET students regarding the current situation and what rights they have in terms of their education (e.g. exams, short-time working, quarantine of the company, etc.): jugend.dgb.de.

The VET schools are asked to digitize their materials and give tasks to the VET students, which they can either do at their company or at home. Many VET teachers send materials and tasks by e-mail. The VET training centre of the Leipzig public transport company provided their VET students with Microsoft Teams accounts for team chats, lessons and video conferences and uses Sharepoint to share data, documents, materials, etc. In addition, they use the offer of the company Christiani, a provider of technical education, who decided to open their online courses for VET students in electrical engineering and metal technology. Until the end of April VET students can temporarily use the full versions for free and learn basics in both fields: lernen.cristiani-digital.de.

This is an exception, since many online offers and trainings are intended for students and teachers of elementary or grammar schools. The German platform for education provides a good overview on these digital tools:
www.bildungsserver.de.

 

Categories
Italian news

The role of journalism in strengthening public awareness

Last January, students and teachers of the Upper Secondary Technical Vocational Institute “F. Scarpellini” – based in Foligno (Italy) – had the opportunity to meet the Italian journalist Marco Frittella to investigate into the role, potential and challenges of the Italian TV Journalism.
 
According to Mr. Frittella, journalist’s selection of sources play a key role, he also underlined that manipulation is a serious risk for journalists using social media.
The workshop was highly appreciated and seemed to be very useful for the participants.