jefa de servicio de ordenación académica, documentación y evaluación de clm
TRANSCRIPT
Study Visit„The future begins today: educational and
professional guidance practices”
Botoșani
From 10th to 15th of October 2016
Mª Isabel Rodríguez Martín Head of a Department of Education: Evaluation and Academic Planning
CASTILLA-LA MANCHA SPAIN
HIGHLIGHTS Spain’s educational context
Students: • 100% enrolment in early childhood education • Comprehensive education until age 16 • Grade repetition• Enrolment in VET is lower than the OECD average • Dropout rates
Institutions: • Spanish learning environments positive • The ratio of students per teacher below the OECD average • Principals • Evaluation and assessment
Governance and funding:• Education objectives are aligned to EU 2020 priorities. • Most schooling decisions are taken at the regional level • Limited autonomy for individual schools
Key policy issues
• Spanish system-level policies such as grade repetition have the potential to impair equity and contribute to student dropout.
• High dropout and youth unemployment rates : efforts to consolidate basic skills and better match labour market needs, focusing on quality of education and provision of vocational education and training
• Schools require sustained support to respond to the rapid and large increase in the proportion of immigrant children they have experienced.
• Given the on-going crisis and recent budget cuts, Spain faces a major challenge as it strives to continue delivering and raising the quality of education and skills
Recent policy responses
• Spain aims to promote education improvement, mainly through a new law, the Organic Law for the Improvement of Educational Quality (LOMCE, 2013).
• To reduce dropout:
• a range of targeted programmes available• and a new dual VET system (2012) combination of training with
employment
EQUITY AND QUALITY: EARLY START IN EDUCATION BUT BARRIERS TO EQUITY AND HIGH DROPOUT RATE
• Highest early childhood education enrolment rates among OECD countries • Comprehensive education until the end of lower secondary education
• Policies low socio-economic status to attend their preferred school
• Grade repetition is also largely used: about one out of three students (35%) have repeated a grade at least once by age 15.
grade repetition is ineffective in improving outcomes can contribute to dropout can be costly to the system about 30% of students in lower secondary education in Spain do
not graduate with the certificate necessary to access upper secondary education
CASTILLA-LA MANCHATOLEDO
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vfdwwXDOs_k
GRADUATES STUDENS IN CASTILLA-LA MANCHA
Rate of students that graduated in Secondary Education: 15 years old students.
Year course No. Students Graduated Rate
2001 - 2002 21.083 13.663 64,812002 - 2003 21.112 14.137 66,962003 - 2004 21.176 14.326 67,652004 - 2005 21.214 14.796 69,752005 - 2006 21.332 14.170 66,432006 - 2007 21.298 14.162 66,492007 - 2008 21.188 14.651 69,152008 - 2009 21.196 14.590 68,832009 - 2010 20.902 14.548 69,62010 - 2011 20.473 14.544 71,042011 - 2012 20.219 14.879 73,592012 - 2013 19.843 14.847 74,822013 - 2014 19.898 14.987 75,322014 - 2015 20.136 15.295 75,96
Resource: Consejería de Educación, Cultura y Deportes. Official Statistics
2001 - 2002
2002 - 2003
2003 - 2004
2004 - 2005
2005 - 2006
2006 - 2007
2007 - 2008
2008 - 2009
2009 - 2010
2010 - 2011
2011 - 2012
2012 - 2013
2013 - 2014
2014 - 2015
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
21,083 21,112 21,176 21,214 21,332 21,298 21,188 21,196 20,90220,473 20,219
19,843 19,898 20,136
13,66314,137 14,326
14,79614,170 14,162
14,651 14,590 14,548 14,544 14,879 14,847 14,987 15,295
65 67 68 70 66 66 69 69 70 71 74 75 75 76
Nº de Habitantes Estimados Promocionan Tasa
DRO
P-O
UTS
Example of good practicesExample of good practices
ACTIVE METHODOLOGIESRÍO JÚCAR SECONDARY SCHOOL
Madrigueras (Albacete)
https://mactivasriojucar.wordpress.com/
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY: ROBOTICS IN PRE-PRIMARY EDUCATION
PASEO VIEJO DE LA FLORIDA SCHOOL AND FERROVIARIO SCHOOLAlmagro (Ciudad Real)
The use of Robot in Pre-primary Education (3-6 year-olds). Codes QR_Augmented Reality. Robot Lego
http://coleferroviario.blogspot.com.es/
PROJECT-BASED LEARNING
Princesa Galiana Secondary School (Toledo)The whole school is involved in the Project “Galiana Presenta”
http://www.galianapresenta.com/
This educational innovation project has an interdisciplinary nature and is connected to the urge of improving the relationship and cooperation between pupils and teachers within the school, and enables the students to get better results working in group and also “learn doing”.
LEARNING COMMUNITIES
La Paz School (Albacete), Entreculturas School (Albacete)
https://www.facebook.com/Ceip-Ses-AA-La-PAZ-ALBACETE-234381636691433/?fref=photo
THE SOCIAL COMPETENCE DEVELOPMENT
FRANCISCO GARCÍA PAVÓN SECONDARY SCHOOL. Tomelloso (Ciudad Real)http://www.iesgarciapavon.com/
Project “Plurals” and project “Equals at school II” about gender equality in Secondary Education
LABOUR INSERTION. VOCATIONAL TRAINING
LABOUR INSERTION. VOCATIONAL TRAININGGREGORIO PRIETO SECONDARY SCHOOL. Valdepeñas (Ciudad Real)
Projects like “The employment tunnel” and “The employment club”http://www.iesgregorioprieto.com/club-de-empleo
Innovation and Quality Prize "La Formación Profesional es el instrumento idóneo para atacar de raíz el abandono escolar temprano y reducir el riesgo de exclusión social"
EUROPEAN PROJECTS
41%
6%3%4%
45%
Projects admitted in Spain since 2014
KA101 Escolar
KA104 Adultos
KA201 Escolar General
KA204 Adultos
KA219 Escolar solo entre centros escolares
Castilla-La Mancha
EXAMPLE
KA 101 = 86
10,32%
Example of good practices
https://sites.google.com/site/erasmuska2cobisa/https://twinspace.etwinning.net/6852/home