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Citizenship education in Europe

ADD PHOTO HERE and replace this box. Citizenship education in Europe. Ana Sofia de Almeida Coutinho Eurydice and Policy support unit - EACEA. Main findings from the Eurydice report. Conference 'Social and citizen's responsibility' Slovenia - 10 October 2013.

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Citizenship education in Europe

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  1. ADD PHOTO HEREand replace this box Citizenshipeducation in Europe Ana Sofia de Almeida Coutinho Eurydice and Policy support unit - EACEA Main findingsfrom the Eurydice report Conference 'Social and citizen's responsibility' Slovenia - 10 October 2013 Education and Training

  2. The Eurydice network36 countries = 40 National UnitsOne coordinating unit = Eurydice and Policy Unit at EACEA

  3. Citizenshipeducation in European and international context Social and civiccompetences Charter on Education for DemocraticCitizenship and HumanRights Education (Council of Europe) 2009 IEA International Civic and Citizenship Education Study (ICCS)

  4. Definition, scope and methodology Broad concept 2010/11 Primary and secondarylevel 31 countries covered Eurydice questionnaires 2009 ICCS data

  5. Citizenshipeducationin Europe Curriculum: Approaches, taught time and assessment Informal learning School culture, out-of-schoolactivities and schoolgovernance

  6. Status in the curriculum Feature in all countries curricula Three main approaches, oftencombined: Integrated in othersubject Separatesubject Cross-curricular

  7. Cross-curricularapproachISCED 1, 2 and 3 Elements of citizenship education are included: in cross-curricular themes, key competences, learning content areas only as general objectives of the education system data not available Source: Eurydice.

  8. Separate and compulsory subjectISCED 1, 2 and 3 Separate subject at primary level Separate subject at secondary level Not a separate subject at either primary or secondary level data not available Source: Eurydice.

  9. Average minimum taught time devoted to citizenship education as a separate subject during a notional year, ISCED 1, 2 and 3, 2010/11 Taught time Hours Hours ISCED 1 ISCED 2 ISCED 3 Source: Eurydice.

  10. Contribution of marks on the transition to the nextlevel Marks in separate subject - ISCED 2 or full-time compulsory education always taken into account not systematically taken into account not taught as a separate compulsory subject or single structure compulsory education with no transition never taken into account data not available Source: Eurydice.

  11. Informal learning School culture Out-of-schoolactivities Curriculum and steering documents Nation-wide programmes and projects → Great variation of 8th grade student's participation in civic-relatedactivities in Europe (2009 ICCS)

  12. School governance Regulations in all countries: → Right for students to participate in school-life and decision-making

  13. Students' participation Class representatives Students' councils School governing bodies Decision-making Consultative Informative

  14. Assessingstudent's participation Central guidelines on assessing students’ active participation in school or in the community ISCED 2 and 3, 2010/11 Central guidelines No central guidelines data not available Source: Eurydice.

  15. Conclusions Citizenshipeducationfeature in all countries' national curricula Informal ways of learning are widelypromoted Challenges / questions

  16. Students'participation in schoolelections

  17. Civic competences of youngEuropeans, ICCS 2009 Knowledge and Skills on Democracy Participatory Attitudes in Europe Source data: CRELL, 2009

  18. Thankyou for your attention. For more information: Eurydice website http://eacea.ec.europa.eu/education/eurydice/

  19. Content OBJECTIVES Politicalliteracy Criticalthinking Values, attitudes: tolerance, solidarity Active participation and engagement Civic-related skills Social skills Communication skills Intercultural skills SKILLS Political system Humanrights Europeanidentity International relations KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING

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