We couldn’t resist publishing this article by Dr
Michael Anderson, Professor of Education at Sydney University and published in The Age newspaper this month. We
recently emailed our schools database with the same sentiments … so please read
on:
As the political
battle over school funding rumbles on, we run the risk of neglecting a glaring
question: how can we prepare kids for a coming world where almost half of jobs will
be displaced by technology?
Imagine a school where the teachers are really
developing skills in innovation.
Innovation in how
learning generates creativity in their students. Innovation that re-imagines
learning as evermore engaging and challenging.
Imagine a school where the students have the agency
to know how to learn. Where students have the curiosity and confidence to
engage with the world as active citizens in small and big ways.
This is what we call
4C schools, and these schools exist. The 4Cs are creativity, critical
reflection, collaboration and communication. In their classrooms and
staffrooms, 4C schools are transforming learning and teaching through this
quartet. But in these schools it takes will, energy, inquiry, courage and
determination.
The 4C evolution is only just beginning in certain
schools but it is always characterised by a climate of re-invigoration,
excitement, challenge, difficulty, uncertainty and possibility.
However, this is not
always the climate across all schools.
The onward march of NAPLAN, testing a limited set of
'basics' with its teach-to-the-test oppressions, and league tables, have
transformed education into a much-reduced experience for teachers and students
alike. This is professionally disappointing for teachers and it is a profound
threat to the students in schools.
While we chase ever-increasing 'accountability measures' we are relegating
the aspects of schooling that will prepare students for the realities of work
and life in the 21st Century.
The world our students now face is complex, contradictory and to a
certain extent more chaotic than the world our schooling system was designed
for. And yet our school systems have only changed incrementally.
Simultaneously, the world of work is changing so that many jobs in
health, law and transport will not exist when a child starting Kindergarten
today finishes high school.
A
landmark Oxford University study found
that 47 per cent of jobs would be affected or severely affected by the
technological 'colonization' of human work. The authors of the study found that
for workers to stay in the 'jobs race' they would need to develop 'creativity
and social skills'.
No one is pretending changing schooling is easy.
There are, however, green shoots. In a number of 4C schools principals
working collaboratively with their teachers and communities are seeing a change
in their classrooms and their school organisations.
In these classrooms students are more engaged, they learn the skills of
the 4Cs through experience: they are interdisciplinary rather than siloed in
their learning and thinking. This change does not happen quickly. It is slow
and sometimes difficult. Where it does work the whole school community commits
resources and energy to the task of transformation. They have made these
hard decisions because they appreciate the gravity of school relevance and work
hard to make the change.
There are resources that schools have an abundance of: compassion,
ingenuity and energy in their teachers, students and leaders. In fact, there
are few other professions in my view that can make this change a reality. We,
however, need more than green shoots. We need schools to be enabled to
fundamentally change. And teachers need more than policy: they need support to
make these capacities understandable and teachable for their students. More
broadly, they need political, policy and resource support to make these hard
changes possible through effective professional learning for their school
communities.
So, if we are to make these critical changes we need to connect with the
capacities. These capacities are the reason many teachers entered the
profession and they can make our schools exciting and relevant to the world
their students are entering.
The time to do this is now because ignoring creativity, collaboration,
critical reflection and communication and leaving it to chance may leave our
schools and our kids unable to face the challenges of this brave new world.
If we miss this opportunity we will be the generation that let our
schooling fade into irrelevance because we lacked the imagination to create
change.
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