Technology & Innovation

Teachers, students and machines

March 03, 2015

Asia

March 03, 2015

Asia
Denis McCauley

Consultant

Denis McCauley contributes to EIU research published on a bespoke basis in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

He works closely with the research directors and editors in each of these regions to improve the insightfulness, relevance and timeliness of their analysis.

Mr McCauley previously directed the company's global technology practice, with responsibility for managing research projects dealing with the impact of information and communications technology (ICT) on businesses and societies.

He is often interviewed by the media, including the BBC, CNBC and Financial Times, for his views on technology industry developments.

A thought piece on the democratisation of education.

Sebastian Thrun, until recently a professor of artificial intelligence at Stanford University, has several major achievements to his name. These include leading the team that developed Google’s driverless car, an invention which looks set to save many lives and disrupt several industries. He is now at the forefront of another revolution, this time in education. In 2011 Mr Thrun and a colleague decided to offer Stanford’s artificial intelligence course online. The response was staggering: 160,000 students in 190 countries enrolled, with 23,000 ultimately completing the course.[1]

Massive Open Online Courses, or MOOCs, have the potential to change the face of tertiary and even secondary education. Mr Thrun is now running Udacity, a start-up that offers MOOCs, and plans to make money by matching employers to qualified students. This new model offers the appealing vision of democratised education, bringing learning to millions of people who would never have the opportunity to attend a university such as Stanford.

The first hint of what was to come emerged in 2002, when the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) started to make its course materials freely available on the web. Many other universities rapidly followed suit. These materials now range from text-based lecture notes to podcasts and vidcasts. The UK’s Open University has a free OpenLearn platform that includes social media for students to discuss course content with each other.

The best-known provider of MOOCs is the Khan Academy, which offers 3,400 online videos and tutorials for some 10m students. A 12-year old in India whose parents cannot afford to send her to school but have some means of access to the Internet can now educate herself online. Some go
on to gain a university place and obtain a further qualification.

In essence, MOOCs provide a way of learning without a teacher being physically present. As Donald Clark, a technology entrepreneur and blogger, puts it: “We are witnessing the 'Napsterisation' of learning—its democratisation, decentralisation and disintermediation.”

Shaking the pillars of learning

Internet-enabled disruption of the type described above is just one factor driving far-reaching, and often unsettling, change across the education sector. Education systems in many parts of the world are coming under pressure from governments and businesses, not to mention citizens, to better prepare students for the workforce. Better performance is being required of teachers in the classroom, of school leaders in teacher and student assessment, of education system leaders in encouraging more cost-efficient school administration, and of all system stakeholders in improving curriculum development and new learning tools. In parallel, greater effectiveness is also required of the "back office" of education—from administrators, IT professionals, bursaries, admissions staff and many others who together create the learning environment.

"Whole system reform" is being pursued at primary, secondary and tertiary levels across the developed and developing world in systems as diverse as those in Singapore, Shanghai, Rio de Janeiro, Ontario and New Orleans.[2]   

As part of these initiatives, instructors, administrators and other staff working in educational institutions are being pressed to integrate new technologies more tightly into the learning and administrative practices they develop. Digitising the supporting business processes of education is also an imperative as many educational institutions become more commercially-minded—partly due to public funding constraints but also to due to greater interest in private schooling. Half of education sector respondents in our survey say their organisation has become heavily reliant on technology in just the past three years—no doubt a reflection of the relatively slow digitisation of schools and other institutions in comparison with that in other sectors.

Given the resistance to change that education systems tend to be famous for, concerns might be expected from educators that technology is constraining the scope for human creativity so necessary for effective learning. The survey suggests otherwise: only a small minority is concerned with a loss of creativity or imagination due to technological progress (although a large number feel that technology stifles open debate and discussion). When it comes to creativity-inducing activities, such as thinking in isolation or brainstorming with colleagues, many more education respondents say that their time spent in these endeavours has increased in the past three years than those who say it has decreased. Almost half—48%, substantially more than other sectors—report that technology has actually freed up their employees' time to be more innovative.

