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THE GUIDANCE ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING

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Exercises critical judgment. Communicates appropriately ... Use and share best practices ... Alberta Career Resources, www.alis.gov.ab.ca/career/cr/alberta.asp ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE GUIDANCE ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING


1
THE GUIDANCE- ORIENTED APPROACH TO LEARNING
Presented by Sandra Salesas, Provincial GOAL
Coordinator and Nancy Battet, GOAL Coordinator,
LBPSB LEARNING PARTNERS SYMPOSIUM February 9th,
2009
2
A Little Reminder
  • GOAL is a concerted action between the school
    team and its partners, in which objectives are
    set and services (individual and collective),
    tools and pedagogical activities implemented to
    guide students in their identity development and
    career planning. These activities and services
    are integrated into the schools success plan and
    its educational project (1)
  • (1) Making dream come true, MEQ, 2002, p.18

3
GOAL
  • When students are engaged in authentic
    learning situations
  • they are more aware of their own identity
  • they have career aspirations and academic plans
  • they choose an appropriate academic path, applied
    or general, POP, professional exploration
  • they are motivated and are more successful or
    more self-efficent (Bandura)

4
What GOAL is not?
  • Not a series of isolated actions or activities
  • Not an add-on  to existing programs
  • Not the sole responsibility of the counsellor
  • Not limited to specifically identified student
    groups
  • Not a course, rather a career culture which is
    school-wide and supported by administration and
    by the teaching personnel.

5
The Schools Mission
  • To instruct, to socialize and to qualify are all
    taken into account with GOAL
  • To qualify links directly with GOAL and the
    broad area of learning, Personal and
    Career Planning
  • Cross-curricular competencies reflect those
    required by most employers
  • Qualification is essential to prepare students
    with the necessary competencies for the
    school-to-work transition as indicated in
    numerous ministerial reports
  • References Final report from the Commission on
    the estates general (1996, p. 23), MELs
    Strategic Plan
  • 2000-2003 (2000, p.16). Quebec Education
    Program at the Secondary School Level
  • (2003, p.6) and the Education Act (EA, art.36,
    al.2)

6
The Importance of Providing Qualifications
7
CONSENSUS FROM THE ESTATES GENERAL IN 1996 AND
THE QUEBEC YOUTH SUMMIT IN 2000
  • With regard to Career-Life Planning, students
    receive
  • Too little support
  • Too late in students schooling

8
The Consequences
  • 75 of students in Secondary 5 admit to having
    no idea of their career plan at the beginning of
    the school year (Landry 1995)
  • Before the age of 20, the dropout rate is 33.3
    (2002-2003)
  • 22.2 of students dropout without any
    professional qualification, either because they
    do not have any diploma such as a High School
    Leaving or a CEGEP diploma (2005-2006)

9
Provocative Statistics
  • 65.8 of Quebecs youth under 20 years of age
    obtained a secondary school diploma in 2004-2005.
  • 59 of Quebec secondary graduates move directly
    on to CEGEP. Only 38 of those actually complete
    a pre-university CEGEP DEC. Only 78.6 of that
    small percentage continue on to university.
  • 60 of Quebecs anticipated labour force needs
    will require graduates of our vocational and
    technical programs, while less than 10 of
    anticipated jobs will be filled by university
    graduates.

10
Why students drop out
  • Lack of a sense of school relevancy is the
  • most commonly cited reason for
  • at risk youth
  • Source Statistics Canada

11
Meeting the Challenge
  • BASIC SCHOOL REGULATION
  • Educational Services
  • Social integration
  • Personal career goals
  • Complementary Services
  • Success in learning
  • Team-building with Complementary Educational
    Services
  • Academic career counselling and information
  • QUEBEC EDUCATION PROGRAM
  • Broad Areas of Learning
  • Personal Career Planning
  • Citizenship Community Life
  • Personal Development
  • Cross-Curricular Competencies
  • To construct his/her identity (Elementary)
  • To achieve his/her potential (Secondary)
  • To use information
  • Exercises critical judgment
  • Communicates appropriately

12
Why GOAL?What are the benefits?
  • Success for all.
  • Students
  • understand relevance of school
  • are more aware of their own identity
  • are less disruptive in class
  • choose a more appropriate academic path
  • have career aspirations and supporting academic
    plans
  • are more motivated and achieve more success.

