SciChallenge, an international STEM-contest, makes scientific careers more attractive to young people through social media. Since January 2017, submissions for the SciChallenge competition are open to youngsters between 10-20 years. Participants can win a trip to Vienna and further prizes by
submitting their project until 30th of April 2017. It is organised and promoted by one of EPA's partners, the European Students' Union (ESU), under the framework of a Horizon2020 project. We are working on the possibility to include a parent representative in the jury and to also award a special parental prize.
Interesting articles, best practices, programmes on parental involvement in schools and many more things for parents all over Europe
2/24/2017
2/23/2017
Your opportunity to influence the Key Competences framework in the EU
The European Commission has launched a public consultation which
will run until 19 May 2017. This is part of a process within the Skills Agenda, aiming at boosting human capital in Europe and updating EU - and subsequently hopefully also national - policies to make one more attempt to modernise education in Europe so that it supports what is necessary for learners' success. The review and update of the 2006 Recommendation on
Key Competences for Lifelong Learning is part of this process and the public consultation is the opportunity for your voice to be heard on European level. EPA has been active in the process and will submit its own contribution, but all readers of our blog, especially our national members are encouraged to do so, too.
2/10/2017
Fund for European Aid to the Most Deprived (FEAD)
The Fund for European Aid to
the Most Deprived (FEAD) supports EU countries' actions to provide material
assistance to the most deprived. EPA was invited to find ways to cooperate and our representative, Herminio Correa is working on finding ways to offer additional support by national parents associations in the form of empowerment to complement material contributions offered by FEAD. Read this short report and feel free to contact us if you want to join support action.
Labels:
child poverty,
cooperation,
EU funding,
FEAD,
support
2/02/2017
New scientific tool to analyse the inclusiveness of education systems embraces EPA advocacy messages
Professor
Paul Downes and his team has just published a scientific paper setting up an exhaustive
set of structural indicators to measure the inclusiveness of systems in and
around schools on different vertical levels and local. Inclusion is key to
making Europe more successful in educating lifelong learners who are equipped
for future challenges and can also cope with the present. Professor Downes, one
of the speakers of our conference in Dubrovnik in April 2016, shares our
thoughts about the importance of fully engaging both parents and students of all
ages as the only means to achieve this successfully. We were consulted as
experts during the development of the indicators, and we are proud to see that our
comments were not only taken into account, but the paper refers to and openly
embraces EPA advocacy messages, becoming the first official European Commission document
referencing our Manifesto 2015. The publication offers assessment tools for use
on national policy and also on institutional (school) level. It is free to be
downloaded from here.
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