E quem ensina os alunos a pensar e a saber ver as coisas de outro modo? e a pensar para além do óbvio? e a colocar questões, questionando-se a si próprio e às suas maneiras de ver as coisas? e quem o ajuda a ver para além das aparências?
A escola é, de facto, o local onde aprendemos a descobrir o mundo
Precisamos de inventar as Bibliotecas deste século. Estas deverão ser algo muito pouco estático, continuamente reinventadas, tecnologicamente avançadas e, sobretudo, ao serviço do utilizador.
segunda-feira, 19 de janeiro de 2015
472 - 1st In-Service Training Course – Lisbon, Portugal – September/October 2015

1st In-Service Training Course – Lisbon, Portugal – September/October 2015
The first of two In-Service Training Courses for the RECIPE project will be held in Lisbon, Portugal. The training course objectives are:
- To inform about and present the importance of centralized, coordinated actions (REC)
- To exchange experiences in how to prevent Early School Leaving and encourage to after-compulsory-education.
- To explore, develop and evaluate “best practice” from a number of European teachers, trainers, principals and policy makers
- To encourage and motivate course participants to include the European and international dimension in their future projects and actions plans for their local activities
- To demonstrate and sharing the best practice between RECIPE partners and the course participants.
During the course the participants will experience workshops, the RECIPE marked place, school visits, cultural events, sightseeing and more.
Download the brochure of the Course and the program below and register your interest today!
https://pt.scribd.com/doc/253021851/Program-RECIPE-Course-Portugal
https://pt.scribd.com/doc/253018014/RECIPE-European-Course-Leaflet
Need funding?
Under the new Erasmus+ programme, the Heads of Schools (and not individual teachers) will be able to organize several mobility activities for staff or teachers from your school/institution to attend Mobility Training courses abroad over a period of one OR two years through one grant application.
The school does not need to identify the courses in advance but this will help with the application as your Head will know whether the courses do address the needs of the teachers!In this new programme, the provider that is charge of receiving foreign adult education staff and offering them a programme of training activities is called a “partner”. This means that if you choose our course, in the new Erasmus+ we will become partners. Plase read the following Erasmus+ guide (click this LINK for the Eramus+ RECIPE Guide)
https://pt.scribd.com/doc/253021850/Erasmus-Guide-RECIPE
https://pt.scribd.com/doc/253021849/Erasmus-application-form-2015
Remember that it’s fundamental to apply for a PIC code!
All interested organizations must first register and provide their basic legal and financial data in the Unique Registration Facility (URF) of the European Commission’s Participant Portal. Once the registration in the Participant Portal is completed, the organization will obtain a nine-digit PIC number. The PIC is a unique identifier which enables the organisation to take advantage of on-line application forms.
Please, if you need more information don’t hesitate to contact us!
sábado, 17 de janeiro de 2015
470 - A escola é... o local onde aprendemos a descobrir o mundo I
terça-feira, 13 de janeiro de 2015
terça-feira, 6 de janeiro de 2015
468 - Does Your School Have a Teacher Librarian?
This advocacy film about California teacher librarians illustrates how we nurture student interests, integrate technology, teach information literacy, prepare students to be college and career ready, and can provide professional development to faculty and staff at our school sites and for our school districts. Can be used as an advocacy tool for all K-12 certified school librarians.
domingo, 4 de janeiro de 2015
467 - Why Librarians Remain Essential to Our Schools
Sense and Sensibility: Why Librarians Remain Essential to Our Schools
Historian, professor, education activist and author of Teaching US History Beyond the Textbook (2008)

In the broad constellation of professionals who make up
public schools, it is important to pause and acknowledge the forgotten
education professionals who aide and support teachers. These include the
librarians, nurses, social workers, learning specialists, and guidance
counselors. They contribute to the growth and development of our young
people but often find themselves left out of broader discussions about
the preservation of public education. They provide a range of critical
support and intervention frequently invisible to us. Most certainly,
their value has escaped the notice of so-called education reformers and
politicians. All too often, these champions of a "new order" have taken
aim at the forgotten teachers in their ever-expanding quest to cut
public school funding.
To be clear, budget and personnel cuts have
hurt the profession across the board. However, professionals in these
areas bear greater risk, given widespread misperceptions about the
essential services they provide that remain vital to public schools. As a
youngster, for instance, I benefitted from the expertise of a speech
pathologist in helping me overcome a minor speech impediment. Having the
problem addressed early in my education boosted my self-esteem and
ended years of torment at the hands of insensitive friends and
classmates. I would not have understood this as a significant moment of
formation in my academic and personal growth if not for countless recent
news stories about proposed cuts to these position in school districts
across the country.
Another equally hard hit position is that of
the school librarian. Fifty years ago, it was inconceivable to imagine
schools without appropriate library resources and the personnel to staff
them. The disparity in library facilities, for instance, helped civil
rights attorneys demonstrate the inherent inequality in segregated
schools. With the advent of the internet and digital resources in
particular, the flawed assumption surfaced that these positions are no
longer necessary. Librarians remain important conduits for student
support in ways that many might be surprised to learn. Contrary to
popular perception, librarians do more than curate collections of dusty
books; they teach critical research skills and often serve as the first
destination for young people on the road to quality research.
Librarians
know best that research in the digital landscape is often more
difficult to manage and navigate unless students receive the proper
guidance and training. As a former high school history teacher, I was
keenly aware of our library staff as a critical part of the
instructional team. This remains equally true as a college professor.
Although not always regarded as "teaching" in the conventional sense,
the ways in which librarians assist students may in fact be one of the
most authentic forms of instruction. Working with students on projects
generated by their unique interests, librarians help students to unlock
and decode the vast amount of information now at their fingertips.
A well-documented pool of research indicating the impact of librarians on student achievement exists. A 2011 Pennsylvania School Library Study,
for example, found that school library programs most meaningfully
affected students at risk. The same study determined that poor, minority
students with learning challenges were at least twice as likely to earn
"Advanced" writing scores when they had access to full-time librarians
as those without access to full-time librarians.
ler mais aqui
sábado, 3 de janeiro de 2015
466 - Literacia da informação
Ora aqui está um esquema muito simples sobre um modelo de literacia da informação (Big 6) para ser publicado e a seguir divulgado a toda uma escola. Como diz o acróstico inglês: Kiss - Keep it short and simple. Para quê arranjar esquemas complexos e complicados? (Esquema obtido aqui )
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