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21 st Century Knowledge and Skills: Reinventing the School Experience. Bob Pearlman bobpearlman@mindspring.com http://www.bobpearlman.org ISAS Head’s Meeting Fort Worth, Texas November 3, 2003. Released Monday, July 7, At NECC. What if we asked the kids?.
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21st Century Knowledge and Skills: Reinventing the School Experience Bob Pearlmanbobpearlman@mindspring.comhttp://www.bobpearlman.org ISAS Head’s Meeting Fort Worth, Texas November 3, 2003
Released Monday, July 7, At NECC
School I'd Like competitionThe Guardian Newspaper http://education.guardian.co.uk/schools/story/0,5500,501374,00.html High Schools are “Institutions of today run on the principles of yesterday” -- 15-year old British girl, 1967
School I'd Like competitionThe Guardian Newspaper http://education.guardian.co.uk/schools/story/0,5500,501374,00.html • The school we'd like is (2000): • A beautiful school with glass dome roofs to let in the light, uncluttered classrooms and brightly coloured walls. • A safe school with swipe cards for the school gate, anti-bully alarms, first aid classes, and someone to talk to about our problems. • A listening school with children on the governing body, class representatives and the chance to vote for the teachers. • A flexible school without rigid timetables or exams, without compulsory homework, without a one-size-fits-all curriculum, so we can follow our own interests and spend more time on what we enjoy.
The School that I’d Like, 2000 • A relevant school where we learn through experience, experiments and exploration, with trips to historic sites and teachers who have practical experience of what they teach. • A respectful school where we are not treated as empty vessels to be filled with information, where teachers treat us as individuals, where children and adults can talk freely to each other, and our opinion matters. • A school without walls so we can go outside to learn, with animals to look after and wild gardens to explore. • A school for everybody with boys and girls from all backgrounds and abilities, with no grading, so we don't compete against each other, but just do our best.
“If I Could Make a School” • by student Pooja Agarwal, (Learning and Leading with Technology, November 2001), Student Technology Leadership Symposium, June 23-24, 2001, held in conjunction with NECC, by the International Society of Technology in Education (ISTE) • U.S. student leaders want schools that : • Are Fun • End lecturing from a textbook • Institute problem-based, discovery-based, and inquiry-based curricula • Implement “real life” situations and hands-on learning • Shape the curriculum with student internship experiences • Build relationships and “animated mutual learning” between adults and students • Provide an “inviting” physical environment • Provide the technology tools for students and teachers to do their work.
Safe Respect Personal Interests Experience Real World Workspace Tools The School that I’d Like
Changing Reality • Changing Skills • Design Criteria
Changing Reality Will your Region circa 2030 be vastly different from today?
The First Recession of the New Millennium Fall, 2000 – The Dot.Com bust Spring, 2001 – The Technology and Telecommunications sectors go bust Fall, 2001 to present – The Blue Chips drop 50%
What region or regions will be best poised to grow during the next recovery?
Internet Cluster Regions – U.S. Chicago “Silicon City” Seattle — “Silicon Forest” Boston “Route 128” New York — “Silicon Alley” San Francisco “Multimedia Gulch” Washington, D.C. “Silicon Dominion” Silicon Valley Los Angeles “Digital Coast” ResearchTriangle “Silicon Triangle” Austin — “Silicon Hills” Atlanta“Capital of the New South” Miami“Silicon Beach”
Houston • 4th largest city in U.S. • 10th biggest Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area (CMSA) in U.S.
Global Internet Cluster Regions Canada “Silicon Valley North” United Kingdom “Silicon Kingdom” Scandinavia “Wireless Valley” Japan “Bit Valley” Germany “Silicon Saxony” China/Hong Kong “Cyber Port” France “Telecom Valley” Israel “Silicon wadi” India Singapore “Intelligent Island” United States
Silicon Valley, 2000 40% of workforce in 7 high-tech clusters
Silicon Valley, 1970 VALLEY OF HEART’S DELIGHT
1992-2001 The longest expansion in US History • H1-B visas • The rise of Bangalore
USA Work and Travel Program Czech students pose at a fast food restaurant in Fremont, Ohio Concession operator at an amusement park
What’s the connection between economic success and student success?
