The Fourth Industrial Revolution is here!

The Fourth Industrial Revolution is here!

How do schools play its part? A new model is required. At first blush, this report is in line with folk knowledge that sees the common denominator for occupations in decline to be a lack of high-level education. However, the World Economic Forum also predicts occupations such as paralegals, accountants, administration managers, executive secretaries, and data entry clerks to contract. That’s because the common denominator isn’t education; it’s job-ready skills. However, should not our eduction system be the vehicle to job-ready skills? The second download gives examples of schools showing the way. have a look!

What matters in teaching and learning?

What matters in teaching and learning?

Students are our common purpose in teaching and learning; our who and our why; the core of our work. Not just ‘students’ plural, but each and every student (with their idiosyncrasies, circumstances, attitudes, abilities and identities).

The decisions we make from the classroom to the board room in schools should all come back to the student. Ultimately in education, we are in their service.

The Transformer

The Transformer

The need for organisations in today’s world (a report from Harvard Business News) is to become more adaptable means changing the goals of corporate learning. Instead of narrowly focusing on job- or compliance-related training for all but their high-potential leaders, organisations should cultivate every employee’s ability to explore, learn, and grow. 

Focus on learning, not the project!

Focus on learning, not the project!

To meet these goals many are focused on blended-learning, project-based learning, personal learning. Yet, if you move beyond the labels and talk about instructional practices that promote learning and how they move us toward the desired outcomes for learners, we begin to see that our beliefs and experiences don’t always translate to our practices.