Unlockinga world of potential
Foreword
Our world is moving quickly: no sooner is one challenge
overcome and celebrated than another is upon us and
demanding our energy and attention. While the security of
vulnerable populations is under threat, digital channels are
simultaneously offering possibilities for democratic
engagement as never before.
Technologies can create new, but also
supplant, existing labour markets with
astounding pace. It is diffi cult to know
how best to serve the UK and our partners
across the world in such complex and
emergent times. The future may be
uncertain, but creativity abounds and
opportunity and commitment to shared
goals are evident globally as never before
– and young people are at the heart of it.
As educators, our responsibility is to
prepare every young person for their
future in the best possible way. Qualifi cations
and knowledge remain important but are
no longer enough to secure a successful
future. Rather, young people need and
deserve the opportunity to grow into
well-rounded, creative and critical citizens,
ready to engage with labour markets and
shape the future for themselves and future
generations. Our work in schools directly
addresses these issues through contribution
to education discourse, system development
and provision of support services for
teachers and leaders. Within these work
areas, we have brought together
international thinking and practice in core
skills and competencies – we believe this
is the most productive way to invest in our
shared future.
We aim to increase the number of young
people globally with access to these
intrinsic and integrating skills. Through
our work with teachers and school leaders,
we aim to empower individual educators to
make informed decisions about how they
can best provide for their pupils. We know
there is not one answer – no single
template for success – but we believe
that developing young people’s core skills
will enable them to engage critically with
the world around them and this is worthy
of our investment. And the British Council
is uniquely placed to deliver on that
investment: we have centres in over 100
countries worldwide and our track record
in international educational transformation
is second to none.
And so, with our partners and collaborators,
I am pleased to present this publication
which precedes new and exciting projects
and programmes all over the world. With
mutual respect, commitment and agency,
I am certain we can enable more young
people to play their part in a successful
and prosperous future global community.
Dr Jo Beall
Jo Beall joined the British Council and the
Executive Board in July 2011 as Director,
Education and Society, reporting to the
Chief Executive. Jo was formerly Deputy
Vice-Chancellor, University of Cape Town,
with responsibility for academic matters,
social responsiveness and external
relations, and the university’s international
strategy. A graduate of the London School
of Economics, Jo was formerly Professor
of Development Studies in the LSE’s
International Development Department,
which she directed between 2004
and 2007. During her academic career
Jo has published numerous books and
academic articles in the areas of gender
and social policy, urban governance and
development, and cities, confl ict and
state fragility. She has worked in Africa,
Asia and Latin America, undertaking
signifi cant research projects and advisory
work in Afghanistan, India, Pakistan
and South Africa. Her move to the
British Council signals her commitment
to education as a force for global good.
Jo is a Fellow of the Academy of Social
Sciences, a Member of the British
Academy’s South Asia Area Panel,
and Honorary Professor of the School
of Architecture and Planning at University
of Witwatersrand, South Africa, and will
be taking up the position of Chair of the
Board of Trustees at INASP later this year.
Introduction
Susan Douglas and Dr Björn Haßler
Every country in the world needs a high-quality, inclusive and
equitable school system 1 that supports young people to develop
the knowledge, skills and values to live and work in a globalised
economy and to contribute responsibly both locally and globally
‘We need to educate our children
for their future, not our past.’
Sir Arthur C Clarke
However, our education systems, and
the young people within them, face some
daunting challenges. While many children
remain out of school, 2 others are in
school but not learning the basics 3
or are intellectually disengaged from
that schooling. 4 Employers are demanding
higher-order cognitive skills from their
workforce, as opposed to the traditional
manual and lower-order cognitive skills.
If economies are to be successful in the long
term, young people need to be enabled to:
• generate and implement new ideas,
solutions and products
• use digital tools to enable knowledge
discovery, creation of resources and
communication
• apply their knowledge to solve
real-world problems. 5
In order to do so, there is growing consensus
that school systems need to be clear about
the purposes of education and develop
young people with core skills and
competencies that relate to the world
in which they are living and will live (often
known as 21st century skills or deep
learning skills 6), which include:
• ways of working: communication
and collaboration
• ways of thinking: critical thinking, problem
solving, creativity and innovation,
learning to learn and metacognition
• tools for working: information literacy,
information and communication
technology (ICT) literacy
• ways of living in the world: global
citizenship and civic responsibility,
including cultural awareness and
competence. 7
Whether you are a young person in Lagos
or Glasgow, Jakarta or Bogotá, accessing
education that supports the development
of academic mastery alongside the
acquisition of core skills such as these
will be crucial to your future success,
to the future and wellbeing of others
and to the prosperity of our global
society as a whole.
