Abstract

This article explores the "open schooling" promoted by the European Union, whose focus is formal, non-formal and informal co-learning through cooperation between students, scientists and communities to solve real-life problems aiming at professional socio-scientific education, and responsible citizenship. The aim of this study was to understand the practices, strategies and needs of teachers interested in educational innovation with emerging technologiesand open schooling. The mixed methods methodology was supported by a semi-structured reflexive instrument of the open schooling project CONNECT. Its aim is to empower youth supported by responsible research and innovation science-action and ‘emancipatory fun’ – intrinsic enjoyment for learning. Participants were 34 teachers of secondary schools including professional, technical and vocational education in Brazil who completed an extension course on the use of emerging technologies. The results highlight several challenges for teachers still focused on traditional transmissive teaching. These include teaching research skills with real-life problems; help students generate questions with evidence-based insights; assess how well students use evidence to form an argument and craft scientific narratives and promote discussion of science in society in the classroom. In addition, four teachers' teaching and learning strategies need to become more frequent so that students can: raise scientific questions about the topic addressed; develop collaborative research project; use collaborative role-playing games and dialogue on current scientific issues.

Highlights

  • The education of this new decade requires innovation and expansion of teacher training programmes to improve their pedagogical practices in a transformative, engaging and responsive way, with the integration of new theories, technologies and pedagogical strategies

  • A Teacher training for professional education through an extension course on emerging technologies with 
open schooling supported by responsible research and innovation science-action and ‘emancipatory fun’ – intrinsic enjoyment for learning

  • This study explores the open schooling approach promoted by the European Union that focuses on integrating formal, non-formal and informal learning through cooperation between students, scientists and communities to solve real life problems

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Summary

Introduction

The education of this new decade requires innovation and expansion of teacher training programmes to improve their pedagogical practices in a transformative, engaging and responsive way, with the integration of new theories, technologies and pedagogical strategies. To support the training of academic educators and school teachers at local and national levels, extension programmes have an essential role in aligning scientific research and technological innovations with the priorities of educational communities and society. The Brazilian extension programme aims to benefit the university and local society, contributing to the transformation of community members and the technologies with 
open schooling educational institution to better face the contemporary challenges towards justice, solidariety and democracy (FORPROEX, 2012). The university extension is an action that promotes the articulation between teaching and academic research with attention to the community's needs (MATTA; FURLANI, 2020) It is benefitial for national governments, universities and societies for four reasons.

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