19
Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning (UIL) UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning (UIL) 8 September 2014 8 September 2014 http://www.uil.unesco.org/home/ http://www.uil.unesco.org/home/

Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning. UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning (UIL) 8 September 2014 http://www.uil.unesco.org/home/. Outline. Global literacy challenge Current trends: Lifelong learning and literacy in the 21st century - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning (UIL)UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning (UIL)

8 September 20148 September 2014

http://www.uil.unesco.org/home/http://www.uil.unesco.org/home/

Page 2: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Outline

1. Global literacy challenge

2. Current trends: Lifelong learning and literacy in the 21st century

3. Literacy as a continuum: Implications and challenges

4. Literacy within the perspective of LLL

Page 3: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

1) The global literacy challenge(UIS data from 2012)

Estimates based on traditional methods:

• 781million adults lacked literacy skills

• 61 million children out of school

• 120 million children do not reach grade 4

• 130 million children in school but failing to learn the basics

Direct assessment in high income countries:

• Around 160 million (1 out of 5) adults have very poor literacy skills – even though they complete compulsory schooling

• PIAAC results in 22 OECD countries:

4.9%-27.7% lowest level literacy8.1%-31.7% lowest level numeracy

Page 4: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

2) Current trends

• Literacy as a continuous process of learning

• Evolving demands require the acquisition of new skills and/ or the development of higher levels of proficiency of existing ones

• Literacy, language & numeracy are part of a wider concept of key competencies, human resource development and lifelong learning

• Literacy & numeracy learning is increasingly embedded in other development activities

• More focus on measurement of learning outcomes (“teaching to the test”)

• Priority of work place/ employment-related skills

Page 5: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

•Shift from education to learning (learning-focused and learner-centred)

•Shift from national and uniform approaches to decentralized, contextualized, community-based and community-owned approaches

•Shift from «one size fits all» approach to diversified, targeted and personalized approaches

•Shift from textbook-based approaches to multi-modal (print, ICT, media, etc.) approaches

Page 6: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Findings of the 2nd Global Report on Adult Learning and Education (GRALE 2): Rethinking Literacy (2013)

• There is still no common understanding of how to approach literacy as a continuum and a lifelong learning process

• Coexistence of traditional approach (dichotomy of ‘literate’ and ‘illiterate’) and level-based approach

• Growing number of practices that treat literacy as a lifelong learning process

Page 7: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

2a) Conceptual evolution: What is lifelong learning?

In essence, lifelong learning is founded in the integration of learning and living…

covering learning activities for people of all ages (children, young people, adults and elderly, whether girls or boys, women or men)

in all life-wide contexts (family, school, community, workplace and so on) and

through a variety of modalities (formal, non-formal and informal)

…that together meet a wide range of learning needs and demands.

Page 8: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

ADULT

S

CHILDREN

YOUTH

L I F E L O N G

Page 9: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

CREATING VALUE

INFORMAL

NON-FORMAL

FORMAL

L I F E W I D E

Page 10: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Lifelong learning should address three broad development goals:

(1) Personal and cultural development – helping individuals to make sense and meaning of the world and achieve spiritual wealth;

(2) Social and community development – enabling individuals to become active citizens and participate fully in society; and

(3) Professional development and sustainable employability – equipping individuals to work productively, achieve job satisfaction, material well-being and economic security.

Page 11: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Adulthood

Childhood

Early Childhood

Literacy & communication

Learning approaches & cognition

Numeracy & mathematics

Formal

InformalNon-formal

Lif

e P

has

es

Learning Domains

Modality of Delivery

LIFELONG / LIFE-WIDE LEARNING

Lifelong + life-wide learning: Lifelong + life-wide learning: Adding a 3rd dimensionAdding a 3rd dimension

Later life

Youth

Culture & arts

Social & emotional

Physical well-being

Science & technology

Page 12: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

“Literacy is the ability to identify, understand, interpret, create, communicate and compute, using printed and written materials associated with varying contexts. Literacy involves a continuum of learning in enabling individuals to achieve his or her goals, develop his or her knowledge and potential, and participate fully in community and wider society”.

Since 2003, UNESCO proposed the following operational definition of literacy for the purpose of national and international assessment:

2b) Conceptual evolution: Literacy in the 21st century

Page 13: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

3) Literacy as a continuum of learning: implications and challenges

The development of reading, writing and numeracy skills involves a continuous process of sustained practising and application

No magic lines to cross from illiteracy to literacy

Progression of proficiency levels from ability to perform most simple tasks towards higher-level, more demanding and complex tasks

No guarantee that people may not lose the skills level already acquired

Evolving demands require the acquisition of new skills, or the development of a higher level of proficiency of existing ones (e.g. ICT skills)

Page 14: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Literacy as a continuum of learning (cont.)

The acquisition and development of literacy is an age-independent, continuous and context-bound activity:

– before, during and after primary education– in and out of school– through formal, non-formal and informal learning

► a life-wide and lifelong learning process

Page 15: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Implications:

• Literacy covering the full spectrum of life-wide and lifelong learning, and recognising its multi-dimensional and complex nature, it is necessary to abandon:

– traditional dichotomy of literate-illiterate

– the aim to „erradicate illiteracy“

– the practice of declaring a country „illiteracy free“

Page 16: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

4) Literacy within the perspective of lifelong learning

• Working towards an enlarged concept of literacy as a continuum and part of lifelong learning

• Recognising that the achievement of sustainable reading, writing and numeracy skills requires levels of basic education beyond elementary literacy

• Embedding or integrating literacy and numeracy learning in other activities linked to vocational training, income-generating activities, and development activities in a broader sense

• Promoting intergenerational and community-based approaches to literacy and learning such as family literacy

Page 17: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Integral approach to policy Literacy for all requires working simultaneously on at

least five complementary fronts:

1. Laying strong foundations for later learning and addressing disadvantage through good-quality early childhood care and education programmes.

2. Universal good-quality basic education for all children (in formal or non-formal settings).

3. Scaling up and reaching out with relevant literacy provision to all young people and adults.

4. Developing literacy-rich environments and a literate culture at local and national level.

5. Dealing with the root causes of illiteracy (mainly poverty, societal injustice and all kind of disadvantages) in a deep structural manner.

Page 18: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

Source: Lifelong Learning Strategy for the City of Vancouver, page 9

Page 19: Literacy & Basic Skills as a Foundation for Lifelong Learning

http://www.uil.unesco.org/home/