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The Changing Nature of
Education in the Digital Age
          Sam Gliksman

     samgliksman@gmail.com
       Twitter: @samgliksman
   http://ipadEducators.ning.com
About Sam Gliksman
 Director of Educational Technology, New Community Jewish
HS
 Educational Technology Consultant
 Published author
 Working with 1:1 and BYOD programs
 Founder of iPads in Education website
     http://iPadEducators.ning.com
 Twitter: @samgliksman
 Email: samgliksman@gmail.com
Pivotal Questions

1. How has technology changed society?
2. In what ways is it altering how we all
   learn?
3. How do educators adapt to learning
   needs in the digital age?
1.   How is technology changing society?
What were you
doing?
1995: Bill Clinton, Eric Clapton … ?
                                         Movies
     Most popular TV
     show?




                             Popular new cars
  Popular
  music?
  Blues Traveller
What do they all have in common
…?
So? Businesses close all the time…

These were market leaders for
ENTIRE INDUSTRIES … that
simply became obsolete
―overnight‖

                … because they failed to
                recognize and adjust to a
                rapidly evolving marketplace
My Concern


Are schools frozen delivering an obsolete
education --preparing students for a society that no
longer exists?
We’re at a critical crossroads…

Questioning the value of education:
   •   Employers complain graduates lack skills
   •   Training for employment that changes or becomes
       totally redundant
   •   Lack of technology in schools
   •   Alternatives abound: The Internet offers online
       schools and self-education options
Technology alone is NOT the answer
… not if we simply use it to reinforce the same
models of education that we’ve been using for 100
years
  • teacher-centered
  • content driven
  • memorization
  • rote drills
  • one-size-fits-all
Doing the same old things ―better‖ isn’t working.

We need new visions of education.
What are our educational goals?
A simple math problem … ―Find X‖




    It’s all about CONTEXT
We are preparing children for life in society after school
http://www.gamersmint.com




CHANGE
What technologies did people use when you were a
kidthat no longer exist today?
    …
Visual
media




Audio
         Communication
             s
―Change‖ is not a new concept
It’s the SPEED OF CHANGE
that just takes your breath away
Computing power

 1969? Today’s washing machine has more
 memory and computing power than all NASA's
 computing resources when it first landed man on the
 moon
 (The Guardian, July 1, 2009)
Capacity to store information
     Price of 1 gigabyte of memory in 1981?
     $300,000
     Price of 1 gigabyte in 2012?
     10 cents
Ubiquity… it’s everywhere
Anyone have a cell
phone?



80% of US teens
have a cell phone.
Connected – Social Networking

•   Facebook didn’t exist prior to 2004
•   Today, almost 1 out of every 7 people on the
    planet has a Facebook page
Life in the Digital Age…

None existed 10
years ago

What will you
―need‖ 10 years
from now?
If context is important… are we preparing students
for their futures?
      Children starting elementary school today
      will graduate in 2024
     What will the world look like in 2024?
     How do we educate and prepare children
     for a world we don’t know anything about?
―In times of change, learners inherit the
Earth, while the learned find themselves
beautifully equipped to deal with a world
          that no longer exists‖

                     — Eric Hoffer
65% of today’s grade school children may
                    end
up doing work that hasn’t been invented yet
              ―Now You See It‖, Cathy Davidson
Evolution of the office
Can you date this classroom?
2.   How has technology changed the ways children
     absorb and process information?
Exposure to Technology

    Neuroplasticity: Theory is now that brain
     constantly adapts to external stimuli
    Children’s brains today develop very
     differently than ours.
How Much Technology?

 Constantly ―plugged in‖. They’ve never known a world
  without technology and Internet.
 Combined technology use averages around 50+ hours a
  week.
 Annually, comes to TWICE the time they spend in classes.
 TEN times more than time spent reading books.
Preference for Multimedia
Our learning was text based.

