Tag: innovation

  • The education crisis of the century

    The health crisis is taking on an unprecedented scale, partly based on the progression of the epidemic, partly fueled by the virus of fear and death anxiety.

    The economic crisis stems from containment, negative consumer expectations, shutdown of production chains, speculative movements in oil and other raw materials.

    The financial crisis is fed by these crises; markets collapse in chains, gold becomes (again) the safe haven.

    Nothing seems to be able to stop THE crisis!

    But what if there was a more serious and more lasting one? The education crisis.

    In 2019, according to the UN, nearly 260 million children did not go to school. Conflict areas are particularly affected: around 50% of out-of-school children of primary school age live in these areas.

    Four days ago, Unesco listed 13 countries forced to close all their schools, affecting more than 290 million students. The arithmetic is simple: 260+290= 550 million children are out of school due to war or coronavirus and the number will increase. The right of children and young to education no matter who they are, regardless of race, gender or disability is a fundamental right of children (article 28 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child).

    The question posed by NGOs, often in vain, becomes – finally – topical: What to do to guarantee their right to education?

    It is easy to imagine that the problem does not arise in the same way in Italy, in the UK or Syria or Iraq. On the one hand, organized, developed countries, on the other, countries devastated by wars. And yet in both cases, children on both sides are deprived of school. Some are “confined”, “locked up at home”, others are left to themselves, most often in the street. Inequality before school also exists for children without school. Better to be born French than Afghan.

    How can we guarantee the educational continuity for all children? This question is at the heart of the statements of ministers of education in developed countries. This question is most often absent in countries at war and NGOs do their best to replace the failing political power.

    What is said today in developed countries affected by the Coronavirus? All those in charge insist on the continuity of the educational activity.

    The answer can of course only be digital! This is in any case the guarantee that is hastily given to parents and children. Digital workspaces, digital textbooks, remote conference tools will replace the “traditional” class.

    Schools quickly inform parents of the solutions implemented. Here is an example from a french “lycée”;

    – Regarding the absence during class, the teachers will use the e-mail and the school learning management system so that the child can continue to work at home.

    – Concerning the absence to a school test, the teachers will be able to offer the child a written or oral question when he or she returns.

    – Concerning the written exams: the teachers will be able, after the test will have taken place in the school, to send by e-mail the subject to the student.

    These solutions seem rather poor. A week ago, we were talking of adaptive technologies, of deep learning, of artificial intelligence and we are back to emails!

    But other questions arise: How do we really ensure the continuity of education when schools are closed, teachers poorly trained in the use of digital technology with poor internet infrastructure? What about personalized attention, interaction between students, social mix, educational innovation? Everywhere of course, the closure is presented as temporary. It will certainly be so even if the provisional is already part of a random temporality.

    Paradoxically, here are the richest countries on the planet confronted with the questions that the poorest have been raising for decades. How to do without school? How to guarantee equality in school when the school is closed? How to reduce the digital divide, this invisible gap inscribed in the heart of the territories and which irreparably separates connected families from others? Back in 2017, a UN report found that 52% of the world’s population still has no access to the internet. There are so many figures to describe differently the inequality in front of the school which persists and worsens in the Coronavirus crisis!

    The Coronavirus crisis is revealing in rich countries what NGOs are experiencing on a daily basis in the countries where they operate: the need to innovate.

    Think of the NGO “Libraries without Borders” which brings its Ideas Box to refugee camps to allow children to read and write when schools have disappeared from their daily lives.

    What is the ideas box that developed countries in turn need?

    ©Shutterstock Ververidis Vasilis
    ©Shutterstock Ververidis Vasilis

    What if the Coronavirus crisis was an opportunity to rethink the role of digital in and out of school, to help teachers strengthen the social bond at the heart of their practice and commitment? Digital technology does not create innovation, it supports it by giving teachers, families and students shared responsibility for learning.

    We thought that digital was a “plus”, “the icing on the cake”, a luxury item for learners of school age; in any case not an essential aspect of our pedagogies. Nothing was to replace physical presence. This myth is collapsing.

    We can, we must know how to educate from a distance. Not by email or through Digital Workspaces, but by giving the educator a central place at the heart of digital solutions.

