Browsing by Subject "21CC"
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- PublicationRestrictedDeveloping 21CC through band: An exploratory study of the “Four Cs”(Office of Education Research, National Institute of Education, Singapore, 2020)
; ; ; Tan, Jennifer Pei-LingINTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND In Singapore, the Ministry of Education (MOE) emphasises the importance of developing 21CC through Co-Curricular Activities (CCA). For example, the Handbook for the Co-Curriculum states that there ought to be an “intentional design” of CCA activities such that they create “authentic opportunities” for students to “practise” the 21CC (MOE, 2014, p. 16). This includes the development of 21CC through music CCAs, such as the school band.
STATEMENT OF PROBLEMS Sentiments on the ground, however, suggest that many band directors see the development of these competencies already implicit in current practice. Furthermore, there is no research in Singapore that has empirically examined the assumption that 21CC can be developed through music CCAs. There appears a need for empirical data to determine if and how 21CC are being developed by school band programmes as currently practised. This would also render any form of formal intervention more organic, persuasive, and authentic.
PURPOSE OF STUDY The purpose of this exploratory study was to examine the development of 21CC through the school band; it aims to render explicit what might already be implicit in current practice. To achieve these goals, two high performing school bands (one Primary and one Secondary) were examined over a period of one year.401 17 - PublicationMetadata onlyGradual shifts in policy and practice towards student-centric learning
This chapter offers a descriptive overview of the policy shifts since the advent of the Thinking Schools Learning Nation policy that spurred the start of the ability-based, aspiration-driven era in 1997 and up to the very recent policies of the student-centric, values-driven era that followed since 2012. It then analyses these shifts by studying the policy-to-practice translations of a handful of the new introductions of 21st Century Competencies-related programs and structures in schools. Nevertheless, academics remain the dominant staple of focus for students, teachers, and school leaders. More broadly, the Ministry of Education has embraced a gradual pace of change as they manage the expectations and aspirations of a new generation of Singaporean students and their parents exposed to the technologically rich milieus of the social media era.
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