They live in a world of multimedia. They learn more
effectively when information is presented visually.
They are visual learners   %
                           90
Their short term recall    80
is 9 times better when     70
                           60
information is
                           50
presented graphically
                           40
                           30
                           20
                           10
                            0
                                Graphical   Oral/text
Learning is More Effective in Color
Our learning was largely black and white.
The 21st century learner processes information in
color.
Yet this is what they routinely get…
For example, if you were learning about
  the recent earthquake in Japan you
  could copy and distribute handouts

                 or…
Experiential Learners
We grew up as passive consumers of media
They constantly interact with media - and learn
effectively through trial and error
What do you do when you open this box?

        What would your students do?
At school, it’s ―sit still and listen‖
Random information access
We received controlled, linear presentation of
information
Their access is fast paced and driven by curiosity and
interest
Collaboration and Communication
 Our mandate was to sit still, be quiet, work on your
 own
 They’re constantly ―connected‖, communicating and
 collaborating with several people at once
Content Publishers
 We consumed media.
 They constantly create and publish media.
If education is about ―context‖…
Life outside school…                 Life in school…
Digital, constantly plugged in       Analog, put technology away
Multimedia and color                 Text, black and white
Personal, driven by passion          Follows fixed schedule
Creating and publishing              Consume and spit back
Always connected, interacting        Isolated, sit still and quiet
Learning from multitude of sources   Teacher, textbook
Sharing and collaborating            Work on your own
Experiential, hands on learning      Listen to lecture
So Why…?
           T hat’s
           T he
           W ay
           We
           A lways
           D id
            It
3.   How do we adapt and create a
     21st century ―learning‖ environment?
Fundamental Shift in Strategy

            Old                                   New
Knowledge is objective and         Knowledge is constantly
certain.                           expanding.

Basic skills and content can       Learning is an ever-evolving
be quantified and delivered.       “lifetime” process. Need to
                                   develop “lifetime” learners.



               -- Shana Ratner, “Emerging Issues in Learning Communities”
New Literacies, New Skills




The literacies and skills students need
 reflect the society in which we live.
Information Literacy & ―Digital Natives‖

Where do I search?
Who wrote it and how do I know it’s accurate?
How do I filter, organize and categorize content?
How do I curate, analyze and apply what I find?
Martin Luther King Jr.




―Every January, the media go into a kind of almost spastic frenzy of
adulation for the so-called "Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King, Jr."
King has even had a national Holiday declared in his honor, an honor
accorded to no other American, not Washington, not Jefferson, not
Lincoln. A liberal judge has sealed the FBI files on King until the year
2027. What are they hiding? Let's take a look at this modern-day
plastic god.‖
From WHOIS.com
Organization:Stormfront
City:West Palm Beach, State/Province:FL
Organization:Stormfront: Server:STORMFRONT.ORG
Is everything you read on the Internet real?




An octopus that lives in a tree?
                                   The history of robots in Victorian times?
Digital Citizenship

• Maintaining your privacy

• Managing your digital footprint

• Staying safe online

• Appropriate behavior on social networking
  sites
•   75% of US
    teens have a
    social
    networking site

•   37% of US
    employers
    check
    Facebook page
    of applicants
From Text to Media Literacy




                         “Under the Rug”
Should we still be delivering content?

Read the chapter and answer the questions?
Can school still be about access to content?
Memorization? Try the ―Five Minute University‖
The alternative?

      Student Centered
               Collaborative
                        Critical Thinking
                                      Creative


                               Independent
                                 Learners
2012 Elections
• Research: Locate a state with a substantial swing vote and
  find which issues impact those swing voters.
• Collaboration: Work in groups of 3-4 students.
• Alternative Media: Create a multimedia website to champion
  your candidate’s stance on the swing issue.
• Media Literacy: Analyze effective TV ads and create a TV ad
  to influences swing voters.
• Social Networking: Create and use a Twitter account that
  sends out concise, impactful “Tweets” to support your cause.
2012 Elections
The primary focus of this ad is to show how Romney's plan does not
help the Middle Class in Florida.
Student centered, inquiry based education:

