eTwinning

News

The European eTwinning Prize Competition 2013

20 November 2012

The European eTwinning Prize Competition 2013 will award eTwinning projects in 3 categories by age (pupils age 4-11, age 12-15, age 16-19), as well as 6 special categories.

 

eTwinning is the community for schools in Europe. It promotes school collaboration in Europe through the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) by providing support, tools and services for schools. Over 5,000 projects involving at least two european schools have been developped since the project was launched in 2005.

The eTwinning Portal (www.etwinning.net) is the main meeting point and workspace for the action. Available in twenty-five languages, the eTwinning Portal now has the involvement of nearly 170 000 members and over 5324 projects between two or more schools across Europe. The Portal provides online tools for teachers to find partners, set up projects, share ideas, exchange best practice and start working together, immediately using various customised tools available on the eTwinning platform.
 
Launched in 2005 as the main action of the European Commission’s eLearning Programme, eTwinning has been firmly integrated in the Lifelong Learning Programme since 2007. Its Central Support Service is operated by European Schoolnet, an international partnership of 33 European Ministries of Education developing learning for schools, teachers and pupils across Europe. eTwinning is further supported at national level by 35 National Support Services.
 
The deadline for submissions is 30 November 2012.
 
More information here.
News

eTwinning Prizes 2012: Winners announced!

16 April 2012

The eTwinning CSS (Central Support Service) portal is the official online European contact point for everyone interested or involved in eTwinning. It is a virtual meeting point for the exchange of information between schools, and it provides all the tools and services necessary for schools to find partners, resources, advice, help, and information, and even to build eTwinning projects in partnership with each other.

The aim of the European eTwinning Prizes competition is to highlight best practice in collaborative school projects using Information and Communication Technology (ICT).

The winners of the three age categories and three special categories were announced on the website. This year another prize was offered, the Best eTwinning Project 2012. This prize is chosen from among all the winners in all categories, by vote of all the National Support Services.

 

See the list of all winners here.

Directory

The European Chain Reaction

25 November 2011

Thirteen teachers worked together in this eTwinning project. They were each given access to the blog and everyone could upload their own video, the children could then watch the new entries on their digital school board or at home. Through entering, the children learned about science (creating the chain reaction), ICT (filming, blogging, ...), languages (commenting in English when their mother tongue was non-English) and other cultures (when watching the introduction videos of the other classes).

News

How eTwinning can boost skills at school

21 November 2011

Teachers involved in eTwinning, the European online community for schools, met with local and national policy-makers in Genoa to discuss how linking up with other schools can help improve teaching quality and pupils' skills.

The conference took place alongside ABCD, Italy's most important education fair, which attracts over 40,000 visitors. Participants discussed ways of integrating eTwinning into education policies by using it systematically as platform for teachers to develop innovative practices and forge new ways of developing their professional skills.

 

In a video message the European Commissioner for Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth, Androulla Vassiliou, encouraged participants to "explore the contribution that eTwinning can make to your own national, regional and local priorities for improving the quality of learning, for encouraging cooperation between teachers, and for promoting school improvement."

 

Last week, school leaders from across Europe met in a similar event near Berlin to look at how they can make specific use of eTwinning to raise the profile of their school, get an insight in modern trends of educational leadership and find partners in Europe (To know more).

 

Background

eTwinning is the European online community for schools involving already 145,000 teachers across Europe. eTwinning is funded by the European Commission as part of the Lifelong Learning programme.

 

The eTwinning platform (www.etwinning.net) offers opportunities for teachers to meet and interact with each other in school projects, special interest groups and online forums. It also offers teachers many opportunities to develop their professional skills via online learning events.

 

"At the end of my first project, when summing up the results and my pupils' feedback, I started to think that eTwinning could be more than an extra project and could be fully incorporated into teaching. eTwinning is the most flexible tool of my teaching that allows my pupils and me to learn, improve, have fun and make friends." Maria Doria, teacher from Italy

 

More information: www.etwinning.net

 

Follow the event via its joint blog with the Experts Meeting in Education Networking (Eminent): http://blogs.eun.org/eminent/

News

Schools Awarded the eTwinning European Quality Label, October 2011

02 November 2011

The 1172 schools awarded the European Quality Label are already listed. In addition to the school name (and teacher name) there is information on the project that got them their Quality Label.

eTwinning Quality Labels are granted to teachers with excellent eTwinning projects. They indicate that the project has reached a certain national and European standard. For this reason, there are two labels: the National Quality Label and the European Quality Label.

 

The European Quality Label is a second mark of success and is awarded automatically by the Central Support Service to schools in a project where at least two partners have already received the National Quality Label. As of October 2009, the European Quality Label is awarded only once a year and featured through the eTwinning Portal.

 

The European Quality Label is required to participate in the European eTwinning Prizes competition.

 

Winning Schools - October 2011

Directory

Best Practice Manual: Manual addressing the organisation of e-twinning activities on the topic of European Citizenship for post-primary schools

10 November 2006
Based on the experiences gathered during Citizen E, the project partners have written a Best Practice Manual intended as a guideline for European and national training institutions who are interested in setting up school twinning activities. This Best Practice Manual includes guidelines and recommendations as well as concrete examples of school twinning activities carried out during the project lifetime.
eTwinning