Info Session for SEED applicants
You are invited to attend the 1st online Info Session about the teachers’ training “Sustainability Education and Empowerment through Drama – SEED”, designed to help interested educators to apply for the trainings.
The Info Session will happen on Tuesday, March 11th at 19:00 CET on ZOOM.
It will last for app. 60 – 90 minutes (depending on questions).
In the Session, the organisers will briefly present the plan and the program of the trainings, and then answer your questions about the training sessions, the agenda, the application procedure, etc.
You will meet the hosts of the 1st training happening in Portugal in early May – SCIAENA (Faro, Portugal); the SEED trainers from BAZAART (Belgrade, Serbia); as well as The Big Green project leader Pro Progressione (Budapest, Hungary).
This Info Session precedes the deadline for the training in Portugal (Sunday, March 23rd at midnight), so it will focus some more on the details of that training.
For the trainings which are to follow, there will be two more online Info Sessions:
- end of April for the training in Hungary (deadline for applications: Sunday, May 11th); and
- mid-June for the training in Serbia (deadline for applications: Sunday, June 29th).
Those sessions will also be announced in our websites and with an email.
If you have questions about the Info Session or any other topic concerning the SEED, please don’t hesitate to write to us at bazaart.beograd@gmail.com or contact Ms. Jelena Stojanovic, program coordinator, at +381 69 5131219 (WhatsApp, Viber).
Looking forward to meeting you soon on ZOOM,
Best regards from the SEED European team!
The SEED is designed by an international group of artists, art educators, teachers and experts in Sustainability Education, within the Creative Europe project THE BIG GREEN funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.