   * values questioning and exploring
   * learning by doing - embraces mistakes
   * prioritizes creative thinking and innovation
The key to learning isn’t knowing the right
answers.to learning is knowing how to
The key
ask the right questions.
Publishers: extending beyond the classroom
Publishing to a global community
The Global Classroom & Community
Online and blended learning
Around 10 million students take at least one online
course
Anytime learning requires a blended learning
environment
Interactive, personalized and differentiated
Connecting: Virtual Communities
 Social networking is one of the most powerful forces
  on the internet today.
 Broadband, mobile trends have led to new
  phenomenon of peer to peer, DIY ―Networked
  learning‖.
Connecting with ―teachers‖ all over the world
Connect and learn anything you want…
Places to start…
 Embrace your role as a learner
 Join a learning community with other teachers
 Implement more student-centered learning
 Create a classroom culture of inquiry and
collaboration
 Integrate and encourage use of multimedia
 Create a virtual classroom that utilizes technology
for personalization, collaboration, interaction and
more
 Start by thinking 80-20
Remember … everything is amazing
"If we teach today
as we taught yesterday,
 we rob our children of
        tomorrow"

      - John Dewey
"This isn't the time to use technology to
refine the model we had before; this is a
time to harness technology to let children
go as far and as fast as they want."
                            --Stephen Heppel
Every new challenge
presents an opportunity
    for excellence
Thank you for your time and patience!



Sam Gliksman
Email: samgliksman@gmail.com
Twitter: @samgliksman

iPads in Education website
http://iPadEducators.ning.com

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Education in the Digital Age

