The Next Generation of Digitally Enhanced Learning — from The Journal by Scott Aronowitz

At the recent Ed Tech Summit, a technology consultant took a distant look at the future of education, based on both widespread speculation and technologies currently on the market and in development

In his lecture at the Ed Tech Summit at the InfoComm 2010 conference in Las Vegas, Mark S. Valenti, founder and president of Pittsburgh-based technology consulting firm The Sextant Group, delved into the myriad of ways in which advancing technology will continue to enhance, improve, and expand education–both K-12 and post-secondary education–as well as the shifts in priorities and attitudes such advancements will likely cause.

In Valenti’s “big picture” view of the next stage of education, there will be several significant changes, some of which we are already witnessing, that will alter the entire landscape for “providers” of education and related services, e.g., colleges and universities, vocational and trade institutes, public and private K-12 schools, etc., as well as for teachers and students:

* The process will continue to become more technology-dependent;
* There will be increased demand for access, in terms of user capacity, frequency, transmission speed, and content capacity, leading to increased demand for bandwidth;
* Information will become increasingly media rich, which will also impact bandwidth demand; and
* The individual will increasingly become both a consumer and a producer of information, leading to shifts in the dynamic between educators and the educated.

Finally, such technology will lead to a rethinking of the architecture of learning spaces themselves. “Collaboration across time and space will drive facility design [in the coming years]. We’re seeing technologies like Skype become commonplace. We’re seeing major investments from companies like Cisco in things like TelePresence, which is a prime example of cross-collaboration.” Valenti said he believes that, in the long run, in addition to the changes in teaching and learning methods, the physical space that accommodates learning will also change. Classrooms driven by multimedia, virtual hands-on combinations of laboratories and lecture spaces, and the aforementioned virtual operating rooms are all examples of the digitally enhanced learning spaces on the horizon.

If educational publishers would publish content to be iPad ready, can you imagine the power of this type of an interface/”chalkboard of the future” in a professor’s hands? He/she could:

  • Intuitively and efficiently locate an item
  • Drag it over to the main viewing are
  • Enlarge a table of data and then annotate it
  • Quickly shrink a graphic and move it to the side of the screen after discussing it
  • Annotate a photo or a website
  • Send the captured image of what he/she had been displaying and working on to devices that can “hear” that signal
  • Etc. etc. etc.

..

so-touch.com


From DSC:
Also relevant here are the following images I created a while back:

One part of the board could provide downloadable, discipline-specific templates

Potential resources for the new "chalkboard" - compliments of the publishers

Why scenario thinking (more than scenario planning) is critical for executives today — from Ross Dawson

The point is that scenario planning is a process that, done ineffectively, does not challenge or change assumptions or beliefs about what is likely to happen. Scenario thinking is an entirely different matter. It is a state of mind where very different futures are seen as plausible and possible.

One of the most valuable outcomes of an effective scenario planning process is that it fosters scenario thinking among the participating executives. A good set of scenarios can be very valuable in setting strategy. However if executives are stimulated by the process to think in terms of possibilities rather than likelihoods, that can be far more powerful (emphasis DSC).

Given the increasing pace of change in most industries, the timeframe within which forecasting is useful is ever-shrinking. Building effective scenario thinking capabilities is essential for being able to build robust strategies and in all leadership development.

World Future Society 2010

World Future Society 2010

The Annual Conference of the World Future Society
July 8–10, 2010
Westin Boston
Waterfront Hotel
Boston, Massachusetts

• Business and Careers
• Futures Methodologies
• Governance and Communities
• Health and Wellness
• Learning and Education
• Resources and Environment
• Social and Cultural Trends
• Technology and Science
• Values and Spirituality

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Study explores student views on the future of business — from Education-Portal.com
Jun 18, 2010

IBM just released the results of their first Global Student Study. The company surveyed college students from around the world, asking them many of the same questions that they asked current executives in their biannual Global CEO Study. The report paints a picture of the attitudes and experiences that are shaping the business leaders of tomorrow.

