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This section provides news about PASCAL together with significant developments in policy and research relating to the areas of interest to PASCAL. It is based on regular scanning of policy, practice and academic literature, including web-based sources.

We invite readers to submit items for consideration. Please send your contributions to our Submissions Administrator.

Improve It Framework Scottish Launch in association with Bond - 20th November 2012

This is an opportunity for those in the Scottish international development community, including funders, NGO personnel, academics and consultants, to get to grips with two new tools for effectiveness – the Improve It Framework and the revised NIDOS Effectiveness Tool.

The Scottish launch of this package of effectiveness tools and resources will include funder perspectives and hands-on sessions to help organisations become even better at what they do, to be accountable to the people they seek to support, and to document their effectiveness for donors.

Call for papers - Between Global and Local: Adult learning and development network, April 25-27, Ghent, Belgium

Please find below the call for papers for the next conference of the Between Global and Local: adult learning and development network, April 25-27, Ghent, Belgium. Deadline for submitting abstract is January 22:

Urban living and urban developments question increasingly the social and spatial conditions for living together. Urban developments can refer to changing social and spatial conditions within cities as well as in rural areas. In the latter case, this may involve a reflection on how urbanising trends and developments affect for instance local community traditions. In the current discourses, urban public space is on the one hand assumed to lack the conditions for the development of social cohesion, community life and citizenship. On the other hand cities are assumed to represent dynamic sites of social innovation and transformation. Recent changes in the social and spatial structure of cities increase the need to act and reflect upon the tensions in these ‘readings’ of community and urban developments.

Inaugural GINCO Quality Awards presented at Hasselt Conference: Quality Course Provision for Grundtvig IST

One of the GINCO activities aiming at raising the quality of delivery of Grundtvig IST courses is the GINCO Award. Up till now the quality control of Grundtvig courses has been limited to the feedback the course participants give to their National Agency when sending in their reports. In the case of negative feedback by the participants the NA of the organizing country contacts the course organiser to check what went wrong and discusses measures to improve things. Repeated negative feedback can lead to removal from the data base. But a real quality label does not exist. Therefore the GINCO Award selection – a ‘test’ quality label for Grundtvig courses – has been carried out by the GINCO network in 2012 in cooperation with the National Agencies.

High-level group issues ‘wake-up call’ for Member States to address literacy crisis

The report states that literacy is a ‘big deal’ because:

  • The labour market requires ever higher literacy skills (by 2020, it is estimated that 35% of all jobs will require high-level qualifications compared to 29% today);
  • Social and civic participation are more literacy-dependent in the digital world;
  • The population is ageing and their literacy skills, including digital literacy skills, need updating;
  • Poverty and low literacy are locked in a vicious circle, each fuelling the other;
  • Growing mobility and migration are making literacy more and more multilingual, combining a wide range of cultural and linguistic backgrounds.

The Crisis in Higher Education - Technology Review

Online versions of college courses are attracting hundreds of thousands of students, millions of dollars in funding, and accolades from university administrators. Is this a fad, or is higher education about to get the overhaul it needs?

An interesting and informative article in Technology Review by Nicholas Carr.

 

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