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PEEL - Project for Enhancing Effective Learning
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The Project for Enhancing Effective Learning (PEEL) was founded in 1985 by a group of teachers and academics who shared concerns about the prevalence of passive, unreflective, dependent student learning, even in apparently successful lessons. They set out to research classroom approaches that would stimulate and support student learning that was more informed, purposeful, intellectually active, independent and metacognitive. The project was unfunded and not a result of any system or institution-level initiative. PEEL teachers agree to meet on a regular basis, in their own time, to share and analyse experiences, ideas and new practices.
The original project was intended to run for two years at one (secondary) school, however the process of collaborative action-research, the developments of so many new ideas for practice and the changes in classroom environment all proved very rewarding for the teachers. Consequently, at the end of the initial two years, the teachers refused to let the project end and a year later it began to spread to other schools in Australia and then in other countries. This spread was driven by teachers in those schools who had similar concerns about learning, as well as the lack of opportunities in a normal school day for collaborative reflection, and who wished to set up PEEL groups of their own. While the initial spread was in secondary schools, there is now a growing network of teachers in primary/elementary schools.
PEEL operates as a network of autonomous groups of teachers who take on a role of interdependent innovators. Coherence is provided by the shared concerns about passive, dependent learning and by structures that allow teachers to learn from and share new wisdom with teachers in other schools as well as a few academic friends. These structures include books, PEEL SEEDS, (the journal of the PEEL collective) an annual PEEL conference, PEEL collective meetings, a range of short courses and in-service activities and of course PEEL in Practice (a large database of teaching practice) available on CD or online.
The list of Teacher Concerns, summarise the sorts of concerns that are held by teachers who get involved in PEEL. The eight groups of Teaching Procedures that have been built up over the life of the project, reflect the areas where the teachers have been active in developing and extending new teaching practices. The twelve Principles of Teaching for Quality Learning were first codified in 1997; they list the critical features of the teaching that PEEL teachers were reporting as being consistently successful in achieving what they felt to be quality learning behaviours in their students.
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Giorgio Bertini added to Collaborative Learning, Joy of Learning, Social Learning Networks, 21st Century Teaching (and Learning), El caparazón, Learning Technologies, Educational Technology, Learning2.0, 21st Century Learning, Conversations, Learning and Change, Lifelong Learning, learning_with_web2.0, Learning Spaces, Thinking About Learning, Change Methods, Learning Theories and Methods, Educational Technology for the 21st Century 10 months ago
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