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A School in the Cloud

gurps_npc writes "Recently there was a poorly designed study that claimed computers don't help teaching. Here with the opposing viewpoint is Sugata Mitra in his recent TED talk. He went to a tiny village in India and put a computer there with software about DNA replication (in English, even though they did not speak or read English). When he came back months later, a group of young children said, 'We don't understand anything — except that mistakes in DNA replication cause diseases.' At heart, his argument is that the old style of teaching derives from Victorian England's need for bureaucrats, so it creates minimally competent people that know how to read, write, and do math in their head. He wants to update our teaching methods with more creative and technological solutions." One of Mitra's main points is that given resources and a question to ponder, children will learn on their own. Interference and too much direction gets in the way of that. Mitra won the $1M TED prize this year for his work. He said in an interview, "We spent 7000 years debating this issue of how do we educate everybody. We have never lived in a world where one standard educated everyone. And given that we have failed for over 7000 years, perhaps we will never have one standard. Maybe the right conclusion is that we do away with standard education. Maybe the convergence of technology and curiosity will solve this problem."

25 of 126 comments (clear)

  1. lol by masternerdguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We didn't spend 7000 years trying to educate everyone, we've been trying to educate everyone for maybe 400.

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    1. Re:lol by CanHasDIY · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We didn't spend 7000 years trying to educate everyone, we've been trying to educate everyone for maybe 400.

      For extremely small values of "everyone."

      --
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    2. Re:lol by masternerdguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Last I checked lots of countries now require a minimum state approved education paid for by tax money. That's much better than only educating the aristocracy and putting all the peasant children to work.

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    3. Re:lol by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 2
      We have been trying to educate "everyone" since the second world war (ie about 1945). For a very limited value of "we".

      the old style of teaching derives from Victorian England's need for bureaucrats No .. British education was originally designed (by ancient Greeks) to create politicians. This was copied by people wanting to teach people who wanted to know stuff (preferably what the Bible says), or possibly wanting have a life style more like the politicians. It is only in the last 10 years that teaching in Britain has even pretended it has anything to do with employment, and it has never even been slightly good at that.

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    4. Re:lol by rtb61 · · Score: 2

      Your reference is culturally prejudicial. We have spent millions of years trying to educate humanity. Can you track wild animals, and know the animal by it's tracks and it health condition and age? Can you fabricate all the hunting tools you require to survive? Can you fabricate your clothing and accommodation? Due you know all the natural remedies available in your environment for the most common maladies? Can you communicate within your social group? Do you know the social mores of your group?

      Of course now our society has far more complex educational needs to fulfil many more specialised roles. This is beyond factory workers, the image of which has been distorted by greed being a factory worker is not so bad subject to the remuneration you receive.

      So random trial and error education whilst likely the most personally enjoyable would produce very poor results when considering the specialised knowledge required to fill the many specialised roles with in a modern society.

      Early education starts general and then becomes more specialised over time as that individual commits themselves to fulfil more specialised roles. The quality of that education makes them more competitive in gaining those roles and receiving the best possible remuneration.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    5. Re:lol by dreamchaser · · Score: 2

      You mean the article that states, among other things, "Providing literacy to most children has been a development of the last 150 or 200 years, or even last 50 years in some Third World countries," and "In many early civilizations, education was associated with wealth and the maintenance of authority, or with prevailing philosophies, beliefs, or religion" ?

      It hasn't been thousands of years that education has been available to just about everyone in most nations/regions.

  2. couldn't that be done with books, too? by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I learned a ton on my own as a kid by reading random articles out of an encyclopedia, and some of those "How Things Work" series of books. I imagine kids in India could do so, too— except that they don't have access to such books. So it seems overall more a matter of access to knowledge, in any form, than of something new and magical about technology-based learning as a specific form.

    1. Re:couldn't that be done with books, too? by Life2Short · · Score: 2

      Actually, based on your comments and the findings of numerous other studies, it sounds like education has a lot to do with motivation, and relatively little to do with forms of education delivery. Look at the history of education, do you see enormous growth spurts tied to the printing press, movies, radio, home video, the internet? In as much as they make information more readily available they increase education. But it's not like there's some magic mode for learning. How many people would sit and watch a Disney film on Differential Equations, no matter what the production values were or how applied it was, etc.? So yes, whatever we can do to make information available is good, but we should stop thinking that we're going to come up with a magical sugar coating that will make everyone want to learn everything.

