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(0:56 people's noises)
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(check who) 1.17 We've got one hour
and a quarter.
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(confused voices then 1:31) How do we know
when these things are going to be turned on?
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(confused voices, then1:58) What? OK?
Right.
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(Chairperson 2:03) Ladies and Genltemen,
can I ask everyone
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to take their seats, please?
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We're about to begin,
so if you're visiting the bar,
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can you charge your glasses and return
to your seats, and then we'll begin.
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We've got an hour and a quarter
for this debate.
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OK, can I -- Welcome everybody to
the Online Educa OEB debate.
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I'm not sure what number this is
in the series of debates that we've had,
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I think it may be getting up to our 10th.
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What I can tell you is that in the time
that we've been having these debates
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and that I've been chairing them,
my eyesight has now gone so bad
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that I can't possibly read any notes
that I have without using glasses, so
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I think we must be on at least our 10th.
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What I can also tell you is that
Online Educa itself, OEB,
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this year is celebrating
its 21st anniversary.
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So I think that perhaps deserves
a round of applause.
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So happy birthday to Online Educa --
(Applause) -- this fantastic conference.
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And 21 years ago was a very difficult --
very different world indeed,
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when one thinks about the scale and scope
of change that there --
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that has taken place in the last 21 years.
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One statistic I was reading recently was
that in the UK, in 1994, 21 years ago,
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there were only 67 mobile phones
per 1000 people.
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But only ten years later, in 2004,
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there were more mobiles in the UK
than people.
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And that pattern of spread
of mobile communications alone
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has spread across the world and
in Africa, for instance,
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those of you who have been to
Elearning Africa will have learned about
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the spread of mobile communications
across the African continent.
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So in terms of the scale
of technological change,
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and the spread of that change
across the world,
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the change in that short period of time,
in these past 21 years alone,
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has been enormous, and we heard about
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the scale of it in the opening
plenary session this morning.
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We live in a world that is globalized,
interconnected, hyperlinked
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and that scale of change we're
experiencing, have experienced
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in the last 21 years, is going to
gather pace and continue.
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And all that is going to create a huge
challenge for education and training,
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which is going to be at the heart
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of dealing with both the positive and
negative aspects of that change.
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And that's why the motion that we're
dealing with today, in this debate,
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is so important, and why the whole subject
of giving young people the skills
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that they need to cope with
the challenges of this new world
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that we all are going to --
that we are creating, is so important.
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We've got four speakers,
four panel speakers
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to open the debate this evening
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and I'm going to ask each of them
to speak for 10 minutes,
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and then I'm going to --
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-- two of them will speak for the motion,
obviously,and two against --
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then I will throw open the debate
to all of you,
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but if you want to intervene
whilst they are speaking, because
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we're having a parliamentary-style
debate,
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then you can try to intervene on them
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and if they want to take
your intervention,
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then they can do so, but it will be
entirely up to you.
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And if they don't, then you can draw
whatever conclusions you want from that.
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But I want to ensure that
we keep the flow going,
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so I'm not going to let you bully them
but I'm going to allow you,
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if you want to make a particular point,
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or if you want to make
a short intervention, to do so.
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Then after they've spoken, we'll
throw open the debate to the floor
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and you can make your contribution,
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but do please realize that time
is of the essence,
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so please try to keep it short and
to the point, succinct.
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This is the kind of debate equivalent
of texting.
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So, no long rambling contributions,
because I will cut you off
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if you try to do that.
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So, very short contributions, please.
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And then I'll ask each of our --
I'll ask one speaker from each side
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to sum up, and then we will take a vote,
and we'll do that by a show of hands.
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And I've also made it clear
to all the speakers that they may
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say things that they don't necessarily
want to be held to in the future,
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so I hope that you will understand that.
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But this is an opportunity for us
to explore some of the issues,
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but don't take it all too seriously,
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and don't come and accuse people of saying
things that you would --
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that they might not necessarily always
want to be held to.
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With that in mind, I'm going to ask
our first speaker, who is Jo Swinson.
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Jo Swinson, who is the former Minister
for business, innovation and skills
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in the UK's coalition government of
2010 to 2015,
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to speak first for the motion.
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And Jo, since leaving Parliament,
has begun a new career
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and is involved in an award within
a data intelligence company
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called Clear Returns
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and she is an expert on the challenges
and opportunities of the digital age.
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So, over to you, Jo.
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(Jo Swinson) Thank you very much indeed,
Harold.
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And I'm absolutely delighted to be here
in Berlin at OEB.
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A bit of a first, actually, the first
technology-related conference
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that I've been to where there is a queue
in the ladies' loos!
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I have to say I was particularly pleased
by that, not only as a feminist,
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but also as a Brit who appreciates
the art of queuing.
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So it was good on two fronts.
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So, this house believes that
21st century skills aren't being taught,
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and they should be, is the motion
that I want to convince you
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to support this evening.
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We absolutely need to be equipping
our young people,
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and indeed, people at every stage
of their lives,
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with the skills that they need
for the 21st century.
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And our education systems,
and our wider society,
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have an important role to play in this.
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But I will put it to you, this evening,
that when it comes to technical skills,
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when it comes to social skills,
and vitally,
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when it comes to capacity
to embrace change,
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we are not yet rising to that challenge
sufficiently.
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There are very specific skills,
there are gaps in science and technology
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that are not being properly filled. 9:32
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These shortages are causing
significant problems
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for businesses, for employers.
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Half of engineering companies say that
they have delayed taking forward
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new products or services, because
they have vacancies
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that are so hard to fill, because
the skills are not there to recruit.
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Digital start-ups are often in real need
of software developers
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that they cannot find sufficiently.
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And companies of all sizes, grappling with
cybersecurity challenges
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struggle to have the skills that they need
to take on those important issues.
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As Harold mentioned, I'm now a director
of a company called Clear Returns.
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It's been going for about three years,
based in Glasgow, and uses data analytics
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to help retailers understand the problems
they have with product returns
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and therefore successfully cutting
the costs for retailers,
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and resulting in better
customer satisfaction.
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But in our technology team of 17 people,
there are 12 different nationalities
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and not one of those people went through
the school education system in the UK,
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because the skills are not taught
up to scratch.
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Now, there have been some improvements
and as to 2014,
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computer science has been introduced into
the curriculum in the UK,
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but that is not the end of the matter,
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because 11% of computer science graduates
are unemployed.
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In fact, that's one of the highest
unemployment rates
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for any subject discipline,
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at a time when we have a huge shortage
of these very skills.
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Something is going very wrong
when that is the case.
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And this is not just about
teaching people to code.
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Fashionable ....... (check) undoubtedly
is at the moment (check)
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and it is necessary that we do have
people who can code.
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But it's not some kind of silver bullet
on its own.
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Actually, it's the building blocks
that we need to be putting in place,
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the things that lie before you get
to the point of coding,
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the logic, the basic maths,
enhancing those skills,
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so that people can put
those building blocks together
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and create an argument or a
train of thought or a mathematical proof,
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or indeed, a piece of code that will
instruct a machine to do something.
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Yet our maths skills
are also going backwards.
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A King's College, London, study found that
compared to the 1970's
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young people today are significantly less
well equipped in the field of mathematics.
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And it's also worth pointing out
that we are missing out,
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when it comes to teaching these skills
on almost half of the population.
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Only one in five A-level physics students
is a girl.
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When it comes to computer science,
that figure drops to 1 in 10.
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Now, it's wonderful to be at
a technology conference
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where there is a queue
in the ladies' loos,
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but even at this conference, if you
have a look at the speakers' brochure,
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only 8 of the 35 main speakers are women,
so where are the women?
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We are missing out
on that important talent
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who will not then get in the fields
that we need for the 21st century
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to enable all of our economies
to flourish.
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We're also not doing well enough
at the social skills
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which have always been imported --
important,
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and I would argue, are even more so
in the context of the 21st century.
