Download - We live in a 3D world
How do we think about the integration of
technology with learning? Is it simply a
substitute for existing practice – or does it open
up opportunities for new things in new ways?
http://www.nec-display-solutions.com/p/w3d/en/Study3DLearning.xhtml
THINKING 3D
http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/gadgets/69734333/affordable-3d-printing-is-finally-here And http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=11473462
• What skills/knowledge/ competencies do we need to be developing now in order to cope with what the future might hold?
• How do we prepare for the emerging ethical, moral and societal change issues that will emerge?
NEED FOR DIGITAL LITERACY
We must equip our students with the knowledge, capabilities and values essential to participate fully and safely in an increasingly digital world.
“The fundamental basis of the education system is fatally flawed…
In 1970 the top three skills required by the Fortune 500 were the three Rs: reading, writing, and arithmetic.
In 1999 the top three skills in demand were teamwork, problem-solving, and interpersonal skills.
We need schools that are developing these skills.”
Linda Darling-Hammond
Have we grasped how significantly student access
to technology is changing their expectations as learners?
Jane Gilbert
“We’re still working within the same twentieth-century framework. The thinking hasn’t changed. It’s just couching what we’ve already done in much fancier production values. It looks cooler and more digitised, but the underlying educational objectives have not changed.”
20TH CENTURY MINDSET?
Ow
ner
ship
of k
now
led
ge
Individual
Collective
Reproduction Transformation
Vision of learning and technology
THE CHANGING NATURE OF KNOWLEDGE
• Knowledge is not an object, but a series of flows; it is a process, not a product
• Knowledge is produced not in the minds of people but in the interactions between people
• The idea of acquiring knowledge, as a series of truths, is obsolete
http://halfanhour.blogspot.co.nz/2009/03/new-nature-of-knowledge.html
Stephen Downes
Ow
ner
ship
of k
now
led
ge
Individual
Collective
Reproduction Transformation
Vision of learning and technology
Collective frustration.
Potential of 21st Century
learning realised
Personal orientation, innovation
resisted
Isolated pockets of innovation
THE 7 PRINCIPLES OF LEARNING (ILE)
1. Learners at the centre
2. The social nature of learning
3. Emotions are integral to learning
4. Recognising individual differences
5. Stretching all students
6. Assessment for learning
7. Building horizontal connections