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Rethinking Learning: The 21st Century Learner | MacArthur Foundation

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    - Probably the most important thing
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    for kids growing up today
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    is the love of embracing change.
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    (upbeat music)
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    The catch for preparing students
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    for the 21st century workforce
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    is how do you get kids
    that have curiosity,
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    and a questing disposition.
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    We have called in the past
    the gaming disposition
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    'cause if you look at the disposition
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    of hard core gamers, such
    as World of Warcraft,
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    massive multiplayer games, the
    surprising things you find,
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    contrary to what people think,
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    is these kids first of all are incredibly
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    bottom line oriented.
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    They want to be measured
    because they want to see
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    how much they're improving, and in fact,
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    the most common mantra of a real gamer
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    is if I ain't learning, it ain't fun.
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    - I don't think any kid
    is born digitally native.
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    I think kids are born consuming media,
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    but I don't think kids
    are born producing media,
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    so almost any kid that you look at
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    and say oh wow this is a
    great user of digital media,
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    you can trace back.
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    There's a parent, there's
    a, you know, program,
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    there's something that inspired them
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    and developed them.
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    - You know, part of the opportunity here
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    is learning the content which is very much
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    the 20th century idea around education,
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    but in 21st century,
    it's learning the tools
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    and the skills of remaking that content
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    and becoming the creator and the producer.
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    - We know that the
    learning outside of school
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    matters tremendously for
    the learning in school,
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    so a lot of what we're trying to say
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    about kids in formal
    learning with new media
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    is part of an already existing set
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    of understandings that educators have
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    of the importance of the home environment,
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    for the peer environment,
    for the community,
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    for learning that happens in schools.
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    The question is how can we be more active
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    about linking those two together?
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    - We just assumed when
    we opened the school
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    that digital media would be
    available at all moments,
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    and we have a technology philosophy
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    around bring it out when we need it
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    and put it away when we don't need it.
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    We have a wireless building,
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    the kids use laptops,
    and the reason we do that
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    is so that we can put them away
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    when it's actually not
    the best tool for them
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    to be learning with.
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    - We find when we talk
    about 21st century skills,
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    people often reduce them
    to skills for the workplace
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    and skills involving technology,
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    and we really are thinking
    about skills for creativity,
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    for civic engagement, for social life,
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    the full range of
    experiences that young people
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    will be involved in in the future.
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    - I think for teachers and
    schools and classroom learning,
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    there's still an incredibly
    important role to play
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    which is about giving kids access
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    across the board to a
    baseline set of standards,
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    literacies, expectations
    about what they need
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    to participate in contemporary society
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    to be reflective, and
    to also take opportunity
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    of the fact that you
    really have kids and adults
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    in a shared space that's
    safe, that's sanctioned,
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    that gives kids an opportunity
    to reflect on things
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    in their everyday life
    that's not just about them
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    being immersed in it all the time,
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    so I think there are incredibly
    functions for schools.
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    What we're saying by
    evaluating in formal learning
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    is not that we should
    abandon formal learning,
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    but that we should get
    those working together
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    in a much more coordinated way.
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    (light music)
Title:
Rethinking Learning: The 21st Century Learner | MacArthur Foundation
Description:

From cell phone and video games to Facebook and YouTube, digital media are changing the way young people play and socialize in the 21st century. Learn more at http://www.macfound.org/programs/learning.

The MacArthur Foundation's grantmaking aims to determine how digital media are changing the way young people learn, play, socialize, and participate in civic life. Answers are critical to education and other social institutions that must meet the needs of this and future generations.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
04:01

English subtitles

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