The British Council’s focus
Building therefore on the deep pedagogies
framework 8 and UNESCO’s transversal
skills, 9 and in consultation with a wide
range of stakeholders across our network,
the British Council is championing the
development of these core skills and
competencies by supporting teachers
to develop their pedagogy in the
following areas:
• Critical thinking and problem solving
– promoting self-directed thinking that
produces new and innovative ideas
and solves problems; refl ecting critically
on learning experiences and processes
and making effective decisions.
• Collaboration and communication
– fostering effective communication
(orally, and in writing); actively listening
to and engaging with others in diverse
and multi-lingual environments and
understanding verbal and non-verbal
communication; developing the ability
to work in diverse international teams,
including learning from and contributing
to the learning of others, assuming shared
responsibility, cooperating, leading,
delegating and compromising to produce
new and innovative ideas and solutions.
• Creativity and imagination – promoting
economic and social entrepreneurialism;
imagining and pursuing novel ideas,
judging value, developing innovation
and curiosity.
• Citizenship – developing active, globally
aware citizens who have the skills,
knowledge and motivation to address
issues of human and environmental
sustainability and work towards a
fairer world in a spirit of mutual respect
and open dialogue; developing an
understanding of what it means to be
a citizen of their own country and their
own country’s values.
• Digital literacy – developing the skills
to discover, acquire and communicate
knowledge and information in a
globalised economy; using technology
to reinforce, extend and deepen learning
through international collaboration.
• Student leadership and personal
development – recognising the
importance of honesty and empathy;
recognising others’ needs and safety;
fostering perseverance, resilience and
self-confidence; exploring leadership,
self-regulation and responsibility,
personal health and wellbeing, career
and life skills; learning to learn and
life-long learning.
In so doing, the British Council supports
the argument that equal importance be
given to the economic, social, cultural and
civic dimensions of learning, as recently
recalled and recontextualised in UNESCO’s
Rethinking Education. 10
Skills and knowledge
Developing pedagogy in relation to these
core skills cannot, however, come at the
expense of the development of knowledge
and, indeed, mastery. Knowledge and skills
are interwoven, and when students are
developing both simultaneously, they learn
more efficiently.
As Joe Kirby explains: ‘Knowledge and
skills are like a double helix, progressing
in tandem from surface learning to deep
learning… skill progression depends upon
knowledge acquisition.’ 11 The timing of the
introduction of core skills is therefore crucial
– students need surface knowledge first
(facts), and once they have mastered these,
teachers can phase in deep learning skills
that test the application and manipulation
of these facts and how students use them
to develop their skills.
Effective classroom practice
The way teachers implement the teaching of
such skills needs to focus on highly effective
techniques and teaching approaches.
Interactive learner-centred pedagogy will
therefore play an important role, and the
most effective approaches include: 12
• drawing on students’ backgrounds and
experiences in teaching (with a positive
attitude towards students)
• increasing metacognition, self-regulation
and self-directed learning
• responsive feedback to students
(including teacher feedback;
sustained and inclusive)
• collaborative learning (with mastery
learning and peer-support; peer
tutoring, pair and group work)
• lesson planning that incorporates
variety (that is, drawing on a variety
of teaching approaches)
• oral language interventions (interactive
questioning style, dialogue, language
learning and the use of local languages
and/or code switching)
• the use of learning materials (digital
and non-digital, local resources).
Professional development
Teachers acquire the practical ability to
teach these skills through carefully planned
teacher professional development which
has a strong relationship with teachers’
practice, and which seeks to create
supportive and reflective communities
of practice – John Hattie’s collective
efficacy. 13 Such professional development
programmes ideally support student
acquisition of the intended core skills.
The British Council is approaching the
development of these skills by advocating
a school-based professional development
model 14 based on teachers working together
across subjects and year groups 15 and
which lets teachers design the assessment
and measurement for student progress
based on what works best in their context.
This approach is supported by Darling-
Hammond and colleagues, who stress the
importance of professional development
being job-embedded 16 while also suggesting
that learning should be collaborative, active
and sustained. This is further emphasised
in research commissioned by the British
Council which stresses that professional
development be ‘recognised as an integral
part of teachers’ work’. 17 In addition,
research conducted in Sub-Saharan
Africa identifies that effective professional
development should: 18
• focus on classroom implementation,
be based on teachers’ existing
knowledge and offer opportunities
for practice in different contexts
• be long term and structured, involving several spased interactions
• encourage and create opportunities
for teachers to work together, to
improve and sustain their learning after
intensive training has been concluded
• develop teacher agency and leadership
• offer opportunities for modelling,
reflecting on teachers’ own practice,
being observed and receiving
high-quality feedback
• encourage and support teachers
in obtaining resources.
This aligns with a growing body of research
upon which our work in this area is based. 19
Sharing is a critical component of learning
communities, 20 and this structured
professional collaboration between diverse
groups that focuses on improved teaching in
core areas ultimately benefits both teachers
and young people. Effective programmes
can make an impact on student attainment
even in the most challenging circumstances.
