TECHNOLOGY IN EDUCATION
Some Videos-
It is truly marked by Dr Marcus Specht, Professor of Advanced Learning Technologies, Open University of Netherlands that-
“The students of the future will demand the learning support that is appropriate for their situation or context. Nothing more, nothing less. And they want it at the moment the need arises. Not sooner, not later. Mobile devices will be a key technology for providing that learning support.”
It is necessary to understand that education demands learning support that is appropriate according to the situation and context. And today, as the world is heading towards a new era of mastering technology and towards the progressive way of accepting AI, we need modifications in the education system also. This blog has some interesting talks about how technology can be helpful in education.
Video - 1: Sir Ken Robinson: Changing Paradigm
Sir Ken Robinson gave some innovative ideas related to technology and education system under the title ‘The Changing Paradigm’. He was a British author, speaker and international advisor on education in the arts to government, non-profits, education and arts bodies. Sir Ken Robinson defines creativity as
"the process of having original ideas that have value".
It differs from imagination, which is the ability to bring to mind things that aren't present to your senses.
"I think of creativity as putting your imagination to work. It’s like the executive wing of imagination. You can be imaginative all day long and never do anything. To be creative, you have to do something".
-Sir Ken Robinson
Sir Ken Robinson studied education system in an innovative way in his talk entitled as The Changing Paradigm. In this video, his ideas on Divergent Thinking and Collaborative Learning are discussed as vital for changing paradigm. Every country on earth at the moment is reforming public education. There are two reasons for it:
First, economic - how to train children to take their place in the economies of the 21st century?
People are trying to work out to educate children to take their place in the economies of the 21st century, given that we can’t anticipate what the economy will look like at the end of next week? As the recent turmoil is demonstrating.
The second, cultural. How do we educate our children so that they have a sense of cultural identity and we can pass on the cultural genes of our communities while being part of the process of globalization?
The problem is in their attempt to meet the future by doing what they did in the past and on the way they’re alienating millions of kids who don't see any purpose in going to school!
“When we went to school, we were kept there with a story, which was if you worked hard and did well and got a college degree you would have a job. Our kids don’t believe that—and they’re right not to, by the way. You are better having a degree than not, but it’s not a guarantee any more.”
Now kids don't like to do this. It's better having a degree, but it's not a sure assurance that the one will get a job.
Hence, the current system of education was designed and conceived and structured for a different age. It was conceived in the intellectual culture of the enlightenment.
“Some people say we have to raise standards as if this is a breakthrough. Like really, yes, we should. Why would you lower them? I haven’t come to an argument which persuades me of lowering them. But raising them—of course, we should be raising them.”
“The problem is that the current system of education was designed and conceived and structured for a different age. It was conceived in the intellectual culture of the enlightenment and in the economic circumstances of the industrial revolution. Before the middle of the nineteenth century, there were no systems of public education. Not really. You could get educated by Jesuits if you had the money. But public education, paid for out of taxation, compulsory to everyone and free at the point of delivery, that was a revolutionary idea. And many people objected to it: they said: “It’s not possible for many street kids, working-class kids to benefit from public education; they’re incapable of learning to read and write and why are we spending time on this?”
“But running right through it was an intellectual model of the mind. Which was essentially the enlightenment view of intelligence – that real intelligence consists in this capacity for a certain type of deductive reasoning and knowledge of the classics, originally. What we come to think of as academic ability.”
In the view of Sir Ken Robinson, the model pillared on ‘Economic’ and ‘Intellectual’ has caused chaos in many peoples lives. So educational reform is driven by an economic imperative which is like the modern epidemic - misplaced and fictitious where academic ability is no longer relevant.
“This is the plague of ADHD. Now, this is a map of the instance of ADHD in America – or prescriptions for ADHD. Don’t mistake me. I don’t mean to say there is no such thing as Attention Deficit Disorder. I am not qualified to say if there is such a thing – I know that the great majority of psychologists and paediatricians think there is such a thing. But it is still a matter of debate. What I do know for a fact is it is not an epidemic. These kids are being medicated as routinely as we had our tonsils taken out. And on the same, whimsical basis and for the same reason: medical fashion.”
“Our children are living in the most intensely stimulating period in the history of the earth. They’re being besieged by information and calls for their attention from every platform: computers, from i-phones, from advertising hoardings, from hundreds of television channels. And we’re penalizing them now for getting distracted. From what? Boring stuff, at school, for the most part.”
The arts especially address the idea of aesthetic experience. An aesthetic experience is one in which your senses are operating at their peak; when you are present in the current moment; when you’re resonating with the excitement of this thing that you’re experiencing; when you are fully alive. And anaesthetic is when you shut your senses off and deaden yourself to what’s happening. And a lot of these drugs are that.”
Sir Ken Robinson goes on explaining that we are getting our children through education by anaesthetizing them. But it is necessary to do exactly the opposite!
The present system of education is modelled on the interests of industrialization. And Sir Ken Robinson illustrates this statement -
“I’ll give you a couple of examples. Schools are still pretty much organized along factory lines. Ringing bells, separate facilities, specialized into separate subjects. We still educate children by batches: we put them through the system by age group. Why do we do that? Why is there this assumption that the most important thing kids have in common is how old they are? It’s like the most important thing about them is their date of manufacture. Well, I know kids that are much better than other kids at different disciplines; or at different times of the day; or better in smaller groups than in large groups; or sometimes they want to be on their own. If you are interested in the model of learning, you don’t start from this production line mentality.”