13
Where does Student Services fit?
CES Essential to Success
GOAL
QEP
Teachers
14
Adding a GOAL flavour to your teaching
  • Self-awareness
  • Exploring the world of work
  • Setting goals and taking action

Source Broad Areas of Learning, Quebec Education
Program, Secondary Cycle One, MELS
15
Complementary Educational Services (CES)
Orientations
  • CES at the heart of the schools mission
  • Global vision with integrated services
  • GOAL and community links
  • Team-building for quality services
  • Services Program of support services,
    assistance services, student life services and
    promotion and prevention services within a GOAL
    perspective

16
A Week on Respecting Differences (CSMB)
  • A multidisciplinary project with the Spiritual
    Life and Community Engagement Animator, the
    Guidance Counsellor and the behavior technician
  • Working on complementary expertise to promote a
    continuum of services
  • Finding that unifying project

17
A team process
  • Team meetings
  • Finding themes and speakers
  • Preparing students before, during and following
    the presentations
  • Identifying team strengths
  • Promoting our services to teachers
  • Ensuring action plan in the educational project
    and the success plan

18
Some themes explored
  • A handicapped persons challenges with
    discrimination
  • A blind person employability skills
  • A prisoners adaptation to the real world
  • A gay persons testimonial
  • Self-image and obesity

19
Group activities
  • We intervened in class to present discussion
    topics
  • Videos on self-image and nutrition
  • Importance of communication skills
  • Targeted groups with specific difficulties
    (Examples special needs, repeaters, etc.)

20
Links with the QEP
  • Cross-curriculum competencies especially
    communication, cooperation and critical thinking
  • BAL Citizenship and Community Life, Personal
    and Career Planning and Health and Well-Being
  • Subject areas Languages and Personal Development

21
Outcomes
  • Appreciation of differences
  • Developing a rapport between teachers and
    professionals
  • Promoting our complementary services
  • Recognizing the pedagogical value of the CES team
  • Increase motivation to learn and to use the
    Complementary Educational Services

22
Winning Entrepreneurship Project (ETSB)
  • Teamwork One Teacher and Two Special Education
    Technicians
  • Art class
  • Challenges
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Organization
  • What students gained

23
Art Class
  • Group of multiple handicap students
  • Life skills class at Massey-Vanier High School
  • Art class stepping stone
  • Works into marketable note cards

24
Entrepreneurial venture with special needs
students
  • Idea of marketing
  • They liked the idea
  • Understanding the vision
  • Correlation idea and finished product
  • Community Partners Station Knowlton

25
Organization
  • Table of tasks according to skills and abilities
  • Committees and Departments e.g. Quality Control
    Advertising Purchasing Production Packaging
    Sales Finance
  • Peer modeling and mentoring within the class

26
Wheres the Black Sheep?
27
Learning through Giving Project at SWLSB
  • Pakistan, its people, the earthquake and the
    Canadian Red Cross became the theme which wove
    its way through English, French, Geography and
    Moral Education classes.
  • At the same time the students designed and
    produced a wide range of fundraising events
  • Students learned to problem solving, planning and
    mathematical skills. students to actively use and
    develop their decision-making and planning
    skills, learn more about the world as a global
    village, and build confidence, initiative and
    leadership skills.
  • The students proved to themselves the impact that
    a few committed citizens can have.

28
Who am I?
  • Using a multimodal approach for self-exploration
  • Multiple intelligences
  • Learning styles
  • Personality types
  • Cognitive styles
  • Study habits
  • Essential skills
  • Interests and Talents
  • Extracurricular strengths

29
GOAL can help us to answer our students questions
30
Career and Educational Planning Influences
  • Parents
  • Teachers
  • Friends
  • Professionals
  • Career Development courses (ex. POP, Explo and
    Entrepreneurship)

31
GOAL is everywhere!
  • Classroom
  • School-life activities
  • Individualized Educational Plan
  • Guidance programs and activities
  • School Success Plan
  • Supporting Montreal Schools
  • NANS Schools
  • School Board Mission Statement
  • In the home
  • In local businesses, organizations, and other
    community agencies
  • Career infusion and collaboration

32
How do we achieve success?
  • decompartmentalization of professional
    practices
  • and
  • collective, concerted action
  • TEAMWORK!
  • Ref. Making Dreams Come True Achieving Success
    Through the Guidance-Oriented Approach, 2002

33
Show me how!
  • Assess needs of school community
  • Build upon established success
  • Identify a complementary educational services
    need and develop a project for students at-risk,
    special needs, etc.
  • Ask for support from your administration, school
    board, and community
  • Use and share best practices
  • Use resources that have been created to support
    your GOAL initiatives
  • Build GOAL into your School Success Plan

34
Personal and Career Planning Its never too
early to start dreaming!
35
Practical Examples of GOAL in the Classroom
  • Have students write about a fantasy job If I
    were a., draw a picture of themselves in the
    job, and identify the tools they would use.
    Discuss in class. Have students participate in a
    career dress-up day in which they wear the
    uniform connected to their occupation. 
  • Have students construct a career pyramid that
    illustrates the different types of jobs in a
    career area at different levels of education and
    responsibility. For example, the variety of jobs
    found in a hospital (orderly, ambulance driver,
    doctor, janitors, etc.).
  • These are the people of your neighbourhood
    students collect pictures illustrating various
    community workers (police officer, truck driver,
    salesperson, teacher, etc.). Have students give
    a job title for each, discuss the work activities
    involved, and the problems they solve.

