Learning process being proposed to EU
The Let Me Learn process, which started as a collaborative effort to enhance the education system of Malta and numerous other national education systems including the US, UK, and Australia, has just celebrated its 10th anniversary. The process is an...
The Let Me Learn process, which started as a collaborative effort to enhance the education system of Malta and numerous other national education systems including the US, UK, and Australia, has just celebrated its 10th anniversary.
The process is an advanced learning system that provides an inward look at a learner's internalised meta-learning behaviours, an outward analysis of a learner's actions and a vocabulary for communicating the specific learning processes that yield externalised performance.
It not only provides the learner with the means to articulate who he is as a learner but also provides strategies for the learner to use learning tactics with intention.
The process was launched in Malta in 1994 following a chance encounter between Mark Borg, Joseph Mifsud and Christine Johnston.
Since then, it has been brought to thousands of educators as a part of teacher preparation programmes sponsored under the auspices of the Faculty of Education.
It was now being proposed to the EU to promote adult education and the development of human resources through the LML process.