    2. Re:couldn't that be done with books, too? by Azure+Flash · · Score: 2

      What's easier for them though: building huge libraries and shipping in millions of books, or getting access to the same information by getting a broadband connection and a computer?

      I don't understand this glorification of ink-and-paper books when digital text is exactly the same thing except orders of magnitudes cheaper.

  3. A computer is a tool by wolvesofthenight · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A computer is a very versatile tool. Used correctly it will help with an amazing array of tasks, including education. Used incorrectly they are either worthless or counterproductive. And, like many other tools, if you let kids play with it, they will learn something (which might or might not be what you wanted them to learn).

    Asking if computers help education is too broad of a question. A better question is "'When do computers help education and when do they hurt?" You can find good examples of each.

    --
    -WolvesOfTheNight
  4. Re: an amazing array of tasks, including education by Nidi62 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    and porn

    Think of it as sex ed

    --
    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
  5. "Education" is itself flawed by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There are times I cringe when "educate" is used as a substitute to "learning"

    Did someone educate you on how to walk on your two feet, or did you do that by your own, learning through trials and errors?

    Did someone educate you on how to speak whatever language that you are using, or did you somehow learn it by listening to the sound made by the adults?

    It's mindboggling nowadays when people forget the most basic thing that makes each and every one of us who we are - that we are "learning machine", that "education" in itself a flawed concept

    You do not educate students - you share with whoever you want to "teach" what you know, show them (if it's possible) the process, and they pick up on that, just like they pick up, by themselves, how to walk, how to talk, et cetera

    --
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    1. Re:"Education" is itself flawed by harlequinn · · Score: 2

      I think it can be taken for granted that educate and learn are intertwined.

      Learning ability differs from person to person - this can be measured and educational material can be altered to maximise the learning of any given individual.

      My children learned to communicate by listening and watching, but if I didn't correct their errors their communication skills (listening and speaking) would be at a lower level today than they are.

    2. Re:"Education" is itself flawed by camperdave · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You do not educate students - you share with whoever you want to "teach" what you know, show them (if it's possible) the process, and they pick up on that, just like they pick up, by themselves, how to walk, how to talk, et cetera

      But that is the very definition of education. Education is transmission of knowledge. Learning is its reception.

      Yes, someone educated me on how to walk. They held my hands, supported my weight, and wobbled me back and forth, transmitting to me the sequencing of walking. Yes, someone educated me on how to talk. They spoke to me and showed me pictures of things and told me the words that matched the pictures. Teachers educated me on how to form the letters, how to combine the letters to form words, and how to string words together to form sentences. Would I be able to speak, write, and type English if I were not educated in the language? Of course not.

      We may be excellent "learning machines", but we will only get so far without a teacher to teach us. Education is what brings us beyond simple grunts and gestures to poetry; and brings us from finger counting to trigonometry. Yes, some are better learners than others, and yes, some are better teachers than others, but make no mistake: education is vital to modern society.

      --
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    3. Re:"Education" is itself flawed by narcc · · Score: 2

      In other words, what you did wasn't "education", but mere sharing of experiences

      Education is just systematic instruction (given by the teacher and received by the student).

      To be educated requires that you have learned. To educate requires that you teach. This isn't exactly complicated.

      So, what exactly are you babbling on about? Why post this ridiculous (and shamefully incoherent) rant? What did you hope to accomplish?

    4. Re:"Education" is itself flawed by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2

      You do not educate students - you share with whoever you want to "teach" what you know, show them (if it's possible) the process, and they pick up on that, just like they pick up, by themselves, how to walk, how to talk, et cetera

      In a word: bullshit.

      Walking is a pre-programmed function of the human nervous system. So is, to a large degree, talking.

      OTOH things like integral calculus or advanced martial arts require stacking one skill upon another upon another over a long period. Complex cognitive and psychomotor skills require a long-term plan of study. You don't learn to read and write, or smash concrete with your hands, by trial and error. Developing and implementing such a learning plan is what we call education.

      Now, an determined autodidact may, to some degree, be able to learn how to develop and implement such a plan for themselves; they'll still need someone to give them the base education that makes that possible,

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  6. Long overdue by XB-70 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Academia has been over-managed into a snarled knot of self-serving rules and regulations. Go to any School Board meeting and the discussion will centre on almost any topic except improving students' uptake of information. The cost of university has little to do with the actual outcome vis-à-vis employment. In short, much of the educational sector has lost focus.

