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Build a School in the Cloud

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    What is going to be the future of learning?
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    I do have a plan,
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    but in order for me to tell you what that plan is,
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    I need to tell you a little story,
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    which kind of sets the stage.
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    I tried to look at
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    where did the kind of learning we do in schools,
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    where did it come from?
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    And you can look far back into the past,
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    but if you look at present-day schooling the way it is,
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    it's quite easy to figure out where it came from.
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    It came from about 300 years ago,
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    and it came from the last
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    and the biggest of the empires on this planet. ["The British Empire"]
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    Imagine trying to run the show,
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    trying to run the entire planet,
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    without computers, without telephones,
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    with data handwritten on pieces of paper,
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    and traveling by ships.
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    But the Victorians actually did it.
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    What they did was amazing.
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    They created a global computer
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    made up of people.
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    It's still with us today.
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    It's called the bureaucratic administrative machine.
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    In order to have that machine running,
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    you need lots and lots of people.
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    They made another machine to produce those people:
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    the school.
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    The schools would produce the people
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    who would then become parts of the
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    bureaucratic administrative machine.
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    They must be identical to each other.
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    They must know three things:
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    They must have good handwriting, because the data is handwritten;
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    they must be able to read;
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    and they must be able to do multiplication,
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    division, addition and subtraction in their head.
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    They must be so identical that you could pick one up from New Zealand
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    and ship them to Canada
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    and he would be instantly functional.
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    The Victorians were great engineers.
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    They engineered a system that was so robust
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    that it's still with us today,
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    continuously producing identical people
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    for a machine that no longer exists.
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    The empire is gone,
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    so what are we doing with that design
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    that produces these identical people,
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    and what are we going to do next
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    if we ever are going to do anything else with it?
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    ["Schools as we know them are obsolete"]
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    So that's a pretty strong comment there.
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    I said schools as we know them now, they're obsolete.
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    I'm not saying they're broken.
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    It's quite fashionable to say that the education system's broken.
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    It's not broken. It's wonderfully constructed.
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    It's just that we don't need it anymore. It's outdated.
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    What are the kind of jobs that we have today?
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    Well, the clerks are the computers.
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    They're there in thousands in every office.
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    And you have people who guide those computers
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    to do their clerical jobs.
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    Those people don't need to be able to write beautifully by hand.
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    They don't need to be able to multiply numbers in their heads.
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    They do need to be able to read.
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    In fact, they need to be able to read discerningly.
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    Well, that's today, but we don't even know
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    what the jobs of the future are going to look like.
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    We know that people will work from wherever they want,
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    whenever they want, in whatever way they want.
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    How is present-day schooling going to prepare them
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    for that world?
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    Well, I bumped into this whole thing completely by accident.
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    I used to teach people how to write computer programs
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    in New Delhi, 14 years ago.
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    And right next to where I used to work, there was a slum.
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    And I used to think, how on Earth are those kids
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    ever going to learn to write computer programs?
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    Or should they not?
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    At the same time, we also had lots of parents,
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    rich people, who had computers,
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    and who used to tell me, "You know, my son,
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    I think he's gifted,
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    because he does wonderful things with computers.
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    And my daughter -- oh, surely she is extra-intelligent."
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    And so on. So I suddenly figured that,
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    how come all the rich people are having
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    these extraordinarily gifted children?
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    (Laughter)
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    What did the poor do wrong?
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    I made a hole in the boundary wall
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    of the slum next to my office,
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    and stuck a computer inside it just to see what would happen
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    if I gave a computer to children who never would have one,
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    didn't know any English, didn't know what the Internet was.
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    The children came running in.
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    It was three feet off the ground, and they said, "What is this?"
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    And I said, "Yeah, it's, I don't know."
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    (Laughter)
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    They said, "Why have you put it there?"
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    I said, "Just like that."
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    And they said, "Can we touch it?"I said, "If you wish to."
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    And I went away.
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    About eight hours later,
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    we found them browsing and teaching each other how to browse.
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    So I said, "Well that's impossible, because --
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    How is it possible? They don't know anything."
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    My colleagues said, "No, it's a simple solution.
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    One of your students must have been passing by,
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    showed them how to use the mouse."
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    So I said, "Yeah, that's possible."
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    So I repeated the experiment. I went 300 miles out of Delhi
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    into a really remote village
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    where the chances of a passing software development engineer
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    was very little. (Laughter)
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    I repeated the experiment there.
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    There was no place to stay, so I stuck my computer in,
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    I went away, came back after a couple of months,
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    found kids playing games on it.
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    When they saw me, they said,
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    "We want a faster processor and a better mouse."
