The project

The project

The Tolerance project provides Guidelines and a Toolbox with open educational resources to create favourable learning environments. It works towards mutual understanding in the classroom. It fights against radicalisations from early stages onward.

Targeting the development of skills and competences in teachers and trainers:

  • to help learners to live and work in a pluralistic society
  • to deal with tensions between learners and between groups of learners
  • to detect indicators of radicalisation among learners
  • to identify who is at risk
  • to act in a preventive stage
  • to deal with those who need support
  • to builds skills and motivation to take action against injustice
  • to create a better learning climate and better learning results
  • to reduce racism and xenophobia in the classroom.

To help achieve this we will produce:

  • Guidelines for teaching in groups with potential tensions and conflicts factors (social levels, cultures, religions...). The guidelines provide background information on how to handle such groups, as well as materials for daily practice in order to maintain a good learning climate.
  • a Toolbox with various learning resources including conflict solving strategies.
  • this website for the dissemination of all materials as Open Educational Resources in various languages.

The Guidelines and Toolbox will be elaborated after individual countries' analysis of needs and existing resources have been completed. The Guidelines and Toolbox will also be tested in real-life situations and adapted for further dissemination.

VET teachers and trainers, as well as educators are directly targeted. The final beneficiaries will be the young and young adult learners facing social integration difficulties and at risk of radicalisation.

News about the project

Fourth project newsletter

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Here is the 4th newsletter. This release contains information about the experimentation of the toolbox.

 

Third project newsletter

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The third newsletter is available as an introduction to the Tolerance Guidelines.

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Guidelines

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The Portuguese team from U.Porto has analysed the needs analysis reports from eight partner countries (Austria, Cyprus, France, Italy, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, Spain) in order to produce a global document systematising all needs.

From this, strategies have been identified and organised into three levels of intervention in relation to a theoretical framework. The first level is the “Teachers’ Training”  level, where we indicated possible actions and orientations that can provide knowledge and skills to teachers. The “School” is the second level of intervention, with possible ways to work on discrimination problems and to prevent radicalisation, under a collaborative action among all members of the school context. Lastly, the “Classroom” level is related to the importance of teachers/trainers discussing these topics with their students.

These strategies have the goal of supporting vocational teachers/trainers who intervene with students/trainees in a situation of socio-economic vulnerability and who might face the risk of radicalisation.

Second project newsletter

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The second newsletter is available. It presents the results of the needs analyses that were carried out in each partner country, together with examples of continuous training offered to teachers, trainers and educators. You can download the newsletter in all the languages of the partnership.

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Open educational resources

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For open educational resources, we will rely on the definition provided by UNESCO: "teaching, learning and research materials in any medium, digital or otherwise, that reside in the public domain or have been released under an open license that permits no-cost access, use, adaptation and redistribution by others with no or limited restrictions."

In the state-of-the-art analysis, we try to locate open resources serving the purposes of the Tolerance project. We will use them and disseminate these resources. But our purpose is also to produce our own ressources to fill in the gaps that were detected. All of these materials will be disseminated through this website in nine languages.

Needs analysis

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Support VET guideEach partner is engaged in a state of the art needs analysis in their respective countries. We do not limit our research to our own organisations, addressing and questioning local and regional environments, other educational organisations and relevant stakeholders. For each of the partner countries, the needs analysis includes a literature survey, an online survey, face-to-face interviews with educators and thematic experts as well as a focus group.

National reports will allow the project to respond to the needs of each partner, while their common analysis will constitute the basis for elaborating a common framework of action and preparing the Tolerance open resource centre.

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First project newsletter

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Image removed.The first newsletter is available. It explains the context, the objectives and the expected results of our project.

Schools and training institutions welcome learners facing social integration difficulties, usually with low educational level. When themselves or their parents are from different origins, they may feel discriminated within the society, by the school institution itself or by the other students. The learning climate is sometimes tense, in particular around socially sensitive questions or when violent political events make irruptions in all conversations and cannot be ignored in the classroom. These tensions and disquiet are reinforced in a context of high unemployment with unequal access to employment and an absence of positive perspectives for most of the learners in deprived area

You can download it all the languages of the partnership.

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Empowering and supporting teachers

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Image removed.The European Radicalisation Awareness Network has created a working group dedicated to education that has published a paper about "the empowerment of teachers so that they are confident and well equipped pedagogues".

They underline that teachers need to be able to:

  • promote citizenship and the common values of freedom, tolerance and non-discrimination in a way that engages students through their "experiences, perceptions and world views";
  • access effective materials to discuss specific ideologies, conspiracy theories and incidents,
  • teach media literacy,

Still, the main conclusion is that teachers who are fully mastering the core of their job are the more prepared to react against radicalisation. If they are empowered, they will be able to "create a safe space for students to find their place", to face new challenges, manage difficult exchanges and deal with critical situations.

Download the full paper "Empowering and supporting teachers - Pedagogical role requires time and training" (6 p.)

Kick-off meeting in Lyon, France

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The meeting has been organised with the generous support of PRAO on their premises. Partners delivered a collective overview of the project objectives and deadlines. They prepared a needs analysis for each individual country.

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