    Nothing can replace the teacher – there are 69 million teachers missing by 2030 to ensure primary and secondary education for every child in the world – and digital innovation must do nothing but strengthen its very “presence” when he is physically absent.

    Problem: teachers mostly restrict the use of digital solutions to their private communications and social life outside of school. Many immediately put digital out of their daily teaching lives. As for children, the abuse of digital leads to the same conclusions as those observed for young “dropouts”: aggression, anxiety, loneliness. According to a recent study published in JAMA Psychiatry and by a researcher from the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health. (https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/article-abstract/2749480): « teens who spend more than three hours a day on social media are more likely to report high levels of behaviors that may be indicators of mental health problems compared to adolescents who do not use social media at all. »

    What should educational continuity look like when there is no school?

    • To a motivated, respected teacher who is capable of animating a distance course in an intuitive way by not reproducing the traditional model of the course “one against many” but of the course “each with everyone”;
    • To mobilized and united families pooling digital resources and educational attention;
    • To children who seize the chance to learn with others in an interactive way;
    • To an education system that accepts to assess differently;
    • To “Edtech” solutions that are designed by and with teacher to replicate an innovative educational experience, not a pale copy of a shared workspace specific to companies’ meetings.

    Tomorrow when the Coronavirus crisis is over, educational practices will have evolved. We will know that we can do without school as we knew it. We will also know how to do it better with school. We will finally know why countries which have no schools are in dire need of our help.

    A real reason to hope? Innovation is on our doorstep and innovators are ready.

     

  • Edtech magicians on stage in London

    We just finalized our fifth edition of the GESA Awards and edtech magicians are more alive than ever. Startups from all over the world joined in London to address the future of education with a mix of creativity, vision and candors. They tell a fascinating and some times frightening story about the impact of innovation in education from the very beginning of our life cycle.

    gesa 2018

    A baby is born. More than one million new neural connections will be formed every second. The newborn is a genius! Enough to raise attention of smart entrepreneurs that create the perfect baby app to make sure that each of these precious seconds are used for learning. https://babysparks.com/

    Your baby is growing smart and joyful. Already time at preschool to be acquainted with maths and language, get a sense of proportion and syntax, thanks to algorithms based on a mix of neuroscience and artificial intelligence that will enrich and personalize the learning path. https://www.hanamarulab.com/en

    You may ask : why does a 3-year old kid need adaptive learning when socialization is essential at that age? Magicians will tell you that your child as every child is unique!

    Time to go to the big school and learn for good! Core contents, core knowledge, core standards! From day one, it is all about skills and competences. Because our challenge as educator is clear and ambitious: to prepare a 6-year kid for a job that has not been invented! Impossible? Not for our magicians. They come to the classroom on their magical carpet with a box full of apps and robots to make our daily life fun, interactive and successful.

    Learning maths remains one of our core objective because what was learned in early age was good but not enough. A new app combined fun exercises and artificial intelligence to get out of the black hole. https://www.maphi.app/ A smartphone will make us a mathematician, and a physicist, and a biologist, and an artist, and an historian, and a reader. A reader? Or at least an “easy reader” that can now read a book in a matter of minutes thanks to Natural Language Programming. https://www.onovation.co.il/startup/mist/. No more excuses for no readers: our magicians can convert every book in a smart book. How could we ever think of learning without a smartphone or a tablet?

    Companies are complaining about how well prepared our kids for professional life? (as if they had no role in it!) Our child must be prepared for a future job that doesn’t exist yet. No programming, no future. Magicians brought robots in our classrooms ready to be programmed by 6-year old kids. Nicely designed or made of recycled waste, they remind us of a future job that not yet exists. http://khalmaxsoftwaresystems.com/krc.html

    Education authorities watching us from their PISA tower are relieved: solutions do exist for every education problem and even to educate children as citizens! Media literacy in a click https://gutennews.com.br/ or citizenship education with a 360º perspective www.lyfta.com are only a few examples of what digital innovation is also about: respect for diversity and grassroot cultures.