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    (Laughter)
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    So I said, "How on Earth do you know all this?"
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    And they said something very interesting to me.
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    In an irritated voice, they said,
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    "You've given us a machine that works only in English,
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    so we had to teach ourselves English in order to use it." (Laughter)
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    That's the first time, as a teacher,
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    that I had heard the word "teach ourselves" said so casually.
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    Here's a short glimpse from those years.
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    That's the first day at the Hole in the Wall.
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    On your right is an eight-year-old.
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    To his left is his student. She's six.
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    And he's teaching her how to browse.
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    Then onto other parts of the country,
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    I repeated this over and over again,
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    getting exactly the same results that we were.
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    ["Hole in the wall film - 1999"]
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    An eight-year-old telling his elder sister what to do.
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    And finally a girl explaining in Marathi what it is,
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    and said, "There's a processor inside."
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    So I started publishing.
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    I published everywhere. I wrote down and measured everything,
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    and I said, in nine months, a group of children
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    left alone with a computer in any language
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    will reach the same standard as an office secretary in the West.
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    I'd seen it happen over and over and over again.
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    But I was curious to know, what else would they do
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    if they could do this much?
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    I started experimenting with other subjects,
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    among them, for example, pronunciation.
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    There's one community of children in southern India
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    whose English pronunciation is really bad,
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    and they needed good pronunciation because that would improve their jobs.
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    I gave them a speech-to-text engine in a computer,
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    and I said, "Keep talking into it until it types what you say."
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    (Laughter)
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    They did that, and watch a little bit of this.
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    Computer: Nice to meet you.Child: Nice to meet you.
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    Sugata Mitra: The reason I ended with the face
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    of this young lady over there is because I suspect many of you know her.
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    She has now joined a call center in Hyderabad
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    and may have tortured you about your credit card bills
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    in a very clear English accent.
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    So then people said, well, how far will it go?
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    Where does it stop?
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    I decided I would destroy my own argument
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    by creating an absurd proposition.
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    I made a hypothesis, a ridiculous hypothesis.
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    Tamil is a south Indian language, and I said,
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    can Tamil-speaking children in a south Indian village
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    learn the biotechnology of DNA replication in English
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    from a streetside computer?
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    And I said, I'll measure them. They'll get a zero.
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    I'll spend a couple of months, I'll leave it for a couple of months,
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    I'll go back, they'll get another zero.
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    I'll go back to the lab and say, we need teachers.
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    I found a village. It was called Kallikuppam in southern India.
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    I put in Hole in the Wall computers there,
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    downloaded all kinds of stuff from the Internet about DNA replication,
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    most of which I didn't understand.
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    The children came rushing, said, "What's all this?"
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    So I said, "It's very topical, very important. But it's all in English."
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    So they said, "How can we understand such big English words
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    and diagrams and chemistry?"
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    So by now, I had developed a new pedagogical method,
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    so I applied that. I said, "I haven't the foggiest idea."
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    (Laughter)
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    "And anyway, I am going away."
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    (Laughter)
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    So I left them for a couple of months.
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    They'd got a zero. I gave them a test.
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    I came back after two months
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    and the children trooped in and said, "We've understood nothing."
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    So I said, "Well, what did I expect?"
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    So I said, "Okay, but how long did it take you
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    before you decided that you can't understand anything?"
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    So they said, "We haven't given up.
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    We look at it every single day."
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    So I said, "What? You don't understand these screens
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    and you keep staring at it for two months? What for?"
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    So a little girl who you see just now,
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    she raised her hand, and she says to me in broken Tamil and English,
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    she said, "Well, apart from the fact that
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    improper replication of the DNA molecule causes disease,
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    we haven't understood anything else."
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    So I tested them.
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    I got an educational impossibility, zero to 30 percent
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    in two months in the tropical heat
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    with a computer under the tree in a language they didn't know
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    doing something that's a decade ahead of their time.
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    Absurd. But I had to follow the Victorian norm.
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    Thirty percent is a fail.
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    How do I get them to pass? I have to get them 20 more marks.
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    I couldn't find a teacher. What I did find was a friend that they had,
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    a 22-year-old girl who was an accountant
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    and she played with them all the time.
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    So I asked this girl, "Can you help them?"
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    So she says, "Absolutely not.
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    I didn't have science in school. I have no idea
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    what they're doing under that tree all day long. I can't help you."
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    I said, "I'll tell you what. Use the method of the grandmother."
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    So she says, "What's that?"
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    I said, "Stand behind them.
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    Whenever they do anything, you just say,
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    'Well, wow, I mean, how did you do that?
