students to define the relevance related to the
learning goals set out at the beginning of the course.
3. Self-guidance: we must put more trust in
the hands of students to guide their own learning.
Within the boundaries and restrictions of each
individual pilot, teachers must try to allow as much
self-guidance and self-directed learning as possible.
This requires not only a different way of thinking,
but most important: patience. Sometimes, it takes
some time before students get motivated to do
‘something’. Asking questions usually is a better
approach than providing assignments.
4. Collaboration: Students take great interest
in working with others. Teachers support
collaboration through group-based work and regular
feedback moments.
5. Ownership: If students (as well as
teachers) have the impression that they are in control
of the learning they do, there is a sense of
ownership. This is an essential ingredient for
motivation and self-guided learning.
6. Creativity: in creativity one can be honest
and you are able to develop an identity. Through
creative expressions one is able to have an idea
about his or her capabilities and interests, which is
fundamental for maintaining motivation and
discovering one’s talents.
7. Relevance: ownership of learning also
means defining those topics that the learner finds
relevant in life, even though this is not part of the
official curriculum. Teachers should, as far is
possible, allow students to define the topics they
want to learn, research, do. This means that they are
allowed to do a project about anything they are
passionate about, whether it is Cristiano Ronaldo,
learning Spanish, or bio-informatics. The main
objective for teacher is to add relevance and to foster
curiosity about the topics they want to be covered.
Sugata Mitra proved that with no or only limited
guidance, students can learn (Mitra, 2010).
8. ICT enabled: The role of ICT is critical but
not an aim in itself. Using ICT is not about using
tools, but about a different, and better way of
learning. Students can find a huge amount of
valuable learning resources online, they can find and
use free tools to create and share content, and they
can use free environments to communicate in order
to learn collaboratively. The reAct Project is going
to provide a dynamic list of tools that teachers and
students can use and complement. It is available on
Diigo (groups.diigo.com/group/react-project) and
will function as a shared resource to which
participants can contribute.
4 THE PILOTS
During the timespan of the project there are two
pilots. The first focuses on the way the approach
works with the first group, the learners, and the
difficulties and advantages of the approach from
their point of view, and the second pilot will focus
on teachers, and their needs and reactions with
regard to the approach. The second pilot will
incorporate improvements suggested by the first.
The specific groups to be used for the pilots were
selected by the partners a few months previous to the
pilots, as the annual nature of this kind of training
precludes a decision about this at the current time
(18 months before the first pilot). Each pilot
involved a cohort of roughly 15-25 learners and 2-7
trainers, in each country. The total numbers over
both pilots are therefore around 180 learners and 24
trainers.
One of the principal difficulties involved in pilot
projects is that they run the risk of failing to
integrate into the context they arise from, and
become interesting experiments, rather than being
adopted into everyday practice. For this reason
another fundamental objective of the project is to
integrate the methodology for recovering the
motivation to learn into current initiatives. The
activity proposed is intended to function as a launch
platform at the start of an action, with aim of
changing perceptions of learning and hence of the
action.
a. Getting acquainted: In the first stage of
understanding and accepting the proposed
methodological design, a series of activities is
designed to develop familiarity with the
environment, both in its technological and
social aspects. Also, there is a focus on the
development of community among the students
and teachers of the different institutions
participating in the project.
b. Collaborative creative project: In this phase,
participants form teams. They carry out a
project of their own jointly with pupils from
other schools, using the available toolbox (or
their own tools). The goal is to collaborate and
create something unique. The students
themselves who will define what they want to
do, with the only requirement to do so in
collaboration with person (s) from another
center. This process of creative collaboration
will be carried out using the tools selected by
the students with support of the facilitation team
when they so request.
c. Support and reflection: Support will be
available throughout the process, both during
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