ABSTRACT

Self-evaluation is going global. This book describes what happened when teams of school students from across the world embarked on the trip of a lifetime to explore the school lives of their international contemporaries.
The students involved in The Learning School project used a variety of tools to evaluate the learning, motivation and self-evaluation abilities of school students in the UK, Sweden, Japan, Germany, the Czech Republic, South Africa and South Korea. From the easy freedom of the Swedish school to the highly structured day in the Czech Republic, this study shows that success and effectiveness in education really is in the eye of the beholder.
The results of this study have significant implications for school leaders and managers, policy makers and academics, and all those concerned with school improvement. This lively and accessible book makes intriguing and important reading, raising fundamental questions about how we judge quality and effectiveness in teaching and learning.

part I|70 pages

The Learning School

chapter 1|10 pages

The story begins

chapter 2|12 pages

What we did

chapter 3|9 pages

Tools for schools

chapter 4|14 pages

A lifetime of learning (in one year)

The students of the Learning School (1 and 2)

chapter 6|8 pages

Expert witnesses

part II|160 pages

Insights into the school experience from the Learning School students

chapter 7|9 pages

A place called school

chapter 8|8 pages

The school day

chapter 17|8 pages

No two the same

How students react differently to the same lessons

chapter 18|20 pages

Talking about learning

Students as self-evaluators

chapter 20|10 pages

Students and their parents

chapter 21|10 pages

Lifelong learning

How teachers and students saw it

chapter 22|4 pages

Postscript