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Employers have long complained that
they get coming into the work place
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are not yet ready for work.
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I have to say there is that thing
I've observed,
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when new graduates starting out
in the work place
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seem to be allergic to
using the telephone
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for the purpose it was originally
designed for.
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I've lost count of the number of times
when, speaking to a member of staff
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about the particular project
that they are trying to make happen,
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and it seems so stuck, and I say:
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"What happened when you asked
that person about it?"
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"Oh, I sent them an email and
they didn't get back to me."
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You know, for all the wonders that
technology can undoubtedly do
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in helping us in our working life, when
you want to get people to do something,
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an email is very easy to ignore, and it is
much harder to just put to one side
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a face-to-face person or contact,
or on the telephone.
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And relationships are absolutely critical
to 21st century work places and skills:
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getting things done, collaborating in
teams, motivating others.
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Yet when we assess children
and young people in the education system,
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it is genuinely done
on a pure individual basis,
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not looking at how they are actually
operating within a drip setting (check).
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And when it comes to skills
in terms of relationships,
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something like personal, social
and health education, which I would argue,
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is absolutely essential to help young
people learn to navigate relationships,
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and important issues like consent
when it comes to sex,
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it's not even compulsory
in the UK curriculum.
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In a world where ultimation is increasing,
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where jobs that we've already seen through
the Industrial Revolution,
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that manual jobs have been replaced
by machines,
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that with the next stage of technological
advancement, many, many more,
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in things like accountancy and
professional services,
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are also going to be replaced
by algorithms,
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the human social relationship skills
are going to be in even more demand
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and therefore deserve much more attention.
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And my final point is that we have not
done enough to prepare people
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for the world of change.
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A little while ago, I spoke at a School
Award ceremony to 12-year olds
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And I was to explain to them
how the world had changed
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since I was there age.
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And one of the examples I used was
the process of taking a photograph.
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And I described how, when I was 12,
you would have a thing called a camera
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that was all that it did, it was just
for taking photographs,
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you would have to get a piece of film,
physically,
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to load it into the camera machine,
you'd had to do that pretty carefully,
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because you didn't want to expose the film
and it was quite a fiddly process.
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You wouldn't know whether the photos
you were taking were any good.
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You would have to take at least 24,
or sometimes 36,
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depending on which particular
piece of film you put into your camera,
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before you would then take it along
to a pharmacist's or a chemist's shop,
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pay some money and then go and do
something else for a few days,
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at which point you could come back
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and be presented with your little
envelope of photographs,
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and see if any of them had turned out OK.
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And I was counting on these 12-year olds
looked at me
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like I might well be lying to them:
this is how it worked,
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because of course these days, you know,
within a matter of seconds,
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you can take dozens of selfies
in your phone,
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apply however many Instagram filters
you like,
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and share it with the entire world,
just without leaving the school.
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The pace of change is accelerating hugely.
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Here in 2015, for us to consider
what even are 21st century skills,
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is like going back to 1915 and trying
to imagine the space race, nuclear power,
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the internet, or the kind of social change
going from a situation
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where women didn't even have the vote,
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to electing a woman as Prime Minister
in the UK,
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or the change with gay rights,
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or the ending of racial segregation
in the United States.
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We can't even conceive of all that
the 21st century is going to bring.
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And so, more than anything, with
this huge pace of increasing knowledge,
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more than anything, what we need to do
is equip people
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to cope with and thrive
on change and uncertainty.
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Instead, we have bunches of kids being
processed through the education system
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that doesn't look that different
to several decades ago.
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So we really do have a problem here,
in terms of the skills
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that we are teaching and more importantly,
not teaching well enough.
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Whether it's technical skills,
whether it's those social skills
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or whether it's the vitally important
ability to be resilient,
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to recover from change and setbacks,
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and to apply yourself in a new way
to a new set of challenges and horizons.
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These are the things
we must be focusing on,
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and we aren't yet rising
to that challenge.
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I support the motion. 18:06
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(Applause)
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(Moderator) OK, thank you very much
for that, Jo.
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Our next speaker, who is going to speak
against the motion, is Allan Päll,
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who is the Secretary General of
the European Youth Forum,
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which is the representative body
for youth organisations in Europe
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and he is an advocate for youth's rights.
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He lead student unions in Estonia and
at the European level, and has advocated
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for students' voices to be included
in educational policy. Allan:
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(Allan Päll) All right,
thank you very much, chair.
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I would like to very much support many
of the claims made by our opposition.
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However, when it comes to the question
and when it comes to this specific motion,
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this house does not believe that
21st century skills aren't being taught,
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because, well, let me put it very bluntly
and very simply:
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the whole notion of what are 21st century
skills is often just a bunch of nonsense,
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if I would sum it up very briefly.
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But let me go into it a bit more.
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There are many definitions of
what these skills could be
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and I fully agree that they do include
everything mentioned by the opposition.
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However, there are many other ways
of looking at it.
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So if we are to say whether these are
being taught or not,
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even if we have a problem of the very
definition of what these skills are,
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how can we say that they are
not being taught so determinedly?
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Some of the elements that can be
mentioned as 21st century skills
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are simple things, as critical thinking,
problem-solving, reasoning, analysis,
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research skills, creativity, curiosity,
perseverance, self-direction
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oral and written communication,
leadership,
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information and communication technology,
social justice, literacy,
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civic, ethical behavior, global awareness:
the list goes on and on and on.
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So, indeed, many of those things, perhaps,
are not being taught enough,
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or specifically enough,
in our educational systems.
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But that doesn't mean that
this is not happening.
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Let me ask you one simple question:
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If you believe that we don't acquire
many of these skills
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in our educational environment,
be it in a formal setting
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or a socializing moment
in your school or at university,
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would we actually witness the pace
of change in society that we are seeing.
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Almost all of us have gone through
the educational system.
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So, we must get a lot of those skills
also through that.
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I do agree, though,
that there is something to be said about
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the question of how specific are we
when we look at those skills.
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Because that is true that most curricula --
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education is very much compartmentalized
into very specific subject areas
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and we're seeing an increasing trend
of those subject areas becoming
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more and more specific.
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And thus indeed, there is perhaps
not enough emphasis on looking at,
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or thinking really about are we acquiring
all those sets of skills
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that are important for our socialization,
etc., our technical skills as well,
-
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as mentioned by the opposition.
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One of the things that I would like
to highlight is that
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the schools and universities, and
vocational education and training
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is not only about the formal
learning outcomes
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that we are beginning to measure
more and more.
-
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It is also about the social environment
at that very school or university
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that determines a lot of
what education gives us.
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In terms of specific skills
that were mentioned by opposition
-
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and the lack of those skills, there are
many variables perhaps to look at.
-
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Yes indeed, we are missing out
on engineers,
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we are missing out on also
staff in medical sciences, in care.
-
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We would need indeed many more people
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to have those qualifications,
perhaps, indeed.
-
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But there is also a question of
what is education for
-
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and what are the requirements
on the labor market.
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And those two things,
although they interact,
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they move at different paces.
-
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So sometimes, we start to put blame
very easily on the education system for
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not delivering specific skills when, for
example, the structure of our education
-
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-- sorry, the structure of our economy
has changed.
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And I think here, it's an important
remark that we need to look at
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different experiences
of different countries.
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And you see countries where
unemployment levels,
-
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even throughout the financial
economic crises,
-
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were record low, such as in Germany
and Austria.
-
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But if you look at youth
unemployment figures,
-
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youth unemployment also among
highly educated young people,
-
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in different areas, like Spain or Greece,
all around the Mediterranean,
-
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they've been staggeringly high.
-
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And it's not because
the education systems failed,
-
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it's because the macro-economic systems
failed them there,
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in terms of not having enough job creation
for all those skills.
-
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And of course, there is something
to be said that when we train people
-
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and when we train minds
to think critically,
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to come up with new and innovative ideas,
we also change the world through that.