Still, the spectre of classes without teachers, such as raised by the advent of MOOCs, generates opposition from some educators who argue that, in learning, there is no substitute for interaction with a real human being. Indeed, in our survey “teaching classes” tops the list of activities where retaining a role for human imagination and intuition is critical. Developing new teaching materials and practices are also prominent in this list. However, the more likely scenario is that MOOCs, like the emergence of other types of technology-enabled learning, will merely mean that the role of teachers in the classroom will change rather than disappear.

One manifestation of this is the rise of “blended learning”, where students use online learning to complement their formal education: if you don't understand what the physics teacher has told you, then you can probably find a Khan Academy video that explains it better. Some teachers now podcast their own lectures, so that students can listen to them outside of class hours. This in turn is leading to a new model, dubbed the “flipped classroom”: instead of learning in a classroom or lecture hall, the student watches or listens to a lecture online. The classroom session is then used for what was previously homework: putting what has been learnt into practice, but with the teacher there to help and answer questions.

Some educators are concerned that far from learning becoming more democratic, the opposite is happening. Salman Khan, the founder of the
eponymous academy, is a former hedge fund analyst, not an educator, and some worry that the education agenda in future will be set by large
corporations, not teachers or experts in pedagogy. Indeed, what is to stop companies like Google offering qualifications to rival those offered by exam boards and universities?

Others believe such new models of learning are the best defence against "corporatisation". Wim Westera, a Dutch physicist and educational technologist at the Open University of the Netherlands, believes that traditional universities are under threat: “If higher education remains the way it is, with its 19th-century model of lectures, then within ten years we will have Google University and Walt Disney University taking it over.”

Digital teachers

Is it possible to remove teachers from the equation even further? One apparent example of this are South Korean schools that have piloted the use of robots to teach English to schoolchildren. However, the “robots” are really telepresence platforms—teachers based in the Philippines, who communicate via a small screen, with microphones and speakers embedded in the robot. It is a clever, cheap way of hiring foreign teachers without paying their living costs, but it is not yet a genuine substitute for human initiative, and it is not entirely clear whether it adds educational value.

Technological development nevertheless has its own momentum. There are some situations where teachers are being displaced because
technology does it better— in gaming, for example. One advantage of games is that they allow students to be active learners rather than passive ones. Or, as Mr Westera puts it, they can be used for “mimicking authentic tasks and bridging theory and practice, which is one of the biggest problems in education”. He argues that gaming is not a substitute for traditional learning but an improvement on it: “Serious gaming simulations are the richest environments that you can imagine and provide all kinds of mechanisms for optimising learning.”

Many educators await with anticipation the coming on stream of other technology applications that will complement the role of humans in
learning as well as in making educational institutions more efficient. Examples include cloud-computing-based software to help schools reduce the administrative burden. Likewise, cloud-based servers and advanced analytics software can allow students, sited together or at different campuses, to collaboratively analyse large data sets or work on other complex projects.

All this points to a potential revolution in education. As technology takes centre stage, the power of learners to control their own learning increases. In some areas, the direct role of the teacher may be diminished. On the whole, however, teachers' impact on the lives of their students will remain undiminished, and that of the best teachers—who can also master the technologies coming available— should be vastly amplified. Despite inevitable tensions, all signs point to the various forms of teacher-technology-student interaction becoming enriched rather than diminished.

* This article is excerpted from an Economist Intelligence Unit report, Humans and machines: The role of people in technology-driven organisations.
The report was published on 5th March 2013 to coincide with the "Technology Frontiers 2013" summit, hosted by The Economist Events.  Both the report and the summit were sponsored by Ricoh.

[1] For more, see: “Instruction for masses knocks down campus walls”, New York Times,  March 4th 2012.

[2] For a closer look at the extent of education reform efforts under way in different parts of the world see How the world's most improved school systems keep getting better,McKinsey & Co, 2010, and The Learning Curve, a Pearson website created by the Economist Intelligence Unit, http://thelearningcurve.pearson.com.

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