    What to do? In my humble opinion, gaming is the answer. Not the gaming we're used to, but real-world, immersive, progressive gaming where students go into virtual grocery stores and learn to shop on a budget. Where trucks are loaded with goods and students have to figure out the optimal route to transport the goods to market. Where students are confronted with tax forms and have to figure them out (and be scored on them). Where a grandparent takes ill and they have to figure out what to do to care for them. Where they are given a virtual puppy/horse/ox and learn to train it. Lastly, they need a program which takes them through numerous scenarios of wealth creation. This last is probably what is most lacking from our present educational system.

    We are doing little if anything like this and yet, this is the world that we live in. If every school board on the planet put 0.05% of their budget towards the development of true AI-based educational gaming, our students would learn at a prodigious rate. Granted, we would have to adjust for region and language, but the essence of education is the same the world over.

    --
    *** Don't be dull.***
  7. There's already a working system. by steelfood · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It always annoys me when people claim to have discovered something new when all they're really doing is reverting to a past method that was recently discarded in the name of "new" and under the pretense of "better". It shows both ignorance and arrogance.

    For thousands of years, people learned through apprenticeship. People learned their trade from one person, and when they gained mastery over their craft, taught some small number of individuals who would hopefully go on to do the same, to varying degrees of success.

    Schools, where twenty to thirty students sit in a classroom and learn from some books and a teacher can only provide a baseline. The system is designed not at all to educate, but to make literate. And because of this, they tend to race to the bottom, especially if managed poorly.

    Today, the only place anything even remotely similar to a master-apprentice relationship could be found is at the doctorate level. One advisor, several candidates, and then they get their degree and become journeymen. Eventually, they may or may not become masters. This is the system that needs to be propogated back down to primary education.

    Yes, today's needs are different. There's a much greater emphasis on working with abstractions (oblig. xkcd) than on developing skills. There are also a far greater amount of knowledge needed in far more disciplines to be considered marginally competent. But I'm certain that the tried and true model of master and apprentice can be adapted to today's quantity, quality, and societal requirements of knowledge.

    The only hindrance is the attitude towards school (especially teachers' attitudes towards school), and towards teachers. People go into teaching because they like working with children. This is already a failure. Parents see teachers as their daytime (or full time, in the case of boarding schools) babysitters. This is also another failure. If the parent does not respect the teacher, then the children will not. If the teacher does not have anything worth respecting, then there's no reason for the parent or even the children to respect the teacher.

    The teacher needs to be the third parent. This is the core of the master-apprentice relationship. At home, the child has parents. When in a place of learning, the teacher is the parent. Children actually want to see their teacher as a parent. But there are social elements that discourage this thinking. Changing teachers every year, for example (mostly because teachers competent at teaching first grade may not be so good at teaching sixth grade) is instability, and children are most comfortable when things are stable.

    Testing, especially paper-based, multiple-choice, sit-at-your-desk-and-don't-cheat testing, is also very bad. Current testing separates students from each other. If the teacher is a third parent, then students in the same class are siblings. But if they are separated from each other during a test, then they cannot form the sibling relationship properly. Tests also do not show competency. They merely show interest in taking the test and perhaps patience. Yes, abstractions comprise mostly what is taught today. But comeptency can only be shown in the doing. That is why to get a doctorate, the candidate must further the field.

    Technology plays very little role in education--in fact, the same one as a calculator would play. It does not solve the education problem. Culture does.

    --
    "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
  8. Re:Where do they get this pontificating morons? by Azure+Flash · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If that insight is so trivial, why hasn't most of the western world realized this, why do we still cling to our ways of sending kids to jail-factories to cram their brains with data in a carefully planned industrial process?

  9. Re:Fascinating talk, with open ended questions by iceaxe · · Score: 2

    Hi Anonymous, thanks for your concern.

    As a matter of fact my daughter is not "home schooled" in the sense you imagine. She is enrolled in a fully accredited online school, with classes, assignments, teachers, lectures, exams, and all the trappings of traditional schools except for the hours spent waiting in lines to go to the potty, waiting for the slower kids to finish their assignments, doing busy work so the overworked teacher can have a little time to grade a few papers, and so forth.

    She works harder, does more, learns faster, and is excelling, as measured by the same standardized tests and the same curriculum requirements as set forth by the state in which we reside. The program leads to the same diploma received by any public school student, although I dare say she'll have learned more and accomplished more than most.

    In the meanwhile, she's free from the foolishness and stupidity rampant in physical schools, and has the flexibility she needs to pursue the career she's already engaged in - so her "future" is quite secure. (The developing career is why she had to leave traditional schooling in the first place.)

