izpis_h1_title_alt

Odlaganje vstopa otrok v osnovno šolo v Sloveniji
ID Kofler, Nika (Author), ID Hočevar, Andreja (Mentor) More about this mentor... This link opens in a new window, ID Kovač Šebart, Mojca (Comentor)

.pdfPDF - Presentation file, Download (896,86 KB)
MD5: 5316091CFA58031E9AFED816CF8AADBC

Abstract
V magistrskem delu smo raziskovali problematiko odloženega vstopa šoloobveznih otrok v osnovno šolo, saj delež takšnih otrok v Sloveniji narašča. Analizirali smo zakone, podzakonske akte, priporočila ter učne načrte za slovenščino in matematiko v prvem vzgojno-izobraževalnem obdobju. Predstavili smo ključne rešitve, zapisane v Beli knjigi (1995), ki so služile kot strokovna osnova za oblikovanje določil v Zakonu o osnovni šoli (1996). To so trajanje osnovne šole, starost otrok ob vstopu vanjo, ocenjevanje znanja, napredovanje v višji razred, diferenciacija pouka in ustrezna formalna izobrazba učiteljev v prvem razredu osnovne šole. V nalogi ugotavljamo, da so leta 1996 sprejeta zakonska določila vzpostavljala prvo vzgojno-izobraževalno obdobje, kot razmeroma zaokroženo zaključeno celoto, kasnejše spremembe Zakona o osnovni šoli pa so posegle v zasnovo prvega razreda oz. prvega vzgojno-izobraževalnega obdobja. Vanjo so posegle tudi spremembe učnih načrtov. Tako doseganje standardov znanja ni več vezano na konec prvega vzgojno-izobraževalnega obdobja, standardi znanja so obsežnejši in zahtevnejši, ocenjevanje znanja je opisno le še v prvih dveh razredih, učenci pa lahko ponavljajo tako prvi kot drugi razred. Spremembe sistemskih rešitev in učnih načrtov pomenijo odmik od prvotne zasnove devetletne osnovne šole, kar starši morda zaznavajo kot povečano zahtevnost zlasti prvega razreda osnovne šole, to pa je morebiti eden od razlogov, zaradi katerih se odločajo za odlog šolanja otrok.

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:odlog šolanja, prvi razred, Bela knjiga, Zakon o osnovni šoli, spremembe zakonodaje, spremembe učnih načrtov
Work type:Master's thesis/paper
Organization:FF - Faculty of Arts
Year:2024
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-159942 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:01.08.2024
Views:18
Downloads:1
Metadata:XML RDF-CHPDL DC-XML DC-RDF
:
Copy citation
Share:Bookmark and Share

Secondary language

Language:English
Title:Deferring Children's Entry into Primary School in Slovenia
Abstract:
This master's thesis studies why parents decide to delay their school-age children's entry in primary school, as the proportion of such children in Slovenia is increasing. Relevant legislation, statutory instruments, recommendations and curricula for Slovene and Mathematics in the first educational period were analysed. We presented key solutions portrayed in the White Book (1995), which served as professional basis to set out provisions of the Primary School Act (1996), i.e. duration of primary school, children's age upon entry in primary school, knowledge assessment, progression to a higher grade, lesson differentiation and appropriate formal education of teachers in the first grade of primary school. In the thesis, we determine that provisions imposed by law in 1996 established the first educational period as a moderately coherent whole, while later amendments to the Primary School Act altered the structure of the first grade and the first educational period. This structure was also altered through curricular changes. Therefore, compliance with knowledge standards is no longer associated with the end of the first educational period, knowledge standards are more extensive and more demanding, descriptive knowledge assessment only pertains to the first two grades, and pupils are able to repeat both the first and the second grades. Changes of systemic solutions and curricular changes mean a departure from the initial structure of the nine-grade primary school, which parents may perceive as especially the first grade of primary school becoming more demanding, which could be one of the reasons why they decide to delay their children's schooling.

Keywords:delaying schooling, first grade, White Book, Primary School Act, legislative changes, curricular changes.

Similar documents

Similar works from RUL:
Similar works from other Slovenian collections:

Back