Insights from Educate., 8th Edition
Schools are beginning to re-open after a year of navigating a challenging educational landscape.
Researchers, administrators, policymakers, and educators are wondering how this past year has changed the future of education. Will schools embrace hybrid learning and 1:1 device access going forward?
Having taught at international schools for most of my career, I have been surrounded by technology as a teaching tool for over a decade. My courses have been designed for a 1:1 laptop classroom, and my teaching philosophy centers on personalized education by utilizing the vast amount of resources available on the internet.
While schools abroad have embraced technology and private schools have encouraged a 1:1 environment, schools in the U.S. are woefully behind in providing reliable device and internet access for all students.
It is my hope that we have learned something during this pandemic. Gone are the days when the teacher wields a ruler at the chalkboard, drilling students incessantly on facts and figures. Students no longer have to memorize dates and places of conflicts in social studies class or commit the biography of a famous author to memory.
Information is readily and conveniently available online. Our task now is to ensure our students know how to find valid and reliable information. This means shifting away from rote memorization and multiple-choice tests and embracing project-based learning and design thinking principles.
We must teach students to be problem-solvers and expert decision-makers. We must teach students how to process and improve upon what they have learned, establishing meaning and thoughtfulness to the world around them.
Bryce Welker, CPA writes in the article “What is the Future of Online Education?”, “now that we’re in the midst of what many experts are calling the Fourth Industrial Revolution, it looks like a great time to give our education system a much-needed facelift.”
Businesses have begun to take note that education is lagging in preparing students to be critical thinkers in an increasingly globally competitive environment. I expect to see more involvement and encouragement from the outer edges of policymaking.
And as Welker notes, online education is a booming industry for adult learners as well. I completed both of my graduate degrees online and will be starting a Ph.D. online in the coming months. I love learning online. The freedom, flexibility, and accessibility make online learning the future of education.
It’s time to provide every student with a device and internet access. It’s time to recognize that we must change how we teach to keep pace with the development of society.
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Professional Learning and Inspiration
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Why A Revolution Is Needed In The Management Of Education by Steve Denning, Forbes
Denning argues that a change in the role of the teacher is necessary to usher in 21st-century education. He cites that a hold-up in the bureaucracy of schools is keeping organizational purpose hidden, further hindering a transformation to learning as a transactional process. Denning suggests altering the mindset from a top-down approach to learning to a problem-solving and collaborative educational practice.
Obviously, management and education are connected. When education systems and schools are run on the basis of 20th century management, we should hardly be surprised that the education that they teach also turns out to be 20th century. It’s time to move on. Education itself needs to be fundamentally reinvented, along with a different way of running schools and education systems.
Dr. MacCarty provides advice to online instructors, specifically in higher education, on the importance of teaching with empathy. Citing research and expert sources, Dr. MacCarty delves into how to communicate with students on difficult matters, such as submitting late work and/or responding to behavioral issues. He explores why a caring attitude matters for students and how leaders can create a more comfortable environment where students can thrive.
Empathetic teaching has always been important, but its importance in the online environment cannot be understated. The care and concern shown by instructors for their students does not go unnoticed. Students appreciate when instructors show concern for what is happening in their lives; having an instructor with a teaching approach that focuses on empathy helps them navigate through anxiety or uncertainty.
Gonser reiterates the essential role educators play in building resiliency in students. By helping students understand that overcoming obstacles is a life skill, they are better prepared for life after school. Gonser delineates five ways to help build resiliency including modeling learning from mistakes and labeling difficult emotions.
It’s a skill that takes practice. “Resilience works like a muscle we can build through effort and repetition, and we want to keep our muscles strong and flexible so we can think of many ways to solve a problem,” Mary Alvord, a psychologist and author, tells Fagell. “At the core, resilience is the belief that while you can’t control everything in your life, there are many aspects you can control, including your attitude.”
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The Who, What, Why, and How of Writing an Article with Value
Jennifer Osborne is an experienced educator with graduate degrees in Educational Leadership and Guidance and Counseling. She has taught in five countries across a wide variety of classrooms and schools. Jennifer is passionate about authentic education for students and personalized professional learning for teachers.
Read her Educator’s Bio at Jennifer Osborne Writes.
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