-
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So, we need to understand
that interaction.
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but certainly, when we look at
21st century skills, well,
-
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if we are to define them with this broad
set of lists that I noted,
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we certainly are gaining those skills,
but perhaps, not specifically
-
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and not enough: that, we could agree.
-
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When it comes to preparedness for change,
-
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when are we ever prepared
for the change to come, one might wonder.
-
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Indeed, things, technologically,
are changing very fast.
-
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And maybe our educational systems
are not embracing that technology
-
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at the same pace.
-
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But that doesn't mean that
if we would embrace
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the use of that technology very quickly,
that it would enhance immediately
-
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the skills that we can describe as
21st century skills,
-
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such as, for example, critical thinking.
-
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There are many advocates that say that
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we need to replace
subject matter teaching completely
-
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with horizontal level approaches.
-
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That doesn't work.
-
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If we don't know the facts, how do we know
that we are on the right path
-
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with our decisions, how can we know
what really happened in the past,
-
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and not, how can we verify what is true?
-
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So when we look at the skills, we need
to look at the evidences
-
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in terms of teaching preparedness
and pedagogy.
-
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And yes, we agree: there is a lot
to be done there
-
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in terms of measuring those essential
skills of socialization and communication,
-
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building relationships, and it is true
that around, it's estimated,
-
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around 50% of jobs in the service sector
-
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are about to disappear in the next
20 years and transform, hopefully,
-
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into something completely new.
-
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Finally, indeed, those skills,
we can all agree,
-
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we'll need those skills.
-
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But there is an important element
of young people,
-
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and this is a study that we have done
in the European Youth Forum,
-
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that they gain a lot of those skills also
outside, in non formal education settings.
-
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And the key here is to see if we can bring
those experiences
-
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that young people gain from youth
organizations, activism,
-
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into the formal education setting,
and thus make it much more open
-
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to recognizing those prior experiences
as well, to overcome this shortage.
-
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Thank you very much.
-
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(Applause)
-
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(Moderator) Thank you very much, Allan.
-
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Our next speaker who is going to speak
for the motion is Pedro De Bruyckere
-
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who is an educational scientist and
he has worked in Ghent in Belgium
-
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since 2001.
-
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He co-wrote two books which debunk
popular myths on generation Y
-
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and generation Z,
-
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and the latest one was entitled
"I was 10 in 2015". Pedro:
-
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(Pedro De Bruyckere) OK. Good evening.
-
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I'm a teacher, I'm a teacher trainer,
so I'm not used to standing still.
-
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So if you don't mind, I will move.
-
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Allan, thank you very much for
making my point.
-
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I have to explain: I have to agree,
I've written a book about it.
-
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There's no such thing
as 21st century skills.
-
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And that's why they need to be taught.
-
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I have to explain this.
-
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You know, if we go back in time, to see
the origins of the 21st century skills,
-
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you'll end up with the liberal arts,
the Septem Artes Liberales.
-
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Rhetoric, what we are doing right here,
that's for me ancient history,
-
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but still needed today.
-
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But the question is,
is this still being taught in school?
-
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Because, like ....... Alberts (check) says,
moreover we get a focus on the Three R's
-
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-- Reading, 'Riting, 'Rithmetics --
-
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while most of the young people are
looking to Snapchats.
-
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But because of the focus,
because we want to test stuff,
-
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the more important things
are being forgotten!
-
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Rhetoric, philosophy, for me, crucial.
-
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To be honest, then, you don't have to look
at Ancient Times,
-
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than you have to look at Medieval Times,
-
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because then philosophy was added
to the Liberal Arts.
-
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So we need to train our children
because it's great to say:
-
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"Look at us: we've done it."
-
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Yes, but we are not talking about us,
because in 20 years' time, they will --
-
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we will be old, boring and
other people need to sit there
-
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and beyond stage, using rhetoric.
-
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So we need to prepare them.
-
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I'm not sure if we're doing a great job.
-
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For instance, if we talk about technology,
-
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technology is often like a sex ad
in education.
-
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You know, you talk about
all the dangerous stuff
-
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and you never talk about the fun stuff.
-
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You know, it's very simple:
-
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"Don't do this, don't do that,
certainly don't try that! Go ahead!"
-
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And another -- for instance, McKinsey,
the McKinsey report, 2014 McKinsey report,
-
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said just (check)
-- and I agree again with you both --
-
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there is a mismatch.
-
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There is a mismatch between
what children study in school
-
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and which topics they choose,
and what we need in the economy.
-
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But at the same time, the employers said:
-
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"You know, don't train them
to a specific job
-
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"but train them in strategic
and communication skills."
-
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OK, they have been around for ages
but they are still important.
-
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But what do we do, for instance,
in many schools?
-
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I've been in schools in Holland,
in Germany, in --
-
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you know, we teach them how to write
a job application.
-
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We teach them how to perform
a talk for a job.
-
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Do we teach them to write
a LinkedIn profile?
-
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No, what we say is "Never post
a drunk photo on Facebook,
-
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"because people will search you."
-
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What we don't say is:
-
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"You know what? Post something good
about yourself on Facebook,
-
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"that isn't a selfie."
-
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But we think well, they will do this.
-
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Actually, for instance research by
Jan van Dek (check):
-
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that's one of the stuff
that our kids don't know.
-
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And if we don't teach them, who will?
-
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So that's my point: we need to teach them
basic skills like Jo said:
-
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communication skills, strategic skills.
-
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And if you want to call them
21st century skills because, by accident,
-
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we're living in the 21st century,
so be it.
-
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(Applause)
Thank you.
-
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(Applause)
-
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(Moderator) OK,
thank you very much, Pedro.
-
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Our final speaker who is going to speak
against the motion is Miles Berry,
-
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who is the principal lecturer
in computing education
-
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at the University of Roehampton in the UK:
Miles.
-
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(Miles Berry) Pleasure to be here,
really is.
-
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Philip and Gudrun, where are you guys?
-
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OK, on the Twitter thing you say:
-
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"We need to talk about what the purpose
of education is, what is education for?"
-
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And that's where I want to start.
-
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I want to move back from the motion,
to think about what education is for.
-
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And to do that, we need some understanding
of what education is.
-
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I've been in education
for over 40 years now.
-
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But even so, I checked.
-
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It's the culture or development
of personal knowledge, or understanding,
-
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growth or character,
moral and social qualities, etc.,
-
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as contrasting with
the imparting of a skill.
-
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(blurred: check)
-
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OK, there's definitely a place
for imparting skills,
-
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but that's training, not education,
and there is a difference.
-
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My Roehampton students study education,
but they are trained to teach.
-
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England's new computing curriculum
educates people about the principles,
-
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the principles of computer science:
(inaudible: check), I tell you.
-
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(laughter) ... technology, I think
the technology ran on me tonight,
-
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it's all right I'll give it...
-
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(off) (unintelligible)
-
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(Berry) 21st century skill
-- on knowledge -- (laughter)
-
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Knowledge that these things are the wrong
shape for my head: never mind.
-
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OK, so: England's new computing curriculum
that Jo has alluded to
-
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educates people about the principles
of computer science,
-
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whereas we used to train them
to use Office software.
-
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Or think about sex.
-
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Look, not like that: we rightly include
sex education on the curriculum in schools
-
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but we typically don't include training.
(Laughter) Important skills.
-
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Do without microphones.
(Laughter) ... very well.
-
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In England, our Education Act says
what education is for.
-
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Firstly, it's to promote the spiritual,
moral, cultural, mental and physical
-
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development of pupils and of society.
-
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And it's to prepare pupils
for the opportunities, responsibilities
-
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and experiences of later life.
-
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What else could education possibly be for?
-
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In that, you just got to love laws
that require you to do
-
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what you'd want to do anyhow.
-
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There does remain a question about
how best to prepare people
-
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for these opportunities, responsibilities
and experiences.
