Saturday, October 30, 2010

School year in Poland


Hi,

We are Zuzia and Sara. We are 11 years old and we go to Szkoła Podstawowa nr 9 in Dzierżoniów, Poland.

We want to write you about the school year in Poland.

The school year has got two terms.

We start school year and the first term on 1st September and finish at the end of January.

We have about 2 weeks holiday at Christmas (from 22nd December to the first work day in January). There are two bank holidays in November: 1st (All Saints' Day) and 11th (Independence Day).

The second term we start at the beginning of February and we have two weeks of winter holiday. This year we have it in the second half of February. It depends on voivoidship we are in.

At Easter we have 6 days holiday and another two bank holidays in May: 1st and 3rd (Constitution Day) and one more in June: Corpus Christi.

The school year finishes on the last Friday of June. This year we finish it on Wednesday 22nd June because of the Corpus Christi on Thursday 23rd June.

We have about 9-10 weeks of summer holiday. What about you?

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Europe, the discovery of our continent

LEARNING ABOUT EUROPE



QUESTIONARY


Wednesday, October 27, 2010

OUR TOWN: EL TOBOSO










Hello .                                                             
Our town is  El Toboso.
It is a small Village.
It has got 2.500 inhabitants.
It´s got a lot of Churchs.
It is Known by Dulcinea,
the Don Qixote`s love.

It's a place full of culture and tradiction.









Written by Sandra and Javier.                                                                               

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

School at Berlin, Germany



Organisation of school is different in different areas of Germany.
At Berlin Primary-School starts at the age of five and a half years and children finish Primaryschool at the age of 11/12 years. This year there are a lot of new organisations at Berlin.
After Primary-School the children go to "Gymnasium" or to "Sekundarschule" or to "Gemeinschaftsschule" till the age of 14/15 years. Then they make some examinations to get "Mittlerer Schulabschluss (MSA)".

If they are good at school they continue till the age of 18/19 years to get the "Abitur", and then they are able to visit different Universities to get "Bachelor" and later "Master".

But they can also go to other schools for learning a trade and if they learn very good they can make other examinations to get the possibility to visit different Universities.

OUR CLASSROOM










We are the children of 5th class. We are thirteen children and we like working in groups.
School Miguel de Cervantes. El Toboso, Spain


We don´t study too much, and our teacher is angry wtih us.

But we promise her that we are going to study more.

Written by Gema

LEARNING AFTER SCHOOL

In El Toboso, Spain:

There are a lot of extra activities in the afternoon,
after ordinary clases:








 -"English Blog  "Children and Reportes"
- "Creative Writing"
- "Grmes and Sports"
- "Playing with the computer"
- "Telling stories"
- "Hand crafts"
- "Músic"
"Funny language"
-" Numbers and letters"
-" Funy library"









Written by Bryan.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

STUDYING IN SPAIN

If you want to study in Spain you must know:
The Spanish educational system is currently based in the division between public school and private school. Education is compulsory form 6 to 16 years old.


The levels are:

-Infant Education:
  • Level : 1: 0-3years old.
  • Level:  2: 3-6 years old.
-Primary Education:
  • 1st cycle : 6-8 years old.
                          1st - 2nd levels.
  • 2 nd cycle: 8-10 years old.
                            3 rd-4th levels.
  • 3 rd cycle:10-12 years old.
                            5 th-6th  levels.

  -Secondary Education: 12-16 years old.
  • 1st level.
  • 2 nd level.
  • 3 rd level.
  • 4 th level.
If you finish secondary Education you have got three options:

-Bachillerato: 16-18. or
-Formative Cycles.
-Laboral World.

If you finish Bachillerato or Formative cycles you have got two options:
- University or
- High formative cycles. 
- Laboral World.



Written by Nazaret and Gema, from Spain.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

At the discovery of the LIM

This year in our class we have a LIM for us all. By using this tool, our lessons are more interesting and enjoyable. The use of images, video, text allows us all to better learn and understand more easily what the teacher says. The LIM also allows us to work together in a task in promoting dialogue and cooperation between us. At this time we are discovering thow to use the LIM to write, draw, watch a video, do the games.


