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Components of KBE:. Delivered by: Dr Amit Mitra Department of Informatics & Sensors, Cranfield University, Shrivenham, Swindon SN6 8LA, UK. A. Education and the skilled workforce. Skills required in a KBE Constant need to develop new skills and competencies
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Components of KBE: Delivered by: Dr Amit Mitra Department of Informatics & Sensors, Cranfield University, Shrivenham, Swindon SN6 8LA, UK
A. Education and the skilled workforce Skills required in a KBE • Constant need to develop new skills and competencies • Tasks moving from routine tasks to knowledge creation • Creativeness, responsiveness, productiveness, capacities to adapt to fast changing environment (Yim-Teo 2004) • Greater productivity from fewer workers means need for greater initiative, and teamwork directed to problem solving and critical thinking
Categories of sets of knowledge and new competencies • Acting autonomously • Using tools interactively • Functioning in socially heterogeneous groups (Rychen and Salganik 2001) • In sum – learning how to learn
Critical skills for the 21st century (consistent with recommendations of International Commission on Education) • Learning to do • Learning to be • Learning to relate • Learning to learn
Expanded definition of functional literacy • Communication skills • Critical thinking and problem solving • Sustainable use of resources/productivity • Development of self and sense of community • Expanding one’s world vision
New teaching and learning strategies • Methodological skills • Ability to learn on one’s own • To pursue lifelong learning • To cope with risk and change • These methodological skills are different from traditional skills as they need to be acquired when teacher acts as a facilitator of learning to nurture – ‘learning how to learn’
Differences between traditional and new teaching strategies and workplaces Source: Adapted from Berryman (2000)
Diaspora • Critical to the context of HRM is the migration of skilled workers • US firms through mandates of the Congress in late 1990s have recruited 600,000 foreigners a third of them from India • PRC has lost 200,000 international Chinese students since 1978, in 2003, 580,000 students went abroad and 160,000 graduated students have returned • When skilled workers migrate the source country loses out because of the decline in their skill endowment. This has given rise to the ‘brain drain’ debate. However, when workers return they constitute a ‘brain gain’ which raises the skill level of the home country • By the turn of the century, emergence of the transnational debate. Professionals can contribute more by staying abroad permanently than returning as they are likely to contribute through ‘diaspora networks’ or ‘expatriate networks’ • The Indian growth of the software industry is a compelling one where expatriates played a critical role in growing the industry facilitating the creation of 700,000 jobs and export of over $17 billion per annum • Similarly Wescott (2006) argues that Philippines has failed to take advantage of diaspora networks to the lack of government policy on harnessing potential skilled labour migration
B. National Innovation Systems • A national innovation system is a ‘subsystem of the national economy in which various organisations and institutions interact and influence each other in the carrying out of innovative activity’ (Balzat 2002) • The NIS concept recognises the fact that innovation and improvements in technical capacity are the result of a complex set of relationships among actors creating, acquiring, disseminating, and applying various kinds of knowledge • The basic premise of innovation systems is that innovation cannot happen if these actors are not linked and, therefore, do not interact with each other. • Five fundamental activities of innovation systems (Liu and White 2000) include: • Research which may include basic, developmental, or engineering • Implementation such as in the case of actual manufacturing or production • End-use which includes identifying the customers of the product or process outputs • Linkage or the process of bringing together complementary knowledge • Education or necessary learning processes
Other players in NIS • Role of government • Networking for research and development
C. Building networks • Interplay between competition and collaboration between economic actors • ICT infrastructure and social trust are ingredients for developing national stakeholder capital • Several features of KBE have been shaped and reinforced by fast development and growing use of ICT. Importance of ICT in supporting KB devt lies in its capacity for • Efficient networking • Interconnectivity • Interdependence • Co-ordination • While physical infrastructure is critical in the industrial age, information infrastructure is becoming indispensible in the knowledge age • Social and business networks are typically prevalent in Asian countries; they are an advantage in doing business
Benefits of ICT and networks • ICT revolution has fast-tracked the innovation process; it is increasing the speed and decreasing the cost of developing tools and instruments for both basic and applied research. Electronic networks are also facilitating research work with information ready to be located and assessed regardless of source location and time • In business, networks facilitate borderless transactions accomplished in an exceedingly shortened time span. For instance, global financial transactions can take place in a fraction of a minute given appropriate ICT • ICT is considered a major contributor to new service-based and knowledge-based industries. • Advances in ICT also offer numerous opportunities for innovative learning and educational applications • If appropriately used, ICT can improve both internal operations of governments and their interface with the public. This is e-governance. • Benefits of ICT can be summed up in a statement made by the G-8’s Digital Opportunity Task Force (DOT Taskforce): ‘ICT when wisely applied, offers enormous opportunities to narrow social and economic inequalities and support sustainable local wealth creation, and thus help to achieve the broader development goals that the international community has set’.