In addition, teachers who are offered
opportunities to share and collaborate
internationally are able to learn from each
other across cultural contexts, further
informing effective practice. Barber and
colleagues 21 argue that successful innovation
will only occur if certain key conditions are
in place, including ensuring people have
the opportunity to work in diverse teams:
‘Top teams bring individuals with diverse
backgrounds and perspectives together
around a shared mission and set of values.’
The focus on professional development
should always be to support teachers in
raising student attainment, particularly
in an equitable and inclusive way, heeding
international commitment towards
Education for All. 22
The chapters to follow
In the following chapters, we will examine
the six core skills, offering a more detailed
definition of each one plus a rationale as to
its importance. Working with experts in the
field, the British Council has sought to apply
an evidence-based methodology that has
a strong relationship with teachers’ practice,
and which seeks to create supportive and
reflective communities of practice. Thus
the techniques and approaches outlined
above underpin each chapter.
Critical thinking and
problem solving
Luxury or necessity? Critical thinking and problem
solving should be at the core of learning for all
Artur Taevere
Even in a world where most children are still learning basic skills,
critical thinking and problem solving can and should be taught.
In a low-income community in South Delhi,
India, students are reading Harry Potter
and the Philosopher’s Stone. Today’s
discussion is about the potions master.
The teacher encourages students to think
independently. ‘I don’t want solutions
which the author gave you. I want you
to be thinking, to imagine a better solution.’
What happens next? It is visible that
students are thinking hard; they are trying
to come up with different answers. Deeper
learning is happening. You can see an
inspiring video of this classroom when you
search for ‘Learning to be a Superhero
Teach For India’ 23 on YouTube.
Learning to think critically and solve
problems is not easy, but classrooms like
this one suggest that all children are capable
of it. However, the reality in most schools
around the world is quite different. Even
if children were capable of critical thinking
and problem solving, they are currently
not mastering these skills. Only four out of
ten primary school students reach a basic
level of competence in numeracy, literacy
and science. 24 Given this reality, what is
the role of critical thinking and problem
solving? Can these skills be taught at all?
The meaning of critical thinking
and problem solving
Cognitive scientists suggest there are
three types of thinking: reasoning, making
judgments and decisions, and problem
solving. Critical thinking is a specific way
of thinking. This means that reasoning
may be uncritical or critical, and the same
applies for the other two types of thinking.
It is critical if it has three features:
Effective – critical thinking avoids
common mistakes such as only seeing
one side of an issue, discounting new
evidence when it conflicts with your
previously held views, reasoning from
passion rather than logic, and failing
to support statements with evidence.
Novel – critical thinking involves thinking
in new ways, not just remembering solutions
or situations that are similar enough to
guide you.
Self-directed – critical thinking involves
thinking independently, in a way that
is not overly controlled by anyone else,
such as a teacher. 26
When young people choose what to study,
they can think critically by considering
multiple perspectives: the opinion of family
members, possible job openings, wages
and graduation placement rates. A recent
international survey suggests that fewer
than half of young people have the
necessary knowledge about all of these
different perspectives. 27
Effective thinking also involves an open
mind: being open to new evidence even
if it is in conflict with one’s previously held
views. For example, some people think
that the disease HIV spreads by sharing
baths, towels or cutlery, or using the same
toilets or swimming pools. 28 In fact, none
of this is true. But discrimination continues
in many communities, because people’s
views are based on misinformation and
prejudices. How will people react when
they are presented with evidence on how
HIV really spreads? It is not easy to change
one’s mind, especially if the issue is very
emotional. That’s why the attitude of having
an open mind and being open to new
evidence needs to be practised at school,
so that it becomes a habit.
Is it important?
Critical thinking and problem solving may
sound like terms that a young philosophy
student would talk about at university,
but these are important skills for everyone.
One of the main reasons is an economic
one: it is about jobs and livelihoods.
Critical thinking enables people to make
better decisions and improve their
livelihood. This is vital for everyone.
For example, 78 per cent of people living
in poverty are in rural areas and are farmers.
Being able to think critically about different
approaches to water and grassland
management may boost productivity
and increase income. In some
communities, adopting different breeds
has grown milk yields by 65 per cent,
and better grassland management
has doubled the income of herders. 29
The economic argument has far-reaching
implications. Because of technological
change and productivity growth, the
nature of work is changing in agriculture
and many other industries. A growing
proportion of jobs now require teams
of people working together to solve
unique problems, as opposed to routine
problems. 30 However, relatively few
students learn these skills at school.
