Schools – the
constant battlefield in the socio – economic war
With the
governments drive for standards being clouded by the insistence that the role
of education is to prepare young people for the world of work schools are yet
again thrown into the maelstrom of defining education for social or economic
purposes.
Ironically,
in the early part of this century at the heart of both arguments is now the
quality of the learner and the learning experience.
While basic English and
maths is becoming a given the content and regurgitation driven education so beloved
of our processors is diminishing with the ‘social’ skills of problem solving,
team work, responsibility for actions, adaptability and so on becoming a prominent
clarion cry for reformers who believe education should provide labour market
ready ‘product.’
The irony of
this lies in the basic premise of educators, and good teachers are educators, that
the basic skills for learners can be boiled down to three components:
- · Language, in our case English, as well as a second or third language, enabling you to communicate your ideas and learning.
- · Maths (or physics) to appreciate logic and reasoning, system and processes, not just number crunching
- · Learning itself, the research, analysis, sharing, problem solving, modifying, stretching and accommodating etc....
Within the
last premise other subjects can appear but not as content; facts, dates, deaths,
names and finally regurgitation to accommodate some abstract measuring criteria.
The skills
for the future lie within these three basic premises, not measuring the content
of learning or what additional skills a young person should have.
In the 21st
century we may have the opportunity, utilising the technology, brilliance of
educators and the desire of young people to learn, to address the question of “what
is education for?” in a far more democratic way than ever before.
Democratic,
not because politicians say it is, but because learners have access to more
information than ever before.
People travelling
in ‘learning’ directions that institutions may not have thought of and need to accommodate,
researching their own interests, problem solving, innovating and sharing beyond
the confines of school and college walls.
They will
develop learning and employment skills simultaneously hopefully within a system that accommodates
this form of learning.
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