This episode is the third of an Education International podcast series entitled ‘Pedagogies of Possibility,’ focusing on how the Teacher-led Learning Circles for Formative Assessment (T3LFA) project has provided the space for educators to come together across its 7 project countries to invent innovative pedagogical practice that improves educational outcomes for all students.
The guest speakers in the third episode include Dalila Andrade Oliveria, professor at the Federal University of Minas Gerais, Heleno Araújo, President of the Confederação Nacional dos Trabalhadores em Educação (CNTE), Ana Maria Clementino, learning circle facilitator and researcher at the Federal University of Minas Gerais and Elaine Amancio Ribeiro, teacher in Brasilia, Brazil.
In this episode, we will be discussing how teacher-led learning circles for formative assessment respond to Brazil’s distinct colonial history and are spaces for teachers to create critical pedagogies that allow for engagement in educational praxis, where teachers and students engage in a continual process of understanding and acting on the world in order to change it.
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This episode is the third of an Education International podcast series entitled ‘Pedagogies of Possibility,’ focusing on how the Teacher-led Learning Circles for Formative Assessment (T3LFA) project has provided the space for educators to come together across its 7 project countries to invent innovative pedagogical practice that improves educational outcomes for all students.
The guest speakers in the third episode include Dalila Andrade Oliveria, professor at the Federal University of Minas Gerais, Heleno Araújo, President of the Confederação Nacional dos Trabalhadores em Educação (CNTE), Ana Maria Clementino, learning circle facilitator and researcher at the Federal University of Minas Gerais and Elaine Amancio Ribeiro, teacher in Brasilia, Brazil.
In this episode, we will be discussing how teacher-led learning circles for formative assessment respond to Brazil’s distinct colonial history and are spaces for teachers to create critical pedagogies that allow for engagement in educational praxis, where teachers and students engage in a continual process of understanding and acting on the world in order to change it.
Leadership, education unions and the struggle to end gender-based violence
Education International EdVoices
24 minutes 25 seconds
3 years ago
Leadership, education unions and the struggle to end gender-based violence
Ending gender-based violence requires a profound transformation of our societies and social relations. What is the role of education unions? What does transformative leadership look like in this context and how can it effect real change?
Tune in to this episode of EdVoices to hear from three women leaders of Education International in dialogue with madeleine kennedy-macfoy:
• Susan Hopgood | Education International President | AEU, Australia
• Dianne Woloschuk | Executive Board member and Chair of the Education International Status of Women Committee | CTF, Canada
• Nadine A. Molloy | Executive Board member | JTA Jamaica
Education International EdVoices
This episode is the third of an Education International podcast series entitled ‘Pedagogies of Possibility,’ focusing on how the Teacher-led Learning Circles for Formative Assessment (T3LFA) project has provided the space for educators to come together across its 7 project countries to invent innovative pedagogical practice that improves educational outcomes for all students.
The guest speakers in the third episode include Dalila Andrade Oliveria, professor at the Federal University of Minas Gerais, Heleno Araújo, President of the Confederação Nacional dos Trabalhadores em Educação (CNTE), Ana Maria Clementino, learning circle facilitator and researcher at the Federal University of Minas Gerais and Elaine Amancio Ribeiro, teacher in Brasilia, Brazil.
In this episode, we will be discussing how teacher-led learning circles for formative assessment respond to Brazil’s distinct colonial history and are spaces for teachers to create critical pedagogies that allow for engagement in educational praxis, where teachers and students engage in a continual process of understanding and acting on the world in order to change it.