Archives For Learning

The pre-release of the 2010 Horizon report is now available and ACU has two mentions in the prestigious report that looks to that identify and describe emerging technologies likely to have a large impact on teaching, learning, or creative inquiry on college and university campuses within the next five years.

This years report points to the following predictions:

Time-to-adoption: one Year or Less

  • Mobile Computing
  • Open Content

Time-to-adoption: Two to Three Years

  • Electronic Books
  • Simple Augmented Reality

Time-to-adoption: four to five Years

  • Gesture-Based Computing
  • Visual Data Analysis

While these predictions are interesting in themselves almost all except for the Visual Data Analysis all are somewhat or totally dependent on Mobile Learning.

More to come…

The full report will be released by the end of January.

In the book Out Of Our Minds, Ken Robinson makes and thoroughly supports the argument that creativity, and the subsequent innovation that is spawns, is fundamentally hindered by our educational system.  Robinson refers to septic focus of education and the fundamental problem and develops the following four points to effectively support this position:

  1. For historical reasons, education is preoccupied with academic ability. This is based on the deep seated assumptions in Western culture about intelligence.
  2. Academic ability promotes particular forms of intellectual activity. They are important, but they are very far from being the whole of human intelligence.
  3. The results have been beneficial in many areas and disastrous in many others. There is a tragic narrowing of intelligence, divisions between arts and sciences, and a profound waste of creative capacity. Very many people leave education never realizing their real intellectual capacities.
  4. In the new world economies, this waste of human resources is potentially disastrous. The abilities that are now most needed are being left to waste despite the massive expansion of education and the pressure to raise standards. Organizations and communities are paying the price.

Robinson isn’t just critical of the system–he provides many worthy recommendations. Most of these recommendations take into account the following three priorities:

Identifying – providing systemically for the identification and development of creative strengths and abilities of all individuals in the organization.

Facilitating – providing for the conditions with the organization as a whole through which creative processes are actively supported and encouraged.

Employing – harnessing creative outcomes to the core objectives of the organization.

Clearly, we have a long way to go.

The Morgan Stanley reports in the following three different formats can be accessed directly from their site.

  1. “The Mobile Internet Report Setup”– a 92-slide presentation that excerpts highlights of the key themes from the report
  2. “The Mobile Internet Report Key Themes” – a 659-slide presentation that drills down on thoughts covered in “The Mobile Internet Report”
  3. “The Mobile Internet Report” – a 424 page report which explores 8 major themes in depth and includes the two aforementioned slide presentations + related overview text

While I have only had the time to go through the smaller 95 slide report setup it looks like Morgan Stanley has done really good job at addressing the key issues with the mobile internet. I am looking forward to finding some extended time to have a thorough look at the full report.

Julio Ojeda-Zapata offers some excellent perspectives on using iPod Touches in primary school in his Twin Cities Pioneer Tech Test Drive column.

Watching the student and teacher video clips, which make up the majority of this post, truly reveal the potential we have for learning engagement when we use technology appropriately.

The Wired article by Brian X. Chen points to ACU’s Connected program in which all incoming freshmen get iphones. Now in it second year Freshmen and Sophmores have iphones as do move than 97% of faculty. Unlike many of the other articles highlighting the ACU program this article includes interviews with students and reveals that many student believe that ACU in onto something really good. The following quote confirms that the student believe ACU is on the right track:

At ACU it’s like they see [the iPhone] is the way of the future and they might as well take advantage of it,” Stratton said in a phone interview. “They’re preparing us for the real world — not a place where you’re not allowed to use anything.