Education 2047 #Blog01 (22 Mar 2020)
Close your eyes, think of these
random words and relate them to the environment closest you can imagine: batch, attendance, time-table, delivery,
instructions, test, pass, inspection, examination, result, grade , fail, reject,
quality, promotion, detention. A factory is built in your imagination, as these
words rattle your head. Right? A stark irony that our education institutions
too use similar, if not the same terms.
Yes, our academic institutions are factories that grade humans and pass
or fail them. Alas! We humans, the most intelligent organisms on the planet
have created a system for education, which sees, admits and processes humans as
products or commodity. The content canned in books is pumped into the head of
each student as instructions, to be learnt at a pace of the rest of the class. S/he
is prompted to regurgitate the same, for being tested against what is there in
the books and stamped fit or otherwise for upward mobility on the academic/ professional
ladder. Human beings put in rat-race !
With the system in place testing a learner in what he knows (in a handful of subjects that a school and its teachers know) and not recognizing his strengths what he knows no wonder the quality of education is sliding down across the board. The students and their parents agree with it, as do the teachers, administrators and the policy makers. The faculty in the top-notch institutions
Anachronistic
Model of Education
On 2 February 1835, Thomas
Babington Macaulay enunciated his Minute on Education aimed to reform secondary
education on utilitarian lines. The objective was to create “a class who may be
interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern; a class of persons,
Indian in blood and colour , but English in taste, in opinions, in morals, and
in intellect”. What came about was imposing English as the medium of
instruction in secondary education, from the sixth year of schooling onwards,
in place of Sanskrit or Persian till then used in the educational institutions
supported by the British East India Company. This British policy had a
determining the impact two aspects: (i) the content and methodology of what has
been and is being taught in Indian educational institutions, and (ii) the medium of instruction through which these have been and continue to be taught.
What started almost two centuries ago has perpetuated- to produce armies of
drones – starting with clerks, then managers and now coders; all spawned from
the instructivist or conformist mould of learning, that split schooling and
education into two!
The things remained unchanged largely because there
Schools in the 20th century were largely
A Roadmap for Education
“Realizing the full potential of
every Indian” goes the vision in the roadmap of Education, that Technology
Information, Forecasting & Assessment Council (TIFAC) has laid down. First-ever foresight for Education, ever attempted in India! This emerged out of the long-term technology
perspective plan for the country drawn by TIFAC, Technology Vision 2035 (TV
2035) as a response to the challenges thrown by surging Information Technology
across all sectors of socio-economic importance. The time horizon for the
Technology Vision 2035 exercise was chosen because it was coinciding with 200
years of Macaulay's Minutes on Education! Naturally, then the exercise would
not have been complete without a document on education. More so because
"quality education, livelihood and creative opportunities" was
identified as one of the prerogatives that the government must assure its
citizens. Also throwing weight behind the roadmap, were 11 sectors covered
under TV2035- hugely technology centred and verticals by themselves. The growth
of technologies in these sectors, their deployment and adoption, would not be
effective unless backed by strong, modernized and responsive educational system
and hence, a roadmap for education was imperative.
Education is possibly the only sector which leads to new technology and at the same time, gets impacted by new technology. Also, it is the one which faces maximum resistance when it comes to the implementation of technologies and ironically from the teachers who are responsible for producing the change-makers! Therefore, the roadmap from TIFAC looks at education in a much more comprehensive manner not only by focusing on future
Technologies impacting education in future
All technologies are basically
assistive in nature, they augment the capabilities of humans and tremendously
expand the resources. When harnessed properly, technologies can
significantly improve human lives and make them better citizens of the world. The
internet and mobile telephony have disrupted education and rendered it-
globalized, democratized, inclusive and affordable. The books allowed a
learner to proceed linearly- forward or backward and thus imposed a
restriction. In contrast, each web-page with hyperlinks embedded in it, allows
a learner to dive into a new world just like a free roving human mind. The
technology thus allows access to what a learner wants instead of books which
have been dictating the learners. Let’s catch a glimpse of technologies in the offing,
in not such a distant future.
The ingress of
A lot more changes are expected
if we push our time-frame by a decade or so. Developments in Artificial
Intelligence will allow Natural Language Interpretation and Machine Translation
to advance further and reduce the linguistic barriers at least in the written
text. The advances in Internet
technologies like Cloud computing, 4G& 5G communications and Mesh
Networking, will transform the classrooms on the one hand and make the virtual
learning environments less virtual on the other. Modular computers, with
flexible screens and context-aware, will make every other panel learner’s desk-
smart and almost weightless; access to educational material and performance of
educational transactions will be without the use of papers, through haptic
interfaces and gestures. The sensation of depth in virtual and tactile
experiences for experiential learning will be addressed by volumetric screens
and Internet of things. All these technologies will liquidate ‘distance’ in
distance education on the one hand, and take conventional education to distant
places on the other. Thus, the shift from real classrooms to virtual classrooms,
availability of language-neutral books, more engaging game-based experiential
learning and highly personalized self-directed education would become
common. With these progressions, MOOCs
and remote-labs would get integrated and also mainstreamed as will be
game-based learning. Adaptive learning and testing will emerge as a defining
characteristic of personalized or learner-directed education that appears to be
the future.
