Humanity
dates back 2.6 billion years, yet has seen the most dramatic change it’s ever
known over the last 200. In two centuries, the global population has grown from
one billion to over eight billion people. The World Health Organization predicts
by 2100 that number will grow to 11 billion. With this increase in human life
we’ve seen a terrifying rise of factors that have the greatest impact on global
health. CO2 concentration, loss of rainforest and woodlands, species
extinction, water usage, energy consumption, ozone depletion, foreign
investments, and global temperature increase has reached proportions so great
scientists are warning environmental degradation could lead to a irreversible
collapse of the global ecosystem in this century. Additionally, the need for
poverty solutions, access to water and sanitation, disease prevention, disaster
relief, advocacy for human and gender rights, food security, and global waste
solutions worldwide has never been greater.

With
all this rapid change occurring we need to ask ourselves: what is the purpose
of education? And, how can that education support this frontier of change? For
decades the purpose of education has been two-fold: to prepare children for
citizenship and to cultivate a skilled workforce. While still relevant, the ‘why’
of education is shifting beneath our feet. We are living in a new, complicated
world that is struggling with complex and life-critical issues the likes of
which no one has encountered before. The true purpose of today’s educational
system should be to develop leaders, visionaries, and problem solvers.
We
need people who can provide real solutions for clean energy; environmentalists
who can protect the planet. We need politicians who can effect change for the
betterment of society. We need historians who can remind us of the lessons our
past can teach us and ensure we don’t make the same mistakes. We need
filmmakers who can document and educate; we need designers who can shift
perception and generate life-changing ideas. We need inventors, entrepreneurs,
humanitarians, scientists, astronomers, physicists, engineers, architects,
authors, curators, programmers, coders, and software developers. We need people
who have an innate passion for life, for learning, and a deep sense of respect for
humanity. We need people who desire to leave a positive and impactful
footprint. But, most importantly, we need healers. We need people who can
approach these critical issues from a foundation of prayerful reflection, pure-hearted
intention, and strength of character.
Therefore,
our challenge is to adopt a new paradigm for the 21st century. Our
task as educators is to dream big, reinvent schools and take education into the
new century. We need to be courageous for the sake of our children, the
students in our schools and the welfare of the world. Let’s re-imagine schooling.
Imagine
a school where all students are excited by what they learn that they can hardly
wait to begin the day. Imagine having only a few discipline problems because
the students are so engaged. Imagine self-directed students collaborating on thematic,
interdisciplinary, project-based units that are research driven. Imagine a challenging
curriculum designed around deepening understanding where teachers teach for
transfer; a curriculum that is highly relevant, articulated, intellectually
demanding and one that meets the students’ needs. This is a learning
environment where knowledge is constructed and connected to previous
experience.
Imagine
a school where children get a firm grounding in academics and use their
knowledge to promote a democratic society. This is a school where issues of
social justice are at the heart of the curriculum so that children may benefit
from the rich history of people who didn’t settle for the status quo. They have
a voice and are confident and skilled innovators and believe in their ability
to lead for good.
Imagine
a school where students collaborate with others around the world learning to
solve issues in an ethical and harmonious manner. Students understand their
ethical responsibility. Imagine a school where service learning around topical
issues forms the core of the curriculum. Students learn about the environment
through meaningful, rigorous real life projects where they are the scientists,
the politicians, the environmental lobbyists, the international relations
experts. This is a school where people are inspired by students being creative,
thoughtful and innovative. Students are generating new thinking around issues
directly affecting the planet. Learning experiences are focused on developing
as well as implementing student-generated solutions to local and issues
students have identified and taken on as a challenge.
Imagine
a place where ‘green’ is actually taught and demonstrated in the school through
overt practices (sustainable buildings, vegetable gardens, water tanks,
monitoring electricity consumption) that are driven by the students at all
levels. Imagine a school where students have full access to technology and are
taught not only how to be media literate but are given the space to create. Imagine
a school where students see no borders. They design environmentally sustainable
buildings, making films and documentaries for others to learn from, posting
projects on YouTube, collaborating with young people and experts across the
globe via social media to solve problems and complete assignments.
Imagine
a school where teachers are engaged in rich discussion around their own
teaching practices; where ideas are shared and thoughtful reflection is part of
the culture. Imagine a school where teachers plan in teams, observe each other
in action and provide useful feedback. Imagine a school where there is a strong
connection between research and practice. This is a place where teachers are
taking cognisance of educational research and applying it to their work, but
are also conducting action research projects around their teaching and other
initiatives. Assessment becomes a performance of understanding through
application of knowledge in real life and novel contexts and self and peer
assessment form an important part of daily learning. Teachers are acutely aware
of the world the students will be inhabiting so they inspire passion,
engagement and relevance. They teach for understanding and transfer so that
knowledge and skills are applied.
Imagine
a school that fosters a culture of inquiry where all learning prepares students
for the now and the future not a world passed by; a culture where curiosity is
instilled and sound moral values are expected and modelled. Imagine a school
where every child has realised their unlimited potential and their capacity to
be good, kind, creative and brilliant; to be a dynamic force for positive
change in the world.
Parents,
students, leaders, educators, imagine.
Picture source: https://angelicview.wordpress.com/2013/04/
No comments:
Post a Comment