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Folie 1

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ICT innovation in education (DELPHI, Merlin, Ivette) eLearning in enterprises (ICT VET) ... Expert workshops (Ivette-W, Merlin, Advocate, Delphi) 4. Demonstration ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Folie 1


1
  • Future Studies and ICT in Education
  • Austrian examples and the work of the IFS
  • Institute for Future Studies, Innsbruck, Austria
  • www.futurestudies.org
  • Friedrich Scheuermann
  • mail scheuermann_at_futurestudies.org

Conference Future Studies An Egyptian
Perspective, Cairo, 27-28 June 2005
2
Contents
  1. Intro
  2. Dealing with the Future in Austria
  3. Why future studies
  4. Why future of education
  5. Trends
  6. Examples
  7. Key challenges, barriers and limitations
  8. Conclusions

3
The Institute for Future Studies
  • Founded by Association for Flexible Learning
  • Applied research
  • Goal to design the education of tomorrow by
    investigating the future dimensions and its
    impact to private and professional life
  • Technological, pedagogical and organisational
    perspectives from a socio-economic background
  • Areas Formal education (School, Higher
    Education, Adult education, Vocational
    Education), companies, Informal Learning
    Providers e.g. Libraries, Museums, Internet
  • Target groups young, adults, senior,
    un/low-skilled people
  • Partnerships Research networks, European
    schools, universities, EU Commission and agencies

4
Forecasting some quotes
  • This 'telephone' has too many shortcomings to be
    seriously considered as a means of communication.
    The device is inherently of no value to us.
    (Western Union internal memo, 1876.)
  • Books will soon be obsolete in the schools. ...
    Scholars will soon be able to instruct through
    the eye. It is possible to touch every branch of
    human knowledge with the motion picture. (Thomas
    A. Edison, 1913.)
  • I believe that the motion picture is destined to
    revolutionize our educational system and that in
    a few years it will supplant largely, if not
    entirely, the use of textbooks. (Thomas A.
    Edison, 1922.)
  • I think there is a world market for maybe five
    computers. (Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM,
    1943.)
  • Computers in the future may weigh no more than
    1.5 tons. (Popular Mechanics, forecasting the
    relentless march of science, 1949.)
  • 640K ought to be enough for anybody. (Microsoft
    Chairman Bill Gates, 1981, referring to a memory
    addressing system that can only address 640 K or
    primary memory in a microcomputer.)
  • (Source David Moursund Planning, Forecasting,
    and Inventing Your Computers-in-Education Future,
    2005)

5
IFS - Approach
  • Analytical work
  • to analyse technological, economic or social
    trends (in order to identify the context of
    eLearning and potential applications/implementatio
    ns
  • to investigate innovation in terms of educational
    models, tools and instruments
  • to identify and contrast potentials and
    limitations of current strategies and
    implementations by connecting both extrapolated
    (exploratory) and normative research in order to
    explore better strategies
  • to investigate the short-, medium and to a
    limited extent long term future of learning,
    education and training
  • Experimental design and validation
  • Pedagogical models, instruments and tools
  • Evaluation, expert workshops
  • Demonstration
  • Outlining future potentials in terms of
    applications / scenarios and contrasting to
    current practices, guidelines, recommendations,
    information services, workshops, training

6
IFS - Projects
  • Analysis
  • IT-Profiles, qualification, validation/certificati
    on (Harmonise, Advocate)
  • ICT innovation in education (DELPHI, Merlin,
    Ivette)
  • eLearning in enterprises (ICT VET)
  • Experimental design and development
  • Mobile technologies (Motfal),
  • eLearning tutoring (eCoach, IseTT), multiple
    intelligences (MiAPP)
  • 3D virtual environments for education (Crimcity)
  • Internet-based operation of telescopes and
    classroom applications (Eudoxos)
  • Special education, flexible learning, lifelong
    learning (Advocate)
  • Evaluation models for eLearning (Eval3, ICT VET)
  • eLearning tools for immigrants (Alphatrain)
  • Models for online collaborative learning (Ikarus)
  • eBooks on education (Metabook)
  • 3. Validation
  • Expert workshops (Ivette-W, Merlin, Advocate,
    Delphi)
  • 4. Demonstration
  • Observatory on eLearning practices (DELPHI)
  • Multigrade school education (NEMED)