  • 1. The Changing Nature of Education in the Digital Age Sam Gliksman samgliksman@gmail.com Twitter: @samgliksman http://ipadEducators.ning.com
  • 2. About Sam Gliksman  Director of Educational Technology, New Community Jewish HS  Educational Technology Consultant  Published author  Working with 1:1 and BYOD programs  Founder of iPads in Education website http://iPadEducators.ning.com  Twitter: @samgliksman  Email: samgliksman@gmail.com
  • 3. Pivotal Questions 1. How has technology changed society? 2. In what ways is it altering how we all learn? 3. How do educators adapt to learning needs in the digital age?
  • 4. 1. How is technology changing society?
  • 6. 1995: Bill Clinton, Eric Clapton … ? Movies Most popular TV show? Popular new cars Popular music? Blues Traveller
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 13. What do they all have in common …?
  • 14. So? Businesses close all the time… These were market leaders for ENTIRE INDUSTRIES … that simply became obsolete ―overnight‖ … because they failed to recognize and adjust to a rapidly evolving marketplace
  • 15. My Concern Are schools frozen delivering an obsolete education --preparing students for a society that no longer exists?
  • 16. We’re at a critical crossroads… Questioning the value of education: • Employers complain graduates lack skills • Training for employment that changes or becomes totally redundant • Lack of technology in schools • Alternatives abound: The Internet offers online schools and self-education options
  • 17.
  • 18. Technology alone is NOT the answer … not if we simply use it to reinforce the same models of education that we’ve been using for 100 years • teacher-centered • content driven • memorization • rote drills • one-size-fits-all
  • 19. Doing the same old things ―better‖ isn’t working. We need new visions of education.
  • 20. What are our educational goals?
  • 21. A simple math problem … ―Find X‖ It’s all about CONTEXT
  • 22. We are preparing children for life in society after school
  • 24. What technologies did people use when you were a kidthat no longer exist today? …
  • 25. Visual media Audio Communication s
  • 26. ―Change‖ is not a new concept
  • 27. It’s the SPEED OF CHANGE that just takes your breath away
  • 28. Computing power 1969? Today’s washing machine has more memory and computing power than all NASA's computing resources when it first landed man on the moon (The Guardian, July 1, 2009)
  • 29. Capacity to store information Price of 1 gigabyte of memory in 1981? $300,000 Price of 1 gigabyte in 2012? 10 cents
  • 30. Ubiquity… it’s everywhere Anyone have a cell phone? 80% of US teens have a cell phone.
  • 31. Connected – Social Networking • Facebook didn’t exist prior to 2004 • Today, almost 1 out of every 7 people on the planet has a Facebook page
  • 32. Life in the Digital Age… None existed 10 years ago What will you ―need‖ 10 years from now?
  • 33. If context is important… are we preparing students for their futures? Children starting elementary school today will graduate in 2024 What will the world look like in 2024? How do we educate and prepare children for a world we don’t know anything about?
  • 34. ―In times of change, learners inherit the Earth, while the learned find themselves beautifully equipped to deal with a world that no longer exists‖ — Eric Hoffer
  • 35. 65% of today’s grade school children may end up doing work that hasn’t been invented yet ―Now You See It‖, Cathy Davidson
  • 37. Can you date this classroom?
  • 38. 2. How has technology changed the ways children absorb and process information?
  • 39.
  • 40.
  • 41. Exposure to Technology  Neuroplasticity: Theory is now that brain constantly adapts to external stimuli  Children’s brains today develop very differently than ours.
  • 42. How Much Technology?  Constantly ―plugged in‖. They’ve never known a world without technology and Internet.  Combined technology use averages around 50+ hours a week.  Annually, comes to TWICE the time they spend in classes.  TEN times more than time spent reading books.
  • 43. Preference for Multimedia Our learning was text based. They live in a world of multimedia. They learn more effectively when information is presented visually.
  • 44. They are visual learners % 90 Their short term recall 80 is 9 times better when 70 60 information is 50 presented graphically 40 30 20 10 0 Graphical Oral/text
  • 45. Learning is More Effective in Color Our learning was largely black and white. The 21st century learner processes information in color.
  • 46. Yet this is what they routinely get…
  • 47. For example, if you were learning about the recent earthquake in Japan you could copy and distribute handouts or…
  • 48. Experiential Learners We grew up as passive consumers of media They constantly interact with media - and learn effectively through trial and error
  • 49. What do you do when you open this box? What would your students do?
  • 50. At school, it’s ―sit still and listen‖
  • 51. Random information access We received controlled, linear presentation of information Their access is fast paced and driven by curiosity and interest