-
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I think the nob of the motion this evening
is about whether this should be done
-
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through some sort of training
in 21st century skills
-
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or by passing on the knowledge,
understanding and wisdom
-
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of our generation to the next and I'd say,
the latter.
-
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I've no problem with skills per se
in teaching.
-
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Behavioral management is a skill,
coding is a skill,
-
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so is searching for things on Google,
or even Bing.
-
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OK. I've some problem, though, with the
notion that there are 21st century skills
-
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and I'd agree with you on that.
-
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But both of you have done a fine job
of demolishing that notion already.
-
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I've also some problem with the skills --
with the notion that skills can transfer.
-
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Skills are about accomplishing something.
-
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There's a context to the skills,
-
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and I think we diminish specific skills
by attempting to generalize them.
-
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It isn't critical thinking,
it's thinking critically about something.
-
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It's not creativity,
it's creating something.
-
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And it's not communication,
-
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it's communicating something
through some media.
-
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The 'something' here matters.
-
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It's really not possible to teach skills
in the abstract fashion, without context.
-
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And the context is king.
-
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Whatever the specific domain,
-
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knowledge of that domain is necessary
for expert skills.
-
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My main problem, though, is that
we've only a little time in school.
-
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We've other things to teach and
our students have other things to learn:
-
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things like knowledge
-
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and understanding
-
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and wisdom.
-
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Without these, skills are unlikely to be
of much practical benefit.
-
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Stephen Downes is here.
-
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Well, nodding in his direction, I'd say,
learning is about connecting things:
-
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neurons, ideas, people.
-
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The computer scientists get this,
-
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Google's page rank algorithm relies
not so much on the content of the page,
-
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as the links between the pages.
-
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The thing is then, the new stuff has to be
connected to something.
-
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Otherwise, it's just isolated factoids.
-
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We can't make sense of it,
we can't use new knowledge
-
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unless it's integrated into our existing
mental maps, our schema.
-
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Put simply: it takes knowledge
to gain knowledge.
-
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This apples to each of us as individuals,
but it's also how civilization grows.
-
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Human achievement is a cumulative thing.
-
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New knowledge doesn't normally contradict
what's gone before.
-
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It builds on it.
-
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If Newton saw further than others had,
-
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it was because he stood
on the shoulders of giants.
-
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What hope would there be
for the next generations
-
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if they had to discover everything afresh
for themselves?
-
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The consequence of our building
on what's gone before
-
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is that the pace of cultural, scientific
and technological change
-
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accelerates exponentially.
-
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But even allowing for this acceleration
is knowledge, understanding and wisdom
-
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which have done the test of time.
-
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Less so, skills.
-
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Expect new inventions and discoveries
over the next 85 years
-
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and new practical skills to go with them.
-
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But don't expect the foundational
shared knowledge of our civilization
-
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to become irrelevant.
-
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Indeed, it's on this very foundation
that the new knowledge will be built.
-
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It's not 21st century skills
that young people need.
-
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It's 21st century knowledge, understanding
and wisdom.
-
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Time, I think, for a quick case study.
-
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The most successful education systems
and the top universities
-
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seem to organize their curriculum
around well knowledge-based subjects.
-
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England's new National Curriculum is
quite explicitly a knowledge-based one.
-
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It sets out to provide pupils with
an introduction to the essential knowledge
-
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they need to be educated as citizens,
-
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and to introduce them to the best
which has been thought and said.
-
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One of the most radical things we've done
in that curriculum,
-
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which many see as rather reactionary,
-
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is to have replaced the old ICT
with a new subject: computing.
-
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This includes an introduction
to the principles of computer science
-
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for all, from age 5 up.
-
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It has been my privilege
to be part of the team
-
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designing and implementing
the new subject.
-
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Under the old curriculum we offered
a good grounding in tech skills,
-
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finding this online,
making a presentation,
-
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typing up stories, articles and reports.
-
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Sometimes, even making a spreadsheet,
often about having a party.
-
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Do people really use spreadsheets
to plan parties?
-
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Are these fun parties? Are these
-- OK (laughs)
-
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It was fine: pupils moved on to work
or the next phase of education
-
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with some competence and confidence
-
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and broadly speaking, were
digitally literate.
-
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Our ...... (check) students
at Roehampton's
-
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suggested that broad portfolio skills,
-
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two thirds regarded them as .... as
competent, proficient or experts.
-
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That said, it was all too often
a bit -- well, dull.
-
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There's a limit, or at least
there should be a limit
-
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to the number of times you can
find something out on the internet
-
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and make a presentation about it.
-
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Generally, it did precious little
to provide any real knowledge
-
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or understanding of computation,
information theory or digital technology.
-
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In the same audit, less than 15%
of my new students
-
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rated their understanding of
digital technology
-
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as competent, proficient or expert.
-
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So we started again.
-
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We built on the idea of computing
as having three elements:
-
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computer science, information technology
and digital literacy,
-
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the foundations, applications and
implications of the discipline.
-
Not Synced
We took a leaf out of
William Morris's book:
-
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"Have nothing in your house that
you do not know to be useful
-
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"or believe to be beautiful."
-
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And built a curriculum of things
that would be useful,
-
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but also things that were interesting.
-
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We took a view that the best way
to prepare pupils for a future
-
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in which digital technology looks
quite likely to remain important
-
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was through providing a firm
computer science foundation,
-
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things like logic, algorithms,
abstraction, networks, programming.
-
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Yes, coding would be important, but not
as a vocational skill for the IT industry,
-
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but as the lab work for computing,
the medium through which
-
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the ideas of computer science are created
and expressed.
-
Not Synced
Computer became part of our curriculum
15 months ago.
-
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It's early days, but early indications
are very positive.
-
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Teachers' professional development
has been a challenge.
-
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But this hasn't been a challenge about
pedagogical or technical skills.
-
Not Synced
Teachers know how to teach
and know how to use technology.
-
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It's just that they didn't know
much computer science.
-
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They are, by and large, willing to learn,
-
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and many are quite enjoying
the fast challenge.
-
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I don't want to leave you
with the idea that I think
-
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knowledge is the only thing
that matters in education.
-
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Of course it isn't: character matters.
-
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I'm talking here about traits
and attitudes,
-
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things such as curiosity and creativity
and courage of our 4-year old daughter.
-
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She's a curious character.
-
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She still has this sense of
wandering the world about her,
-
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that sense of Wow when she sees
or hears something new,
-
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and still a willingness to explore,
experiment and play.
-
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She's at a great little primary school
and I shouldn't worry.
-
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But I do worry that her schooling
might get in the way of her curiosity
-
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when it ought to be nurturing this.
-
Not Synced
As Plowden had it back in '67,
-
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one of the main educational tasks
of the primary school
-
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is to build on and strengthen children's
intrinsic interest in learning
-
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and lead them to learn for themselves.
-
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(Moderator, off) 21st century skill?
-
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(Berry) But knowledge matters here.
-
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It's as Sophie learns more that I hope
she'll want to learn even more.
-
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With literacy motivation, and good WiFi,
she can teach herself almost anything,
-
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and does.
-
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Creativity matters.
-
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We learn not just though listening,
reading and exploring,
-
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but also through making.
-
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I don't think there's some generic
creativity skill, here.
-
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But I'd like my daughter to be creative
in her music and her computing
-
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and her maths, and so on.
-
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She's been making things for a while now,
but as her knowledge grows,
-
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I'm looking forward to her exploring
and drawing on that in her creative work.
-
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Finally, courage.
-
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She's a fearless explorer, with tons
of self-confidence.
-
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(Off whisper, inaudible)
(Berry) OK.
-
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I want her school to encourage that.
-
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More importantly, I want her
to have the courage to tell the truth,
-
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to stand up for those who can't stand up
for themselves
-
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and to do the right thing,
even if it's not the popular thing.