36
More Classroom Examples
  • Read Dr. Seuss, Oh, the Places Youll Go (or
    invite someone from the business community to
    read to students). Have students do a
    composition on the Places they plan or would
    like to go.
  • Have students prepare an autobiography and
    address at least three ways in which their life
    is influenced by family, school, and friends.
  • Have students research some aspect of change
    such as a means of transportation compile
    pictures depicting changes and occupations
    affected, and arrange a bulletin board display
    related to the project.
  • Do oral reports on different occupations with the
    student pretending to be the worker in the
    report.

37
More Classroom Examples
  • Have students design a simple machine and build
    an assembly line to build it. The assembly line
    is set up and test in class, and everyone has a
    job to do. Students then market their product by
    writing advertisements.
  • Who builds the stuff in my neighborhood? How
    many people does it take to build a house? Who
    grows my food and how does it get to the store?
    How many workers does it take to design and sew
    my jeans? What do I know about the country in
    which they are produced? Have students do a
    research project to answer many questions related
    to their surroundings.
  • Plan, cook, and serve a meal while studying
    nutrition.

38
Practical Examples of GOAL in School-life
Activities
  • Career fair with employers from the community
  • Have students interview workers concerning their
    career paths how did they decide upon the
    field, etc.
  • Have students plan and carry out a Hobby Fair in
    which each student is invited to bring in an
    example of his or her hobby and demonstrate or
    describe the hobby to the class.
  • Students form clubs e.g., radio club, drama
    club, Junior Achievement, etc.
  • Job shadowing, job training (stages), and other
    career exploration activities
  • Students organize a Talent Show or other arts
    event as a fund raiser and to develop
    creativity, cooperation, and project skills.

39
The GOAL Networks mandate
  • 1- To identify GOAL features and key works in
    the QEP, Secondary Cycle One and Two.
  • 2- We will be preparing promotional tools for
    administrators and consultants, including
    updating the GOAL website.
  • 3- We will be developing GOAL-driven learning
    and evaluation situations to embed GOAL into
    teaching practices, particularly through the
    Broad areas of learning. These learning
    situations will aim to prepare students for
    choices of paths, math sequences and
    post-secondary and vocational programs.
  • 4- We are presenting GOAL at the Learning
    Partners Symposium on February 9th and 10th,
    2009 at the Sheraton Laval (www.learnquebec.ca/mak
    ingconnections)
  • 5- To develop a GOAL regional plan with the
    Direction régionale of the MELS and with other
    school boards and community partners in a region.

40
References
  • Career Cruising, http//www.careercruising.com
  • Workapedia (Canadian sector councils)
    www.workapedia.ca
  • Smart Options, http//lifework.ca/home.htm
  • The Real Game Series, www.realgame.ca
  • Work-Study Programs, www.schooltocareer.ca
  • Government of Quebec, Heading for Success,
    http//www.toutpourreussir.com/en/
  • Career exploration www.jobsetc.ca
  • Alberta Career Resources, www.alis.gov.ab.ca/caree
    r/cr/alberta.asp
  • Québec Entrepreneurship Contest and Toolkit,
    www.concours-entrepreneur.org

41
Resources
  • The GOAL Post and the GOAL website
    www.learnquebec.qc.ca
  • MELS documentation on GOAL Making Dreams Come
    True,
  • www.mels.gouv.qc.ca/dgfj/csc/pdf/Brochure_eng.pdg
  • Complementary Educational Services In Brief
    http//www.mels.gouv.qc.ca/DGFJ/csc/pdf/19-7036A.p
    df
  • Human Resources and Skills Development Canada
    www.hrsdc.gc.ca
  • Youth Canada www.youth.gc.ca
  • Conference Board of Canada www.
    conferenceboard.ca
  • Sector Councils www.councils.org
  • www.tgmag.gc.ca/destination 2020
  • www.careersinjustice.qc.ca

42
Discussion Questions
  • 1- In your own words, define GOAL and its aims.
  • 2- Where is GOAL in your school? In your student
    services initiatives?
  • 3- How would you like to develop GOAL with your
    team of professionals?
  • 4- Identify one possible GOAL-oriented theme for
    your students?

43
Discussion period
  • Thank you!
  • Sandra Salesas, c.o., Provincial Coordinator for
    GOAL, sandra.salesas_at_mels.qc.ca
  • Tel514-873-3339, ext. 5510
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