  • 52. Collaboration and Communication Our mandate was to sit still, be quiet, work on your own They’re constantly ―connected‖, communicating and collaborating with several people at once
  • 53. Content Publishers We consumed media. They constantly create and publish media.
  • 54. If education is about ―context‖… Life outside school… Life in school… Digital, constantly plugged in Analog, put technology away Multimedia and color Text, black and white Personal, driven by passion Follows fixed schedule Creating and publishing Consume and spit back Always connected, interacting Isolated, sit still and quiet Learning from multitude of sources Teacher, textbook Sharing and collaborating Work on your own Experiential, hands on learning Listen to lecture
  • 55. So Why…? T hat’s T he W ay We A lways D id It
  • 56. 3. How do we adapt and create a 21st century ―learning‖ environment?
  • 57. Fundamental Shift in Strategy Old New Knowledge is objective and Knowledge is constantly certain. expanding. Basic skills and content can Learning is an ever-evolving be quantified and delivered. “lifetime” process. Need to develop “lifetime” learners. -- Shana Ratner, “Emerging Issues in Learning Communities”
  • 58. New Literacies, New Skills The literacies and skills students need reflect the society in which we live.
  • 59. Information Literacy & ―Digital Natives‖ Where do I search? Who wrote it and how do I know it’s accurate? How do I filter, organize and categorize content? How do I curate, analyze and apply what I find?
  • 60. Martin Luther King Jr. ―Every January, the media go into a kind of almost spastic frenzy of adulation for the so-called "Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King, Jr." King has even had a national Holiday declared in his honor, an honor accorded to no other American, not Washington, not Jefferson, not Lincoln. A liberal judge has sealed the FBI files on King until the year 2027. What are they hiding? Let's take a look at this modern-day plastic god.‖
  • 61. From WHOIS.com Organization:Stormfront City:West Palm Beach, State/Province:FL Organization:Stormfront: Server:STORMFRONT.ORG
  • 62. Is everything you read on the Internet real? An octopus that lives in a tree? The history of robots in Victorian times?
  • 63. Digital Citizenship • Maintaining your privacy • Managing your digital footprint • Staying safe online • Appropriate behavior on social networking sites
  • 64. 75% of US teens have a social networking site • 37% of US employers check Facebook page of applicants
  • 65. From Text to Media Literacy “Under the Rug”
  • 66. Should we still be delivering content? Read the chapter and answer the questions?
  • 67. Can school still be about access to content?
  • 68. Memorization? Try the ―Five Minute University‖
  • 69.
  • 70. The alternative? Student Centered Collaborative Critical Thinking Creative Independent Learners
  • 71. 2012 Elections • Research: Locate a state with a substantial swing vote and find which issues impact those swing voters. • Collaboration: Work in groups of 3-4 students. • Alternative Media: Create a multimedia website to champion your candidate’s stance on the swing issue. • Media Literacy: Analyze effective TV ads and create a TV ad to influences swing voters. • Social Networking: Create and use a Twitter account that sends out concise, impactful “Tweets” to support your cause.
  • 72. 2012 Elections The primary focus of this ad is to show how Romney's plan does not help the Middle Class in Florida.
  • 73. Student centered, inquiry based education: * values questioning and exploring * learning by doing - embraces mistakes * prioritizes creative thinking and innovation
  • 74. The key to learning isn’t knowing the right answers.to learning is knowing how to The key ask the right questions.
  • 76. Publishing to a global community
  • 77. The Global Classroom & Community
  • 78. Online and blended learning Around 10 million students take at least one online course Anytime learning requires a blended learning environment Interactive, personalized and differentiated
  • 79. Connecting: Virtual Communities  Social networking is one of the most powerful forces on the internet today.  Broadband, mobile trends have led to new phenomenon of peer to peer, DIY ―Networked learning‖.
  • 80. Connecting with ―teachers‖ all over the world
  • 81. Connect and learn anything you want…
  • 82. Places to start…  Embrace your role as a learner  Join a learning community with other teachers  Implement more student-centered learning  Create a classroom culture of inquiry and collaboration  Integrate and encourage use of multimedia  Create a virtual classroom that utilizes technology for personalization, collaboration, interaction and more  Start by thinking 80-20
  • 84. "If we teach today as we taught yesterday, we rob our children of tomorrow" - John Dewey
  • 85. "This isn't the time to use technology to refine the model we had before; this is a time to harness technology to let children go as far and as fast as they want." --Stephen Heppel
  • 86. Every new challenge presents an opportunity for excellence
  • 87. Thank you for your time and patience! Sam Gliksman Email: samgliksman@gmail.com Twitter: @samgliksman iPads in Education website http://iPadEducators.ning.com