-
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So, what should we be doing
to best prepare young people
-
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for the opportunities, responsibilities
and experiences of later life?
-
Not Synced
Passing on knowledge.
-
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Nurturing character.
-
Not Synced
Sounds a bit old-fashioned, but honestly,
-
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what better preparation
for the rest of the 21st century?
-
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Thank you.
(Applause).
-
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(Moderator) Thank you very much,
Miles.
-
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Right, it's now over to you and I think
we've got about 25 minutes
-
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for questions and contributions.
-
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If you ask a question, I'm going to ask
our panel speakers
-
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not to answer it directly
but to deal with it in their summing up,
-
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just so that we can ensure that we have
a decent flow.
-
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And if you make a contribution, please,
try to keep it fairly brief, well, brief,
-
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so that other people
have a chance as well.
-
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And you've been very well-behaved so far.
-
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Please don't feel that you need to be
quite so well-behaved now,
-
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but now is your opportunity.
-
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If you want to speak,
please just raise your hand.
-
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Bear in mind that if you're at the back,
it is slightly difficult to see you.
-
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And can you, if I call you,
-
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please can you just wait
till the microphone turns up.
-
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Who'd like to go first?
-
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Would anybody like to ask a question
or comment?
-
Not Synced
Yes, at the back on the left, there.
-
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(Participant 1) My question is short,
particularly for Allan, I think.
-
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Why are critical thinking skills
important in the 21st century?
-
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(Moderator, off) OK. So that's one
for Allan to deal with in his summing up.
-
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Anybody else, any--
Yes, over on the right there, Yannis (check)
-
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(Participant 2) Thank you very much.
-
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I think both sides of the motion
are saying it's not working.
-
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So who's to blame, who or what is to blame
or who or what must we change?
-
Not Synced
(Moderator, off) Thank you for that.
-
Not Synced
Right, I'm looking for some contributions
now, somebody who's --
-
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Yes, lady there, on the,
just by the aisle, there.
-
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(Participant 3) Whoops! OK.
-
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Hi, I just have a comment to all of you.
-
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I don't see a huge difference
between your positions,
-
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because you always seem to say,
it's important to have these,
-
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whatever you call them.
-
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Skills is a kind of a talent that you have
when you are born, or whatever.
-
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You mentioned those things are important,
so what is actually the difference?
-
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We just need to promote an environment
-
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to let people develop
those types of skills or talents.
-
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(Moderator) Yes, also on the aisle there.
-
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(Participant 4) Thank you. I want to --
-
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(Moderator) Would you mind just introduce
yourself briefly;
-
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actually, if people would just say
who they are and where they're from,
-
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that would be helpful as well.
(Participant 4) OK.
-
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I'm Denise Gaspard- Richard,
I'm from the University
-
Not Synced
of the West Indies and Caribbean--
(Moderator) Thank you.
-
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(Participant 4) ..... Campus.
-
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The board said to me, seemed to be saying
somewhat of the same thing.
-
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As you were speaking, I kept thinking
about some employers' surveys
-
Not Synced
that we have done over a period of time
in the Caribbean,
-
Not Synced
where the ..... (check),
-
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soft skills are not really being taught
at the University.
-
Not Synced
So when a student comes out
in today work environment,
-
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they can't carry out a decent conversation
and therefore they can't call up
-
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someone who is not getting
the kind of service that they need,
-
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they don't know how to communicate
in .............. (check) OK?
-
Not Synced
So when I listened to Jo, I heard
some of that coming out
-
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and I'm wondering if, probably,
we have simply substituted
-
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social skills, or soft skills to call it
21st century skills.
-
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So we have more or less seen
the same things
-
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as we were seeing before we came up
with this terminology. Thank you.
-
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(Moderator) Thank you for that.
Anybody else?
-
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Yes, in the front row, there.
Just down here, please.
-
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Is there a mike here in the front row
on my right? That's it.
-
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(Participant 5) Thank you.
My name is Anne DeLorean (check)
-
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from the European Schoolnet in Brussels.
-
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A comment: I think maybe we are missing
the adaptive nature of human beings,
-
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because society has progressed
through the ages because --
-
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just because we are adaptive.
-
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We have not always had to be taught
everything we do,
-
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but we have to discover it a little bit.
-
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I think, as educators, what we need to do
is provide the -- at the area or the ethos
-
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where this discovery can happen,
-
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not necessarily that we have to provide
the lessons to do it
-
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but provide the means of discovery.
-
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(Moderator) Thank you. Let's have
another one on the front, here.
-
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Lady on the front row
on the left hand side here.
-
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(Participant 6) My name is Nikki Spalding,
from Higher Education Academy in the UK.
-
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I was wondering what do you think
is driving the rhetoric
-
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behind 21st century skills the most?
-
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Is it happy individuals and learners?
Happy employers? Happy society?
-
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Or happy Government Treasury?
-
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(Moderator) Thank you for that.
-
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Yes, towards the back there,
on the right hand side.
-
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(Participant 7) Lydia .... (check)
-
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You have concentrated on education
of young people.
-
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And what about education of people
at your age?
-
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Who and how (laugher) should you educate
these 21st century skills or knowledge?
-
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(Moderator) Very good question indeed.
So, we'll come back to that one.
-
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Yes, we have a number on this side, in the
-- where has the microphone gone?
-
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Yes, just at the front
of this little block there, thank you.
-
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(Participant 8) My name is Mike Rauser (check),
from McKinsey and Company in Germany.
-
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And my question is directed to Mr Barry.
-
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Where you've stressed
teaching specific skills,
-
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please correct me if I'm wrong, about
teaching specific skills in schools.
-
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How do you account for situations where
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a skill that may not even
have been invented yet
-
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-- I'm thinking about say,
from an 1980 view point,
-
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15 years in the future, that
nobody knew what the internet was.
-
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Nobody knew it was to be in there
15 years later.
-
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OK, very limited.
-
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(Off) I think the internet
was invented in 1969.
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(P8) (overlap with moderator)
OK, I understand that in general--
-
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(Moderator) Can we -- If you could just
try to make it a contribution
-
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and then they can respond
in their final remarks.
-
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(P8) Sure enough
(Moderator) OK (overlap)
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(P8) -- that we don't know about
15 years into the future,
-
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or skills that are here now, that may
no longer be there 15 years into the future.
-
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Let's hope that's a little clearer.
-
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(Moderator) OK, thank you.
-
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Can I have some more contributions,
rather than questions?
-
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Anybody like to give their opinion?
Yes, on the --
-
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I think about the third row here.
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(Participant 9) So actually it's phrased
as a question,
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but think of it as a contribution.
(Moderator) Yes (laughter).
-
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A rhetorical contribution.
-
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(P9) So all of you have been arguing
for or against 21st century skills
-
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very convincingly.
-
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But you were always talking about
what they are,
-
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and not about what they aren't.
-
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So maybe, if the question is phrased
a bit differently,
-
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you would need to make
a more difficult point, so:
-
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what do you think are skills that are
no longer relevant,
-
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or knowledge that is no longer relevant
now in the 21st century,
-
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and that was indeed very important
200 years ago?
-
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(Moderator) What would your answer
to your own question be?
-
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(P9) I would have to think about it.
(Moderator) Right. (Laughter)
-
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Right, at the -- right at the back,
we've got two hands up there.
-
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At the back, somebody with a dark-colored
jacket on -- that's it.
-
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(Participant 10) Mike Brown,
-
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from the National Institute
of Digital Learning in Ireland,
-
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A question, but equally a contribution.
-
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What do you think,
what does the panel think,
-
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22nd century skills will be?
-
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Particularly, particularly
if we fail to achieve
-
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the post-2015
Sustainable Development Goals?
-
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(Moderator) Right. Next to --
at the back, there.
-
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(Participant 11) I think
we've lost the plot.
-
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30 years ago, many students started
overtaking the teachers in knowledge.
