Zaipul.Com - Disseminate Knowledge

This is my daily reflective diary. More info about me can be found at http://www.zaipul.net or http://facebook.com/zaipul. Every articles in this blog has been posted by me unless otherwise specified.

Why Schools Can’t Improve: The Upper Limit Hypothesis


I just read a paper written by Robert K Branson from Florida State University about his hypothesis with regards to why he thinks there should be a change in paradigm when it comes to teaching in schools. Branson insists that we have actually reached the upper limit of the book-based education paradigm. When a paradigm reaches its upper limits of efficiency there is usually another paradigm waiting in the wings to replace the previous one. He thinks that internet-based education should be the new paradigm. Teachers should include internet as the new tools to enable teachers to ask clever, rich and open questions and expect the students should be able to answer them back through the research that they did on the internet. For more info please click here.

Why do classrooms and schools operate almost the same way they did 100 years ago?

A group of middle schoolers from the Dallas-Fort Worth area began asking themselves this question during a class discussion of Orson Scott Card’s science fiction novel Ender’s Game. More importantly, they began to wonder, “Could children, using the internet, have a dramatic impact on the world around them? Could they influence public opinion, and make a mark on their world?” Thus began “Education Evolution,” a class video project that brings a student perspective to what’s going wrong in the modern classroom, and offers up ideas of how it can be fixed.

The students began working on the project back in January, generating ideas, storyboarding scenes, and dividing the work into groups. When you watch the product of their months of work, the video above, it’s easy to think they simply want more technology—more learning via laptops, tablet technology, and software—in classrooms. But it’s also clear that they’re clamoring for an end to a factory-based model of education. No more sitting in rows facing forward while a teacher lectures at a whiteboard, no more rote memorization and multiple choice testing. Instead, they want collaboration, learning driven by student interests, and project-based tasks.

But why listen to what a bunch of seventh and eighth graders think about schools? Their teacher, J. Fletcher, recently wrote on the project blog that his beliefs about teaching and learning have changed because of his students:- “These students really are right. Educational needs aren’t the same as when I was in middle school twenty years ago. The modern educator is a facilitator, an organizer, and a guide—the modern educator is NOT a teacher. We are no longer (or should no longer be) in the business of giving information. The information is out there, easily grasped. It’s our job to present it to the students in a way that makes them want to learn themselves. That’s basically what this video—and this whole project—is about. We’re still using exactly the same methodologies—with, in some cases, niftier tools—that we used twenty (one hundred!) years ago. Lecture and listen. Drill and kill. Review and test, always test, again and again. Repeat with next unit. That was onerous and tired twenty years ago when I was a student. Why are we still using it now?”

Fletcher and the students hope their video goes viral and that it sparks conversation and real change in the way teachers and schools operate.

Reference: Good.Is

First time dalam sejarah kat rumah di Gombak ni, capaian internet cecah 8.5mb/s! Dah 12 tahun guna Streamyx 1mb/s pun tak dapat, dah lebih 1 tahun daftar Unifi, tak masuk2, jawabnya cancel jer lah Streamyx tu hari ni..

First time dalam sejarah kat rumah di Gombak ni, capaian internet cecah 8.5mb/s! Dah 12 tahun guna Streamyx 1mb/s pun tak dapat, dah lebih 1 tahun daftar Unifi, tak masuk2, jawabnya cancel jer lah Streamyx tu hari ni..