Commentary: Educational transformation will come--whether entrenched interests like it or not
Primary Topic Channel: Emerging technologies
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Default Lines from eSchool News, first published in print on Nov. 1, 2009--As I was saying last month, an avalanche of change is rumbling towards our field. I propose we call this cascading phenomenon "convergent education."
Here's what I mean: A new species of education is emerging that artfully aggregates up-to-the-minute instructional technology, sophisticated pedagogy, robust and standards-based educational content, and web-based delivery that requires a computer or other personal digital device but no fixed address. Under most circumstances, convergent education certainly can amplify the impact of traditional instruction, but it is not necessarily dependent on face-to-face encounters between teacher and student.
At its best, convergent education features diverse learning opportunities delivered via multiple media platforms combined with field trips (virtual or real), live streaming video, interactive archived video, educational gaming, student collaboration, animation, celebrity lectures and adventures, project-based instruction with student-managed data, virtual demonstrations and experiments, continuous monitoring of student engagement and learner satisfaction, and classic, in-the-classroom instruction.
In general, convergent education is based on developments such as distance learning and lecture-capture strategies that have been around for some time, but which are now reinforced by the completely unprecedented fact that nearly every willing learner has (or soon will have) economical access to the rich multimedia resources of the internet--access delivered by such devices as personal computers, netbooks, smart telephones, personal digital assistants, interactive whiteboards, pocket projectors, and handheld reading devices.
Convergent education has been made feasible--and perhaps even inevitable--by a unique confluence of social and technological forces that ultimately must transform the way we learn. Such forces include--but are by no means limited to--the thinning of our teaching corps by retirement, reductions in force, and classroom abandonment; the movement toward charter schools, open-courseware, and online universities; the push for school reform from government and industry; and the desire and necessity of multitudes of adults to obtain new skills and knowledge to survive and thrive in a swiftly changing job market.
Here's what's profoundly different now: This time the transformation will come whether entrenched interests like it or not.
Those elements of the education establishment that traditionally have defeated change will be powerless to stop it this time. Their hands will be tied, because the general population will no longer be limited to learning in authorized institutions at appointed hours under regular supervision.
At its best, convergent education eventually might embody the classical values of Paideia in ancient Greece, except now, its benefits will no longer be restricted to the aristocracy alone. Technology will make rich learning experiences accessible to the population as a whole.
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Interesting Times
A thought-provoking article - indeed these are interesting times. It seems as though there is a great willingness, and even enthusiasm, for learning at teh present time, which is being fuelled by the availability and proliferation of information - largely thanks to the rapid spread of access to the internet. And for me, this transformation in the way that way that we are "learning to learn" could spawn unlimited opportunities for the road ahead. This is only the beginning. I'm just happy to be here to see it.
Posted By: ben.palmer32, 2009-11-12 9:33 AM