In most countries, fewer than one
in ten (15-year-old) students are able to
solve fairly complex problems creatively,
according to the PISA tests in 2012. 31
Creative problem solving
among 15 year olds
According to management consultants
McKinsey & Company, 75 million young
people around the world are unemployed,
and a shortfall of 85 million high- and
middle-skilled workers is expected by
2020. In a recent international survey,
four out of ten employers said a skills
shortage is a leading reason for entry-level
vacancies. Alongside general work ethic
and teamwork skills, problem solving
is among the skills that are highly
valued among employers – but where
the competence of new employees
does not meet expectations. 32
Critical thinking and problem solving are also
important for another reason, which goes
far beyond jobs. The purpose of education
is also about enabling learners to fulfil their
potential and make a positive contribution
to the world. Better critical thinking and
problem solving would enable both.
Can it be taught?
This brings us to the question: if critical
thinking and problem solving are
important, can these skills be taught?
General critical thinking programmes
have been relatively popular in the past.
These have often focused on learning
‘how to think’, but research suggests
that this approach usually brings about a
modest benefit. 33 Why? Critical thinking is
not a general skill; you always think about
something. Being able to think critically
about historical events does not mean that
the same person is able to think critically
about the nuances of farming. Both critical
thinking strategies and content knowledge
are needed. 34
Therefore, a more promising approach
involves integrating critical thinking into
subjects. Critical thinking strategies –
such as looking at an issue from multiple
perspectives – need to be made explicit
by the teacher, and practised extensively
by students.
All of the above can only be achieved if we
invest in high-quality professional learning
programmes for teachers – how to model
critical thinking, how to ask open questions,
and how to provide feedback that enables
students to solve non-routine problems.
Teachers need new skills and better tools
to meet these expectations. Curriculum
resources have to be redesigned with
critical thinking and problem solving in
mind. And finally, the focus of exams needs
to shift to evaluate these skills as well.
If students learn how to think critically
and solve problems, it would make a big
difference to their livelihood and happiness.
This is not a question of luxury.
Communication andcollaboration12Communication and collaboration:
a new signifi cance
Lynne Parmenter
All humans communicate. All humans collaborate.
Communication and collaboration are basic human survival skills.A newborn baby cries to communicate
hunger. People collaborate and co-operate
to do everything from farming to surgery
to driving safely through a city. So why
are collaboration and communication
the subject of so much attention now?
What is the difference between
communication and collaboration as
survival skills dating back to the earliest
humans, and communication and
collaboration as core skills now? This
paper examines communicative and
collaborative competence through
discussion of defi nitions, followed
by purposes, then approaches.
One of the clearest defi nitions of
communication and collaboration as core
skills is provided by the Partnership for
21st Century Learning. 35 Their defi nition
of communicating clearly states that it
requires effective listening and an ability
to communicate in different models
(oral, written,non-verbal) for a variety of
purposes, working confi dently in diverse
environments including multilingual contexts
and using technologies effectively. Their
defi nition of collaborating with others
involves the ability to work responsibly
and willingly in diverse teams to achieve
common goals, demonstrating respect for
the contributions of each group member,
as well as the ability to be fl exible and
make compromises when necessary.
These defi nitions indicate what is
necessary to cope in and contribute to
the economy and workplace of the 21st
century. However, communicative and
collaborative competence are more than
this. An important report from UNESCO,
known as the Delors Report, 36 laid out
a foundation for education beyond the
economic rationale, and one of its four
pillars was ‘learning to live together’, which
is fundamentally about communication
and collaboration. The goals of education
need to go beyond employability-focused
skills, to ‘address the… moral issues that
face the planet such as confl ict, inequality,
lack of resources, poverty and citizenship’. 37
Communication and collaboration are
at the heart of such education, alongside
other focus areas such as citizenship,
leadership and critical thinking.
There is tension in debates over the
development of skills through education.
Policies of the World Bank and OECD,
especially in previous decades,
have focused on skills for economic
competitiveness, with priorities such
as employability, productivity, economic
development and the improvement of
socio-economic indicators. An alternative
emphasis is on development of core skills
that enrich each individual and contribute
to improvements and greater equity in
society. The two purposes for developing
these skills are not mutually exclusive,
of course, and it is important to note that
the development of communication and
collaboration aligns with both purposes;
they are important for economic, humanistic
and social justice reasons, at local, national
and global levels.
In more concrete terms, communication
and collaboration are vital for the purposes
of obtaining, sharing, creating and
disseminating information, knowledge,
opinions, skills, values and ways of thinking
and seeing. Whether it is in the classroom,
in the playground, in the home, in the
neighbourhood, in a place of worship,
or through television and the internet,
children and young people spend a huge
amount of their time building and sharing
knowledge and experiences through these
core skills.
At another level, communication and
collaboration are also essential for dealing
with change and coping in society.
