LIfe sKills for improving primary school Environment Erasmus Project

General information for the LIfe sKills for improving primary school Environment Erasmus Project

LIfe sKills for improving primary school Environment  Erasmus Project
September 14, 2022 12:00 am
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Project Title

LIfe sKills for improving primary school Environment

Project Key Action

This project related with these key action: Cooperation for innovation and the exchange of good practices

Project Action Type

This project related with this action type : Strategic Partnerships for school education

Project Call Year

This project’s Call Year is 2017

Project Topics

This project is related with these Project Topics: Early School Leaving / combating failure in education; Pedagogy and didactics; Key Competences (incl. mathematics and literacy) – basic skills

Project Summary

As phrased prior to the project, Early School Leaving (ESL) is an obstacle to economic growth and employment for EU Countries. It obstructs productivity and competitiveness, and fuels poverty and social exclusion. In 2019, the share of early leavers from education and training in the EU stood at 10.2%. In other words, one in ten individuals aged 18-24 years with at most a lower secondary level of educational attainment (ISCED 0 – 2) was not engaged in any further education and training in the four weeks preceding the survey. The Europe 2020 target was to reduce the rates of early school leaving in the EU to below 10% by 2020. In 2019, this share was already below 10% in a majority of regions with some of the lowest shares concentrated in Eastern Europe and in capital regions.
Among the EU regions, the lowest share of early leavers from education and training (1.7%) was recorded in the coastal/island region of Jadranska Hrvatska (Croatia). There were three other regions where no more than 1 in 50 young people were early leavers: the capital regions of Czechia and Lithuania — Prague and Sostinės regionas (both 1.9%) — and the Greek region of Kentriki Makedonia (2.0%). Young people who leave education and training prematurely are bound to lack skills and qualifications, and to face serious, persistent problems on the labour market. It aims to inspire and generate the development of a comprehensive approach to ESL. As defined in the booklet edited by the European Commission and entitled ‘A whole school approach to tackling early school leaving’, Early school leaving ESL is a pressing concern for the individual, for society and the economy. The skills and competences gained in upper secondary education are seen as the minimum credentials for successful labour market entry and as the foundation for further learning and training opportunities. These skills and competencies help prepare young people for life, developing the potential in every person so that they become fulfilled and active citizens. Yet 11.1% of 18 to 24 year-olds have left education and training without completing an upper secondary programme according to Eurostat 2014 data.
The project proposal was based on the Communication From The Commission To The European Parliament, The Council, The European Economic And Social Committee And The Committee Of The Regions “Tackling early school leaving: A key contribution to the Europe 2020 Agenda”.
The project aims to develop and disseminate an innovative pedagogic method, based on the centrality of pupils and of their emotional needs and requests, aiming to prevent and/or to face the early school leaving phenomenon. The aim is to develop a unique pattern flexible enough to be adapted to the specific contexts and conditions of the different regions and individual situations.
The Like Project involved 9 partners coming from 6 EU countries. Partners are research centers, no profit organizations, authorities and associations with long-standing relevant experience and strongly involved with problems connected to the education system governance and development.
The project expected that the pupils learn to fill their existential, communicative, relational and training needs; develop the motivation to study; the project managed to fulfil these requirements. This was possible through a process of meaningful learning and training, in order to identify, concepts and meanings, to understand the importance of collaboration to be able to perform their cognitive and socio-emotional growth.
Prior to the project we believed that operators and teachers had to improve their ability to “read” the starting positions of students in terms of identifying cultural levels, modes of communication and relational learning styles of each.
The project aimed to set up and transfer the methodologies and effective tools to bring out recommendations useful to identify and combat the phenomenon of school drop-out and obtain target required by the target communities in the partnership countries, giving a contribution to the redefinition of school curricula with regard to life skills.
During the project in the collaboration of the partners, a Pedagogical Toolkit was created after the conceptualization of the model had been finalized. The procedures described in the Toolkit were implemented in the schools of the partner countries. Following the implementation, the impact of the procedures on the life skills of students was measured with the developed survey tool phrased in IO2. The results were analyzed jointly together with the partners.

EU Grant (Eur)

Funding of the project from EU: 242087 Eur

Project Coordinator

Junior Achievement Magyarország & Country: HU

Project Partners

  • Artes Srl
  • ASOCIACION CULTURAL EUROACCION MURCIA
  • TIBER UMBRIA COMETT EDUCATION PROGRAMME
  • WYZSZA SZKOLA BIZNESU I NAUK O ZDROWIU
  • TATICS GROUP SRL
  • INSTITUT ZA PODGOTOVKA NA SLUJITELIV MEJDUNARODNI ORGANIZACII ZDRUZHENIE
  • REGIONAL DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION – PERNIK