The process of learning doesn’t require the “production line mentality”. It is essentially about conformity. Changing the paradigm means going opposite to the standardization. Robinson talks about DIVERGENT THINKING. Divergent thinking isn’t the same thing as creativity. Sir Ken Robinson defines creativity as the process of having original ideas that have value. Divergent thinking isn’t a synonym but its an essential capacity for creativity. It’s the ability to see lots of possible answers to a question, lots of possible ways of interpreting a question, to think what Edward de Bono would probably call “laterally”, to think not just in linear or convergent ways. To seek multiple answers, not one. The research says that education deteriorates divergent thinking which is essential among all but as we educate ourselves in this ‘corporate education which is industrial’, we tend to decrease these capacities.
But Sir Ken Robinson points out that we have to think differently about human capacity by eliminating certain distinctions of academic, non-academic, abstract, theoretical, vocational to meet the requirement of the real and future world.
The most important lesson is to work in groups, in collaboration which the traditional system denies by accusing it with “COPYING” which is called “CHEATING”. But collaboration is the essential stuff of growth which is often neglected in the gene pool of growth.
“If we atomize people and separate them and judge them separately, we form a kind of disjunction between them and their natural learning environment. And thirdly, it is crucially about the culture of our institutions: the habits of institutions and the habitats that they occupy.”
Hence, Sir Ken Robinson chiefly talks about the “raising standards” of the education system in order to change the structure of education.
Video 2: Sugata Mitra: School in the cloud- SOLE
Q&A Bill Gates: I’ve seen some things you’re doing in the system that have to do with motivation and feedback — energy points, merit badges. Tell me what you’re thinking there. Salman Khan: Oh yeah. No, we have an awesome team working on it. And I have to make it clear, it’s not just me anymore. I’m still doing all the videos, but we have a rockstar team doing the software. Yeah, we’ve put a bunch of game mechanics in there where you get these badges, we’re going to start having leader boards by area, and you get points. It’s actually been pretty interesting. Just the wording of the badging or how many points you get for doing something, we see on a system-wide basis, like tens of thousands of fifth graders or sixth graders going one direction or another, depending what badge you give them. Bill Gates: And the collaboration you’re doing with Los Altos, how did that come about? Salman Khan:Los Altos, it was kind of crazy. Once again, I didn’t expect it to be used in classrooms. Someone from their board came and said, “What would you do if you had carte blanche in a classroom?” And I said, “Well, I would just, every student work at their own pace on something like this and we’d give a dashboard.” And they said, “Oh, this is kind of radical. We have to think about it.” And me and the rest of the team were like, “They’re never going to want to do this.” But literally the next day they were like, “Can you start in two weeks?” Bill Gates: So fifth grade math is where that’s going on right now? Salman Khan:It’s two fifth grade classes and two seventh grade classes. And they’re doing it at the district level. I think what they’re excited about is they can now follow these kids. It’s not an only-in-school thing. We’ve even, on Christmas, we saw some of the kids were doing it. And we can track everything. So they can actually track them as they go through the entire district. Through the summers, as they go from one teacher to the next, you have this continuity of data that even at the district level they can see. Bill Gates: So some of those views we saw were for the teacher to go in and track actually what’s going on with those kids. So you’re getting feedback on those teacher views to see what they think they mean? Salman Khan:Oh yeah. Most of those were specs by the teachers. We made some of those for students so they could see their data, but we have a very tight design loop with the teachers themselves. And they’re literally saying, “Hey, this is nice, but … ” Like that focus graph, a lot of the teachers said, “I have a feeling that a lot of the kids are jumping around and not focusing on one topic.” So we made that focus diagram. So it’s all been teacher-driven. It’s been pretty crazy. Bill Gates: Is this ready for prime time? Do you think a lot of classes next school year should try this thing out? Salman Khan:Yeah, it’s ready. We’ve got a million people on the site already, so we can handle a few more. (Laughter) No, no reason why it really can’t happen in every classroom in America tomorrow. Bill Gates: And the vision of the tutoring thing. The idea there is, if I’m confused about a topic, somehow right in the user interface I’d find people who are volunteering, maybe see their reputation, and I could schedule and connect up with those people? Salman Khan: Absolutely. And this is something that I recommend everyone in this audience to do. Those dashboards the teachers have, you can go log in right now and you can essentially become a coach for your kids, or nephews, or cousins, or maybe some kids at the Boys and Girls Club. And yeah, you can start becoming a mentor, a tutor, really immediately. But yeah, it’s all there. |
Marc Prensky in his talk discusses the change which can be termed as “singularity” – an event which changes things so fundamentally that there is absolutely no going back. This so-called “singularity” is the arrival and rapid dissemination of digital technology in the last decades of the 20th century. Marc Prensky talks about how today's generation is the first generations to grow up with this new technology as they have spent their entire lives surrounded by and using technology. Today‟s average college grads have spent less than 5,000 hours of their lives reading, but over 10,000 hours playing video games (not to mention 20,000 hours watching TV). Computer games, email, the Internet, cell phones and instant messaging are integral parts of their lives.
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