Microsoft has released a report on the class of 2030. Drawing on interviews with thousands of students and teachers across the UK, US, Canada, and Singapore
as well as expert opinions from technologists, researchers and
policymakers, it makes an educated guess at what skills graduates in the
near future will need in a job market driven by technological change.
My 3½-year-old niece taps at my
“outdated” iMac screen, wondering why “the big iPad isn’t working” but
this narrative of the digital native, comfortable with new consumer
technology is a shallow interpretation of the future of education; the
classroom of the future will be shaped more profoundly by a world where
automation has replaced several jobs and ever-advancing AI is integrated
with others.
“The class of 2030 will be learning very different things,” says Kevin Marshall,
head of education, Microsoft Ireland. “The legal profession, for
example, is beginning to use machine learning, and data algorithms can
potentially allow all that precedent to be captured so the role of the
junior lawyer will change.
“If you look at the way businesses
are restructuring at the moment, in terms of how financial forecasts
are carried out, for example: a lot of that is on historical data and
machine-learning models can now take this data and produce your
forecast. The issue is not filling a pipeline, the issue is: how do you
interpret that?”
With artificial intelligence and
automation doing much of the menial tasks, what will be required of our
current junior and senior infants is the ability to interpret complex
data patterns as well as other higher-level cognitive skills such as
problem-solving, critical thinking and creativity.
Problem-solving vs code
The other side of the coin is
equipping teachers with the skills and technological know-how to teach
the graduates of 2030. An example of this is the Microsoft-UCD
initiative to put trainee teachers pursuing a professional masters in
education (PME) through a diploma in computational thinking with the aim
of teaching them underlying core skills of logic, analytical thinking
and problem-solving techniques rather than churning out a group of
teachers who can code.
“The teachers thought the coding
was okay but what they really loved was the computational thinking
aspects: how computers work, the impact of technology on society, they
thought that would be great stuff to teach the kids,” explains Marshall.
Similarly, Microsoft’s DreamSpace
initiative encourages computational thinking using technology
schoolchildren are both familiar with and enjoy using: “The afternoon
workshop we recently ran with DCU was about looking at complex
problem-solving using Minecraft in one case, Lego in another and also Arduino kits.”
These skills in conjunction with
the requirement to work in groups will shape the classroom just as
workspaces have changed, says Marshall, who points to the open-plan
environment of Microsoft’s Dublin HQ and “the open spaces and much more
fluid make-up of the classroom” in countries with progressive attitudes
towards education like Finland.
Technology is also a fundamental
ingredient for making lessons go more smoothly. Adbul Chohan, edtech
advocate and co-founder of Apple Distinguished School, Olive Tree Primary School in Bolton, UK, found this out almost a decade ago in his first job.
Mobile devices
“In this school we had laptops on
trolleys, computer rooms, technicians that were trying to keep things
working. But we had an opportunity to replace some kit that was very old
and instead of just buying the same thing in a more modern version I
decided to do something that was radically different at the time. I
calculated that for the same cost I could put a small, mobile computer
ie an iPod Touch in the hands of every student and that’s where we
started off,” explains Chohan.
He says there were teething
problems at the time as it was uncharted territory with Chohan pressed
to find examples of other schools switching to mobile devices. But
something wonderful happened. Instead of wasting valuable teaching time
fetching laptops from the computer trolley, having students return to
their desk, power them on, wait for them to boot up, and sort out
inevitable problems with uncharged units, forgotten passwords and the
odd bluescreen, it was a breeze.
“With an iPod Touch it was suddenly magical: it comes on immediately and within seconds a student can Google
what they need to find, put the device away and carry on with whatever
work they need to do. It’s a form of what we now describe as the digital
pencil case,” he says.
Mobile devices are now standard in
many schools but technology is still driving change in others aspects
of teaching: “In education, using technology to drive operational
efficiency is an area that I feel has been neglected,” explains Chohan.
Verbal feedback
“We use technology for learning,
finding information, replacing physical textbooks and so on, but a lot
more is possible. I’ve been looking into the amount of money schools are
spending on photocopying and how it can be drastically reduced. In my
last school we reduced it by 70 per cent. And it’s not just the amount
of money that we’re spending on photocopying, it is the amount of time
teachers are wasting on photocopying too.”
Another extremely time-consuming
activity for teachers is marking copybooks and providing written
feedback. Chohan’s school is trialling the idea of giving verbal
feedback: students are still doing homework and they are still using pen
and paper, so writing skills are not being sidelined. The difference is
they capture an image of their homework using a mobile or tablet device
and submit that to their teacher.
