Title: Education for an Information Age
1Education for an Information Age
- Presentation given by
- Bernard John Poole, MSIS, PGCE
- for the
- REFRESHER COURSE IN Pharmacy Education
- Sponsored by
- The University Grants Commission
- Directed by
- Dr. Jyothi
- Head i/c Dept. of Pharmacy
- Sri Padmavati Mahila Visvavidyalayam (Womens
University) - Tirupati 517 502, Andhra Pradesh, India
2Food for Thought
As of August of 2000, all entering full time
pharmacy students will be issued a personal
notebook computer. The expense for the notebook
computer will be incorporated into the normal
tuition for the pharmacy school curriculum.
Pharmacy education and pharmacy practice in the
21st century will critically depend on graduates
who have mastery of information technology. All
health care professionals depend on the timely
delivery and use of many types of networked
information resources. Pharmacists already rely
extensively on information systems for the
provision of pharmaceutical care to patients.
Access to the world wide Internet for personal
education and professional practice is no longer
an option for Creightons future pharmacy
graduates. The Internet commerce generation is
ahead for all of us and we intend to insure that
our graduates are well prepared to capitalize on
the rich opportunities that lie ahead for
education, research and professional practice
using advanced information technologies.
3- Good tools do not make a good teacher, but a
good teacher makes good use of tools. - Eleanor Doan
4What goes on in a good teachers classroom?
- Teacher and students seem to be involved in
everything that is happening - Teacher has a ready alternative whenever students
fail to understand and/or perform a given task - All students are actively involved in the
proceedings - Students show willingness or interest
- All students are attentive to others and the
teacher - Learner reactions to learning activities seem to
be expected by the teacher - Teacher is in possession of all the material that
is required - The entire classroom is buzzing with eager
anticipation in the activities
Excerpted from Conceptual Inputs for Secondary
Teacher Education The Instructional Role. by
M.S. Yadav T.K.S. Lakshmi, 2003 National
Council for Teacher Education, New Delhi.
5Reflections on teaching from Carl Rogers
- When I have been able to transform a groupand
here I mean all members of a group, myself
includedinto a community of learners, then the
excitement has been almost beyond belief. To
free curiosity to permit individuals to go
charging off in new directions dictated by their
own interests to unleash curiosity to open
everything to questioning and exploration to
recognize that everything is in process of
changehere is an experience I can never forget.
I cannot always achieve it but when it is
partially or largely achieved then it becomes a
never-to-be-forgotten group experience. Out of
such a context arise true students, real
learners, creative scientists and scholars and
practitioners, the kind of individuals who can
live in a delicate but ever-changing balance
between what are presently known and the flowing,
moving, altering problems and facts of the
future. - In Rogers, Carl, 1965. Client-centered Therapy
Its Current Practices, Implications, and Theory.
Boston Houghton Mifflin
6Thomas Armstrongs 12 Qualities of Genius
- Curiosity
- Playfulness
- Imagination
- Creativity
- Wonder
- Wisdom
Inventiveness Vitality Sensitivity Flexibility Hum
or Joy
7Brain-based Learning and Multiple Intelligences
- These qualities of genius emanate from a
brain-based approach to teaching and learning - We (along with our students) have a complement of
at least eight distinct intelligences, according
to Howard Gardners Theory of Multiple
Intelligences - You need multimedia to stimulate these qualities
of genius and to more likely tap into the
intellectual potential of your students
8The most important multimedia element in the
classroom?
The Teacher!
Insert your picture here ?
9A Chinese proverb
- I hear and I forget.
- I see and I remember.
- I do and I understand.
- Hence the importance of the senses in learning,
because when you do you engage all the senses. - Data visualization, music/sound, play, physical
interaction, communicationespecially writing and
speech communicationall help students understand
and retain information. - Alan Kay Doing with images makes symbols.
10The Affective nature of learning
- Feelings are important, too
- A ffective learning is E ffective learning
- Good teaching begins, not in the mind, but in the
heart - Teaching is hard work because its heart work
11Education is a balancing act between teaching and
learning
- The learning becomes more as the teaching becomes
less - The student is at the center of the learning
process - The teachers role is to prepare the environment
- Not the sage on the stage, but the guide at the
side
12Theres nothing new under the sun
- These ideas about education are as old as the
hills - Froebel (à la Plato and Pestalozzi)
- Educational value of play and physical activity
- Montessori
- Prepare the environment so that the student will
learn spontaneously - Dewey
- Learning by doing
- Piaget
- Reaffirmed Vigotskys Constructivism
- Bruner
- Discovery learning
13A great quote
- The greatest sign of success for a teacher is to
be able to say, "The children are now working as
if I did not exist. - Dr. Maria Montessori (1870-1952)
14Technology enables new/old ways of teaching and
learning
- Discovery methodslet them find out for
themselves - Contructivism (Vigotsky)
- Group workcollaboration/cooperation
- Projects
- Portfolios of workalternative methods of
assessment
15Sachin Tendulkar
16I have a dream
- that modern, computer-based technologies for
teaching and learningin time, and as these
technologies become ubiquitous at home and at
schoolwill fundamentally change the way
education is done. - For each one of us, the journey begins here the
journey begins now.
17Multiple Intelligences
- Visual-Spatial
- think in terms of physical space, as do
architects and sailors. Very aware of their
environments. They like to draw, do jigsaw
puzzles, read maps, daydream. They can be taught
through drawings, verbal and physical imagery.
Tools include models, graphics, charts,
photographs, drawings, 3-D modeling, video,
videoconferencing, television, multimedia, texts
with pictures/charts/graphs. - Bodily-kinesthetic
- use the body effectively, like a dancer or a
surgeon. Keen sense of body awareness. They like
movement, making things, touching. They
communicate well through body language and be
taught through physical activity, hands-on
learning, acting out, role playing. Tools include
equipment and real objects. - Musical
- show sensitivity to rhythm and sound. They love
music, but they are also sensitive to sounds in
their environments. They may study better with
music in the background. They can be taught by
turning lessons into lyrics, speaking
rhythmically, tapping out time. Tools include
musical instruments, music, radio, stereo,
CD-ROM, multimedia. - Interpersonal
- understanding, interacting with others. These
students learn through interaction. They have
many friends, empathy for others, street smarts.
They can be taught through group activities,
seminars, dialogues. Tools include the telephone,
audio conferencing, time and attention from the
instructor, video conferencing, writing, computer
conferencing, E-mail. - Intrapersonal
- understanding one's own interests, goals. These
learners tend to shy away from others. They're in
tune with their inner feelings they have wisdom,
intuition and motivation, as well as a strong
will, confidence and opinions. They can be taught
through independent study and introspection.
Tools include books, creative materials, diaries,
privacy and time. They are the most independent
of the learners. - Linguistic
- using words effectively. These learners have
highly developed auditory skills and often think
in words. They like reading, playing word games,
making up poetry or stories. They can be taught
by encouraging them to say and see words, read
books together. Tools include computers, games,
multimedia, books, tape recorders, and lecture. - Logical Mathematical
- reasoning, calculating. Think conceptually,
abstractly and are able to see and explore
patterns and relationships. They like to
experiment, solve puzzles, ask cosmic questions.
They can be taught through logic games,
investigations, mysteries. They need to learn and
form concepts before they can deal with details.