The Old Formula: Education => Student Success
SCANS Workplace Know-How (1991) • Competencies – effective workers can productively use: • Resources -- identifying, organizing, planning, and allocating time, money, materials, and workers; • Interpersonal Skills -- negotiating, exercising leadership, working with diversity, teaching others new skills, serving clients and customers, and participating as a team member; • Information Skills -- using computers to process information and acquiring and evaluating, organizing and maintaining, and interpreting and communicating information; • Systems Skills -- understanding systems, monitoring and correcting system performance, and improving and designing systems; and • Technology utilization skills -- selecting technology, applying technology to a task, and maintaining and troubleshooting technology. Source: What Work Requires of School, 1991, Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills, U.S. Department of Labor
SCANS Workplace Know-How (1991) • The Foundation – competence requires: • Basic Skills -- reading, writing, speaking, listening, and knowing arithmetic and mathematical concepts; • Thinking Skills -- reasoning, making decisions, thinking creatively, solving problems, seeing things in the mind's eye, and knowing how to learn; and • Personal Qualities -- responsibility, self-esteem, sociability, self-management, integrity, and honesty.
Written for NCREL by Cheryl Lemke, Metiri Group Sources: What Work Requires of School, 1991, Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills, U.S. Department of Labor A Nation of Opportunity: Building America's 21st Century Workforce, 2000, 21st Century Workforce Commission, U.S. Congress Preparing Students for the 21st Century, 1996, American Association of School Administrators
Job Outlook 2002, National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE)
Working in the Real World (i.e. California?) • Projects, projects, projects • Teamwork and collaboration • Self-direction • Interpersonal skills and Networking • No one asks about your formal education
Released Monday, July 7, At NECC www.21stcenturyskills.org
How do students get these skills? Do students want to get these skills?
Summary of findings • The workforce gap in Silicon Valley, comprised of unfilled positions, outside recruits and commuters, has increased by over 25% since 1997 and cost business more than $6 billion a year in 2000. • High access does not appear to translate into high awareness of or motivation to pursue technology careers. • Motivation to pursue technology careers is less among females than males. • Social networks for technology acclimation drive an individual’s motivation and preparation to pursue technology careers • There are fewer technology related networking opportunities for Hispanics and African Americans than for Asians and Whites. “Social networks that can bridge across geography, race and class are key to success in the new economy. ‘Hard’ skills are essential, but it’s the connections and mentoring that provide information about what skills are necessary and a vision of how acquiring them can lead to new opportunities for all our residents”. -- Professor Manuel Pastor, Jr., University of California, Santa Cruz
… and how will they get these skills? Awareness Interest Motivation Preparation
Strategies that Make a Difference • Engagement • Hands-on • Adult connections • Internships • Real World immersion
The New Formula: Education => Student Success (Hard + Soft) + Skills + Social Networks
There is a big difference between a successful school and a school of successful students! • Academics, technology access, and career information are the foundation, but they are not enough • Equally important is student motivation stimulated by experience, adult and real world immersion, and an expanding social network
Kids Needs: • Safe • Respect • Personal • Interests Design Criteria • Experience • Real World • Workspace • Tools • Personalization • Common Learning Goals • Adult World Immersion • Performance-Based Student Work & Assessment Design Principles Design Elements Program, Facility, Transitions, Exhibitions, Advisories, Technology, Projects, Portfolios, Internships, Size and Teams
Stages of Educational Technology Implementation http://www.bobpearlman.org/BestPractices/Stages.htm
Reinvent the School Experience! Personalization Projects Exhibitions Digital Portfolios Internships Technology
Bob Pearlman bobpearlman@mindspring.org http://www.bobpearlman.org "New Ingredient for Student Success: Social Networks" http://www.bobpearlman.org/Articles/Student_Success.htm “Reinventing the High School Experience“ http://www.ascd.org/readingroom/edlead/0204/pearlman.html