Title: What Knowledge is of the Most Worth
1What Knowledge is of the Most Worth?
- Yong Zhao, Ph. D
- University Distinguished Professor
- Director, US-China Center for Research on
Educational Excellence - College of Education
- Executive Director, Confucius Institute
- Michigan State University
- zhaoyo_at_msu.edu
2What knowledge is of most worth?--Herbert
Spencer, 1859http//www.gutenberg.org/files/16510
/16510-h/16510-h.htm
It must not suffice simply to think that such or
such information will be useful in after life, or
that this kind of knowledge is of more practical
value than that but we must seek out some
process of estimating their respective values, so
that as far as possible we may positively know
which are most deserving of attention.
3- Our first step must obviously be to classify,
in the order of their importance, the leading
kinds of activity which constitute human life.
They may be naturally arranged into - those activities which directly minister to
self-preservation - those activities which, by securing the
necessaries of life, indirectly minister to
self-preservation - those activities which have for their end the
rearing and discipline of offspring - those activities which are involved in the
maintenance of proper social and political
relations - those miscellaneous activities which fill up the
leisure part of life, devoted to the
gratification of the tastes and feelings.
4The global Globalization
5As electrically contracted, the globe is no more
than a village. Marshall McLuhan, 1964
Honey, I confided, I think the world is
flat. Thomas Friedman, 2005
61492 about 3 months
2009 about 13 hours
71858 17 hours
Glory to God in the highest on earth, peace and
good will toward men.
2009 less than 1 minute
81927 65 (about 1,000)
3 minute phone call
2009 about 0.02
9By almost any economically relevant metric,
distances have shrunk considerably in recent
decades. The shrinking globe has been a major
source of the powerful wave of worldwide economic
integration and increased economic
interdependence that we are currently
experiencing. But the full implications of these
developments for all aspects of our lives will
not be known for many years. --Ben S. Bernanke,
chairman of the U. S. Federal Reserve 2006
10??
Diversity
11http//www.worldmapper.org/
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13Its a Big Job to Make the Mini Global Supply
Chain
14Yao Ming and Herbert Hoover Global Trade of
Talents
15Today, Indian engineers make 7,500 a year
against 45,000 for an American engineer with the
same qualifications. If we succeed in matching
the very high levels of mastery of mathematics
and science of these Indian engineers an
enormous challenge for this country why would
the worlds employers pay us more than they have
to pay the Indians to do their work? They would
be willing to do that only if we could offer
something that the Chinese and Indians, and
others, cannot. --New Commission on the Skills
of the American Workforce (2007). Tough Choices
or Tougher Times
16When I was growing up, my parents told me,
Finish your dinner. People in China and India
are starving. I tell my daughters, Finish your
homework. People in India and China are starving
for your job. ---Thomas Friedman, 2005
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18Over 10 million jobs lost due to automation in
last 10 years
19OutsourcingAutomation
20A New Hope
21The eBay Phenomenon Expanded Market
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24Virtual marriage 2nd Life Socializing
virtually
Anshe Chung has become the first online
personality to achieve a net worth exceeding one
million US dollars from profits entirely earned
inside a virtual world. --Business Week, May,
2006
25Gold-farming and digital produce Digital
farmers market
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27Real-money trade of virtual items (RMT) I
estimate the total worldwide RMT volume to reach
2,090M Virtual Economy Research Network
http//virtual-economy.org/blog/how_big_is_the_rm
t_market_anyw
28YouTube and podcasting Everybody a Broadcaster
29Framework for 21st Century Learning (Partnership
for 21st Century Skills, 2007)
- Core Subjects (English, reading or language arts,
World languages, Arts, Mathematics, Economics,
Science, Geography, History, Government and
Civics) and 21st Century Themes (Global
awareness, Financial, economic, business and
entrepreneurial literacy, Civic literacy, Health
literacy) - Learning and Innovation Skills (Creativity and
Innovation Skills, Critical Thinking and Problem
Solving Skills, Communication and Collaboration
Skills) - Information, Media and Technology Skills
(Information Literacy, Media Literacy, ICT
Literacy) - Life and Career Skills (Flexibility
Adaptability, Initiative Self-Direction, Social
Cross-Cultural Skills, Productivity
Accountability, Leadership Responsibility)
30The European Parliament and the Council of
European Union (2006)key competences necessary
for personal fulfillment, active citizenship,
social cohesion and employability in a knowledge
society
- 1) Communication in the mother tongue
- 2) Communication in foreign languages
- 3) Mathematical competence and basic competences
in science and technology - 4) Digital competence
- 5) Learning to learn
- 6) Social and civic competences
- 7) Sense of initiative and entrepreneurship and
- 8) Cultural awareness and expression.
- critical thinking, creativity, initiative,
problem solving, risk assessment, decision
taking, and constructive management of feelings
are important across all domains.
