A Pesquisa Global para a Educação: Tecnologia da Educação

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“O iPad possibilitou um maior acesso tanto para o consumidor educacional quanto para o criador.” — Tony Wagner
 

EdTechTeacher will host the first national iPads in education summit, reunindo educadores, pesquisadores, diretores de tecnologia, diretores, líderes escolares e parceiros da indústria para identificar as melhores práticas para a integração de iPads na educação. The conference will be held from November 6th to 8th at The Joseph B. Martin Conference Center, Harvard Medical School in Boston.

Schools and districts nationwide continue to invest in mobile technologies. O EdTechTeacher iPad Summit hopes to provide educators in this country and overseas with a forum to discuss how to leverage these devices in order to further empower teachers and students as creators of their own learning. “While there are some technical sessions,” explains the EdTechTeacher team, “the focus is on creating effective pedagogy, enriching curriculum, and leveraging the device in order to support students and teachers as innovators.

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Knowledge is rapidly becoming a commodity and is increasingly democratized and globalized.” — Tony Wagner
 

The keynote speaker at the conference is Tony Wagner, Innovation Education Fellow at the Technology & Entrepreneurship Center at Harvard. Wagner, an advocate for the need to better prepare students for 21st-century careers and citizenship, collaborated with noted filmmaker Robert Compton to create the 60 minute documentary, A Finlândia Fenômeno: Inside the World’s Most Surprising School System. Tony’s latest book, Criando Innovators: The Making of Jovens Quem vai mudar o mundo (Simon & Schuster), provides a powerful rationale for developing an innovation-driven economy. He explores what parents, professores, and employers must do to develop the capacities of young people to become innovators. What role can the iPad play in their education? What additional professional development for teachers is needed? What examples of best technology practices can we learn from around the world? Tony agreed to discuss these subjects with me.

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Students will need to learn to work in teams, understand and solve problems using multiple disciplines, perseverar, take risks, and learn from mistakes.” — Tony Wagner
 

How has the iPad made learning in education more innovative, and how can educators use the iPad to achieve significant innovation in teaching and learning?

Primeiro, the iPad has made using most computer-based learning applications far more accessible and intuitive. You no longer need to take students to a special room full of computers for that occasional experience; you don’t need to pull a laptop cart around the school. And students don’t need hours of training to learn how to use the device or its applications. Assuming a decent broadband connection, most computer related workresearching, escrevendo, compartilhando – can happen at any time and for every student, with little or no advance preparation. Em segundo lugar, the comparative ease of creating and distributing an iPad app, versus writing a program for a computer, has given rise to a dramatic increase in the number of education-related applications being created and disseminated. Em resumo, the iPad has enabled greater access for both the education consumer and the creator.

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We need assessments of the skills that matter mostlike the online test called the College and Work Readiness Assessment, which measures problem-solving, reasoning, and writing skills.” — Tony Wagner
 

Is the missing link in education technology trained teachers?

Having teachers who are comfortable with the technology and who know how to apply it in the classroom is critical, but that problem will be mostly solved by time. As older teachers retire in growing numbers in the coming years, and many young people who are digital natives come into teaching, I think we will see a much more rapid adoption.

But the real question is: what will this technology will be used for? I toured a school district recently that had, with corporate help, put web-connected white boards and student clickers into every classroom at huge expense. Mas, in classroom after classroom, what I saw was all of this technology being used for drilling and test prep. Instead of having work sheets on their desks, students had clickers that enabled them tovotefor the right answer on the practice test. More and better teacher preparation won’t solve this problem. We need assessments of the skills that matter mostlike the online test called the College and Work Readiness Assessment, which measures problem-solving, reasoning, and writing skillsto encourage more powerful teaching and learning, both with and without the new technologies.

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As older teachers retire in growing numbers in the coming years, and many young people who are digital natives come into teaching, I think we will see a much more rapid adoption.” — Tony Wagner
 

Can you share a couple of examples of good teaching/technology practice that you’ve seen in top education systems around the world, por exemplo, na Finlândia?