Wednesday, October 6, 2010

project of arts

We have finished a project of arts. Theme: Respect.
60 children of two primary schools have spoken about respect and later they created pictures with their own thoughts of the theme.
Then they started with big pictures and instruction of two artists, which have created this project. Elder pupils of a Sekundarschule ( next school after primary school is finished, for pupils which are 12, 13, 14, 15 or 16 years old) colorated the big walls and children of our primary schools decorated the walls with their drawings.
At the end: a great celebration with important people like the burgomaster.

Thanks to my pupils for their great work and their patience to finish all the pictures. It was great!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

World Teachers’ Day, October 5



World Teachers’ Day, held annually on 5 October since 1994, commemorates the anniversary of the signing in 1966 of the UNESCO/ILO Recommendation Concerning the Status of Teachers. It is an occasion to celebrate the essential role of teachers in providing quality education at all levels.
With a group of teachers participating in "The school that works", a community of practice founded by Gianni Marconi to allow communication between teachers of various italian regions and contribute, through
cooperation, sharing, communication, improving the education and the learning of students, we have developed the Manifesto of the teachers presented for the first time on July 2 to LSCFCamp in Venice.
The Manifesto of teachers is a kind of Hippocratic Oath (13 points) in which it outlined the commitment of the teacher to encourage personal development, social and cognitive development of students, to make the
school a genuine opportunity to prepare young people to their future and social development.
A "manifesto" which also touches on the role of the teacher the same:
passion for their work, the tension and commitment to continuous improvement, the desire to base their role on the emphaty and no authority.
A powerful work of synthesis with the aim of providing a model of the class teacher and school teacher to the challenges of the times, a challenging model to pursue, so many challenges to abandon the certainties of the past. To keep alive the school and not to die as a teacher.

Teachers'Manifesto authority.


1. I love teaching. I love learning. This is why I’m a teacher.
2. I will teach to promote in every way a sense of wonder at the world, which is inborn in my students. I will teach in order to be overtaken by them. When I am no longer able to do that, I will release my position to one of them.
3. I will teach by demonstration and example. The acknowledgment of my mistakes will enlighten my way.
4. I will join my students in their discovery of the world around them, favouring and encouraging among each of them curiosity and inquisitiveness, questions and passion.
5. Being unable to convey truth to my students, my endeavour will be to get them to live in its pursuit
6. I will foster in my students the commitment and will power to constantly improve themselves and to never give up when faced with difficulties. I, too, will keep updating my training and knowledge.
7. I will strive to make the school the world, and not a prison.
8. I will not convey to my students fixed, pre-packaged ideas. I will be lead by my world view but it will never be a law for them. Questioning and constructive criticism will be the pillars of my educational action.
9. I will promote studying for life and oppose studying for grades.
10. I will gather assessment factors, and refuse simplistic and mechanical approaches that do not take into account the starting point, progress, commitment and overall improvement of each student.
11. I will fight for the school to be everybody’s school, a school where each student can learn according to his/her own pace and path. I will see that my students choose me rather than put up with me.
12. I will help my students light up the future through reading about the past and fully living in the present. I will help them live in the world as it is, but not tolerate leaving it as it is.
13. I will remain faithful to these tenets at all moments of my educational activity, ready to face and overcome all formal and bureaucratic obstacles in my path.
The Manifesto for teachers may be signed by all those who believe in the role of the school and the role of teachers (teachers, administrators,school staff, parents, students) at the following link
http://www.manifestoinsegnanti.it/

HEALTHY BREAKFAST


 We have a healthy breakfast in our school, "Miguel de Cervantes", El Toboso (Spain). 
 This is our breakfast calendar:

Monday: Juice and biscuits

Tuesday: Sandwich 

Wednesday: Milk Products


Thursday: Fruit

Friday: Mum... Today I choose! 






Studying in Italy

If you want to study in Italy you must know:
The Italian educational system is currently based on the division between public school (which is based on subsidies) and private school. The levels are :
– Kindergarten (3-5 years)
– Primary school (6-10 years)
– Middle School (11-13 years)
– High school (14-18 years).
The school is compulsory until the completion the first two years of high school.