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    What's the next page? Gosh, when I was your age, I could have never done that.'
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    You know what grannies do."
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    So she did that for two more months.
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    The scores jumped to 50 percent.
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    Kallikuppam had caught up
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    with my control school in New Delhi,
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    a rich private school with a trained biotechnology teacher.
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    When I saw that graph I knew there is a way to level the playing field.
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    Here's Kallikuppam.
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    (Children speaking) Neurons ... communication.
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    I got the camera angle wrong. That one is just amateur stuff,
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    but what she was saying, as you could make out,
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    was about neurons, with her hands were like that,
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    and she was saying neurons communicate.
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    At 12.
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    So what are jobs going to be like?
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    Well, we know what they're like today.
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    What's learning going to be like? We know what it's like today,
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    children pouring over with their mobile phones on the one hand
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    and then reluctantly going to school to pick up their books with their other hand.
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    What will it be tomorrow?
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    Could it be that we don't need to go to school at all?
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    Could it be that, at the point in time when you need to know something,
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    you can find out in two minutes?
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    Could it be -- a devastating question,
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    a question that was framed for me by Nicholas Negroponte --
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    could it be that we are heading towards or maybe in
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    a future where knowing is obsolete?
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    But that's terrible. We are homo sapiens.
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    Knowing, that's what distinguishes us from the apes.
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    But look at it this way.
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    It took nature 100 million years
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    to make the ape stand up
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    and become Homo sapiens.
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    It took us only 10,000 to make knowing obsolete.
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    What an achievement that is.
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    But we have to integrate that into our own future.
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    Encouragement seems to be the key.
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    If you look at Kuppam,
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    if you look at all of the experiments that I did,
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    it was simply saying, "Wow," saluting learning.
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    There is evidence from neuroscience.
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    The reptilian part of our brain, which sits in the center of our brain,
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    when it's threatened, it shuts down everything else,
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    it shuts down the prefrontal cortex, the parts which learn,
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    it shuts all of that down.
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    Punishment and examinations are seen as threats.
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    We take our children, we make them shut their brains down,
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    and then we say, "Perform."
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    Why did they create a system like that?
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    Because it was needed.
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    There was an age in the Age of Empires
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    when you needed those people who can survive under threat.
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    When you're standing in a trench all alone,
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    if you could have survived, you're okay, you've passed.
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    If you didn't, you failed.
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    But the Age of Empires is gone.
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    What happens to creativity in our age?
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    We need to shift that balance back
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    from threat to pleasure.
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    I came back to England looking for British grandmothers.
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    I put out notices in papers saying,
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    if you are a British grandmother, if you have broadband and a web camera,
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    can you give me one hour of your time per week for free?
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    I got 200 in the first two weeks.
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    I know more British grandmothers than anyone in the universe. (Laughter)
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    They're called the Granny Cloud.
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    The Granny Cloud sits on the Internet.
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    If there's a child in trouble, we beam a Gran.
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    She goes on over Skype and she sorts things out.
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    I've seen them do it from a village called Diggles
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    in northwestern England,
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    deep inside a village in Tamil Nadu, India,
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    6,000 miles away.
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    She does it with only one age-old gesture.
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    "Shhh."
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    Okay?
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    Watch this.
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    Grandmother: You can't catch me. You say it.
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    You can't catch me.
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    Children: You can't catch me.
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    Grandmother: I'm the Gingerbread Man.Children: I'm the Gingerbread Man.
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    Grandmother: Well done! Very good.
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    SM: So what's happening here?
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    I think what we need to look at is
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    we need to look at learning
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    as the product of educational self-organization.
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    If you allow the educational process to self-organize,
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    then learning emerges.
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    It's not about making learning happen.
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    It's about letting it happen.
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    The teacher sets the process in motion
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    and then she stands back in awe
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    and watches as learning happens.
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    I think that's what all this is pointing at.
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    But how will we know? How will we come to know?
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    Well, I intend to build
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    these Self-Organized Learning Environments.
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    They are basically broadband, collaboration
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    and encouragement put together.
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    I've tried this in many, many schools.
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    It's been tried all over the world, and teachers
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    sort of stand back and say, "It just happens by itself?"
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    And I said, "Yeah, it happens by itself.""How did you know that?"
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    I said, "You won't believe the children who told me
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    and where they're from."
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    Here's a SOLE in action.
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    (Children talking)
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    This one is in England.
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    He maintains law and order,
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    because remember, there's no teacher around.
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    Girl: The total number of electrons is not equal to the total number of protons -- SM: Australia
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    Girl: -- giving it a net positive or negative electrical charge.