Na Finlândia, what I saw was much less teacher-centric uses of technologiesI don’t recall seeing a single white board, por exemplo – and much more student-centric technology applications. I saw students using Moodle (the e-learning platform) to share and discuss work. In a marketing class, I saw students discussing how various social networking applications were being used to market products and services. Here in the US, I’ve seen some schools like High Tech High require all students to have digital portfolios that show evidence of progressive mastery of the skills that matter most. I’ve seen virtual dissections in biology classes that teach far more than having to actually cut up a frog. And I’m excited about new software being developed that will enable students to better understand disruptions of complex ecosystems through simulation. Finalmente, the US Army has developed a wide variety of gaming applications to teach strategy.

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Developing the skills, habits of mind, and dispositions of an innovator, na minha opinião, requires effective coachingthat is what I think all teachers must strive to become.” — Tony Wagner
 

Online education continues to be an ever larger force in how students learnhow far can it go to changing education as we know it?

Knowledge is rapidly becoming a commodity and is increasingly democratized and globalized. You no longer need to be in a classroom to acquire the knowledge you want or need. But in my view, knowledge is only one of the three pillars needed for life-long learning, trabalho, and citizenship in the 21st century. In addition to knowledge, students also need so-called 21c skills, such as those I’ve described in The Global Achievement Gap. Finalmente, students need the motivations and dispositions that will enable them to innovateto solve problems creativelyin whatever they do, which I’ve written about most recently in Criando Innovators. They will need to learn to work in teams, understand and solve problems using multiple disciplines, perseverar, take risks, and learn from mistakes. They will need to be intrinsically motivated to acquire new knowledge and skills throughout their lives. Developing the skills, habits of mind, and dispositions of an innovator, na minha opinião, requires effective coachingthat is what I think all teachers must strive to become.

Para mais informações: Criando Innovators , EdTechTeacher iPad Summit

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Tony Wagner and C. M. Rubin

Photos courtesy of EdTechTeacher and Tony Wagner.

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Na busca Global para a Educação, se juntar a mim e líderes de renome mundial, incluindo Sir Michael Barber (Reino Unido), Dr. Michael Bloco (EUA), Dr. Leon Botstein (EUA), Professor Clay Christensen (EUA), Dr. Linda, Darling-Hammond (EUA), Dr. Madhav Chavan (Índia), Professor Michael Fullan (Canadá), Professor Howard Gardner (EUA), Professor Andy Hargreaves (EUA), Professor Yvonne Hellman (Holanda), Professor Kristin Helstad (Noruega), Jean Hendrickson (EUA), Professor Rose Hipkins (Nova Zelândia), Professor Cornelia Hoogland (Canadá), Senhora. Chantal Kaufmann (Bélgica), Dr. Eija Kauppinen (Finlândia), Secretário de Estado Tapio Kosunen (Finlândia), Professor Dominique Lafontaine (Bélgica), Professor Hugh Lauder (Reino Unido), Professor Ben Levin (Canadá), Senhor Ken Macdonald (Reino Unido), Professor Barry McGaw (Austrália), Shiv Nadar (Índia), Professor R. Natarajan (Índia), Dr. PAK NG (Cingapura), Dr. Denise Papa (US), Sridhar Rajagopalan (Índia), Dr. Diane Ravitch (EUA), Richard Wilson Riley (EUA), Sir Ken Robinson (Reino Unido), Professor Pasi Sahlberg (Finlândia), Andreas Schleicher (PISA, OCDE), Dr. Anthony Seldon (Reino Unido), Dr. David Shaffer (EUA), Dr. Kirsten Immersive Are (Noruega), Chanceler Stephen Spahn (EUA), Yves Theze (Lycée Français EUA), Professor Charles Ungerleider (Canadá), Professor Tony Wagner (EUA), Sir David Watson (Reino Unido), Professor Dylan Wiliam (Reino Unido), Dr. Mark Wormald (Reino Unido), Professor Theo Wubbels (Holanda), Professor Michael Young (Reino Unido), e Professor Minxuan Zhang (China) como eles exploram as grandes questões da educação imagem que todas as nações enfrentam hoje. A Pesquisa Global para Educação Comunitária Página

C. M. Rubin é o autor de duas séries on-line lido pelo qual ela recebeu uma 2011 Upton Sinclair prêmio, “A Pesquisa Global para a Educação” e “Como vamos Leia?” Ela também é autora de três livros mais vendidos, Incluindo The Real Alice no País das Maravilhas.

Siga C. M. Rubin no Twitter: www.twitter.com/@cmrubinworld

Autor: C. M. Rubin

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