Visibility of eTwinning Projects Groups July 2019 Newsletter Newsletter 9 | Page 120

Visibility of eTwinning Projects Group July 2019 Newsletter ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No Man Is an Island: eTwinning and Erasmus+ hand in hand by Elena Pezzi How many eTwinning projects will I have done with my students in all these years? And how many Socrates, Comenius and Erasmus+ projects have I been involved in since I was infected with the Europeanisation virus? Surely dozens, and certainly some of the most engaging and motivating activities were those in which eTwinning and Erasmus+ merged together to create exciting projects both online and in presence! I would like to tell you something about the latest project of this kind, a three-year Erasmus+ partnership which is also, at the same time, an eTwinning project between six partner schools from five different countries. All the activities lead to a collaborative "Heritage Catalogue" of all partners and a "Cross-cultural newscast" in which we will show the characteristics of the "other" through our eyes. The activities involve a heterogeneous group of teachers and students of various school orders, between 14 and 18 years old. All the students work actively on the project; we want to stimulate knowledge and collaboration among young Europeans from European schools all over the world using English as a language of communication with an action-oriented approach and project-based learning. The modular structure and the different tasks have allowed all pupils to work according to the rhythms and methods best suited to them, always with a view to collaboration and the implementation of activities. The title? No Man is an Island, because we are convinced that only from communication, collaboration, interaction can come something beautiful and special for us, for our students and, hopefully, also for our society. As far as pupils are concerned, for some of them this was their first eTwinning project, for mine it was their third, so I didn't have to involve them particularly, on the contrary they had a beneficial "towing" effect by hooking up the new pupils and getting them immediately into the collaborative atmosphere. All the partners are eTwinners who have been active for a long time (three of us are also eTwinning Schools) and by common agreement we wanted to create a space where we could share and collaborate beyond the simple repository of materials, where to meet and work together on the mutual knowledge of our schools, countries and cultural heritage. In fact, the other fundamental aspect of the project is its opening to the whole school, allowing pupils from different classes to work together on the project, already experiencing at school the collaboration that we have established at European level. The leitmotif of the project is the discovery of our cultural heritage, of what makes us unique and special but, at the same time, makes us recognize what each of us owes to the "other" in the construction of a piece of its own identity. We also wanted to disseminate the good practices already implemented in our institutions to make the school a place where values of respect, inclusion, interculturalism and active citizenship are promoted. During the project we have run common activities, such as: - the creation of the national and international logos - the collaborative creation of some episodes of a webradio program - a joint discussion (debate) on some topics of common interest - the celebration of some important dates (World Heritage Day, Earth Day, etc.) The project is fundamental to change our attitude towards the teaching-learning process. The students themselves learn language and cultural content in a more lively and effective way in an informal and pedagogically focused context. From this point of view, the emotional aspect is also very important, creating deep bonds between students and teachers. The integration in the curriculum is evident in all phases of the project, which is based on the methodology of project based learning and task approach, whose objectives are that the pupils develop skills and acquire at the same time the curriculum content. The topics on which the students have reflected and worked collaboratively all refer to the different phases of learning both of a foreign language and culture and of the contents developed in the mother tongue, also according to the CLIL perspective and 120