Technology, media and globalization contribute to our world
changing at an alarming pace and in ways it never has done before. When
our current elementary school children enter the workforce, a
significant percentage of the jobs they will take have yet to be
invented. Their generation are likely to change careers five times.
Our world is changing, it is becoming flatter and smaller
Factors driving today's reality include: vast amounts of
information, rapidly and readily available, increased automation,
skilled and cost-effective labor in Asia which, relocates the workforce
for many businesses and yet to be taken fully into consideration, global
mobility. Today is an era of new industries, a more demanding workplace
and the reality of global warming. This combined with social shifts,
'family time' at the dinner table is often replaced by digital
devices and over crowded schedules.
In the past decade researchers have broadened our understanding of
intelligence. 'Multiple', 'emotional' and
'cultural' intelligence have entered our assessment of what it
means to be smart. We also understand the increasing demand for people
who can design products and offer creative services that are unique and
relevant in a world filled with an ever-increasing abundance of choices.
Recent brain research has raised our awareness, creating new ideas
and organizing thought. It is effectively facilitated through mind
mapping. Two Tokyo-based organizations specialize in training people to
meet the needs of today's corporations. The AMT Group
(http://amt-group.com), shapes global thinkers using diverse methods in
order to prepare corporations and organizations for the challenges of
the 21st century. The New Center for Creative Arts
(http://www.rbr-art.com) focuses on developing the right side of the
brain.
Todays children are digital natives. Their visual cortexes are
approximately 15% larger than their parents' and are accustomed to
making frequent digital decisions. Today 87% of students are visual or
visual kinesthetic learners.
Brain research suggests active participation in the learning
process enhances the potential for emotional motivation. Project-based
learning is an effective way to 'synergize' with the brain.
Parents need to acknowledge that the most effective schooling for their
children must be vastly different from their own.
21st Century schools: Rewiring brains for inquiry
It is mandatory that schools evolve to serve their students.
Education must reflect and keep pace with both societal and
technological changes. Schools are obliged to engage this generation of
digital natives, focus on developing communication skills and empowering
their students to actively learn. This can be achieved by integrating
courses through guided inquiry, by developing positive human
characteristics and by promoting students to actively engage in relevant
learning.
Schools meeting 21st century needs, nurture students through
'brain wiring' or 'rewiring' which focuses on
inquiry, and teaches students to embrace change. The inquiry method
starts with summarizing current knowledge pertaining to a topic. Next,
questions are formulated to focus the inquiry with eight types of
questions, this provides a holistic perspective on the topic. Working
together and individually, students discover answers via various
methods. These schools often have a digital focus to match today's
digital learners. Students then summarize their specific findings and
share them through a creative presentation of their learning to others.
The inquiry process invites students to experience the world's
richness, empowers them to ask their own questions, seek their own
answers and challenges them to understand complexities. Learning through
inquiry builds strong paths in the brain that prepares students to
confidently ask relevant questions. They then can critically navigate
through information.
Schools today should also focus on the development of positive
human values. They need to be reflected on the walls, in student and
teacher work, referred to when discussing behavioral expectations, be
part and parcel of the decision making process and role-modeled in all
levels of the school community. Ideally, they form the school's
mission statement or student profile.
A variety of purposes for people with purpose
Purpose driven people and organizations are confident and have
clear goals. Empowering people to actively participate in a
decision-making process leads to a high level of motivation, interest
and engagement. Empowered learners of all ages, when given ownership in
the decision making process excel. This is an important attribute in
schools today.
A majority of the current elementary students will work for
companies comprised of people from many cultures as well as from many
worldwide offices. The ability to change and adapt with an increasingly
global economy will become the standard.
Raising global awareness can also be linked to teaching
'conflict resolution'. To quote from Perkins-Gough et al,
"If the school is a democratic, peaceful kind of place, the chances
are that this culture will rub off on students. Teaching conflict
resolution directly is also effective hands-on culture of peace."
Often conflict is a result of miscommunication.
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The role of a classroom educator is to provide an environment where
students feel safe to take risks when learning, to promote inquiry, to
foster collaboration and to focus on strengthening the understanding of
the human connection beyond one culture. We have a shortage of people
prepared to meet the needs of this century. Many core attributes
necessary in life are barely touched upon in schools because they are
not measurable by standard exams. Today's needs are navigating us
away from rote testing and towards higher order thinking.
The real world demands of the 21st century the ability to adapt
regularly to change, competency to find and process large amounts of
information and a skill set to deal with a mobile world of international
citizens.
How is your organization facing this reality?
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.