-
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Our school server was looked after
by students, pupils, rather than teachers,
-
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because they couldn't do it.
-
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And that happens all the while.
-
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Medical patients are getting
more knowledge than the doctors,
-
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because they search the internet
before they go to the doctor's
-
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about their own disease.
-
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So I think we have got no chance,
we can't teach anymore.
-
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(Moderator) OK, thank you for that.
Somebody standing up there --
-
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Yes. (inaudible) on to them.
Hello, Clark (check)?
-
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(Participant 12) Yes. Hi, my name is
...... (check) from Sweden
-
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and I work with a software company
developing ideation software.
-
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My contribution is that I wonder
if we should not dig even deeper
-
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and see if this is a structural problem,
because I'd like to say that these skills
-
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are being taught.
-
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We see today that people are in two
different types of networks:
-
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they are in centralized or distributed
networks at work or at school,
-
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but distributed in their spare time.
-
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And we see also that
these different types of networks
-
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cultivate different types of values.
-
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So it could be an organizational problem,
-
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but also a value problem,
if we dig even deeper.
-
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For example,
from advertising to conversation
-
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from ownership to sharing,
from profit to growth --
-
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sorry, from profit to sustainability,
and so on.
-
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So my contribution is basically, maybe
the problem is even deeper,
-
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maybe it has to do about
how we are organized,
-
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and the values that those organizations
cultivate.
-
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(Moderator) Thank you for that
(Applause)
-
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Yes, down in the front block here,
in the middle.
-
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(Participant 13) I'm Cory Doctorow,
from the morning plenary.
-
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It seems to me that education has been
refactored over the last several decades
-
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as a kind of factory,
whose product is educated children,
-
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with teachers as employees,
-
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and the board of directors as the Ministry
of Education, God help us, Michael Gove,
-
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as the CEO.
(laughter)
-
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And it seems like, when you organize
something around the idea
-
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that the public are shareholders and that
we're doing something that's a business,
-
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you have to have a ...... (check) report
where some numbers go up
-
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to show that the business is thriving.
-
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And as a result, we are rear-fighting (check)
-
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things that are not
pedagogically supported,
-
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like attendance and
standardized test scores,
-
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rather than things that are pedagogically
supported as real learning,
-
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which are often not quantifiable
and are difficult to recognize,
-
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except as a kind of creative fog
that you see your students in,
-
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where they are excited and
are really chasing knowledge.
-
Not Synced
And so now we're -- can be obsessed
with turning children into
-
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second-rate spreadsheets or
third-rate spellcheckers,
-
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instead of teaching them arithmetic
and language.
-
Not Synced
It seems like a focus on skills,
-
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without reference to the way
that we frame education,
-
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gets us nowhere.
-
Not Synced
Adding standardized tests' outcomes
where we look at
-
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whether or not you've acquired
21st century skills,
-
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ignores the fact that anything
that you try to teach,
-
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where the only way you're evaluated
is with high-stake testing,
-
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gives you nothing,
-
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except for someone who has been
crammed full of a bunch of facts
-
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that they'll promptly forget
when they leave school,
-
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and no synthetic capability.
-
Not Synced
(Moderator) Thank you for that.
-
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Yes, on the side of this block here,
on the left.
-
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(Participant 14) Thank you.
I am ..... (check) from the Investor Malawi.
-
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My question is, I don't know if we know
what we're talking about.
-
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(Laughter)
-
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In Africa, we believe that if
you don't know where you're going,
-
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then the Lord can take you there. (check)
-
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Are we changing education,
although we are using,
-
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we attempt to coexist two educations,
or we are neglecting education. Thank you.
-
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(Moderator) Thank you. Yes, in the middle
of the front block again, and then
-
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I'll come over to this one.
-
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(Participant 15) Hi, ........ from ....
University of Applied Science.
-
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As a university of applied science,
we're teaching skills like hell:
-
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social skills, soft skills,
technical skills, all this stuff.
-
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But maybe we are missing out the values
behind these skills,
-
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because they aren't the things
in the future. (check)
-
Not Synced
(Moderator) Thank you. Let's go
into this block in the front here,
-
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on the right hand side, the -- the lady
there, I think, just in front of the camera.
-
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(Participant 16) My name is
Lisa .......... (check)
-
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I work at ...... in the United States.
-
Not Synced
I think my comment really builds on some
of the things that Cory Doctorow said.
-
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You could argue that the premise
that we are arguing
-
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is actually the wrong question.
-
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It's not important, we -- just teaching
the 21st century skills isn't enough.
-
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Those skills have to be honed, practiced
and applied,
-
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for them to do anything.
-
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So it's not about the teaching, it's about
-
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what should the students do
with the teaching after that.
-
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(Moderator) Thank you for that.
Let's have another one on this side.
-
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One here on the front -- front row.
-
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(Participant 17) Good evening, I'm
.......... (check) of the European Schoolnet,
-
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I want to be also provocative and
I'm thinking about the role you mentioned.
-
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What's the role of education?
-
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Are we pushed by industry to deliver
certain things or not?
-
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And I'm thinking, what's the role
of the parents in all that?
-
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Is it maybe the role of the parents
to teach these kinds of things?
-
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You talked, Miles,
about character building
-
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and I think there are certain things
school can do,
-
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but I have, at least for my generation,
a little bit of feeling that parents
-
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share a little bit, sometimes,
the responsibility to school,
-
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to technology, and maybe it's time
to be a good parent again.
-
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(Moderator) Thank you for that.
(Applause)
-
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Right at the back, there,
on the right hand side,
-
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right at the back in the middle.
-
Not Synced
(Participant 18) Hi: Bernard Sander
from New York University.
-
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I grew up developing my own films.
-
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Though I'm a pretty adequate digital
photographer, I did research
-
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using card catalogs and paper indexes
and microfiche,
-
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but I am a more than adequate
digital researcher.
-
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And I think the story is the same
for most of the people in the room.
-
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So the question really is, what was
inadequate about my education?
-
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Nothing I did in the 20th century
hasn't prepared me
-
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for what 21st century has begun.
-
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And as long as I'm competent
-
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in my capacity to search
for new information
-
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and in being willing to put any effort
to acquire new skills,
-
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I don't feel that I'm unprepared,
-
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and I don't frankly think that any student
is really unprepared,
-
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as long as they have that.
-
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So what is it that the 21st century brings
that is so unique,
-
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other than the fact that
they can make a mistake
-
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and be seen by everybody all at once
in three seconds,
-
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right? so you know, that's fun.
-
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But other than that little piece,
what's new?
-
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(Moderator) Thank you for that.
-
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Right at the back, against the wall,
with a red tie. That's it.
-
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(Participant 19) I'm Eric Balance (check)
-
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and I'm from the Education, Audiovisual
and Culture Executive Agency.
-
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We're talking about skills,
-
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because our employers tell us
that our kids don't have them.
-
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Why are we not asking about the skills,
not the employers,
-
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but society is asking for?
-
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(Moderator) Yes, next door
to the last speaker.
-
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(Participant 20) .......... (check)
from the UK.
-
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I've changed jobs now,
but in a previous life
-
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I've worked with many, many teachers,
primary and secondary,
-
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and they will tell you that
all of the skills you're talking about,
-
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with creativity, adaptation, rhetoric,
-
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all of them are what they are
trying to teach,
-
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when they are not delivering
standardized tests.
-
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So the question is,
-
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do we want the education system to be
told to do a certain thing
-
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or are we trying to encourage it
from the inside?
-
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Because I think they are two
different things.
-
Not Synced
(Moderator) Yes (Applause).
Thank you for that.
-
Not Synced
In the front row here,
on the left hand side. 1:02:30
-
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(Participant 21) Hello, this is Philip
from IBA
-
Not Synced
and I wonder if we're not discussing
on a completely too advanced level.
