lead paper in australian council for educational leaders annual conference 2011

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Deep Conversations Across Boundaries: Learning Engagement in the Context of Global Citizenship Professor Cher Ping LIM 1 Oct 2010 – CCEAM & ACEL International Conference 2010

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Lim, C.P. (2010). Deep Conversations Across Boundaries: Learning Engagement in the Context of Global Citizenship. Invited Lead Paper at the 2010 Conference by the Commonwealth Council for Educational Administration and Management and the Australian Council for Educational Leaders: Hosting and Harvesting – Creating the Change We Wish to See in the World. Australia, Sydney: 28 Sep-1 Oct 2010.

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Page 1: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries: Learning Engagement in the Context of Global Citizenship

Professor Cher Ping LIM

1 Oct 2010 – CCEAM & ACEL International Conference 2010

Page 2: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

OVERVIEW

• Learning Engagement, Global Citizenships & Conversations Across Boundaries

• Case Studies in the Asia-Pacific – Conversations Across Boundaries

• Issues & Challenges

• Designing & Supporting Engaged Learning Environments – Empower, Enact & Engage

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 3: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Learning Engagement, Global Citizenships & Conversations Across Boundaries

Page 4: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Engagement is paramount for learning success; where engagement entails mindfulness, intrinsic motivation, cognitive effort and attention.

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 5: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Classroom activities in schools are often being driven by the implementation of curricular standards and standardized testing (Darling-Hammond, 2004)

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 6: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Harter (1980, 1981), in a series of studies, found that the intrinsic motivation of students for school steadily declined at statistically significant levels form grades three to nine. He treated intrinsic and extrinsic motivation as negatively correlated and credited the decline in intrinsic motivation to an increasing dependence on extrinsic motivators such as grades. More than a decade later, Lepper and colleagues (1997) showed that extrinsic and intrinsic motivation were not perfectly negatively correlated, and that in fact, in their study they found that both intrinsic and extrinsic motivation for school steadily declined in a statistically significant manner over grades three to nine.

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 7: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

By undervaluing the rich and complex processes of learning for engagement, classroom activities that require active inquiry and deep conceptual understanding may become scarce in schools.

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 8: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Globalisation is a complex and multidimensional phenomenon that has become a part of everyday life that complicates local, national and global boundaries and creates tension between local and global dynamics.

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 9: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

In such a new world order, our children and young people have to be prepared to be agents of change rather than just passive observers of world events.

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 10: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

By providing students with opportunities to critically examine local and global issues across boundaries (country-country or rural-urban) and act upon them, students are more likely to engage in the learning process and improve their learning outcomes.

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 11: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Case Studies in Asia-Pacific – Conversations Across Boundaries

Page 12: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

QUEST ATLANTIS: Singapore & Australia

Page 13: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 14: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

QUEST ATLANTIS: Singapore & Australia

Page 15: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

ISSUES & CHALLENGES

• Monologues vs Dialogues

• Academically At-Risk Students

• Time-Tabling

• Mono- vs Multi-modal Output

• Curriculum & Assessment

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 16: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

TON KHAO CHAO NA THAI: Thailand

Page 17: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

RICE OF THE THAI FARMERS: Thailand

Page 18: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

RICE OF THE THAI FARMERS: Thailand

Page 19: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

RICE OF THE THAI FARMERS: Thailand

Page 20: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

RICE OF THE THAI FARMERS: Thailand

Page 21: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

ISSUES & CHALLENGES

• Time, Space & Resource Constraints

• Parental and Community Support

• Links with Other Subject Areas

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 22: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

GAMING: Singapore

Page 23: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 24: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

ISSUES & CHALLENGES

• Attitude towards School

• Multiliteracies vs Traditional Literacy

• Metacognitive Competencies

• Student Empowerment? (Reproduction of existing power relations?)

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 25: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Designing & Supporting Engaged Learning Environments – Empower, Enact & Engage

Page 26: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

• Practitioner Research & Professional Learning: Developing Dispositions of Teachers and School Leaders to Support Technical and Pedagogical Competencies

• Partnerships: Building Internal and External Partnerships

• Assessment: Transforming Mode and Process of High Stake Examinations

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 27: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Conclusion

Page 28: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Facebook Account? (Pacitan, Indonesia)

Page 29: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Facebook Account? (Pacitan, Indonesia)

Page 30: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Students at Hogwarts question why their Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher is requiring that they sit and read a chapter in their textbook during each class. They discover that this is all she intends them to do the entire year. The students have begun to challenge her and she responds:  “Now, it is the view of the Ministry that a theoretical knowledge will be more than sufficient to get you through your examination, which, after all, is what school is all about. And your name is?” she added, staring at Parvati, whose hand had just shot up.

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

AN EXCERPT FROM HARRY PORTER

Page 31: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

“Parvati Patil, and isn’t there a practical bit in our Defense Against the Dark Arts O.W.L.? Aren’t we supposed to show that we can actually do the countercurses and things?”

“As long as you have studied the theory hard enough, there is no reason why you should not be able to perform the spells under carefully controlled examination conditions,” said Professor Umbridge dismissively. “Without ever practicing them before?” said Parvati incredulously. “Are you telling us that the first time we’ll ever get to do the spells will be during our exam?” “I repeat, as long as you have studied the theory hard enough—“ 

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 32: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

“And what good’s theory going to be in the real world?” said Harry loudly, his fist in the air again. Professor Umbridge looked up. “This is school, Mr. Potter, not the real world,” she said softly.  (Rowling, 2003, pp. 243-244)

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

Page 33: Lead Paper in Australian Council for Educational Leaders Annual Conference 2011

Cher Ping LIMProfessor of Curriculum & InstructionHong Kong Institute of Education

Honorary Professor of EducationEdith Cowan University

[email protected]

http://ied.academia.edu/CherPingLim/About

Deep Conversations Across Boundaries

The Hong Kong Institute of Education