Round Square shares BDS’ School Model
The following text was published in the last edition of the Newsletter distributed by Round Square among member schools all over the world.
Towards a New School Model
Summary of Chapter 4 in: Towards a New Education, by Alberto C. Taquini, PhD, et al. Buenos Aires: BDS, 2014 (originally published in Spanish)
This BDS’ Model was presented and discussed at Harvard Graduate School of Education in August 2014, with a later authorities’ encounter in Harvard’s Project Zero Teachers’ Conference held in California (October 2014).
Why a ‘New School’ is Needed
Dramatically significant social changes provoked by disruptive technological innovations have transformed higher education and the labour world, and therefore claim for an entirely new school model, the traditional “industrial school model” being no longer valid.
Schools should basically redefine their mission, transform their methods, make the most of virtual learning environments (duly blended with fruitful motivating face to face encounters), and, above all, help students “learn to learn” on an autonomous yet collaborative basis, for that is precisely what they will be due to do for the rest of their lives, in ever-changing contexts developing at faster and faster speed.
Belgrano Day School in Buenos Aires, Argentina, has been working in this direction for the last 12 years now, and has outlined a new school model around the great objective of learning to learn, applying it not only to students, but also to teachers and to the school as a whole. After all, how could a school possibly become a nurturing learning environment if the school itself does not become a “learning institution”? Only by example do we teach…
Key concepts in the new school model include:
- Various forms of blended learning and the flipped classroom.
- A switch from teacher-centred practices to students’- centred practices.
- An ever-growing Virtual Learning Environment (VLE, nurtured by teachers and students alike) making the most of cloud computing, social media, gamification, and “glocal” interactions with a flexible platform behind (we moved from Mooddle to Schoology this year). Some BDS projects that illustrate this ample use of the VLE include: Micro-fiction contests using Twitter; a Facebook group for Model UN participants; the “Virtual statistics for real life” project; the “Dual Baccalaureate” Program with the US by which Middle & Senior students can take a few extracurricular online courses to obtain an American High School Diploma together with BDS’ Diploma & CIE qualifications; videoconference exchanges and shared projects with schools around the word (e.g. quad-blogging, a project on immigration in North and South America shared with a public school in Chicago, etc). We encourage pupils to bring their own device to school, as of grade 4.
- The use of Visual Thinking routines and Design Thinking methodology practices.
- Ongoing media literacy training as of Kindergarten (the school provides some ‘order’/ structure, and values- scale based reflection to what young children bring along naturally and intuitively, in terms of visual/audio-visual stimuli and skills).
- Hands-on experiences and field trips, also to be shared in the VLE, as a bridge from school to reality, and vice-versa.
- Growing autonomy and less supervision as students move on through the sections (Kindergarten, Primary, Middle & Senior –again, the frontiers between sections tending to blur, with more and more cross-section projects in progress, like a Robotics Workshop joining Primary and Middle School pupils together, the school play, or the BDS orchestra).
- New teaching roles and tasks. Despite natural resistance to change, the teaching profession has turned upside down, moving from “know-it-all” lecturing to ICT assisted new teachers’ roles as: facilitators/mediators between students and knowledge (understood as skills rather than as content/data, although skills do need content to set foot upon); information organizers and guides; one-to-one or group tutors, positive feedback evaluators, procedure rather than content-oriented models, etc. BDS believes in cross-discipline within the school model, and has hired professionals from various fields currently working with/as teachers: ICT system experts; business administrators; psychologists; communication specialists /journalists; an audio-visual designer; a professional librarian, researcher and document specialist; an educational specialist with an engineering background, etc. Diversity works wonders in schools, too!
- All of the above oriented towards learning to learn, the practice of human values (including RS Ideals), and internationalism on a global scale. Belgrano Day School actively promotes students’ exchanges with RS schools around the world, and looks forward to expanding its growing Exchange Program still further.