    But parents are worried. They always are and always will be! They dream of being in touch with teachers, at any time and from any where. Magicians make it possible.  https://www.classtag.com

    And what about teachers? Are they dreaming with parents? At least, they dream with better training and this can also be as magical as a smartphone. http://www.millionsparks.org/

    Education everywhere will be transformed thanks to the power of chips, processors, networks, artificial intelligence and… people. Even in Africa! Or maybe before all in Africa. https://solutions.snapplify.com/

    And education goes on as a continuous journey! Skills, skills, skills are needed once we left school as if our (long) stay in school had been useless. Learning is deconstructed to be constructed again. Online courses – https://bedu.org/ – enable skills acquisition that will immediately be connected to the job market – https://www.skillist.co. Simulation tools will help future doctors to cope with future illnesses – https://insimu.com/ – because our reality is also virtual!

    And in this magical world where we have a hard time separating virtual and real worlds, the winner is immersive learning. And for those who don’t believe in true magics in education, have a look at https://www.uptale.io. One last thought, isn’t “immersive” the final goal of learning, i.e. feeling completely involved?

    All winners of the 2019 GESA edition are to be found on the GESA website.

    Thanks to Avi, Cecilia, all MindCET team and all GESA partners to make magic come true once again!

  • Monopsony in Blue: Is there a market for Edtech?

    Is there a market for Edtech?

    Education is one of the favoured market for a new generation of entrepreneurs. Edtech’s ambition is to rhyme with Fintech, Healthtech, Cleantech… and Edtech funds ambition to transform into billions the Edtech magic.

    Counting by the number of startups or application apps, this new eldorado is already there.

    But a paradox remains: “why is it so hard for Edtech startups to sell to schools?”. In a recent article, there was an attempt to give some explanations:

    • It is not easy to reach the people who make the decisions.
    • There is fear of change and new things.
    • There are many stakeholders.
    • The market is overcrowded.
    • Products lack validation.

    In fact, they are all part of the same story: all innovations target the same decision makers. When it comes to innovation in the classroom, nothing can be done without the teacher’s asentment (even if the intention would be to substitute him or her!) and the head master’s agreement.

    The Edtech market has therefore a unique characteristic: it is a one-buyer market or better said, a monopsony. Only one buyer (the school) interacts with many potential sellers (the Edtech entrepreneurs) and has therefore almost absolute market power.

    In this monopsony, there is no other alternative than to convince, seduce, attract the teacher. New strategies could be designed and joining forces may be desirable: why should entrepreneurs struggle desperately and separately to capture teachers’ attention. Joint offers could be made. New forms of distribution could be envisaged.

    Monopsony in Blue
    Monopsony in Blue

     

    But to start with, there is a core issue to take into consideration: teacher’s risk preference. In other words, are teachers ready to take risks to change their practices and innovate in the classroom?

    Intuition often says no and research evidences seem to confirm it.  Bowen analyses Teacher Risk Preferences  and by comparing preferences of new teachers with those entering other professions, he finds that individuals choosing to teach are significantly more risk averse.

    He also suggests that new policies introducing for instance performance incentives for teachers (performance pay programs) could attract less risk-averse individuals into the teaching profession. In the meanwhile the Edtech entrepreneurs should invest time and money to train a new generation of teachers into innovation.

  • School is boring!

    School is boring!

    How often have we heard this sentence!  Googling the expression will give more than 60 million results.

    Most education “innovators” start with the same statement “school is boring” and end up with the same conclusion ” let’s change it”.

    But our innovators arrive late. Let’s look back in history for a moment.

    For centuries, brillant educators have introduced innovative methods and practices based on a simple conviction: school shouldn’t be boring!

    Saint Augustine in the fourth century defined education as “a process of posing problems and seeking answers through conversation”.

    The Saint Augustine Taken to School by Saint Monica. by Niccolò di Pietro 1413-15
    The Saint Augustine Taken to School by Saint Monica. by Niccolò di Pietro 1413-15

    After him, Swedish educator Ellen Key, German education reformer Kurt Hahn, Italian paediatrician Maria Montessori, Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner, French educator, Célestin Freinet, British visionary A.S. Neil, Catalan anarchist Francisco Ferrer y Guardia, American psychologist John Dewey, Brazilian educator Paulo Freire all envisaged education as a dialogue, flowing from learner to teachers and back.

    Their ideas and methods are however still considered as marginal and categorized as  “alternative” as no other words seem to fit them.