As part of high school, distinguished schools (classic, scientific, educational, artistic,language) and technical institutes professional.
After the age of 16, tuition remains free, although an enrolment tax ( tasse d’iscrizione) of around €20 is payable at the beginning of each school year. Enrolment tax increases to around €130 for university students. University education is free for foreign students and there are no quotas, though non-EU students require a student visa.

Qualifications in Italy


 

Qualifications are of great importance in Italy, where very few school-leavers go directly into employment without studying for a diploma, degree or professional qualification, and Italy boasts one of the highest proportions of university students in the world. Despite this, the percentage of students who graduate from university or even obtain secondary school qualifications is low compared with other EU countries.
Two reasons for this are the traditional (and rigorous) nature of education in Italy and the number of years (seven or eight) most students require to complete a degree, which leads to a high dropout rate: only one in three who enrol graduate. However, due to its demanding curricula, Italy considers its school and university qualifications to be of a higher standard than those of many other countries, with the consequence that educational qualifications gained abroad aren’t necessarily recognised in Italy or given equal status.

Curricula and examinations

 

Both the curricula and examinations in state schools are set by the Ministry of Education (Ministero della Pubblica Istruzione), in consultation with an advisory body, the National Education Council. The Ministry is represented at regional level by school ‘superintendencies’ ( sovrintendenze scolastiche). Italy is divided into scholastic districts ( distretti) administered by provincial local education offices. In theory, this centralised system should ensure the same standard of education throughout the country, although in practice there’s a considerable disparity between the quality of education in northern and southern schools, the former being regarded as far superior. (The adult illiteracy rate is officially around 1.5 per cent, although unofficially it’s much higher and almost exclusively limited to the south.)
Recent years have seen a progressive devolvement of responsibility to regional education authorities and schools, one effect of which has been to give schools a (limited) degree of freedom in setting their own curricula. Since September 2000, state schools have also been responsible for managing their own finances.
As educational courses at school and university are largely determined by the Ministry of Education, they aren’t tailored to the needs of individual students. At university a certain amount of choice can be exercised through a student’s individual study plan, but a frequent criticism is that the structure of courses does little to encourage self-expression and personal development. Teaching methods at all levels are often criticised as old-fashioned, with over-emphasis on learning by rote.
The rigid adherence to a core curriculum (with textbooks often standardised) in state schools helps to ensure uniform standards but can be hard on slow learners. The need to introduce more flexible study programmes in schools has long been a subject of debate in Italy, and the last ten years have seen a gradual broadening of the school curriculum, partly through the introduction of experimental classes ( classi sperimentali) based on students’ own choices and needs.

Evaluations in Italy

 

A child’s progress is based on annual evaluations, which in turn are based on tests and continuous assessment. Written tests are held each term and oral tests ( interrogazioni) at the discretion of the teacher. This can come as something of a shock to foreign children who aren’t used to responding orally and who come from a system where greater emphasis is given to written work and exams. At university, the emphasis on oral examinations, as opposed to written ones, is even more marked, the majority of exams being conducted orally.
The need to obtain a satisfactory level in all subjects each year, as well as passing exams at the end of each school cycle, means that Italian children must study hard from an early age. From primary school onwards, children are expected to do regular homework ( compiti), the amount increasing with the age of the child (parents often set aside a considerable amount of time to help children with their homework).
Information about Italian schools and universities can be obtained from Italian embassies and consulates abroad, from foreign embassies and from educational departments within the Ministry of Education, Ministero della Pubblica Istruzione, Viale Trastevere, 76/a, 00153 Rome (06-58491, www.pubblica.istruzione.it ). Local school information can be obtained from town halls ( comune) and from local education offices ( provveditorati), as well as from the Ministry’s website, which lists the names and addresses of all state schools and many private schools by province (click on Anagrafe Scolastica). The Italy Schools page of the Worldwide Classroom’s online directory (www.worldwide.edu/ci/italy/index.html ) lists many educational institutions accepting both Italian and foreign students, including language schools, universities, private institutes and international schools.



Saturday, October 2, 2010

safety on the street


Streetpolice and ADAC (german automobile club) have demonstrated, how long is the way before a car can be stopped and what will happen, if a person (it was a dummy) cross the street and the car couldn't be stopped in time.
(Heinrich-Zille-Grundschule, Berlin, Germany)