Education professionals who want to make
improvements in their classrooms, schools,
communities or systems can only do so
through the effective use of these skills
and to do so with all the people they work
with. They also have a responsibility to
develop these competencies among
young people because, as Fullan noted,
‘the ability to collaborate on both a small
and large scale is becoming one of the
core requisites of society’. 38 The importance
attached to this competence is refl ected
in the PISA 2015 Collaborative ProblemChildren (and adults) in today’s globalised world not
only need to be able to communicate and collaborate;
they also need to be prepared to do so interculturally,
in diverse and often multilingual settings.Solving Framework. 39 Additionally, as
societies and economies become ever
more interdependent, the ability to learn
and work in other languages is increasingly
important for effective communication.
Having discussed definitions and purposes
the next issue is to consider approaches
to the development of these core skills.
Approaches based on theories of social
constructivism, deriving from the work of
psychologist Lev Vygotsky, provide a solid
base for understanding how and why the
development of communicative and
collaborative competence should be
a focus in schools. These approaches
show that children learn through social
engagement with the teacher and with
each other. The role of the teacher here
is to scaffold children’s learning through
collaboration and communication, facilitating
children’s learning as they build their
knowledge, skills and experiences through
social interaction with others.
Going back to the question in the
introduction about how these core skills
differ from communication and collaboration
as human survival skills, the key concept
is diversity. Children (and adults) in today’s
globalised world not only need to be able
to communicate and collaborate; they also
need to be prepared to do so interculturally,
in diverse and often multilingual settings.
The role of languages and language
learning is central to this as it opens doors
to other cultures as well as providing tools
to enhance understanding of your own
language and culture.
Byram’s framework for conceptualising
and developing intercultural communicative
competence 40 suggests that this involves:
knowledge of self and others and of
interaction; the ability to discover, interpret
and relate information from another culture
(often through another language); the ability
to use that information and knowledge
effectively; the ability to interact and
mediate between cultures and languages,
and the possession of attitudes conducive
to intercultural competence; including
openness to otherness, relativising self,
and critical cultural awareness. Extending
this model to intercultural collaborative
competence, abilities such as working
together to share and create knowledge
also become paramount.
Using theories such as these, it becomes
possible to examine and understand ways
in which core skills can be practised in
schools and classrooms. One important
point here is to emphasise that
communication and collaboration skills
need to be embedded in the curriculum
and in classroom practice, not treated
as optional extras or discrete skills to be
squeezed into an already full timetable.
In conclusion, communication and
collaboration are core to the development
of every child as an individual, as a learner,
as a member of school, and as a citizen
of their community, nation and world.
Communicative and collaborative skills
are universal and have a history as long as
humans themselves, but as competencies
for today’s world, they have a new
significance in the context of globalisation,
diversity, and intercultural dependency
and co-existence.
Citizenship
What is education for citizenship?
Clive Belgeonne, Rob Unwin and Helen Griffi n
Education must fully assume its central role in helping people
to forge more just, peaceful, tolerant and inclusive societies.
It must give people the understanding, skills and values they
need to co-operate in resolving the interconnected challenges
of the 21st century.
Unpacking citizenship
As a contested concept, there are many
ways of defi ning citizenship. One helpful
model, developed by Osler and Starkey 42
sees it as a status, a feeling and a practice:
Status: Whatever the political regime in a
country, states generally seek to protect
citizens through laws and policing and
provide some collective benefi ts such
as education, healthcare and a justice
system. In return, citizens are generally
required to contribute to such benefi ts
through paying taxes and possibly through
jury or military service. The status of a
national as ‘citizen’ will have changed over
time and can be contrasted with that of
‘subject’ to an absolute power, where there
may be a greater emphasis on obedience,
rather than having rights and freedoms.
Feeling: Even when someone has legal
status as a citizen, they may not feel fully
included in a society because of disability,
gender, ethnicity, faith, language, social
class or caste, or sexuality. This can act
as a barrier to citizenship. Many members
of a nation may also feel an allegiance to
their communities that exist within, and
often also beyond, the boundaries of the
state. The Runnymede Trust suggests
that a multicultural country can be
reconceived as both a ‘community of
citizens’ and a ‘community of communities’
where individuals may be, for example
both British and Asian. 43
Practice: Active citizens know their rights
and freedoms and may act individually,
or collectively, to achieve a more inclusive
and sustainable society. This might include
raising public awareness, fundraising,
voting, lifestyle or consumer choices
and active campaigning.
Citizenship education
These features of citizenship, their
interrelationships, associated competences
and underpinning values can be explored
and developed in school.
Teaching and learning needs to take place:
• about citizenship – knowledge
and understanding
• for citizenship – which requires active
methods of learning by doing
• and also through citizenship in an
atmosphere which refl ects a concern for
the ideals and practice of citizenship. 45
Learning may be seen as a process of
‘dialogic encounters within a community
of learners who together pose problems,
enquire and seek solutions for change.’ 46
Values and a range of key concepts
related to citizenship can be explored and
audits used to evaluate citizenship across
the curriculum and school life. It should
also be recognised, however, that there
may be considerable challenges to
the teaching of citizenship within school
systems and structures that may not
always give voice or agency to students
– or even teachers.