Notas do Editor

  1. IntroductionsThanks
  2. What were you doing in 1995? Here’s a snapshot of my life…
  3. In looking for reasons to deploy tech, let’s take a trip back to 1995.Let’s test your knowledge of popular culture…Nicolas Cage won Oscar – know which movie? Leaving Las VegasMost popular TV show? Jerry, Elaine, George and KramerVandelay Industries, “No soup for you” and we found out about shrinkageMost popular song? Blues Traveler’s “Run Around”What were you doing in 1995? Here’s a snapshot of my life…
  4. Browse books, take kids there for kids books, get a coffee and read
  5. I’m a big music buffGo to store to sample albums Ask to play and they give you for headphones
  6. TIME showed up every Tuesday in the mail
  7. Need to book a flight. Call your agent. Usually knew them by name.
  8. Either closing or scaling way down on the way to closing… (yes, even the newspaper business)
  9. In the case of Blockbuster they were selling you a physical product that required you to make two trips to a store… and we hated returning that video. Along came Netflix – convenience: order online and we’ll mail it to you… and now Netflix is adjusting to online streamingGone from physical location to ordering online to now viewing onlineNow have this connected presence where I can research, order and view
  10. Not about better frontal teaching, learning drills, better testing, better content delivery
  11. For most schools the answer is clear… Just buy tech for use in schools…right? We turn to technology as our solution.We waste untold amounts of money chasing technology for education … that simply addresses the wrong issues
  12. Not if we simply use technology to pursue the same goals and models of education that we’ve had for over 100 years: - teacher-centered, content driven, one-size-fits-all, memorizationWhat we need instead is a new holistic vision for education that prepares children for the future…
  13. In order to determine why and how we use tech, we have to dig one level deeper and ask the fundamental question we rarely ask…Education as an institution has been around so long that we rarely ask …A question we often take for granted… what are our goals?Socrative – what are our goals???
  14. Nobody wanted to prepare kids to ONLY succeed in school.As educators, we don’t operate in a void – our education system works within the context of a 21st century society and culture – and it relates to children that are products of that culture. If we are to succeed as educators then we have to understand what is happening to the culture around us.
  15. If I asked you to define the objective of education there would be one common thread…Not much use acing school tests if those skills don’t translate outside of schoolLet’s take a look at what’s happening outside – and how it impacts the nature of education we’re giving our children
  16. The one trend that is having the biggest impact on society at the moment is “change”. The world around us is changing at a frenetic pace.
  17. Turn to the person next to you and come up with a quick short list of 3 items…
  18. Education serves society at large - so what context are we working within? What is happening to society around us?What technologies have disappeared in the last 30 years?We’re not the first generation that has had to deal with a change in technology. What technologies were in use when you were a little kid that are now obsolete?
  19. Steam powered printing presses allowed for mass production of paper
  20. Library of Congress on your iPhone in seconds
  21. 2010 statisticsThey aren’t just phones any longer. They are computers that connect us to people and information anywhere.About 30% aresmartphones and the number is growing.
  22. Greatest impact on modern times is the Internet and social networking is most sweeping phenomenonAround 800 million users, 50% daily access - Predicted to hit 1 billion this year.Mention Arab Facebook revolutions
  23. We can be sure you won’t even see it until at least 7 years from now…
  24. If context is important…and we’re preparing children for their future roles in society…Devices and technologies that will be central to our lives in 2022 haven’t even been invented yet!
  25. There may be a projector, maybe a smartboard, some computer use … but the essence of education, the structure of the school, division of content into subject areas, the role of the teacher… those essential elements haven’t changed. All while the world around us is racing ahead at lightning speed.
  26. Skeptical? Let’s try a little experiment to see if our theory about kids being different is true.I want you to watch this next video VERY carefully. You’ll see a group of people with basketballs in a moving circle. You need to count the number of passes made … but only by the people wearing white shirts. Only count the passes made by people in white shirts.Make sure not to say anything or make any comments. Keep still and quiet during this test and count the passes. I’ll get your feedback later.
  27. Here’s the answer.What conclusion can we draw from the test?They call it “Selective Attention” – how you can totally miss things that happen in front of your eyes.You have not developed the ability to process parallel feeds of information. You’re a poor multi-tasker.
  28. Theory of the static nature of brains held until the late 20th century. You had a fixed number of brain cells with a fixed memory and processing power. Your brain’s capacity and capability was fixed by age 3.New MRI scanning techniques can monitor changes in the brain and we now believe that brains are totally malleable. They can be completely adaptive, changing as a result of external stimulus and its intensity. This is key to understanding the impact of digital bombardment on kids.Let’s try a little experiment – Gorilla video.
  29. Technology impacts information transmissionWe were still the descendants of the printing pressYouTube is 2nd most popular site for search.Video is second nature to them.
