December 26, 2024

European Project Design: how school can put into practice the Europe 2020 strategy through Erasmus+

Europe 2020 is a ten-year strategy proposed by the European Commission in 2010: the European Union has set ambitious goals for employment, innovation, climate and energy, education and social integration, to be achieved by 2020.

Each Member State has adopted its national objectives for each of these sectors and concrete actions have been planned to consolidate the Strategy.

In terms of education and training, in order to achieve the goals of smart, sustainable and inclusive growth, the School has put into practice the Europe 2020 strategy through participation in the various community programs; this is why the in-depth knowledge of the European project design tools is a fundamental element for the pursuit of the project objectives.

Erasmus+, the European program for education, training, youth and sport, which celebrated 30 years of life in 2017, allows a concrete experience of European citizenship and the relationship with new cultures and different habits.
A life-changing experience.

During these 30 years, millions of young people have participated in an experience of mobility and exchange, coming into contact with the founding values ​​of the European Union: freedom, democracy and solidarity.

Thanks to this experience, they have the opportunity to discover themselves therefore, participating at the same time in the construction of a more open and tolerant society.

In fact, Erasmus+ has proved to be an extraordinary tool for opening up, comparing and exchanging knowledge for all students animated by the desire and curiosity to live, study and grow in another European country, to improve not only their specific technical skills, but above all their soft skills, those abilities inherent the way of being and relating.

Many goals have been achieved in recent years, but what does the future hold for Europe’s longest running mobility program?

In the 2014-2020 period, Erasmus+ had a 40% budget increase compared to the previous phase, providing funding not only to universities, schools and training institutes, but also to “innovative partnerships”, ie to consortia and initiatives aimed at creating synergies between the world of education and the world of work, promoting innovation and an entrepreneurial spirit.

Aware of the importance of mobility, the European Parliament has recently approved a further budget increase, presenting some significant recommendations:

– in order to facilitate exchanges, the countries participating in the Erasmus+ program should more easily ensure the recognition of credits obtained by students in mobility;

– lifelong learning should become one of the key elements of the Erasmus + program, in order to favor students in the acquisition of personal and professional skills, functional to produce the increase in employment and, more generally, of the economic growth;

– vocational training should be rethought according to the digital economy, based on recent technological developments.

Furthermore, the European Parliament has given a positive opinion about the possibility of including Erasmus+ in an agreement to guarantee the continuation of the mobility agreements between the European Union and the United Kingdom even after the Brexit.

But the Erasmus affaire for the future is inspiring the European Commission to build, by 2025, a European Education Area aimed at strengthening the cultural dimension of the European Union, favoring the active participation of young people in construction of a stronger Europe.
And that is why, last May 30, the European Commission launched its proposal for the next Erasmus program, doubling the budget for the period 2021-2027 in order to increase the number of beneficiaries.
According to the Commission’s intentions, the next program should continue to apply to the Education and Training Bodies, committing to promote the inclusion of individuals with fewer opportunities and to encourage activities in new knowledge sectors, such as green economy, design, robotics engineering and artificial intelligence.
And to actually realize these intentions, the Commission has already adopted a package that includes:

• a general communication on “building a stronger Europe: the role of policies for young people, education and culture”;
• a “Strategy for youth” which reflects the importance the Commission gives to investing in young people and their future;
• automatic mutual recognition of diplomas and learning periods abroad to facilitate mobility in Europe;
• improving the teaching and learning of foreign languages;
• a new Agenda for Culture to raise awareness about the shared and diversified heritage of Europe, exploiting the potential of culture to build a more inclusive and fairer Union.

Therefore, sharing, growth and mobility to promote European identity through the experience of travel.
In one word: Erasmus+.

What will be the next destination?

Related Posts

European Project Design: an international school is a better school. These are the reasons why.

November 4, 2019

November 4, 2019

In a globalized scenario where interculturality represents the added value of a society with an international dimension, the school world...

Discover INTERGEN, the project designed to develop an innovative approach in intergenerational education

July 26, 2021

July 26, 2021

INTERGEN is a Strategic Partnership Project for Adult Education, KA2 – Cooperation for Innovation and Exchange of Good Practices of...

European project design: the advantages for teachers and students to participate in a transnational mobility project

May 23, 2019

May 23, 2019

Erasmus generation. It’s the name given to the thousands of young people who every year choose to undertake a period...

European project design: 3 main tools to write a successful project

October 22, 2019

October 22, 2019

Organizing focusing on ideas to achieve the set goals are the main steps to develop good design skills, fundamental to...

Erasmus+: good practices for developing the eight soft skills identified by the European Union

July 13, 2022

July 13, 2022

The European Union’s identification of the eight European key competencies – soft skills – (also called key citizenship competencies) is...

Erasmus+: a survey states that experiences abroad increase the acquisition of soft skills

June 29, 2022

June 29, 2022

In 2014, the European Commission published the Erasmus Impact Study, a study carried out by experts in which it states...

European project design: how to make school an international space for learning, training and education

October 17, 2019

October 17, 2019

In a Europe without borders, protagonist of a ongoing evolution driven by new technologies, by growing globalization and by considerable...

Europe on 2 wheels: from Pleven to Motor Valley with the Erasmus+ project to study mechatronics and transports

December 3, 2019

December 3, 2019

The students of the Professional School on Transport in Pleven (Bulgaria) carried out an Erasmus+ project at our Italian agency...

4 tips to write the right budget for an Erasmus+ project

February 21, 2020

February 21, 2020

When applying for a mobility project abroad, it’s necessary to pay close attention to the drafting of the budget, in...

Erasmus+: the most important European training program point by point

January 8, 2020

January 8, 2020

28 EU Member States, 6 non-European countries, more than 4 million participants: these are the figures that make Erasmus the...

The European Project Design glossary|Part II

November 18, 2019

November 18, 2019

Today we continue our discovery of the most used terms in the field of European Project Design. They are fundamental...

Playing 4 Soft Skills: how to activate new competences through game and creativity

November 30, 2020

November 30, 2020

A new adventure has just started for Berlink, our training agency located in Berlin, for Axonforce, our technological partner, and...

10 tips for successfully completing the Erasmus + KA1 Staff form

March 12, 2020

March 12, 2020

Thanks to the Key Action 1 Staff envisaged for the Erasmus + Program for 2020, each school can present mobility...

Erasmus+ in 6 simple points

May 31, 2022

May 31, 2022

What is Erasmus? Let’s try to answer this question, even if it is not easy to resume 35 years of...

Equality and inclusiveness: how Erasmus+ promotes equal access to all its actions

June 20, 2022

June 20, 2022

“The whole purpose of education is to turn mirrors into windows.” (Sydney J. Harris) Equality and inclusiveness are part of...

Comments
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Newsletter