31Daniel H. Pink (2005). A Whole New Mind Moving
from the Information Age to the Conceptual Age.
New York Penguin.
- Information Age
- L-Directed Thinking
- Sequential
- Literal
- Functional
- Textual
- Analytic
Asia Automation Abundance
- Conceptual Age
- R-Directed Thinking
- Simultaneous
- Metaphorical
- Aesthetic
- Contextual
- Synthetic
Can someone overseas do it cheaper? Can a
computer do it faster? Is what I am offering in
demand in an age of abundance?
32Essential Aptitudes in the Conceptual Age
- Design
- Story
- Symphony
- Empathy
- Play
- Meaning
33Across all the proposals
- Assumption 1 We must cultivate skills and
knowledge that are not available at a cheaper
price in other countries or that can be rendered
useless by machines. - Assumption 2 Creativity, interpreted as both
ability and passion to make new things and adapt
to new situations, is essential. - Assumption 3 New skills and knowledge are
needed for living in the global world and the
virtual world. - Assumption 4 Cognitive skills such as problem
solving skills and critical thinking skills are
more important than memorization of knowledge. - Assumption 5 Emotional intelligence or the
ability and capacity to understand and manage
emotions of self and others are important.
34Feasibility
- Individual differences
- Nature
- Nurture
- The limitation of schooling
- Time
- Influence outside schools
35Therefore we need to move into niche areas where
they will not be able to completely replace us
for quite some time. ---Lee Kuan Yew, 2007
In the global economy, our students careers are
global. Where can they find employment depends on
their niche talents.
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37- Our first step must obviously be to classify,
in the order of their importance, the leading
kinds of activity which constitute human life.
They may be naturally arranged into - those activities which directly minister to
self-preservation - those activities which, by securing the
necessaries of life, indirectly minister to
self-preservation - those activities which have for their end the
rearing and discipline of offspring - those activities which are involved in the
maintenance of proper social and political
relations - those miscellaneous activities which fill up the
leisure part of life, devoted to the
gratification of the tastes and feelings.
38Your Child's Strengths, Discover Them, Develop
Them, Use Them, by Jenifer Fox, M-Ed. (Viking,
2008) http//www.strengthsmovement.com/
The Strengths Movement
39Global Competences
- Culture Intelligence (CQ)
- Skills
- Attitudes
- Perspectives
- Values/identity
- Knowledge of the Globe
- Global economics
- Global problems
- Interdependence
- Languages and cultures
40Digital Competencies
- Living in the digital world
- Consumers
- Citizens
- Community leaders
- Making a living in the digital world
- Digital workers
- Global workers
- (Re)Creating the digital world
- Innovators
- Entrepreneurs
41The How of Learning
42Personalized Learning
the drive to tailor education to individual need,
interest and aptitude so as to fulfill every
young persons potential Department for Education
and Skills (UK), 2004
43Nine Gateways(Hargreaves, 2004)
- Curriculum More choices
- learning to learn Love and ability to learn
- workforce development PD
- assessment for learning Formative
- school organisation and design Structural
changes - new technologies
- student voice What do I want?
- advice and guidance
- mentoring Personal relationships
http//www.clusterweb.org.uk/docs/HargreavesPerson
alisedLearning.pdf
44Schools as Global Enterprises
Unique qualities Creativity, passion R-directed
thinking skills Global Competences
Global products
Global resources
Global staffing
Global market
45Never Send a Man to Do a Machine's
JobReconsider the Human-Machine Relationship in
EducationYong ZhaoMichigan State University
46Software's Benefits On Tests In Doubt Study Says
Tools Don't Raise Scores --The Washington
Post Major Study on Software Stirs Debate On
whole, school products found to yield no net
gains --Education Week
Test Scores Were Not Significantly Higher in
Classrooms Using Selected Reading and Mathematics
Software Products. --IES Study on the
Effectiveness of Computer Software
(2007) http//ies.ed.gov/ncee/pdf/20074005.pdf
Readers are advised to scrutinize the findings
carefully, as even ED states that the study
'was not designed to assess the effectiveness of
educational technology across its entire spectrum
of uses. --CoSN, ISTE, and SETDA As this
study recognizes, proper implementation of
education software is essential for success.
Unfortunately, it appears the study itself may
not have adequately accounted for this key
factor, leading to results that do not accurately
represent the role and impact of technology in
education. -- The Software Information Industry
Association (SIIA)
47Why are we unhappy?
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49What if?
50Are we sending a man to do a machines job?
51Reconstruct the Relationship
- Fragment the education process
- Treat technology as equals
- Do what you do best
- Let technology do its best
- Create technology to do what you dont want to do
52Input-based Accountability
Physical environment
Leadership
Learning facilities
Teacher quality
Student voice
Diverse opportunities
Global connections
Tolerance
53Yong Zhao, (2009), Catching Up or Leading the
Way American Schools in the Age of
Globalization, ASCDhttp//confucius.msu.edu