Toward an ubiquitous network society • Ubiquitous Network Society is a society where information can be exchanged anytime, anywhere, instantaneously between people, objects, and systems. • This happens as objects with embedded microprocessors – in addition to traditional computers – become connected through an invisible or wireless network • Typical example of an ubiquitous network application is the ‘smart home’ where all ‘intelligent’ equipment in the house are networked and can automatically operate co-operatively or be centrally controlled • Related to ubiquitous networking is social computing, which refers to interplay between persons’ social behaviours and their interactions with computing technologies. Examples of social computing are voicemail, email, online chat, and collaborative applications • Ubiquitous network societies can benefit a number of sectors including business, health, agriculture, disaster prevention, government, and civil society
Elements needed in building ICT • Appropriate regulatory framework is most important for encouraging private sector participation in the ICT sector. Governments have, in fact, moved to being promoters and facilitators of ICT use and development, and their current challenge includes determining the appropriate level of liberalisation and deregulation, levelling the playing field for all players which in some cases include state-owned companies, and providing forums for industry-government dialogue • Readiness and availability of human resources. Does the country have the knowledge and skills required to design, implement, and use new ICTs? • When it comes to building KBE through an ubiquitous network society, requirements include not only technology upgrading but also research, appropriate education and possession of IT skills, protections for security and privacy, partnerships between government and the private sector, and clear plans at the national and local levels
D. Setting policy and regulatory environments Asian governments’ roles and decisions to moving their nations toward a KBE/KBD vary, but the general pattern spans three areas: • Policy: legislation, organisation/reorganisation, and regulation • Planning: formulation of vision, strategy, and road map • Infrastructure and programs: establishing and implementing the necessary physical, institutional, and social infrastructure and programs, including pilot projects along the three areas of human resources devt., ICT infrastructure/institutions, and science and technology development or innovation system
Policy • Rapid technological developments are rendering some laws obsolete • Unless new enabling legislation is enacted, electronic documents are inadmissible in court • Without deliberate laws and affirmative policies, access to ICT would favour the already wealthy and could exacerbate existing income gaps • Experience of developed countries indicate governments need to establish three conditions to attract investment, reduce transaction costs, and sustain economic growth: accountability, property rights, and the rule of law (Timmer 2006) • Shift of commerce toward more online transactions requires creating the legal and regulatory environment to build trust and confidence among businesses and consumers. Electronic security, privacy of communications, protection of consumers (delivery guarantees, quality guarantees, credit card information security, etc.), and effectively checking cyber crime and spam are issues that have to be effectively settled to build the additional trust needed for e-commerce. • An emerging regional issue is dispute resolution arising from cross border online transactions: Which country has jurisdiction over which aspect of the transaction?
Planning Several Asian governments had adopted ICT or KBE/KBD road maps: • PRC State Information Development Strategy (2006 – 2020) • India Vision 2020 (2002) • e-Japan Strategy (2001) • e-Korea Vision 2006 (2006) • Malaysia’s KBE Master Plan (2002) • Philippines’ National Information Technology Action Agenda for the 21st Century or IT21 (1997; currently being revised) • Singapore 21 (1997), ICT 21 Master Plan (2000) • Thailand’s IT 2010 (2001) • Central concern of most of these road maps are: how to bridge the many digital divides, how best to mix national economic and social goals, selecting pilot or demonstration projects, etc.