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European School Education Platform

Viewpoints

Expert views and surveys on school education

Illustration of a laptop and symbols of AI

Should we chat?

We’ve been very chatty in recent years; various platforms have enabled many different opinions and points of view to be shared. The same goes for education. After observing the aftermath of the pandemic and the changing educational landscape, it was clear that we needed to do things differently. But we quickly returned to our familiar practices and from there, we were catapulted again; the infamous ChatGPT tool was introduced. And everything changed. Again.
Digital competence
Digital tools
Policy development
School data
School supplies and textbooks on mathematics close up

PISA 2022 and the EU: three thought-provoking trends

The OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) measures young people’s competences in basic skills: mathematics, reading and science. The 2022 study involved 690 000 students, representing 29 million 15-year-olds across 81 education systems; all EU countries except Luxembourg participated, and its results were published in December 2023.
Assessment
Disadvantaged learners
Policy development
Support to learners
Two adults working together with a laptop

Empowering teachers for a brighter future

Teachers play a vital role in shaping our societies. Despite this, the profession is seemingly becoming less attractive since more than half of European Union Member States have raised concerns about teacher shortages.
Classroom management
Funding and resources
Initial Teacher Education
Policy development
Professional development
Stakeholders’ involvement
Well-being
Whole-school approach
Hand raised at a rally

A ballot box does not make a house of democracy

Engaging young minds in meaningful citizenship activities poses a formidable challenge – one that cannot be adequately addressed by rhetoric or the occasional ‘Go vote’ poster.
Citizenship
Cultural competence
Kids running in school

The school climate has not been affected by global warming

On entering any school, you can observe its physical environment, written norms, relationship culture, school atmosphere, values and even its unwritten rules. This is the school climate that determines how we perceive and experience a school.
Assessment
Inclusion
Initial Teacher Education
Learning space
Supportive partners
Well-being
Whole-school approach
A teenager in glasses and a white t-shirt and a backpack

Rural schools need more than just connectivity – but that’s a good place to start…

The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted a number of key lessons related to education: the importance of access to reliable internet connectivity and devices, the need to support teachers to cope with disruptions, exploding workloads and learners experiencing emotional distress or dropping out, and the need to support learners’ well-being. While these issues are true for education everywhere, they are even more relevant in rural and remote areas.
Digital tools
Learning space
Professional development
School partnerships and networks
Support to learners
Teacher mobility
Well-being
Student happy while studying foreign language

What's new in teaching and learning languages? New trends and challenges

In recent years, even recent months, a lot has happened in the educational field. In the last decade, the development of the flipped classroom, task-based approaches and a greater focus on differentiation have already transformed the process of learning languages.
Blended Learning
Cultural diversity
Cultural heritage
Digital tools
Inclusion
Initial Teacher Education
Language learning
Migrant students
Parental involvement
Refugee education
Support to learners
Child solving a Rubik's cube

How can we better understand and support gifted students?

Gifted, precocious, high intellectual potential… All these terms refer to the same clinical situation: children and adults with an intelligence quotient—or IQ—of 130 or above on a standardised and validated intelligence scale. They make up 2.3% of the total population, but is it really true that they are all more intelligent? The reality is not that simple.
Assessment
Classroom management
Inclusion
Pedagogy
Special needs education
Well-being
Illustration of a colourful graph with several columns

Solving school segregation with the matching mechanisms of schools

In recent years, economists have gained significant experience (and fame) in practical market design in matching children to schools. Much of this success is based on the seminal papers by Gale and Shapley (GS), which were initially used for entry-level job markets.
Disadvantaged learners
Funding and resources
Inclusion
Parents
Policy development

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