  30. We grew up with a text based education…that’s what we give them.
  31. We had b/w textbooks. Was cheaper to produce. If they included images then it was as an addition to the b/w text.Still see line at photocopy machine of teachers printing b/w handouts for class distributionNot just that they prefer color… they process and retain information more effectively in color.***Yet we continue to hand out dated textbooks and black and white handouts.
  32. Learning occurs best when you’re speaking a common language
  33. Game playing is the ultimate example of trial and error learning
  34. They’ve taken an album og photos and uploaded it to the web before you finish the introduction to the manual.They are active learners - experiential models of education tend to be more effective than content based, frontal teaching methods.
  35. Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
  36. GatekeepersReading fashion – we read in Z pattern, they read in T pattern
  37. We live in a world that is connected and where collaboration is a key requirement. Friedman’s “world is flat” – connecting and collaborating are key skills for 21st centuryThey constantly interact, video chat, 3K text messages a month
  38. We live in a world that is connected and where collaboration is a key requirement. Friedman’s “world is flat” – connecting and collaborating are key skills for 21st centuryThey constantly interact, video chat, 3K text messages a month
  39. So we have identifies two important factors:- Our children learn differently that we did. We can’t use the same teaching methods.The world is vastly different and we need to be graduating students with the skills they need in today’s society (not 20th century society How do remain relevant??
  40. Start by recognizing that a constantly changing world requires new literacies and skills.Topic for a complete and different session…can’t do it justice in 2 minutes
  41. DIGITAL NATIVES? Did them an injustice…We just assume they know how to find stuff
  42. Can also talk about multimedia literacy, e-safety, digital citizenship and more
  43. 37% to 50% of major US employers check facebook pagesMany ask you to log in AT the interviewWe don’t even discuss it at school
  44. I’m not advocating we stop valuing reading and writing as important skills… but we communicate in so many media these days
  45. If the role of schools and teachers is content delivery then we’re all in trouble.Internet/computers do it far mnore efficiently and can offer personalized delivery.
  46. Not static content any longer. Not only that, while teachers grapple with ever increasing class sizes, new digital systems can personalize instruction and content so that each student is analyzed and given what they need most.Online course and schools is becoming a big, well funded industry that competes with schools. So what is the role of school?
  47. Refer to expert on comparing merits of knowledge construction and memorization – Father Guido SarducciDo you know more than a 5th grader
  48. Goal is to prepare them for life by making them independent learners
  49. Let’s look at a typical “project”
  50. Let’s look at a typical “project”
  51. An integral part of the process is the emphasis on asking questions – not just memorizing answers.Importantly, it encourages and embraces mistakes. We hate mistakes in schools – we ask children to give us back the answers we expect.But mistakes are at the very heart of creativity and innovation. How do you move forward without trying things, making mistakes and then adjusting?
  52. In his own way, Einstein was a great educational philosopher. He believed in inquiry based education – questioning everything and pushing Do we want our schools limited to learning about past knowledge or push forward towards exploring and creating the future?
  53. No longer a 1 to 1 learning relationship. Not writing for the teacher.
  54. Students aren’t just knowledge consumers. Today they are publishers.6th grade class in ManchesterTeacher and students write on the blogPost what they are doing, videos and moreNote the cluster map and visitors – keeping track of visitors from all around the world
  55. There are a variety of ways to connect to other students and classes anywhere in the world. Think of how education is enhanced by learning with people in other cultures, exchanging opinions and working together on projects.
  56. Define online versus blended learningBold statement - The physical school is in a period of transitionPersonalized – interactive, differentiated, formative assessment and corrective actionRaising hand in class? Can’t help everyoneWhy online? Personalized, flexible, anytime
  57. The DEPTH of commitment aroused by these learning communities is staggering… some examples follow
  58. Connect to teachers and experts anywhere. At one high school I work with, the kids were reading a book by an English author called Allie Shaw. I found him on Twitter and we skyped him into the classroom where he discussed the novel with the kids. It was an exciting experience that brought the pages to life.
  59. Bottom line - world has become a very small place. You no longer have to live within closed off school and learn about world “out there” – you can connect to it.Learning networks exist on pretty much any subject and theme you can imagine. You can connect with others that have similar passions and learn anything you want – both students and teachers.
  60. 80-20 Success at Google LabsFollow standards but look for opportunities to empower students to follow passionsNew Roads example of self study course
  61. Educational tech can be used to reinforce 21st century educational practices … and it can be affordable
  62. Educational tech can be used to reinforce 21st century educational practices … and it can be affordable
  63. Educational tech can be used to reinforce 21st century educational practices … and it can be affordable