Thirteen ways education could change
Posted by Hlengiwe Zwane on 01 July 2021, 10:05 SAST
Article by Terry Heick
1. Elementary school might evolve
Modern learners must consume, evaluate, and integrate constantly changing data in highly-dynamic and visible contexts. In 2013 (when this post was originally published), most elementary schools were (are?) more less tiny high schools, with a balance of reading, writing, mathematics, geography, and other ‘core’ skills, while character training supplements academic work. Though that balance tends more towards literacy than it does in most high schools, this minor adjustment is insufficient to meet the needs of a modern world.
In this approach, grammar doesn’t refer to parts of speech, but rather “discovering and ordering facts of reality comprises basic, systematic Knowledge, not only the rules developed and applied to the ordering of words or concepts for verbal expression and communication. This is the initial, self-conscious technique used in properly (discursively or sequentially) organising a body of knowledge from raw, factual data for the purpose of gaining understanding (through logic) and; thus, also organising the individual human mind.”
This could also be accomplished through adaptive learning software, smart apps, and a blended approach to learning that mixes precise decoding instruction driven by personal learning algorithms, mixed with ‘human’ teaching of the art and science of media design.
2. The demand for a new kind of assessment
Rather than measurement, true assessment is the process of uncovering understanding/ figuring out what a learner does and does not understand, and moving forward from there.
A connected culture seeks to see and be see to measure itself based on the interaction with others. This replaces a more intimate ‘feedback loop’ of a close circle of friends and only intermittent sharing. Rather than dwelling with texts, revisiting writing, reflecting on thinking, or extended conversations, everything here is fragmented across digital screens and a half a dozen communities.
The ability to be heard at any point in the learning process has significantly changed both our self-image and the sources of curiosity. For better or worse, thinking is now often social, and the traction an idea receives in chosen communities will act as a form of assessment, not so much of truth or innovation, but accessibility and even popularity.
4. Personalised learning will disrupt how we think of curriculum
Personalised learning is not just about differentiated content, but rather just in time, just-enough, just for me access to authentic and accessible learning resources. ‘Curriculum’ is a flexible enough term that it can bend to accept new approaches to learning, but ultimately, it may be replaced entirely. Learning playlists will serve as a middle ground between top-down pedagogy, and pure heutagogy, just as blended learning bridges current K-12 models with eLearning.
5. New content areas could emerge
Math, science, social studies, and literacy have been the pillars of modern education for over a century. But in the face of an uber-connected and technologically-driven world, new perspectives naturally emerge. Rather than ‘content areas,’ it is now possible to unify learning experiences by new criteria, including the ability to use specific technologies. And this assumes they need to be unified at all.
This doesn’t mean traditional content areas are unnecessary, but rather that new, more robust and hopefully more interesting and rebranded themes are necessary to naturally aggregate content. For example, ‘Design’ can merge math, science, and sociology to provide both a playground for arithmetic and an authentic need to know and create for authentic purposes in a true ‘Maker Movement Culture.’
6. Certification could be supplemented by avatars
The need to see and be seen has fostered a culture of spectacle, where image, visibility, interaction, and access trump critical thinking and patience. As people seek to continuously brand themselves, just as corporations have been doing for a century, the result could be the same in education: human identity based on reputation, portfolios, and data rather than intimate and authentic human interaction, and iterative understanding.
7. There could be a shrinking demand for some forms of certification
Dominated by digital media, social media, video games, and an increasingly blurred line between them all, the work a connected, 21st century adult ‘does for a living’ is taking an unprecedented number of forms. Unable to keep up with this explosion of ‘careers,’ many academic institutions (which were paid larger sums of money to prepare for careers in law, medicine, and engineering) may see the end of/or radical rethinking of ’certification,’ a relic of a time when people, information, and communities stood still.
Certainly, specific fields will continue to require highly-specialized training, and provide universities with a lifejacket–or motivation to rebrand themselves as cultural cornerstones of wisdom.
8. There may be new reasons ‘to go to school’
Growing discontent with a corporate-dominated world, a fresh demand for equity, and the democratisation of information access will cause the rise of ‘good work’ where hyper-interdependent students seek to understand the ultimate impact of their work on the world around them. The days of ‘going to school to get a job’ could be slowly replaced by ‘critically learning so that we come to understand what must be done.' This shift causes schools of all levels and sizes to respond.
9. Networks could trump content
Networks trumping content is an odd possibility, the idea that who you interact with becomes more important than what you study or desire to understand. But it’s already happening and it doesn’t have to be all bad.
Of course, this depends on the community and the nature of one’s membership within it. Think about Reddit. Whether this is truly ‘bad’ or not is subjective, but in a community especially a digital one, where connections are often superficial, huge in number, and based on convenience and the nature of the platform itself, subsequently losing that community is similar to losing content mastery.
10. The Maker Movement could spawn a design and/or entrepreneurial “culture” in education
Fidling with physical and digital tools encourages playfulness, creativity, and a relaxed state of mind where genius has room bloom. Just as project-based learning has taken years to find credibility in the average classroom, the ''Maker Movement'' will as well but could see an accelerated implementation in light of the natural thinking patterns of the 21st century students.
11. Mobile Learning & self-directed learning could form the core of formal education models
Whether through adaptive learning apps from blended learning, personalized learning algorithms, or self-directed learning, the future of learning is undoubtedly mobile, personal, and self-directed. Whether it is effective or not depends on what exactly is being ‘personalized,’ but ‘getting out of the way’ and focusing on how to learn rather than what to learn is a shift difficult to fault.
12. Elite academic institutions could become the new ‘fringe’ Or begin to anyway.
While autodidacts, homeschoolers, unschoolers, and apprenticeships are currently the ‘fringe’ of education, that could change. As the focus of learning shifts from pure academic proficiency to a tone more open, fluid, and self-directed, many will naturally resist such a change. Those that believe in the value of top-down, compliance-based, text-driven, test-centered, letter-grade approach will catalyze a fringe return to a “golden era” of academics, including focus on classical education, failure and success, academic standards, good grades, and professional preparation.
Socioeconomic realities will keep such a trend from finding widespread traction, as public schools continue to experiment with new approaches to learning, and spend their budgets in pursuit.
13. Curriculum will change, both in form as well as content
Evaluation of learning will see the ability of students to merge content and access high value content areas as leading indicators of understanding. ‘Mastery,’ ‘proficiency’ and related terms become old language from an era of closed and institutionally controlled system of education. New notions of ‘mastery’ will focus not on academic standards, but media literacy, problem-solving, networking, and other critical strands of a modern, technology-driven society.