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The Future of Cloud Computing — by Janna Quitney Anderson, Elon University and Lee Rainie, Pew Internet & American Life Project
June 11, 2010

A solid majority of technology experts and stakeholders participating in the fourth Future of the Internet survey expect that by 2020 most people will access software applications online and share and access information through the use of remote server networks, rather than depending primarily on tools and information housed on their individual, personal computers. They say that cloud computing will become more dominant than the desktop in the next decade. In other words, most users will perform most computing and communicating activities through connections to servers operated by outside firms.

Among the most popular cloud services now are social networking sites (the 500 million people using Facebook are being social in the cloud), webmail services like Hotmail and Yahoo mail, microblogging and blogging services such as Twitter and WordPress, video-sharing sites like YouTube, picture-sharing sites such as Flickr, document and applications sites like Google Docs, social-bookmarking sites like Delicious, business sites like eBay, and ranking, rating and commenting sites such as Yelp and TripAdvisor.

This does not mean, however, that most of these experts think the desktop computer will disappear soon. The majority sees a hybrid life in the next decade, as some computing functions move towards the cloud and others remain based on personal computers.

10 Internet of Things Blogs To Keep An Eye On — from ReadWriteWeb [via Steve Knode]

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To provide a preview of the “world’s fair of ideas” that will transpire at the conference our partner, Bentley Systems, is hosting three Webinars featuring WorldFuture 2010 speakers. The Webinars are free but require advance registration. Registration here.

The Virtualization of America (and the World)
A Conversation with Michael Rogers
Time: Tuesday, June 8, 2:00 PM EDT US (6:00 UTC)
Register Now Here

The Internet will change tremendously in the next 10 years. A more important question is, how will it change us? Children born this decade will have to learn what “offline” means, because being online will be the normal condition of life. It is an era of social reorganization equaled only by the rise of cities 6,000 years ago. But unlike urbanization, this enormous transition will take place in a matter of decades rather than centuries. At WorldFuture 2010, “practical futurist” Michael Rogers will describe what will be gained in this historic transition, what will be lost, and what challenges are ahead.

Internet Evolution: Where Hyperconnectivity and Ambient Intimacy Take Us
A Conversation with Lee Rainie
Time: Thursday, June 17, 2:00 PM EDT (6:00 UTC)
Register Now Here

Imagine the implications of the future that most technology experts foresee: Wireless devices are embedded in everything including us; cameras record activity in all public spaces; databases catalogue our online moves; invisible, ambient networked computing makes us available to more people in more ways; software exhibits humanlike thinking; and a direct brain-to-computer interface is possible. These are just some of the future scenarios predicted by experts, as documented by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, directed by Lee Rainie. At WorldFuture 2010, Rainie will discuss the most recent, widely covered Future of the Internet Survey, which asked Internet experts from across the globe for their take on how the Web will evolve in the decade(s) ahead.

The City Sustainable
A Conversation with Jennifer Jarratt and John Mahaffie
Time: Tuesday June 29, 2:00 PM EDT (6:00 UTC)
Register Now Here

What’s the future for the metropolis? Except for some experiments in planned communities, cities develop haphazardly over the ages. At WorldFuture 2010, leading futurists Jennifer Jarratt and John Mahaffie will introduce alternatives to the city of today, which are masses of people, buildings, and structures linked together chaotically. The tools for reinventing the city in the twenty-first century include new building technologies that bring sustainability and greater efficiency into construction and changes in the very concept of “city” from urban concrete to green communities.

From DSC:
What a great example of thinking outside the box!

solar coco

solar coco

solar coco

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http://www.tuvie.com/holo-2-0-future-wearable-computer-for-2015/

