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1. What are the 3 categories of 21st Century Skills?

Explain

The Three 21st Century Skill Categories, The learning skills (the four C's) come first,
which instructs students on how the mind works required to adjust to and enhance a
contemporary working environment. The second component, literacy skills (IMT),
concentrates on teaching students how to recognize facts, publication venues, and the
technology that supports them. Finding reliable sources and genuine information is a
top priority in order to distinguish it from the false information that permeates the
Internet. The Existence Skills (FLIPS) course examines the intangible aspects of a
student's daily life. These intangibles emphasize both professional and personal
attributes. All 12 21st Century talents that are important for a student's future career are
covered by these categories collectively.

2. What are the four C's?

The four C’s are by far the most popular 21st Century skills. These skills are also called
learning skills.

The 4 C's of 21st Century Skills are:

Critical thinking: Finding solutions to problems

Creativity: Thinking outside the box

Collaboration: Working with others

Communication: Talking to others

Perhaps the most crucial skill for someone to possess in the health sciences is critical
thinking.

3. What are the Literacy Skills?

The next group of 21st Century skills is literacy. They are sometimes referred to as IMT
skills and each one is focused on a various component of digital understanding. There
are three 21st century literacy skills: information literacy, media literacy, and technology
literacy. Information literacy is the foundational skill and involves understanding facts,
figures, statistics, and data. Media literacy involves understanding the methods and
venues through which information is published. It aids students in comprehending facts,
particularly data points, that they would run across online.
4. What are the Life Skills?

The last category is life skills. These abilities, collectively known as FLIPS, all relate to a
person's personal life but also cross over into professional contexts. The five 21st
Century life skills are: First Flexibility: Deviating from Plans as Needed; Second
Leadership; Third Initiative: Starting Projects, Strategies, and Plans on Ones Own; Fourth
Productivity: Maintaining Efficiency in an Age of Distractions; and Fifth Social skills:
Meeting and Networking with Others for Mutual Benefit. Being flexible is a way of
expressing one's capacity to change with the situation.

5. By learning these skills, How it may help you as a future educator?.

We discover it's most important as a future teacher when in middle or early high school,
it's crucial to teach 21st century abilities. While 21st century skills have always been
significant, they have now important in a global market that is developing more quickly
every day. All of these abilities come back to the same main subject. a person's
capacity to act and/or adjust to change. This is due to the fact that any industry is
subject to sudden change. Modern innovative ideas and methods frequently challenge
established industries. However, unaffected industries are not exempt from disruption.
Simply put, they haven't been disturbed yet. In light of this, we now live in a time where
nothing is certain. Students must therefore have the skills necessary to manage the
change that will permeate their lives. They must learn how to respond to it, at the
absolute least. They will be left behind if not.

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