7
Current trends and perspectives
  • Technology
  • Internet access is becoming a given at home and
    work.
  • The advances in digital technologies have and
    continue to enrich the interactivity and media
    content of the web.
  • Increasing bandwidth and better delivery
    platforms make e-Learning feasible and
    attractive.
  • A growing selection of high quality e-Learning
    products and services such as content providers,
    authoring tools, training management systems,
    portals, delivery systems and integrated
    solutions are now available.
  • Technology standards, which facilitate
    compatibility and usability of e-learning
    products, are emerging.

8
Current trends and perspectives
  • Technology Internet- Applications
  • Open source
  • Open content
  • Ubiquitous computing
  • Interactive Web, social networks, social software
  • Mobile Technologies
  • Etc.

9
Current trends and perspectives
  • Pedagogy / Learning
  • Paradigm shift
  • Shift from teacher-centered to learner-centered
  • Shift from information transmission to knowledge
    construction creative thinking, critical
    thinking, problem solving, information
    management, collaborative learning

10
Paradigm Shift
  • Some significant trends in learning
  • Many learners will move into a variety of
    different, possibly unrelated fields over the
    course of their lifetime.
  • Informal learning is a significant aspect of our
    learning experience. Formal education no longer
    comprises the majority of our learning. Learning
    now occurs in a variety of ways through
    communities of practice, personal networks, and
    through completion of work-related tasks.
  • Learning is a continual process, lasting for a
    lifetime. Learning and work related activities
    are no longer separate. In many situations, they
    are the same.
  • Technology is altering (rewiring) our brains. The
    tools we use define and shape our thinking.
  • The organization and the individual are both
    learning organisms. Increased attention to
    knowledge management highlights the need for a
    theory that attempts to explain the link between
    individual and organizational learning.
  • Many of the processes previously handled by
    learning theories (especially in cognitive
    information processing) can now be off-loaded to,
    or supported by, technology.
  • Know-how and know-what is being supplemented with
    know-where (the understanding of where to find
    knowledge needed).

(Source George Siemens, 2005)
11
Current trends and perspectives
  • Applications
  • Personal learning, user generated content,
    ePortfolios
  • Active learning
  • Games and simulations
  • Workflow learning
  • Mobile learning

(Source www.cetis.ac.uk/members/scott/blogview?en
try20050125170206)
12
Project Eudoxos
Source http//www3.ellinogermaniki.gr/ep/eudoxos/
htm/index.htm
13
Project Motfal
(Source http//www3.ellinogermaniki.gr/ep/motfal/
)
14
Project Crimcity
(Source http//www.futurestudies.org/crimcity/)
15
Key challenges for European Education
  • By 2010 half of the net additional jobs will
    require people with tertiary level qualifications
    80 Mio. EU citizen are low-skilled
  • Demographic change and shrinking workforce
  • High degree of innovation requires excellence in
    Higher Education and research, highly skilled
    work forces and with permanent update of
    continuing training
  • Low level of transnational mobility
  • Social cohesion and inclusion

16
Requirements
  • Ensuring equal availability and access to ICT
    infrastructures
  • Improving information and media literacy
    competence
  • Flexible learning solutions
  • Educational reform (structures, curricula,
    teaching)
  • More research in
  • pedagogical practises
  • informal learning
  • Socio-economic issues (potentials, S/W, visions)
  • Linking formal, non-formal and informal learning
  • Approaches to validation of skills
  • Updating teacher training

17
Conclusion
  • Why do we need to know more about the future of
    education
  • and learning with ICT ?
  • Overcoming existing performance problems
  • Improving educational effectiveness
  • Achieving better learning outcomes
  • Ensuring availability and equal access
  • Redefine values and strategies ICT in education
    is not a value itself, it is not more an
    instrument which should be more regarded in the
    light of the benefits to be achieved for the
    society.
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