In a slightly distant
The emergence of technologies like Immersive Virtual Reality (IVR), Artificial Intelligence (AI), Brain-Computer Interface (BCI), Real-time Translation (RT), 3-D Printing and Block-chain (BC) and their combinations are posed to several unthinkable possibilities. Literacy will have to be completely redefined and understood as how noted futurist Alvin Toffler puts
The end
of teachers, as we know them today is a distinct possibility, at least in higher
education, repositioning them as pathfinders, navigators, counsellors and
confidants in the service to learners. The books are set to become vestigial
for the education system, accelerated by the climate change concerns and this
trend also signals the end of reading, writing already threatened by texting!
BCI may also hit hard on reading and of course, bypass listening/ speaking.
Instant translation of text and speech will end linguistic barriers. Further,
“adaptive” systems which will become less and less expensive and more and more
widely available, are a pointer to end of grades/ classes, each learner has to
struggle through, competing with peers. With all these technologies and of
course, an enabling eco-system and policies, education is all set for a complete
changeover, with the focus shifting from improving quality (of a product) to
unleashing the full potential (of a human). With some technologies on
exponential trajectory rather than linear, education is set to be under
tremendous pressure and in a state of flux, this, in turn, opens up challenges
for governance.
Future Challenges in Governance
Education is not just about the
intellectual transactions that happen in academic institutions but it has a
range of other processes, systems and institutions in its ambit . For this
reason, administration, management and governance of systems and institutions
in the education sector become extremely important. Administration is
essentially about procedures and is therefore important in all public
institutions. Unfortunately, the system now in place for administration were
designed for an industrial age with layers of bureaucracy to ensure
compliances. Owing to the emphasis on normality and routine that tend to
maintain the status quo, the systems are bereft of novelty and
innovation. Technologies like mobile telephony, cloud, RFID, apps, block-chain
etc. can immensely accelerate the pace of administrative actions and make them
transparent.
Management of education is the process of planning, organizing, directing and controlling the activities of academic institutions. This is achieved by utilizing human and material resources in a manner so as to effectively and efficiently accomplish the functions of teaching, research, training and extension work. A great deal of management functions is being done using technology, aided and accelerated by the internet. Communicating, sharing, archiving and retrieval of information
Block-chain technology that is taking the financial sector by storm is already tipped to take away the offices of Registrar and their equivalents in schools and colleges. If the internet transformed the way we shared information and connected, the block-chain will redefine we exchange value and whom we trust. This is all the more important when much of the education will happen online, also lifelong and life-wide (learning and personal development in real contexts and authentic settings), naturally learners yearning for learning in a trustful environment. With this technology not only the educational transactions will become trustworthy, but also setting up digital lockers holding students' credentials will become faster, with student reports automatically getting uploaded with validation processes in place.
Governance reflects in the quality of administration and management. It translates into putting in place- standards, information on performance, incentives for good performance, and also accountability. Technologies that can lead to quality governance in the education sector include cloud computing, mobile apps, digital identity, RFID, real-time translation, data analytics and block-chain. Advancements in these technologies can ensure us- safe, secure and authentic database vaults, digitization and storage of personal and public records, advanced forensics, advanced biometrics for digital identity and human independent decision support systems- promising to make governance in education more transparent, speedy and effective.
Technology for
revamping education
For education, as we have just
seen, technology has the potential to touch almost every aspect of it- slaying
the traditional bottlenecks of inclusivity , infrastructure, economics and
geography. The education systems hitherto, were designed to provide the
information already available, to equip the students to grapple with similar
situations in future. However, with democratization and easy access to
education, and the rapid changes across sectors, induced by technologies, some
galloping at the exponential rate, the system has to empower learners to shape the
unpredictable future. Thus, education of the future will all be about how to learn
and not what to learn and, scales tilted more in favour of innovation than
invention. This paradigm shift would mean a radical change in the role of
teachers who are considered the cornerstone, dwindling of
the rigidity in academic institutions, and revisiting the structures and
policies in governance.
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The author is a Scientist with Technology Information, Forecasting & Assessment Council (TIFAC), currently on deputation to All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE)
(nrjsaxena@gmail.com
totally agree with every single point detailed in the article. But, will the trend change as pointed out?
ReplyDeleteThanks Dr. Vac. I foresee the changes because of rapid advances in communication technologies. If you notice carefully, education is all about communication- active or passive and humans have been smart in embracing them.
DeleteGreat piece sir. A Comprehensive Document covering almost all aspects of Technological Innovation that can be though of at this point of time.
ReplyDeleteThanks Dharmesh. :)
DeleteExcellent prediction of future education system.
ReplyDeleteYes, concept of industrial automation can not be applicable in education. It's now interesting to see how transition of Teacher centric education to learner happens.
Thanks :)
DeleteIn the knowledge era that we are in, the role of teachers as a repository of knowledge has gone to the internet; as transmitter of knowledge is going to the MOOCs; and, as an examiner of (known) knowledge is going to online assessment tests. What is possibly left is role as facilitator (not even assessor) of creation of new applications (innovation) and new knowledge besides that of a pathfinder, navigator, guide, counselor etc. So a polar change seems to be happening in the centeredness, triggered and augmented by the Internet and related technologies
Excellent article sir, Your proposed road map includes the technologies shaping and disrupting the education space. This informative article also provides the technologies impacting education in future i.e. Blockchain etc.
ReplyDeleteThank you :)
DeleteGood analysis.
ReplyDeleteThanks! :)
Delete