Access to a world of infinite information has changed how we communicate, process information, and think. Decentralized systems have proven to be more productive and agile than rigid, top-down ones. Innovation, creativity, and independent thinking are increasingly crucial to the global economy.
And yet the dominant model of public education is still fundamentally rooted in the industrial revolution that spawned it, when workplaces valued punctuality, regularity, attention, and silence above all else. (In 1899, William T. Harris, the US commissioner of education, celebrated the fact that US schools had developed the "appearance of a machine," one that teaches the student "to behave in an orderly manner, to stay in his own place, and not get in the way of others.") We don't openly profess those values nowadays, but our educational system—which routinely tests kids on their ability to recall information and demonstrate mastery of a narrow set of skills—doubles down on the view that students are material to be processed, programmed, and quality-tested. School administrators prepare curriculum standards and "pacing guides" that tell teachers what to teach each day. Legions of managers supervise everything that happens in the classroom; in 2010 only 50 percent of public school staff members in the US were teachers.
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That's why a new breed of educators, inspired by everything from the Internet to evolutionary psychology, neuroscience, and AI, are inventing radical new ways for children to learn, grow, and thrive. To them, knowledge isn't a commodity that's delivered from teacher to student but something that emerges from the students' own curiosity-fueled exploration. Teachers provide prompts, not answers, and then they step aside so students can teach themselves and one another. They are creating ways for children to discover their passion—and uncovering a generation of geniuses in the process.
Good, long article on how education could be reinvented for the 21st century.
(Score: 4, Interesting) by AnonymousCowardNoMore on Monday August 24 2015, @06:00PM
I work in industry, in a sector which today employs half as many people in my country as two decades ago. I am a thinker; I play some small part in this decline in jobs because I do work which saves costs, which are directly or indirectly wages.
If we did not do things this way, it would only make matters worse as we would not be able to compete. (And we struggle as it is, with the current economic climate.) Political interference make things especially tough over here but problems exist even where that is not a factor.
I genuinely do not know the One True Answer. But I can say this: Malnutrition, illness, poverty, psychological distress, etc. all influence the sharpness of the mind directly and sometimes permanently. It is in the interest of everyone to combat these things, and promote education, because we're running out of easy jobs and its better for society to spend the money now than carry all that dead weight in a few decades. We already have a huge surpluss of unskilled labour.