“The teacher is able to annotate
that document using voice; giving verbal feedback so the child can
listen to it as many times as they want, their parents can listen, or
they can go back three weeks later and listen to it of needs be.
“The teacher is able to annotate
that document using voice; giving verbal feedback so the child can
listen to it as many times as they want, their parents can listen, or
they can go back three weeks later and listen to it of needs be.
“What we’ve seen from the teacher
perspective is the amount of time they spend giving feedback is
significantly reduced but the quality of feedback has increased because
it’s human-to-human with the emotional range of the human voice.”
There is also the area of
personalised learning software where data analytics are used to crunch
numbers, observe patterns and come up with teaching plans to suit each
student.
But data analytics is not a silver
bullet for delivering the perfect lesson plan and it must not overlook
the importance of designing with humans in mind, says Owen White, director of the Dublin-based Learnovate research and innovation centre, which focuses on edtech.
Professional dispossessed
“This is something Learnovate has
done quite a bit of research into. The dream of personalised education
is something we can all immediately identify with, and it seems to make a
lot of intuitive sense, but when you look at many of the solutions that
are out there they don’t actually appeal to teachers as much as the
theory would suggest.
“It goes back to getting the right
balance between the technology and the human. A lot of personalised
learning systems are designed in a way that they remove a certain degree
of agency from the teacher. These algorithms are clever and efficient
but when teachers feel this is dispossessing them of their professional
judgment, they tend not to trust it.”
"These algorithms are clever and efficient but when teachers feel this is dispossessing them of their professional judgment, they tend not to trust it"
The key, says White, is designing
technology that does not alienate key stakeholders but rather works with
them, something Chohan agrees with: “It’s not about the wow factor of
technology. I mean, of course we use augmented reality and other new
tools but actually what we should want is a baseline good experience.”
White, who has been in the edtech
sector for over 25 years, says there has been this rhetoric of “we’re at
the tipping point because now we have laptops”, then interactive
whiteboards, then tablets, then VR or whatever technology is now going
to supposedly change everything.
“And then it doesn’t happen
because there is too much resistance within the system and the reason I
say that is because if you don’t figure out the right relationship
between technology and humans – unless you understand the world of the
classroom and the world of the school – you can have great technological
solutions but if they are not solving real, on-the-ground problems then
individual will not be interested,” explains White.
Stakeholder management
This isn’t to make the assumption
that teachers are generally resistant to technological change or even
that pragmatism in the classroom is a good thing. White says that
companies designing edtech need to know their stakeholders well and, in
turn, educators need to suck it up and learn to use new technologies for
the good of their pupils.
“I was observing a class in a
London school where some of the laptops weren’t charged, some just
weren’t working, and the teacher wasted a lot of time troubleshooting
before the children could get their work done. I asked the teacher why
he didn’t just give up and his answer was: ‘well, it would make it
easier for me but these kids are going into a world where technology is
commonplace. I have a social responsibility to do this even if it causes
me some hassle.’”
It is clear the classroom of the
near future will augment the pupil’s learning experience and hopefully
prepare them for the jobs of 2030 and beyond but what about the
learn-to-code craze? Shouldn’t we be churning out future programmers to
become tech entrepreneurs or populate Google and Facebook?
"Children should not learn to code just for the sake of it; it is the underlying computational thinking skills alongside “soft” ie social-emotional skills that will stand to them"
Marshall, Chohan and White are all
pretty clear on this front: children should not learn to code just for
the sake of it; it is the underlying computational thinking skills –
alongside “soft” ie social-emotional skills that will stand to them.
Cognitive development
“My view on coding is pretty
simple: all the teachers in my school have a basic understanding of
coding. There are some coding courses that are freely available on the
iPad that we get all our teachers to do, which is kind of fantastic.
They’ve got this base understanding but the bit that we’re really
focusing on is computational thinking: logic, sequencing, patterns,
these are the things that we really want our children to be able to
understand. For me that is where the cognitive development is,” explains
Chohan.
“We teach maths to all the
children but we don’t expect them all to be accountants. We teach coding
and it doesn’t mean that they’re all going to be app developers,” he
adds.
“I do think that everyone should
get the opportunity to code in primary school,” says Microsoft’s
Marshall. “Everyone should be exposed to computational thinking to a
reasonable degree, and then some will say ‘this is for me’ and some
won’t. The bigger point is the notion of how we will tackle big complex
problems in the future; everyone will need these skills because I think
that’s the way the world of work is going to go.”
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