News from The Open University
Posted on • Education
Professor Peter Twinning, Professor of Education (Futures) at The Open University discusses why the UK’s school system needs to change.
Traditional models of schooling are based on a desire for standardisation and compliance, for a mass of industrial age ‘production line’ workers (with the majority of the small number of leaders and thinkers coming from elite private schools). Today, what we need from schools is very different because of the challenges facing the world:
These feed societal tensions and increase the possibilities for conflict.
Schools need to be preparing individuals who can tackle these challenges, and that leads to both individual fulfilment and universal wellbeing.
Rather than focusing on standardisation and compliance schools today need to be equipping young people with the skills, knowledge and attributes that are often (mistakenly) labelled as ‘21st century skills’. These include such things as: collaboration, communication, problem solving, creativity, digital literacy, learning to learn, empathy, intercultural understanding, flexibility, resilience, and persistence.
These skills and attributes can only be developed through a deep engagement with ‘knowledge’ (or more accurately with information). They require a rethinking of the curriculum, assessment and how we teach young people.
Handfuls of schools around the world are trying to address these challenges in different ways. For example:
What all of these models seem to have in common are a shift towards project based learning and real-world engagement informed by the learners’ interests and ambitions.
On a smaller scale many schools are developing maker spaces which provide opportunities for students to develop ‘21st century skills’ through collaborative problem solving, as they create physical and/or digital artefacts (often integrating subjects across the curriculum and helping to make meaningful connections between school work and ‘real world’ issues).
However, these schools are still the exception. The major obstacles to change lie in:
The last of these three may be the most challenging – and will rely on shifts in public opinion (i.e. your opinion) and politicians who understand and care about our children’s futures.
For further thoughts about schooling visit Peter’s blog at halfbaked.education