1 / 15

THE GUIDANCE- ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING

THE GUIDANCE- ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING. Presented by: Cheryl Pratt Barbara Goode March 21, 2003. THE GUIDANCE-ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING Making Dreams Come True An Overview. CONSENSUS FROM ESTATES GENERAL 1996. Career-Life Planning: Too little support

korene
Télécharger la présentation

THE GUIDANCE- ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE GUIDANCE- ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING Presented by: Cheryl Pratt Barbara Goode March 21, 2003

  2. THE GUIDANCE-ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING Making Dreams Come TrueAn Overview

  3. CONSENSUS FROM ESTATES GENERAL 1996 Career-Life Planning: • Too little support • Too late in students’ schooling

  4. PROBLEMS • Lack of student plans for the future • Student ambivalence concerning studies • 59% of students lack career plans • Students find themselves in the wrong post-secondary programs • Career choices limited by misinformation and stereotypes • Insufficient graduates to fill labor shortages

  5. BENEFITS OF GUIDANCE- ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING • To increase students’ knowledge of themselves and the world of work • To encourage students to make educational and career plans • To sustain the interest and motivation of students with respect to their studies • To reduce students’ risk of failure or dropping out

  6. To ensure students achieve educational success and obtain qualifications

  7. WHAT THE GUIDANCE-ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING IS • Concerted team approach involving in-school and community partners • Activities, tools, and resources combine to guide students in their identity development and career-life planning • Integration of activities and services into the schools’ success plans and educational projects

  8. WHAT THE GUIDANCE-ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING IS NOT • Not a series of isolated actions or activities • Not the sole responsibility of the Guidance Counsellor • Not limited to specifically identified student groups • Not a course, rather a school-wide approach supported by the school board and its community

  9. MAIN OBJECTIVES OF THE GUIDANCE-ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING • To guide students in their identity development to further their education and career planning • To give students opportunities to discover various educational paths • To enable students to become more familiar with the world of work • To encourage students to make realistic career choices by basing their dreams in reality

  10. SUPPORT MEASURES FOR IMPLEMENTATION • Integrating career orientation elements into the curriculum • Developing related school life activities • Ensuring access to a variety of career orientation tools and resources • Providing access to individual counselling

  11. CONNECTIONS TO EDUCATIONAL REFORM • The Education Act • school mission • legal responsibilities • The Basic School Regulations • educational services • complementary services • The Quebec Education Program • subject areas • cross curricular competencies • broad areas of learning

  12. PARTNERS IN THE GUIDANCE- ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING • Students -take responsibility for their own education and career planning • Parents – responsible for child’s education and school partner • Information and counselling professionals – key leadership and support role • Teachers – integrate approach into classroom and student life • Support personnel – collaborate within the learning environment • The school administration and governing board – responsible for the school’seducational project • The school board – promotes and supports the approach • The community – partners in the process

  13. Complementary Educational Services

More Related