What is education for citizenship?
Clive Belgeonne, Rob Unwin and Helen Griffi n
Education must fully assume its central role in helping people
to forge more just, peaceful, tolerant and inclusive societies.
It must give people the understanding, skills and values they
need to co-operate in resolving the interconnected challenges
of the 21st century.
As citizenship is as much about feeling and practice as
it is about status, it is also about behaviour and actions
Citizenship in a globalised world
Citizenship is usually defined as the status
of a person recognised under custom
or law as being a member of a state,
so is often seen as synonymous with
nationality. However, ‘Rapid globalisation
and modernisation are posing new and
demanding challenges to individuals
and societies alike. Increasingly diverse
and interconnected populations,
rapid technological change… and the
instantaneous availability of vast amounts
of information are just a few of the factors
contributing to these new demands.’ 47
People are being increasingly bound
together by common interests, and
a shared fate and ‘As a result humankind
is acquiring some of the broad features
of a political community.’ 48
Importance of values
As citizenship is as much about feeling
and practice as it is about status, it is also
about behaviour and actions. As the
diagram below shows, values are at the core
of what determine our attitudes which in
turn determine our behaviour and actions.
Values
Attitudes
Actions and
behaviours
The Schwartz Values Survey 49 identified
ten basic values recognised in cultures
around the world. The values ‘circumplex’
explains the dynamic relations between
values and shows two motivational
continua: self-enhancement versus
self-transcendence and openness
to change versus conservation. Individual
people and even countries may differ
in the importance that they attribute to
particular values, but the same structure
of opposition and compatibility between
values seems to apply universally. There
is evidence of the link between two of the
values – universalism and benevolence
– and people’s attitudes towards the
environment, human rights, difference,
and global poverty, 50 key issues for
citizenship in a globalised world.
Values also help to determine whether
one sees oneself as a citizen in a
globalised world, where some of the
key challenges may be human rights,
democracy, inequality and social justice
or as a ‘planetary creature’ 51 where
the challenges may also include
interdependence, sustainability and
our relationship with the biosphere.
An exploration of values and concepts is
central to understanding and implementing
citizenship education. It is useful to give
both teachers and students an opportunity
to identify some of their own values,
consider how these relate to those of their
countries and to explore those perceived
to be needed for active citizenship. Values
underlie what people are motivated to
take action on and exploring them critically
with school students can support their
understanding of what it means to be an
active citizen.
An ability to unpack and problematise
key concepts in relation to issues of
human and environmental sustainability
is important, as is an understanding of
how power operates and the ability to
use a range of techniques to generate
and select potential courses of action
to take in relation to such issues. These
skills help support young people in taking
informed and effective action as citizens.
Creativity and
imagination
Preparing children for the future: the essential
role of creativity and imagination in learning
Pat Cochrane
Creativity and imagination are essential human capacities.
They enable us to express thoughts, feelings and aspirations,
and help us to fashion our ever changing culture.
They underpin scientifi c and technological
development. They drive forward our
economies and social development
through entrepreneurship, and enable
us to contribute fully as citizens. In this
fast-changing world, the capacities
of creativity and imagination are more
crucial to our lives than ever before.
Education systems across the world are
increasingly recognising the importance
of preparing young people for the growing
challenges, uncertainties and complexities
they face. 52 For young people to thrive in
the future the curriculum needs to nurture
skills, capacities and habits of mind as well
as knowledge. 53 Our children are inheriting
a world characterised by increasing
inequality and competition within and
between countries, a world in which some
of the challenges we face, such as global
warming, a growing population, migration
and poverty, seem insurmountable. The
ability to imagine new ways of approaching
these challenges and to seek and craft
creative solutions is surely one of the most
important capacities we need to nurture
in our children and young people.
The economic imperative for creativity
has been made by business leaders across
the globe. They recognise that creativity
and imagination are essential ingredients
for enterprise, development and growth.
The ability to imagine, connect, create
and innovate is crucial to success. 54
The cultural imperative for creativity and
imagination is equally compelling. We need
to fi nd ways ‘to live together in a world which
is more dynamic, more nuanced, more
connected, more independent’ than
ever before. 55
There is also a personal imperative.
Creativity and imagination enable us each
to lead fulfi lled and satisfying lives. And
so, nurturing the creativity and imagination
of future generations is not a choice, but
a necessity.
It is possible to promote an environment
that favours creativity, innovation and
calculated risk-taking, whilst also focusing
on the acquisition of knowledge and the
promotion of excellence and high levels
of achievement. Both creativity and
imagination can be nurtured by schools,
but they can also be suppressed.