-
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I just got an email from the school
of my son, today,
-
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where the school counselor had decided
that -- and that was the name --
-
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that game boys should be left home.
-
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Which makes me think if what we're
discussing here is not way away
-
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from what the reality looks like,
-
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because we're here sitting and discussing
really interesting topics,
-
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and in our ideal state of mind,
it's something like that.
-
Not Synced
And then I go out and see people like
Donald Trump who are ......... check
-
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about our education system,
-
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which is a reason for shutting
the whole thing down, I think.
-
Not Synced
(Laughter, applause)
-
Not Synced
(Moderator) Thank you for that. Yes,
another one here, in the front block.
-
Not Synced
(Participant 22) Hello, I come from
the University of Oslo, Norway,
-
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...... (check name).
-
Not Synced
There was quite a lot of investigation
in Norway, a few years back.
-
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They asked employers, I would like to go
to employers:
-
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"What kinds of skills are you looking for
-
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"in a candidate that you consider
employing?"
-
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And the first one was:
ability to cooperate.
-
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Then we asked to ourselves,
are we doing that?
-
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And then the next one on the list was
ability to attain new knowledge;
-
Not Synced
next, ability to think independently
and critically;
-
Not Synced
communication skills; ability
to use knowledge in new fields;
-
Not Synced
ability to establish contact
........... (check) relations.
-
Not Synced
And again, we're not doing these things,
we're not -- kind of.
-
Not Synced
Point 7 on the list was good theoretical
knowledge in your field of science.
-
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That's what we're doing all the time.
-
Not Synced
I mean it's great to see
so many people here
-
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but let's face it, most people
are not here. (Laughter)
-
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That means that lectures -- I mean it's
great to see many people at this meeting,
-
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concerned with teaching in general,
but the fact is that most lectures,
-
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say basic course in first year mathematic,
whatever, at my university,
-
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are being taught today in exactly
the same way as when I was a student,
-
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thirty years ago.
-
Not Synced
So that's why this conference
is important,
-
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that's why we need to provide students --
some people have to take responsibility
-
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to provide students with the skills
that employers need.
-
Not Synced
(Applause)
(Moderator) Thank you.
-
Not Synced
There was another question just near
to the last speaker, in the same block,
-
Not Synced
the lady there, just the row in front,
I think.
-
Not Synced
(Participant 23) Hi, Lisa,
with the Global School Network.
-
Not Synced
And ........ (check)
-
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perhaps it's not just what skills
we're teaching, but more so
-
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what 21st century pedagogical skills
that we're using, in that
-
Not Synced
sometimes it's just as important
how it's being taught
-
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than what is being taught.
-
Not Synced
And I think back to my college and
in some of the courses,
-
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sometimes when I was going through
the course catalog,
-
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it wasn't how exciting the title was,
but who was teaching it.
-
Not Synced
And I think that goes back to
some of the test scores
-
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that teachers are very focused on as well.
-
Not Synced
And when I look at my daughter
who has started school
-
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and what when I started school
30 years ago,
-
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and looking at how she is being taught
-
Not Synced
-- taking away from ...... (check)
what should be included --
-
Not Synced
but a lot of that rote learning and a lot
of new skills they're using as well, so.
-
Not Synced
(Moderator) OK, thank you, another one
in the ..... (check) over there
-
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(Participant 24) Hi, my name is ...... (check)
-
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I work for UNESCO.
-
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I just want to ask,
not just for the panelists,
-
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but I think for everyone.
-
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Maybe after 20, 30 years or so, are we
still going to talk about the same thing?
-
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Or are we going to -- what the idea
would be the next topic
-
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that we're going to talk about?
-
Not Synced
And I just wanted to also reiterate what
our head of office is actually saying,
-
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I mean -- ..... (check name) --
-
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he always say that the world is not
hungry for more words, more resolutions,
-
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more talks and more panel discussions.
-
Not Synced
The world is actually hungry
for more actions.
-
Not Synced
Thank you very much.
-
Not Synced
(Moderator) Thank you. We've got about
5 minutes left for questions.
-
Not Synced
Please, so if you want to ask a question,
just stick your hand up
-
Not Synced
and then we can get an idea:
I think there is about three more.
-
Not Synced
So, the man right at the back
on the back of the aisle here,
-
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on the right hand side, please, first.
-
Not Synced
(Participant 25) Hi, ............. (check name)
from London.
-
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Miles mentioned knowledge and character,
-
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I think one thing left out here is values.
-
Not Synced
So you know, we need knowledge
to do things,
-
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we need skills to do things,
-
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but we first have to agree at
what's worthy of doing.
-
Not Synced
(Moderator) OK, thank you, and there was
a question, again on the aisle, here,
-
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on the left hand side --
lady just down here: that's it.
-
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(Participant 26) It's not really
a question, but a challenge, maybe
-
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for the panelists.
-
Not Synced
I miss a little bit of diversity, so
maybe more ethnical background,
-
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different ethnical backgrounds
looking at the same question,
-
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and how is it that we are addressing this
in different contexts.
-
Not Synced
So maybe for the next plenary, we can have
a bit more diversity.
-
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(Moderator) OK, and then there's --
there are two, right at the back,
-
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on the right hand side.
-
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(Participant 27) .................... (check name)
Belgrade, Serbia.
-
Not Synced
Part of the title of this panel is that
soft skills, 21st century skills,
-
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should be taught.
-
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My question is, is there any published
evidence as to what extent
-
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teaching them really changes
the mastery of these skills?
-
Not Synced
(Moderator) And I think, a final question,
again at the right of the back --
-
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-- or a contribution -- right at the back
on the -- here we are, that's it.
-
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(Participant 27) Thank you. My name is
Heike Dratch (check name.
-
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I'm working for ........ (check)
an international cooperation organization.
-
Not Synced
And my -- what I'm lacking a bit here is,
in looking at 21st century skills,
-
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then looking at Paris,
the climate change conference,
-
Not Synced
so what kind of skills do we need,
to look into the future
-
Not Synced
and really see what we're doing now
is a future-oriented, sustainable activity.
-
Not Synced
So what kind of skills are not taught,
in the sense of having
-
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a future orientation of our behavior now
and how we can change our behaviors
-
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So this is a -- probably
in the next 10, 20 years,
-
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we need answers for that,
how we change our behavior
-
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and seeing all effects
of what we're doing.
-
Not Synced
(Moderator) OK, thank you
very much for that,
-
Not Synced
and thank you everyone
for your questions and contributions
-
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(Applause)
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I'm now going to ask one speaker from
each side to sum up,
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and to deal with the points
that you've made
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and to make their final pitch
for your votes.
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So, first of all, I will ask our speakers
against the motion to sum up.
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You've got 5 minutes.
(Allan Päll) Alright, thank you very much,
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thank you very much.
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I'm also very happy to hear
the different nuances
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and different arguments raised,
and I think that the question --
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questioning the very question itself
is a good one,
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because it is difficult to pin down.
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I would perhaps like to start with
the broadest question, in terms of
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what would the 22nd century skills be?
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And unless the world will change
completely
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or we will run out of resources
on the planet,
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or we will have a nuclear war,
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potentially, it will look similar,
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but it could also be that we are just
......able (check)
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into a metric slide singularity that some
are predicting.
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And then, of course, it would be
completely different, because
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there would be no physical interaction.
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So our mind needs to be open for even
fundamental, more fundamental changes
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than we can even imagine.
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However, I think there was a --
one important reflection indeed,
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about how do we teach
and what is the pedagogy
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used in hour educational system.
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I think our main problem, if we are
to look anyone who is to be blamed,
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is that -- is not education itself,
is not the educators or the teachers,
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but it may be indeed in this obsession
with standards, standardized testing
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and also indeed, I would even go to argue,
with qualifications.
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Yes, you might say, we want to be sure
that you, as an engineer,
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are properly qualified, or as a doctor.
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Yes, we need to be sure that you have made
-- have a certain set of skills
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to be able to perform that job.
