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INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION FOR INFORMATION PROCESSING

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Title: INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION FOR INFORMATION PROCESSING


1
INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION FOR INFORMATION
PROCESSING
  • Imagining the future for ICT and Education
  • 26th 30th June 2006 in Alesund, Norway

2
Young learners views of Future Education
systems Like now only better
  • Kieron Sheehy, k.sheehy_at_open.ac.uk
  • Sue Bucknall,
  • Child and Youth Studies Group,
  • The Open University, United Kingdom.

3
Context of the research
  • The Schome Research Group
  • A means of developing Schome not school not
    home schome - the education system for the
    Information Age www.schome.ac.uk.
  • Inclusive and relevant
  • Role of ICT S-E-T
  • One aspect of the Schome Research Groups initial
    research was to seek ideas and visions about
    current and potential educational systems from
    different groups of learners

4
Methodology
  • Four groups of learners in Focus groups
  • What do you see as learning and when do you learn
    best?
  • How could the way you learn be improved?
  • What should learning/education be aiming to do?
  • What would be your ideal/future learning
    scenario?

5
  • Six mainstream primary school children, aged 10
    years of age.
  • Six mainstream primary school children who were
    also Young Researchers, aged 10 years of age.
    Engaged with research though the Children's
    Research Centre They had experience of carrying
    out research projects and learning about the
    research process.
  • Six teenagers, 14-17 yrs of age, from mainstream
    secondary schools and undertaking the Duke of
    Edinburgh Award Scheme (DoE). The scheme is a
    programme of personal and social development,
    part of which involves independent expeditions
  • Six teenagers 13-17 yrs of age who were being
    educated at home.

6
Primary school pupils
  • Thinking of new or alternative approaches
    -challenging
  • The importance of fun
  • Remembering things is seen as a large part of
    learning i.e. being able to recall, say and
    write it down.
  • The split between learning and fun
  • E.g. The Beach School Candy workshop

7
A behavioural model?
  • strongly tied to the schoolroom model
  • Didnt move far, geographically or conceptually,
    from their perceptions of how things currently
    exist
  • I love school I love chocolate.
  • passive learner receiving and digesting
    preordained chunks of information.
  • often an explicit label is given in drawings to
    indicate the appropriate emotional response for
    learning. Never the case for fun activities

8
Technology is an Add on
  • a way of delivering conventional materials and
    rewards within a classroom.
  • It may improve the ease of accessing a learning
    activity or gaining a type of reward.
  • Contrast with their home experience and use of
    technology. club penguin, Runescape
  • Is the setting influencing this ?
  • Technology used for learning isnt fun. Helps
    get it over with quicker.

9
Primary School Young Researchers (YR)
  • Overall the groups construction of learning was
    as an active process. Learning is..
  • Building on knowledge
  • Trying to figure stuff out
  • Not just being told
  • Working things out.

10
A Constructivist view?
  • Because learning is seen as a method, their
    futures are not tied to particular geographical
    spaces, influenced by the questions one is trying
    to answer. Learning happens
  • Everywhere (whole group response)
  • on the beach
  • in computer games
  • outside, like finding out about the water cycle

11
A significant role for ICT
  • It made finding out things easier and quicker. It
    could also change the sorts of things one could
    find out and the ways of finding them.
  • You plot co-ordinates in the carcar on
    autopilotRun on tram rails so no crashes.
    Headphones on when you get in. Window changes to
    screens and Information in 3D picturesFor
    literacy you write onto the screen.. Each car
    company has its own make.
  • ..Virtual reality libraries where you ..learn
    by observation rather than being told facts
  • Small island like Fiji or The Isle of Man.
    Children teach themselves DT design and
    technology ..Tree climbing lessonsPlasma screen
    for languageswimming in the sea...Animal pen7
    days a week
  • ..School is not all about results

12
Teenagers undertaking the Duke of Edinburgh Award
Scheme.
  • Developed a very broad concept of what learning
    was and what it could look like in the future.
  • learning and education gives learners the
    power, through skills and knowledge, to have a
    freedom of action in the real world with real
    people.
  • The purpose of learning is empowerment.
  • learning experiences should address all aspects
    of a persons life e.g. health, personal and
    intellectual skills and, within this, role models
    were seen as essential

13
real learning isnt like school
  • Play was a central and fundamental part of their
    desired learning experiences.
  • Learning could be happen though . play, sharing
    and role play
  • Formal activities such as writing could be
    incorporated into creative play
  • Being given independence and placed in positions
    to do real things helped them to..
  • Learn to think for yourself, not through telling
    us what to do.they show and encouragebut you
    have the freedom you really need to experience
    it
  • pupils learn from people who are successful in
    particular areas and who enjoy what they do.

14
ICT is a real world thing
  • ICT primarily seen as a facilitator of
    interpersonal communication and social
    structures.
  • This aspect is a significant one for the DoEs
    future vision.
  • ICT created effective groups and helped the
    groups to interact with real world situations and
    problem solving.
  • The thinking element came from the group itself
    but ICT helped them think together and to source
    information to inform their problem solving and
    develop their skills.

15
Home Educated Group (HE)
  • As with the DoE group, placed less emphasis on
    schools as being necessary sites for learning
  • ideal future learning environment was -flexible,
    able to provide a wide range of opportunities
    that the students may need. able to accommodate
    different way of learning things because
    children learn in different ways.
  • Show your learning in different ways too

16
Conservative view
  • formal examinations-a necessary part of learning,
    but exams should test skills as well as an
    ability to recall facts.
  • current real world skills and vocational
    experiences should be embedded more in learning
    (as with the DoE group).
  • each learner should have a mentor

17
ICT keeps things comfortable
  • The consensus was that one needed to feel
    emotionally and physically comfortable before
    learning could begin to take place.
  • ICT would help to create social links and also
    allow learners to learn in a variety of different
    comfortable locations, essentially being away
    from school

18
Conclusions
  • implicit models of learning reflected, on the
    whole, their best current educational
    experiences.
  • These models are then used in the creation of
    new future practices.
  • ICT is used to support or allow these practices
    to occur but the underpinning model of learning
    remains the same as their best current
    experience.

19
  • many of their ideas have been significantly
    shaped by activities they had undertaken
    outside the school (DoE, YR and HE).
  • In this sense they could be samples of different
    possible futures
  • The pedagogy underpinning how technology might be
    used remains unaltered. It might be seen as
    unrealistic to expect young learners to think of
    new ways of doing this.
  • However, young learners are interacting with
    technology in new ways outside of formal
    schooling.

20
  • a need to equip learners with the conceptual
    tools to reflect on learning and how it occurs.
  • to build a broader range of perspectives from
    which to build future educational systems.
  • giving learners an awareness of, and asking them
    to reflect on, their models of learning could
    itself be an important part of learning in the
    Information Age.
  • What we re doing next?
  • Real ICT and learning is happening. Children
    are immersed in this-but outside of school. We
    need to acknowledge and build on this. And
    ..have another word for learning
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