    As for friends, she has a number of close friends with whom she spends time regularly, and we make a priority of providing social experiences. Furthermore, she's actively engaged in multiple community organizations (as are her parents) and is a remarkably poised and well adjusted human being.

    As far as being hippies (Hey, you understood my sig! Bonus points!) you'd be hard pressed to recognize us as anything of the sort, being hard working, tax paying, home owning, church going, normal dressing, unobtrusive, productive citizens.

    I hope that alleviates your concerns for my daughter's welfare.

    --
    WALSTIB!
  10. Re:Teaching by iceaxe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually, Mitra's point has little to do with computers except inasmuch as they make access to information vastly more available. The point is about how children, given access and motivation, learn quite remarkably well on their own. Think of it as a "Free Market" theory of education.

    Our teachers, bless them for their nearly thankless efforts, are as trapped as the students in our out of date education system. Freeing them is every bit as important as freeing the children.

    Anyway, the point is to find out how to make learning work better, not to throw out the good things about what we have.

    Cheers :)

    --
    WALSTIB!
  11. "Children will learn on their own?" by Harvey+Manfrenjenson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From the summary: "One of Mitra's main points is that given resources and a question to ponder, children will learn on their own. Interference and too much direction gets in the way of that."

    Well, great. Nobody explained that to the inner-city teenagers I deal with in my clinic. Just about all of them have access to the full resources of the Internet, either at home or down the street at the library. And they are wonderfully free from the evils of "interference and too much direction".

    Their general fund of knowledge is shockingly limited. Many of them can't find Europe on a map. A remarkable number of them can't name a single city outside of the United States/Mexico. They struggle with basic arithmetic and reading comprehension.

    If you want to see how well-educated a child becomes when you give him "resources" and no direction, just look around you.

  12. DNA? I'm skeptical by nbauman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    He went to a tiny village in India and put a computer there with software about DNA replication (in English, even though they did not speak or read English). When he came back months later, a group of young children said, 'We don't understand anything — except that mistakes in DNA replication cause diseases.'

    I don't believe it. Young children can't understand DNA -- or even molecules. I particularly don't believe that young children from a rural village in India could understand anything meaningful about DNA. You might be able to teach them to parrot phrases like "mistakes in DNA replication cause diseases" if you repeated it to them a lot. But they won't understand what they're talking about. You could just as easily teach them to say, "Disobeying God causes diseases." It certainly has nothing to do with teaching science.

    I did some research into elementary and high school science education, and read what the teachers with hands-on experience said. A friend of mine had lots of stories about how he taught science in the Peace Corps in Africa.

    Surprisingly, even high school kids have a difficult time with science concepts that seem to be simple and basic -- for example, molecules.

    Think about it. Science is hands-on. The main lesson of science is that you make a hypothesis, and then test the hypothesis against the real world to see if your hypothesis actually works. How can you demonstrate to a high school student that molecules exist? I read in my history of science books the saga of how chemists finally figured out and proved what molecules and atoms were, starting in about the 18th century. It's a great story. It would be very difficult for high school students to replicate those experiments, and even more difficult to understand what they were doing. We don't have mercury barometers any more. How do you prove that atoms and molecules really exist? In my niece's middle school science class, it was an appeal to authority -- the book says so.

    I was particularly interested in the efforts to teach elementary school students about DNA. What's the point? You're not demonstrating the existence of DNA or genes to them. You're not showing them anything in the real, testable world. You're just showing them pictures and animations. The Harry Potter movies also have animations. Why should they believe your animations any more than Harry Potter movies? Or creationist Bible movies? The American Museum of Natural History had a show on DNA. They had exhibits for children demonstrating DNA. I asked the kids to explain it -- and they couldn't do it. They had a big, colorful, impressive exhibit for kids on DNA, and none of the kids understood it. Although you could get a grant for it.

    In the world of pundits and foundation grants, there are lots of people who make extravagant claims about what their thing can do, their technical trick or their computers.

    There are lots of things about science that you can teach kids, hands-on, starting as young as 3 years old. Seymour Simon http://www.seymoursimon.com/ had books for 4-year-olds that taught them how to discover for themselves principles of engineering using paper and clay to build arches. Science teachers take their kids out into the woods -- or a vacant lot -- and show them what you can find there.

    But teaching rural Indian children to understand anything about DNA? With materials in a language they don't understand? I don't believe it.

  13. 2013 - 1850 = 163 years. Nowhere near 400 by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 2

    1852 saw the first compulsory education law introduced in the US, the last US state would follow in 1917. England got its in 1870.