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    The net charge on an ion is equal to the number of protons
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    in the ion minus the number of electrons.
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    SM: A decade ahead of her time.
  • 18:07 - 18:10
    So SOLEs, I think we need a curriculum of big questions.
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    You already heard about that. You know what that means.
  • 18:12 - 18:16
    There was a time when Stone Age men and women
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    used to sit and look up at the sky and say,
  • 18:18 - 18:20
    "What are those twinkling lights?"
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    They built the first curriculum, but we've lost sight of those wondrous questions.
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    We've brought it down to the tangent of an angle.
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    But that's not sexy enough.
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    The way you would put it to a nine-year-old is to say,
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    "If a meteorite was coming to hit the Earth,
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    how would you figure out if it was going to or not?"
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    And if he says, "Well, what? how?"
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    you say, "There's a magic word. It's called the tangent of an angle,"
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    and leave him alone. He'll figure it out.
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    So here are a couple of images from SOLEs.
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    I've tried incredible, incredible questions --
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    "When did the world begin? How will it end?" —
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    to nine-year-olds.
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    This one is about what happens to the air we breathe.
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    This is done by children without the help of any teacher.
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    The teacher only raises the question,
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    and then stands back and admires the answer.
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    So what's my wish?
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    My wish is
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    that we design the future of learning.
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    We don't want to be spare parts
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    for a great human computer, do we?
  • 19:36 - 19:40
    So we need to design a future for learning.
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    And I've got to -- hang on,
  • 19:41 - 19:44
    I've got to get this wording exactly right,
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    because, you know, it's very important.
  • 19:47 - 19:49
    My wish is to help design a future of learning
  • 19:49 - 19:51
    by supporting children all over the world
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    to tap into their wonder and their ability to work together.
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    Help me build this school.
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    It will be called the School in the Cloud.
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    It will be a school where children go on these intellectual adventures
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    driven by the big questions which their mediators put in.
  • 20:09 - 20:11
    The way I want to do this
  • 20:11 - 20:15
    is to build a facility where I can study this.
  • 20:15 - 20:18
    It's a facility which is practically unmanned.
  • 20:18 - 20:20
    There's only one granny
  • 20:20 - 20:22
    who manages health and safety.
  • 20:22 - 20:24
    The rest of it's from the cloud.
  • 20:24 - 20:26
    The lights are turned on and off by the cloud,
  • 20:26 - 20:28
    etc., etc., everything's done from the cloud.
  • 20:28 - 20:31
    But I want you for another purpose.
  • 20:31 - 20:34
    You can do Self-Organized Learning Environments
  • 20:34 - 20:39
    at home, in the school, outside of school, in clubs.
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    It's very easy to do. There's a great document
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    produced by TED which tells you how to do it.
  • 20:43 - 20:46
    If you would please, please do it
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    across all five continents
  • 20:48 - 20:51
    and send me the data,
  • 20:51 - 20:54
    then I'll put it all together, move it into the School of Clouds,
  • 20:54 - 20:57
    and create the future of learning.
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    That's my wish.
  • 20:59 - 21:01
    And just one last thing.
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    I'll take you to the top of the Himalayas.
  • 21:03 - 21:06
    At 12,000 feet, where the air is thin,
  • 21:06 - 21:09
    I once built two Hole in the Wall computers,
  • 21:09 - 21:11
    and the children flocked there.
  • 21:11 - 21:14
    And there was this little girl who was following me around.
  • 21:14 - 21:19
    And I said to her, "You know, I want to give a computer to everybody, every child.
  • 21:19 - 21:21
    I don't know, what should I do?"
  • 21:21 - 21:25
    And I was trying to take a picture of her quietly.
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    She suddenly raised her hand like this, and said to me,
  • 21:29 - 21:31
    "Get on with it."
  • 21:31 - 21:43
    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    I think it was good advice.
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    I'll follow her advice. I'll stop talking.
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    Thank you. Thank you very much.
  • 21:51 - 21:54
    (Applause)
  • 21:54 - 22:03
    Thank you. Thank you. (Applause)
  • 22:03 - 22:09
    Thank you very much. Wow. (Applause)
Title:
Build a School in the Cloud
Speaker:
Sugata Mitra
Description:

Onstage at TED2013, Sugata Mitra makes his bold TED Prize wish: Help me design the School in the Cloud, a learning lab in India, where children can explore and learn from each other -- using resources and mentoring from the cloud. Hear his inspiring vision for Self Organized Learning Environments (SOLE), and learn more at tedprize.org.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
22:31

English subtitles

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