Escolar Documentos
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Country: Sweden
Partners present
Åsa Kajsdotter – SE
Åsa Hedlin Olsson - SE
Yulia Bazyukina - FI
Marja-Liisa Helenius - FI
Inês Messias - FI
Veronica Gelfgren - FI
Responsible All partner countries. Activity to be held by each partner in their institution for its
participants.
2 Lifelong learning
Topic 1
Using new technology for adult learning
Adult learners, due to their specific time, commitments and priorities differences make teaching for
them even more unique, specially when using new technology.
2. Creating a culture
1. Creating a safe, 3. Collaborating on
of empathy, respect,
welcoming learning the diagnosis of
approachability,
environment learning needs
authenticity
4. Collaborating on
5. Ensuring the
developing learning
practicality of all
objectives and in
learning activities
instructional planning
According to Karge et al. (2011) active learning may be one solution to provide students with opportunities to
apply their own background knowledge or prior experience. And online environments make optimal
environments, as they possibilitate preparing different paths regarding different learning styles, time and pace
of learning (LeNoue et al., 2011), they can be flexible to accommodate each learners’ characteristics, and
actually promotes active and proactive roles. The teacher only needs to prepare the tools and the content to
the tools in the correct way, in order for these to be the perfect environment for adult learners. Never forgetting
that a critical part of online course design must include Online Discussion groups, hence, potentially, OSN
tools, to promote highly collaborative, integrative, self-reflective and application-centered structured discussions
(Ke & Xie, 2009).
Topic 2
Lifelong learning
We can define lifelong learning as being all learning activity undertaken
throughout life, whether formal, informal, non-formal or natural; and with
the aim of improving knowledge, skills and competences, within a personal,
civic, social and/or employment-related perspective (Harvey, 2004; in
Loureiro, Messias and Barbas, 2012).
We have incorporated technology in our daily lives, we use it for the most basic
basic tasks, most of us have cell phones, tablets, computers, smart TVs, even our kitchen
appliances are now becoming smart! But most adults uses technology by routine.
At work we use emails, we write texts, at home we use social networks to stay in touch
with family and friends, we use phones to take pictures, and most of us probably register
their whole lives in social media.
However we seem to not be using all of this to learn. These digital skills we are learning are
nowadays necessary as students and as teachers, specially for lifelong learning.
These tools as full of learning potential, however most of us
choose not to use them to learn.
As Thorpe (2005) says: “the promise of the new media is just that a promise
or potential that can only be realised through skilled and creative design and
teaching, on the part of both the local tutor and the course team. (...) lack of
success in use of ICT may result as much from cultural differences in how
people expect to learn, as from any feature of the new media themselves.”
There are many ways to support lifelong learning in practice:
❖ participation in workshops
❖ training days
❖ training and informal learning opportunities
❖ language cafes for language learning
❖ self-learning applications and programs.
In 2017 the European Commission have published a working document to
create an European Reference Framework of Key Competencies for
Lifelong Learning, were they hilight 8 key competences:
3. Mathematical
1. Communication in the 2. Communication in competence and basic
4. Digital competence;
mother tongue; foreign languages; competences in science
and technology,