  

http://www.tuvie.com/holo-2-0-future-wearable-computer-for-2015/

  

http://www.tuvie.com/holo-2-0-future-wearable-computer-for-2015/

American Education in 2030 - from Stanford

Contents
Foreword …………………………………………………………………………………………. 1
Only if Past Trends Persist Is the Future Dismal ………………………………………… 2
Curriculum Then and Now …………………………………………………………………… 6
Classroom Teaching in 2030 ……………………………………………………………….. 11
Equality and Technology ……………………………………………………………………. 17
Time Spent on Learning ……………………………………………………………………… 24
Standards and Competitive Rigor ………………………………………………………… 30
An Evidence-Based World ………………………………………………………………….. 37
A New Education Federalism ……………………………………………………………… 45
Reinvented School Districts ……………………………………………………………….. 52
A New Politics of Education ……………………………………………………………….. 59
Vouchers Thrive ………………………………………………………………………………. 65
School Choice ………………………………………………………………………………….. 70
What Can Happen in Twenty Years? …………………………………………………….. 77
About the Authors ……………………………………………………………………………. 82
Koret Task Force on K–12 Education ……………………………………………………. 85

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Project Dream School — from EducationFutures.com

Project Dream School starts with a simple question:

If you could build a dream school, what would you do?

Furthermore:

What would the building look like? The methods? The teachers? Technology? The mission? …does it need to be a school, or should it be a bootcamp for designing futures… life… the perfect job?

Last Thursday, many great minds assembled to discuss just this… and how to make it happen. Sir Ken Robinson, Jeff Jarvis and I joined the discussion by Skype with Peter de Visser (principal), Marcel Kampman (creative organizer), Ellen Mashhaupt, Bianca Geerts, Fons van den Berg, Rob van der Ploeg, Bram Verhave (Architecture historian STEK, advisor to Chief government Architect), Peter de Visser, Ton Dohle, Bjorn Eerkes, Maurice Mikkers, Lex Hupe, Arjan Dingsté, Hartger Meihuizen (staff Stad&Esch), Roel Fleurke (staff Stad&Esch), Koene Kisjes (student Stad&Esch), Christian Paauwe (student Stad&Esch), Bart Hoekstra (student Stad&Esch), Jan Albert Westenbrink, and Annette Stekelenburg.

The project will have a website up-and-running soon at projectdreamschool.org, and also in Dutch at: projectdroomschool.org. As a Skype (distant) participant, I really cannot report on how the entire discussion went, so make sure to follow the project sites for their take on the meeting and their next actions as they work to transform their dreams into reality.

Stay tuned… more soon!

Postscript: Here is my Dream School…


projectdreamschool.org

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2020 forecast: creating the future of learning

The Online Cisco Virtual Forum for Education Leaders
The Connected Learning Society: Inspire, Engage, and Empower

The world of learning and the places of learning in our world are changing in exciting new ways. Innovative technologies are inspiring this change. See how schools, colleges, and universities like yours are transforming the learning experience at this online education forum, The Connected Learning Society: Inspire, Engage, and Empower. Join us to discuss the future of learning and be part of this momentous change.

Speakers
John T.   Chambers
John T. Chambers

Chairman and CEO, Cisco
Alisa   Berger
Alisa Berger

Founding Co-Principal, NYC iSchool
De’Arno   De’Armond, Ph.D.
De’Arno De’Armond, Ph.D.

Asst. Professor of Mktg/Finance, West Texas A&M University
Richard   Halkett
Richard Halkett

Director of Strategy & Research, Global Education, Cisco
James G.   Lengel
James G. Lengel

Professor, Hunter College CUNY and Boston University
Dr. Greg   Mathison, PhD
Dr. Greg Mathison, PhD

Global Solutions Manager, Cisco
Ewan   McIntosh
Ewan McIntosh

Director, NoTosh Ltd, Digital media | Education
David   Morris
David Morris

Director of eLearning, Coventry University
Mary   Moss
Mary Moss

Founding Co-Principal, NYC iSchool
Renee   Patton, MA Ed
Renee Patton, MA Ed

Manager, Global Industry Marketing, Cisco
Mohammad   H. Qayoumi, PhD
Mohammad H. Qayoumi, PhD

President, California State University, East Bay
Michael   Stevenson
Michael Stevenson

Vice President, Global Education, Cisco
Dr.   Cynthia J. Temesi
Dr. Cynthia J. Temesi

Global Education, Education Strategist, Cisco
James   Webb, MBA
James Webb, MBA

Chief Information Officer, West Texas A&M University
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