Friday, December 2, 2011

From the Technology of yesteryear

Michael Gove spoke to the Schools Network in Birmingham on 1st december 2011 at the first SSATs conference. He discussed his reforms in terms of school networks in general suggesting that autonomy drives improvement.  He then went on to talk about as he put it 'networks of a totally different kind' the digital network.  The full review is found on the DfE website. But what I liked in particular was a reference he made to a piece in the New Scientist below as it links nicely into the work my 1st years have been conducting over the last few weeks.

 "If you were trying to build an iPhone using equivalent components from the 1980s, asks the author, just how big would that phone be? Running through all the parts - from the antennas to the batteries to the GPS to the gyroscope to the accelerometer to the cameras to the mobile computing capability and more - New Scientist concludes you would need a truck to haul around an iPhone built of 1985 parts. We've gone from an 18-wheeler to a pocket in just 26 years."

Excellent observations but what is more warming, considering the cuts in technology & education that have been made over the short time this new government has been in power, are his closing comments.  He concludes;

The challenge for us is this: how we can harness the many exciting technological leaps that are constantly being made? We will be saying much more early in the new year. Make no mistake: this is a priority for me. I believe we need to take a serious, intelligent approach to educational technology if our children are not to be left behind. As John Chubb and Terry Moe put it in their excellent book on the subject, a genuine engagement with the wondrous world of technological innovation will see children's learning 'liberated from the dead hand of the past.' We owe it to pupils across the country to take this issue seriously. 

I guess only time will tell.

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