Repetitive and uninspired teaching can
reduce children’s capacity to be imaginative
and creative, particularly when there is an
over emphasis on testing and examinations.
However, there are schools and education
systems that are rising to the challenge and
making remarkable changes to practice
that unlock the creative and imaginative
capacities of our future citizens.
What do we mean by creativity in
learning? And why does it matter?
The term creativity is often strongly
associated with the arts, and creative
capacities are often nurtured through
arts learning. Mastery in the arts can free
students to explore and experiment. In a
context where there are no right or wrong
answers, imagination and experimentation
are encouraged. The arts support our ability
to introspect and fi nd personal meaning. 56
However, creativity has a vital role to play
across all areas of learning including science,
technology, engineering and maths (STEM)
subjects. When we are being creative we
are inquisitive; we wonder and question,
explore and investigate; we challenge
assumptions; we are persistent, sticking
with diffi culty, daring to be different and
tolerating uncertainty. We are imaginative,
collaborative and disciplined, and work
through challenges to create outcomes. 57
It is hard to imagine any aspect of life
where we do not draw on this repertoire
of capacities or habits of behaviour.
Therefore the imperative to nurture
creativity in schools is compellingWhat are the implications
for teachers’ practice?
Many teachers teach creatively. They use
imaginative and innovative approaches
to deliver the curriculum, to make learning
more interesting, exciting and effective
and provide memorable lessons.
Even so, in order to teach for creativity,
in other words, in ways that enable children
themselves to develop their creative
capacities, teachers need to change
their stance, to enable solutions and
ideas to emerge through questioning
and exploration.
Teachers can encourage a spirit of enquiry,
the generation of ideas and the use of
imagination by asking enabling questions
that encourage dialogue and exploration
such as ‘what if?’, ‘why?’, and ‘what would
happen if?’. Imagination can be encouraged
by extended role play, exploring issues from
a particular perspective and experimenting
with thoughts and options. Teachers can
model possibility thinking, 58 an important
element of creativity.
Shaping learning around a provocation,
a big question or a series of questions
is more likely to generate creative thinking
and behaviours than a curriculum which
focuses solely on the transfer of knowledge.
A teacher who is focused on developing
learners’ creativity will encourage their
students to work towards an outcome or
product. They will work with students to
co-construct the approaches used during
the lesson, and will support risk taking,
while ensuring challenge and rigour. 59
Such a transformation of the teacher’s role
requires effort, practice and careful planning.
It has implications for teacher training and
also their professional development.
What is the role of
leadership in schools?
School leaders have a key role in
encouraging and enabling their staff to
embrace creativity in both teaching and
in how they facilitate learning. Meeting
the challenge of a powerful drive for
raising standards, as well as promoting
the development of creativity, may at times
appear to be in tension. However, there
is increasing evidence that schools can,
and do, achieve both. 60
Leaders do more than promote creativity.
They sustain and nurture it in the way
that they provide opportunities for others,
license innovative practice, and model
the characteristics of creativity themselves.
One of these characteristics is using
imagination. School leaders’ ability to imagine
what might be, and share that with others,
is one of the most important contributions
they can make to promoting creativity
in their school.Wider research consistently highlights
a number of common leadership strategies
in generating creativity. When leaders and
staff feel creative, they:
• collaborate and explore which
approaches really work in the context
of their school and community
• review and reflect on their
teaching process
• control and take ownership
of their practice
• are innovative and ensure relevance
to learners
• enable teachers, pupils and others
to engage in calculated risk-taking
• envisage possibilities and differences,
and see these through. 61
Conclusion
Creativity and imagination are central
to the human condition. They are critical
to success in relation to real-world
challenges, whatever the context. If we are
serious about nurturing the creative and
imaginative capabilities of our students,
we need to think carefully about all
aspects of our education systems including
curriculum design, assessment of learning,
the culture of classrooms and schools
and the way in which teachers work.
Digital literacy
Why schools and teachers need to take action
Dr Tim Rudd
Digital technologies are rapidly becoming embedded in more
and more aspects of our daily lives. Our personal and social lives
are increasingly infl uenced by them, and our culture is constantly
being shaped by new developments.
Digital literacy skills, therefore, are becoming
increasingly important and essential skills
for both learning and employment, as well
as being vital in enabling us to function
effectively in an increasingly complex
and digitised world. As more and more
services and transactions occur online,
the need to ensure young people are
aware of the potential and pitfalls that
new technologies can bring becomes
more and more important.
Many major international organisations,
and a growing number of governments,
are also recognising the need to develop
digital literacy, with claims that such skills
will become ever more important in assuring
economic competitiveness in a globalised
world. They highlight that the need to
develop digitally literate citizens is necessary
so that future workforces have the skills
required to handle information and create
new resources, and also that individuals
become effective problem solvers who
can participate fully in all aspects of society.
