Education Coup

coup [koo] noun: a highly successful, unexpected stroke, act, or move. --Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Time Says Education Needs to Enter the 21st Century

Time Magazine has a cover article this week about "big public conversation the nation is not having about education." The one that says that more rigorous test scores and a "back to basics" mentality isn't going to cut it anymore because the skills our current system was designed to teach are becoming obsolete.

Here are some of the highlights of the article. Any added emphasis is mine.

Jobs in the new economy--the ones that won't get outsourced or automated--"put an enormous premium on creative and innovative skills, seeing patterns where other people see only chaos," says Marc Tucker, an author of the skills-commission report and president of the National Center on Education and the Economy. Traditionally that's been an American strength, but schools have become less daring in the back-to-basics climate of NCLB. Kids also must learn to think across disciplines, since that's where most new breakthroughs are made. It's interdisciplinary combinations--design and technology, mathematics and art--"that produce YouTube and Google," says Thomas Friedman, the best-selling author of The World Is Flat.

And this:

In an age of overflowing information and proliferating media, kids need to rapidly process what's coming at them and distinguish between what's reliable and what isn't. "It's important that students know how to manage it, interpret it, validate it, and how to act on it," says Dell executive Karen Bruett, who serves on the board of the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, a group of corporate and education leaders focused on upgrading American education.

Last year, in response to demand from colleges, the Educational Testing Service unveiled a new, computer-based exam designed to measure information-and-communication-technology literacy. A pilot study of the test with 6,200 high school seniors and college freshmen found that only half could correctly judge the objectivity of a website. "Kids tend to go to Google and cut and paste a research report together," says Terry Egan, who led the team that developed the new test. "We kind of assumed this generation was so comfortable with technology that they know how to use it for research and deeper thinking," says Egan. "But if they're not taught these skills, they don't necessarily pick them up."


There are also some great stories of how schools around the country are experimenting more and more, attempting to dream up new ways of educating children instead of continuing to simply school them, remodeling the system instead of tightening the bolts on a dilapidated machine.

Check out the article and leave a comment.

Friday, December 01, 2006

Quote of the Week

If you want to build a boat, do not drum up people to collect wood
or assign them tasks or work, but rather teach them to long
for the endless immensity of the sea.
~ Antoine de Saint-Exupery