#éducation "il vaut mieux mettre l'accent sur la formation des professeurs que de diminuer la taille des classes"

L'enjeu est de taille. Selon le cabinet de conseil McKinsey, "la qualité de l'enseignement est la clef du succès des systèmes scolaires qui réussissent", lit-on dans son rapport publié en 2007. Dans le même sens, Eric Charbonnier ajoute qu'"à choisir, en période de restrictions budgétaires, il vaut mieux mettre l'accent sur la formation des professeurs que de diminuer la taille des classes".

#futureofeducation A New Culture of #Learning: Cultivating the #Imagination for a World of Constant #Change

We’re stuck in a mode where we’re using old systems of understanding learning to try to understand these new forms, and part of the disjoint means that we’re missing some really important and valuable data.” ~ Douglas Thomas

#Education #WEF #Entrepreneurship should be a required course for every young person in the world. via The World Economic Forum Blog

What I know from my tenure as the CEO of the Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE) is that if you talk to kids from low income communities about money – how to earn it with their own ideas and interests – they are instantly engaged. Their class work becomes relevant in a way they had not previously seen. We need to teach these students essential skills such as critical thinking, problem solving, opportunity recognition and negotiation, along with the required math and reading, so they can adapt to new career options in high-demand fields, or create their own jobs by building businesses, and hopefully employing others.

Entrepreneurship should be a required course for every young person in the world and then we will build an economy of innovators able to adjust to the ever changing global landscape. Seeding the entrepreneurial mindset in as many young people as possible is a vital strategy to a robust and resilient economy for decades to come.

Our best universities have forgotten that the reason they exist is to make minds, not careers: by William Deresiewicz

  1. The first disadvantage of an elite education, as I learned in my kitchen that day, is that it makes you incapable of talking to people who aren’t like you.
  2. The second disadvantage, implicit in what I’ve been saying, is that an elite education inculcates a false sense of self-worth.

Excellent in-depth article

'We need a new generation with far more knowledge, much better skills, and a different mindset' #JFRischard #Education #Change

Jean-François Rischard, a former vice president of the World Bank and the best-selling author of High Noon, told the audience that the world needs a "new generation of students" who are more creative and collaborative in their approach to tackling global problems such as the warming of the planet, poverty, financial instability, water shortages, and biodiversity breakdowns.

The speech was heavy on the global big picture, with charts, diagrams, and lists on a large screen on the stage, but there were not a lot of specifics about how education, and more specifically, educational technology would help solve those problems.

But near the end of the presentation, Rischard called on those in the audience and educators worldwide to engage in the kinds of changes that would help tackle the world's most pressing issues. "We need a new generation with far more knowledge, much better skills, and a different mindset," he said. "This has to come from heads of states, this has to come from you, educators."

He argued that if schools took the approach of creating a more multidisciplinary and multicultural curriculum centered on solving the biggest global problems, the result would be better schools producing more creative, analytical, and collaborative students who would grow up to be far more effective than the present generation of adults in addressing the fast-changing and increasingly complex issues of today and tomorrow.

But, he said, "institutions of education tend to be much more change resistant when they should be the opposite." That comment drew loud applause.

Opening Keynote—Jean-François Rischard
Global Problem-Solving and the Critical Role of Educators and Technology for Education

Sunday, June 27, 5:45–7 pm, Wells Fargo Theatre (simulcast throughout CCC)