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But then again, perhaps, the way
that we conduct learning
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is not recognizing the fact that learning
is not something
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that an educational institution can have
a monopoly over.
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And thus, maybe, we need to open that up
much more and say that
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we need to recognize any kind of
competences, skills, values
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that you gain anywhere.
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So I think -- I think in terms of
building that critical thinking,
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which I do think is important, and which
has existed throughout centuries
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and is needed for the future as well,
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that if we want to make sure that it is
better done.
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We really need to look at, OK, let's
recognize that this happens everywhere
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and let's also see that we don't need
to ignore the subject matter
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but use participative methods of teaching
and learning in our environment.
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And that's where
the difference comes from.
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But however, I do believe that
the very standard academic methods
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are still giving us the basic abilities
for things like critical thinking.
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(Applause)
(Moderator) Thank you. OK?
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If you want to you got a couple of minutes
to ......
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(Berry) Very briefly, a couple of other
things worth saying, I think,
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in addition to what Allan said.
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Trust schools! Actually, so much of what
we heard about here
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happens in the day to day life
of the classroom.
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What does school do,
yes, it is about education,
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this passing on of knowledge
to the next generation.
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But it's also about building character,
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it's also about young people
having that experience
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of getting on with one another
and working collaboratively,
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of working creatively.
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Much of what we are labeling perhaps
as 21st century skills is happening.
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Teachers are committed to this
sort of thing,
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this happens in most of the classrooms,
length and breadth of most countries,
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apart from when the testing
gets in the way,
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as Allan has already made clear that.
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What are the reasons
why this has happened?
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Well, in part, it is this sort of
preparation for the future.
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If you look back at the start
of the 20th century,
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there were newspaper articles,
there were magazine articles
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about what should be 20th century skills.
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How many of those
are still relevant today?
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I'd say most of those
are still relevant today.
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You know, the photography thing:
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yes, we are working
with different cameras now
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but the knowledge of what makes
a good photograph,
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and the wisdom to discern
a good photograph
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from a less good photograph
is still just,
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I think is just as important now
as it was then.
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So in summary, 21st century skills
are being taught in schools.
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We are addressing this.
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But actually, there are much more
important things
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that we should be focusing on: knowledge,
passing that on to the next generation,
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and character, and yes, values,
absolutely right.
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You know, the question about
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what should we be doing
in terms of 22nd century skills.
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I suspect the values of respect for
one another, of integrity,
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of willingness to be courageous,
as I was talking about,
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that's going to be just as important then
as it is now. Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
(Moderator) Thank you.
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OK, I'll now ask our speakers
for the motion
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to sum up and you've got 5 minutes.
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(Pedro De Bruyckere) I'll say one minute,
one answer to one question,
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and then, Jo will conclude.
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But there was a question,
"Who is to blame."
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That's easy: we are.
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We are all, because we've fogotten
what school is about.
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If you look back what school really means,
it means free time.
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If I say this to my son, he will start
throwing things,
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but it means free of economic value.
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Because if you go to a hair salon
in a school,
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you know it will take much longer time
than in a real hair salon,
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because the emphasis is not
on earning money, but on learning.
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And today, because of the testings,
because of the focus,
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teachers need to to focus on
very specific elements
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and we've forgotten what schooling
is about, what school is about.
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So if we bring back school, then maybe
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these 21st century skills
will be taught again.
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(Moderator) Thank you. Jo.
(Applause)
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(Jo Swinson) So, I firstly want to answer
a question that Miles asked, which was
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"Who uses a spreadsheet to plan a party?"
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I would just say that anyone that asks
that question has never planned a wedding.
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(Laughter)
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I think it was -- a guy at the back said:
"Most people are not in this room."
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And that is actually part of the problem.
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Because if the world was
like the people in this room,
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i don't think there'd be such concern,
I think that we would be able
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to stand here and say that
21st century skills are being taught.
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You know, going round the exhibitions,
seeing the innovation, the creativity,
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it's really inspiring.
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But I think we all know
from our own experience
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that the world out there
isn't quite as enlightened.
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And the measurement is a stifling problem.
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What gets measured gets done.
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So of course, if you have endless testing,
then teachers will teach to the test.
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And I noted the reference to Michael Gove:
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I'd just like to just say for the record:
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I was a part of the coalition
trying to rein him in at that point.
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And I think Elijah talked about the values
in organizations,
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and how the values even of our societies
is changing.
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I think that's right and it's important --
I think it's exciting.
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We are moving to an age where there is
far less deference
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that has its challenges in ll sorts
of walks of life, from anchors
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to medicine, to politics, to the media.
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But I also think it's
a positive development
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that people can make
their critical analysis
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of the institutions around us,
rather than assuming that
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if somebody is in authority,
then they must be right.
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Even in the business world, there is
a move towards more collaboration
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rather than just pure competition.
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The pursuit of profit is still important,
but conversations ..... (check) purpose
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are also increasingly heard.
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And I think that the leadership models
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that are now experienced and valued
the most
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are not the ones about just
in a military style,
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telling people what to do,
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but actually about working
with individuals,
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to lead them and motivate them,
and get the best out of a team.
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And this has an impact
for all of our careers paths.
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You don't just go into one job
and stay there for 40 years.
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And therefore we need to change the way
we are preparing people for this world.
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A lady in the audience mentioned that we
are, as human beings, naturally adaptive,
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and I would agree we are, but we need
to be helped to do that even more,
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because we do need to adapt
more than we did
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when we stayed in one job for 40 years
in our career.
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So that lifelong learning is actually
so important.
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By all means, we should talk about
what happens in the education system
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but it's just as important for,
when we're all here in 20 years time
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and we are, you know, trying to keep track
of the world that has suddenly developed.
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We need to find a way
of staying up to date.
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So, can these skills be taught?
How can these skills be taught?
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Well, they absolutely have to be taught
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so we need to figure out
the answers to that.
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People need to acquire these skills
and they will need help to do it.
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But that teaching can come
from a range of sources.
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Of course, the formal education system
but also parents and our peers
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and indeed I would argue, particularly
to the point, in some dimension,
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about all the people in the audience,
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I think, ultimately, one of the ways
21st century skills will be taught
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will be from our children
and grandchildren.
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Thank you.
(Applause)
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(Moderator) Thank you for that,
Jo and Pedro,
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and thank you to all our speakers
and thank you to your contributions.
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We'll now take a vote on this, so
would all those in favor of the motion:
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"This house believes 21st century skills
aren't being taught and they should be."
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please raise their hand, in the singular:
one hand each.
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Right.That's all those in favor.
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And all those against.
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(Inaudible off voice - laughter)
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(Moderator) That's not --
that is very close but I would say that --
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that the motion is lost on that.
(Boos and clapping)
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I would say I would be happy to --
but only just.
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That's very, very narrow vote.
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So thank you very much indeed
for all your contributions
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and your attention, and I have a number
of announcements just to make, actually.
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Just to remind you that the Online Educa
OEB party, Weihnachts Fest
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will take place and the tickets are
on sale at the reception.
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It will take place tonight,
there'll be food, drink
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and 25 liters of fake snow.
(Laughter)
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So that's something to look forward to.
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The other thing is that many of you
will remember
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our dear friend and colleague Jay Cross,
who died recently.
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And Jay was one of the real stars
of OEB in the past.
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And I know that he was a great friend to
many people who attend this conference
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and there is going to be a special session
which will take place now
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in room Potsdam 1, which will look at
Jay Cross's legacy in person and in print
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and this session will feature
Jay's colleagues
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from the Internet Time Alliance,
who will remember his influence
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and present his legacy.
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So I do hope you'll take the opportunity
to go along and take part in that session.
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Thank you all very much indeed,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
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(Applause)
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[Recordings of this session will be uploaded to
www.online-educa.com]
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[Recording is provided by Presentations 200
Making Video Reality]