    We are prompt nowadays to celebrate any innovation in education, advocate for education entrepreneurship but we forget the truly disruptive nature of innovation, i.e. restore freedom to learn and freedom to teach as a central component of any education system.

    Students and teachers require after all two basic “rights” to do their jobs right: engage into continuous dialogue and be free to learn and teach.

    All education innovators should help strengthening these basic rights.

     

  • You have said “INNOVATE IN EDUCATION”?

    Innovation in education is often seen as a commitment at improving the quality of education.

    But what does it mean to educate?

    To this essential question, the French geneticist and humanist Albert Jacquard answers “E-ducere” that is to say “to awaken the appetite, to create needs, to raise questions”. “Education must be lived as a commitment in the collective game where men and women – (Jacquard called them“lucid men”) – build themselves mutually.”

    albert jacquard

    This vision of education takes us far away from the classroom where it usually stays and brings new perspectives to innovators in education.

    The challenge is to (re)think of education as a global solution to meet the following three objectives:

    • “Awakening the appetite” – thanks to communication and awareness-raising
    •  “Creating needs” – applying participatory methodology and design thinking
    •  “Raising questions” – with user-generated contents

    Innovation in education in this context means much more than “anyone, anywhere, anytime”.

    Education is a dialogue, an innovative form of communication that must favor the creative and constructive appropriation by ALL the inhabitants of the planet and above all by the younger generations of ALL the themes vital to our future.

    Education relies in this new context on a “pedagogy of the question” and not on prefabricated answers or ready to use technology with pre-existing contents.

    Education requires the participation of all in the construction of the common good.

    Education is thus the means of sensitizing and provoking the participation of the greatest number on each of the subjects that condition the quality of our lives and our “living together”.

    Education is therefore a tool of social transformation enabling individuals, starting with the youngest, to become aware of problems that are essential to them, to move forward with behavioral changes and to influence the behavior of the community in which they live.

    Innovators in education have no other choice than to contribute to this social transformation. Are they aware of it?

  • Finnish tango: the educative dream

     

    Pasi Sahlberg "Finnish lessons"

    “Finnish Lessons” by Pasi Sahlberg is an enlightening summer read for all those passionate about education. Pasi tells us a success story – how, in less than three decades, Finland built  a very successful education system – but above all he shares key thoughts regarding innovation in education.

    (more…)

  • Happy learning: How innovative is a good grade?

    results of the French baccalauréat
    Is it all about grades?

    Over the last few weeks, millions of students around the world have taken their final exams, desperately struggling to attain good grades and access the universities of their choice. The Chinese Gaokao, the French Baccalauréat, the British A Level… are all symbolic of the hyper-competitive nature of our education systems. (more…)

  • Robotics or roboteach

     

    Roboteach © Milab - IDC
    Kip1: “Roboteach”
    © Oren Zuckerman – Milab – IDC

    It is striking to observe how robotics influence and determine innovation in education. One of the first MOOCs ever was on robotics – ‘An Introduction to Artificial Intelligence’ – and the tens of thousands of students that registered online at the time told us of the fascination one feels in front of a machine that can think. The success of robotics education programmes worldwide (VEX for instance) is other evidence of the importance of a hands-on approach to science. (more…)

  • Committed learners wanted

    Networked public by Anne-Lise Heinrichs https://www.flickr.com/photos/snigl3t/
    Networked public by Anne-Lise Heinrichs https://www.flickr.com/photos/snigl3t/

    How do you measure the success of an innovative learning experience? One of the key indicators is the degree of commitment from learners.

    This is obviously true in the classroom and the number of school dropouts reminds us that this is not easy to achieve. This is also true online, and at least as difficult to achieve as the availability of interactive tools doesn’t mean that they are fully used for this purpose.

    (more…)

  • The three Ps of innovation in education

    the elite unit of education entrepreneurs
    The elite unit of education entrepreneurs

    Over the last few weeks we have been evaluating the hundreds of proposals we received for the first round of the Open Education Challenge. The process is complex, as each of these proposals is evaluated simultaneously by two evaluators. The quality and passion that are present in each proposal is remarkable. Key concepts that I thought were only shared by a few experts are widely spread across this new community of ‘education entrepreneurs’. (more…)