Increasingly, employers will expect staff
to be able to use a range of digital tools
and programmes, make sense of complex
materials and information, and communicate
and collaborate using various tools and
media. Young people will also need to
develop the capabilities that will enable
them to search, analyse, create, edit and
remix digital resources.
Some commentators have also interpreted
digital literacy as the ability to operate digital
technologies in a safe and secure manner.
However, while e-safety and security are
essential aspects of digital literacy, this
does not represent the whole picture or
the breadth of the concept. Digital literacy
also includes the ability to understand how
digital tools can be used meaningfully,
and how they can be harnessed to solve
problems and create opportunities that
were not previously possible. Being digitally
literate also means individuals can fully
participate in democratic, economic and
social processes in informed, safe and
meaningful ways. It means that they can
critically assess the nature of information,
and consider how technology might be
harnessed to support and enhance society
and the environment.
So what does this mean for schools?
Developing digital literacy should be a
key area of concern and development for
schools, colleges, universities, teachers
and students themselves. However, it is
often assumed that young people are
already digitally literate and that teachers
can do little to help them enhance
their digital literacy skills. This is clearly
an over-generalisation at best and a
dangerous assumption at worst. Educators
have a crucial role to play in guiding,
supporting and modelling acceptable
practices, and in encouraging students
to think critically about digital technologies
and the opportunities and risks they present.
Educational institutions have a responsibility
to consider how they might support the
development of digital literacy among
students, and also how they can support
the professional development of teachers
so that they are better informed as to
how they might provide students with
appropriate guidance.
Many argue that digital literacy is now so
important that it has become a pre-requisite
for the development of other skills and
capabilities, which are crucial to an
individual’s life chances and necessary
for engaging successfully in a whole range
of activities we could not have foreseen
even a decade ago. Perhaps, therefore,
we should now consider digital literacy
as a core entitlement for young people.
‘One size fits all’ approaches would not be appropriate,
given the wide variations in technology, knowledge
and approaches between schools and across different
national and local contexts.
However, there is still a very long way
to go. Many countries, governments and
educational institutions still do not have
adequate strategies, policies, plans or
practices in place that are capable of
adequately developing digital literacy
skills among young people or educators.
There are currently many misunderstandings
about what digital literacy is. Many mistakenly
believe that digital literacy is merely the
practical ability to use digital technologies.
However, such narrow interpretations miss
the point and must be addressed. Being
able to use a tool tells us nothing about
the quality or the purpose of its use.
Technology can be and is used poorly,
and can be used to detrimental and
harmful effect. Moreover, as the availability
of different technologies, hardware, software
and applications increases, we need to
shift our emphasis to the quality of use and
how it can best be harnessed to support
learning and development, rather than
merely on the basic competences required
to use various tools, which themselves may
soon become obsolete or outdated.
The need to take action
The need to take action is why an increasing
number of international organisations now
consider digital literacy as one of a number
of core, interrelated skills for learning and
life in the 21st century. The most effective
training programmes are those designed
specifically to help practitioners and
school leaders gain a better understanding
of what digital literacy is, highlight how
it might be developed among students
and staff alike, and which support teachers
to conduct their own interventions and
enquiries in their own specific and unique
contexts. As digital literacy has no single
or precise definition, for the concept to
have power and meaning, it has to be
co-created and implemented. This helps
convey the nature of its meaning through
tangible changes in actions and practice.
Moreover, digital literacy should be viewed
as an evolving social practice whereby
learners, and staff, seek to develop new
skills, artefacts and outcomes from their
learning, and where practices change
regularly to best utilise new technological
developments. This is why better training
programmes emphasise the development
of individual interventions or enquiries
suited to the specific context of the teacher
and school. ‘One size fits all’ approaches
would not be appropriate, given the wide
variations in technology, knowledge and
approaches between schools and across
different national and local contexts.
Instead, the emphasis is on changing
teaching and professional development
practices by empowering teachers
to become leaders and deliver change
in their own schools. There is a need,
therefore, for training and resources that
help practitioners gain an understanding
of digital literacy from theory to practice,
and which help develop a greater awareness
of how digital literacy is related to wider
skills for life and learning in the 21st
century. Similarly, there is a need for
training programmes and projects that
also seek to challenge practitioners’
current thinking and practice, through
a process of understanding, planning,
implementing, reviewing and reflecting,
communicating and refining and
developing new practices, so that they
become active and powerful change
agents in their own contexts.
In considering digital literacy in its
broadest sense, we can better understand
the key skills teachers need to help students
develop, and which can be applied in various
knowledge, subject, and skills areas.
The active, creative and constructive
nature of learning and teaching are central
to digital literacy. In many cases, digital
literacy can be viewed as a means of
challenging existing thinking and practice,
leading to more innovative, creative, and,
in some cases, transformational learning
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