    So... where do you get 400 years from? 2013 - 400 = 1613 that is still in the middle of the reformation.

    And considering a girl recently got a bullet in her head for wanting to go to school, I would say that we have NOT been trying to educate everyone for 400 years or whatever but more that for thousands of years people have been actively trying to NOT educate all.

    The danger of education is that people start to think for themselves. Disease caused by mutations in the genes? My my, what heresy is this, everyone knows it is god that cures disease if you listen to your local cleric and don't question why the pope sits on a throne of gold while millions starve, I read about Jesus Christ, I fail to see how he could ever approve of Catholicism.

    And modern education is not really about creating anything but more in trying to prevent the kind of people who burn witches (last case happened very recently) or shoot girls in the face because they want to be able to read and write. It is not about making people smart, it is about making them slightly less stupid and maybe if you are lucky allowing a few bright ones to climb their way out of the cesspool that is humanity and improve all our lives. But make no mistake, school is NOT efficient or productive, it is a sausage factor that relies on random chance for a fine steak to get through at times.

    And other systems have been tried. They never ever worked.

    Lock kids in a building, force them to sit up right and 50% will come out a bit less stupid, 45% will remain as stupid as ever and vote Republican and 5% go on to shape the world for everyone else. Statistics pulled entire out of my ass but we don't need millions of Einsteins. It would be nice but we managed to do with just one. The rest of you? Like me? By-product. Just try not to stench the place up to much with your wasted life and let the smart people do their stuff.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  14. You are partly right by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 2

    Indeed yes, education is about making people literate and numerate. AND THAT IS IT AND THAT IS ALL IT SHOULD DO.

    Nobody can make you smart or interested in learning. THAT is something you got to do yourself. Developing a questioning mind "why is it so" is impossible to enforce.

    Your parents can make you learn to ride a bicycle but only YOU can win the Tour de France.

    Your father can teach you how to weld but only YOU can build the Eiffel tower.

    Your mother can teach you how to read but only YOU can write the next great American novel.

    Modern compulsory education is about forcing everyone to be given a chance to at least develop the basics from which maybe the individual him or herself can take off. But it is NOT designed, cannot be designed to make everyone into a scientist. THAT is what is wrong with American and Western education, the idea that we can press all kids into a school factory and produce insurance salesmen and ad-women.

    Individuals themselves make this mistake too. I work in web-development PHP, which is the ass end of IT, 1st line tech support kids look down on us. But as easy as it is, you STILL can see who is not going to make it very simply. They are the ones who ask "what must I do". "What course should I take" "What book should I read".

    Those who do make it just DO IT! There are two ways to complete a long march and that is by YOU yourself taking the first step, not asking someone else to tell you how to march. The basics "reading/math" you should have picked up in school. The skills, you have to master on your own AND ESPECIALLY on your OWN initiative.

    If you, given the tools of reading and the internet can't learn PHP on your own, you will NEVER ever become any good at it because it is that DRIVE to learn, to examine, to explore, to experiment. If you ask, you are to lazy AND HERE IS WHY!

    THE QUESTION HAS ALREADY BEEN ANSWERED: with google, you can easily find the question you are asking, that has already been answered. REMEMBER that if you want to see furthest, you should stand on the shoulders of giants. No great scientist worked in a vacuum, they STARTED by seeing the world, asking themselves a question and the finding an answer at least in PART by reading what others had written about it.

    So asking on say yahoo what is a good PHP book shows that you lack even the basic skills of finding the answers to a previous question: you basically want knowledge to magically enter your brain and that just doesn't work (says a guy who has bought way to many language course books and still can't write a proper sentence because apparently you actually need to read the books not just buy them).

    It is amazing we think of education as we do. Most schools in Holland teach swimming but we don't magically expect all kids to become olympic swimmers. Why do we expect all kids thought basic reading to be great writers then?

    School swimming is there to make you slightly less likely to drown. The rest is up to you.

    School education is there to stop you chewing the books, reading them, understanding what is inside, is up to you.

    I can make you read say "Anne Frank's diary" or listen to MLK speeches but I cannot make you understand them. And frankly for all those who wish for schools to be MORE then literacy factories... do you REALLY want your school system to tell people what to think? What to understand?

    Our school system might seem like a waste and horribly inefficient but I for one am more afraid of what an efficient school system would look like. Remember that in say Public Transport, if a train is filled to capacity, it is efficient. Factory farming is efficient, I do not wish to be a factory animal thank you very much.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.