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What Will Education Look Like During the 21st Century? By: Ken Stevenson University of South Carolina.

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Presentation on theme: "What Will Education Look Like During the 21st Century? By: Ken Stevenson University of South Carolina."— Presentation transcript:

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2 What Will Education Look Like During the 21st Century? By: Ken Stevenson University of South Carolina

3 First, What’s Occurring in the US that’s Driving Educational Trends? BIRTH PATTERNS AGING POPULATION FAMILY STATUS VALUE OF AN EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY CULTURE

4 1. Birth Patterns Are Changing 2.1 BIRTHS/FEMALE = ZERO POPULATION THE U.S. –1.7 = WHITES –2.4 = AFRICAN AMERICANS –2.9 = MEXICAN AMERS. –3.1 = PUERTO RICANS

5 Percent children white, Af. Amer., Hispanic - Hernandez, The Future of Children

6 Children of the 21 st Century More diverse in values, culture, priorities Poorer Greater health problems Less home stability Fewer “pre-school” educational experiences Less likely to come to school ready to learn Parents likely were not successful in school

7 2. WE’RE GETTING OLDER

8 U.S. House Committee on the Budget: Facing the challenge of the 21st Century

9 SOME AGE TRENDS FIRST BABY BOOMERS TURNED 50 IN 1996 18 YEAR OLDS AND UNDER ARE NOW 34% OF POPULATION –BY NEXT DECADE THEY WILL REPRESENT 25%

10 3. Family Status Continues to Change 1955, 60% OF HOUSEHOLDS WERE OZZIE, HARRIET, DAVID, AND RICKY TODAY, ONLY 7% ARE –60+% OF WOMEN ARE IN WORK FORCE GROWING EACH YR. 40 OF 100 CHILDREN WILL LIVE WITH ONE PARENT BY AGE 18

11 4. Education Continues to Grow in Importance

12 Education = Employment –13% WITHOUT HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA UNEMPLOYED –LESS THAN 2% WITH COLLEGE DEGREE UNEMPLOYED Education = Quality of Life –FEMALE, SINGLE, PARENT, DROPOUT = 80% IN POVERTY –MARRIED COUPLE, ONE WITH COLLEGE DEGREE, NO CHILDREN = LESS THAN 1% IN POVERTY

13 5. Technology Grows - & Grows! "Since 1984, the country has experienced more than a five-fold increase in the proportion of households with computers," said Census Bureau analyst Eric Newburger, author of Home Computers and Internet Use in the United States: August 2000. "In addition, Internet use is rapidly becoming synonymous with computer availability."Home Computers and Internet Use in the United States: August 2000

14 Technology is in the hands of students: US Census Bureau “A ratio of 9-in-10 school-age children (6-to-17 years old) had access to a computer in 2000, with 4-in-5 using a computer at school and 2-in-3 with one at home.” “About 77 percent of White non- Hispanic and 72 percent of Asian and Pacific Islander children lived in households with computers, while only 43 percent of African American children and 37 percent of Hispanic children did.”

15 6. A Changing Culture PLURALISM AND DIVERSITY “I” GENERATIONS MORE CONSERVATIVE VIEW OF GOVERNMENT FEAR & VIOLENCE

16 Cocooning Ourselves From Reality?

17 How will the Six General Trends Affect Education? Let’s Look at the Possibilities

18 Immediate and Intermediate Trends of the Future: A Baker’s Dozen

19 Trend 1: Disappearance of attendance lines/zones

20 VS. Trend 2: Return to smaller, neighborhood schools Or many smaller in the bigger?

21 Trend 3: Schools develop unique personalities Technology-based curriculum Arts-based curriculum “3r’s-based curriculum

22 VS. New Definition of “Fairness?”

23 Return to the neighborhood: The “Balkanization of America?

24 Trend 4: Continued reduction of teacher/pupil ratios TodayTomorrow

25 Trend 5: Technology dominates schooling throughout the U.S.

26 School: Learning from the “Outside to the “Inside” (Classrooms as staging centers)

27 Virtual Classmates?

28 One Vision: Teachers become technical team managers (Master Teachers) Teacher as “doctor” with the technical support team?

29 Trend 6: Schools become full service agencies Schools will be as much about adult education and service as traditional schooling.

30 Trend 7: The curriculum becomes more narrowly defined – Or, does it? Phys. Ed.? Music? Art?

31 Sight TasteTouch Hearing Smell Trend 8: Schools will be about learning and teaching styles

32 Trend 9: Student as worker Past:Teacher as all-knowing Future: Teacher as facilitator

33 School year will approach 240 days. Trend 10: School time expands: Extended and Year Round School day will Approach 8 hours

34 Trend 11: Paperless Schools

35 Trend 12: Grades will be grouped differently K-5? K-8? K-12?

36 Trend 13: No School? (At least as we now know it??) A “commodity” to be sought at the will and ability of the purchaser? Virtual School?

37 What to do: A) Base decisions on HARD data whenever possible

38 What to do: B) Remember that you never arrive Today’s accomplishments are merely building blocks to the “next” future

39 What to do: C) View schools as community centers for adults and children K-12 Education Adult Education Social Services Health Services Recreation Transportation Services Food Services Contract Business Use

40 What to do: D) Plan and construct schools with the trends in mind Build schools: – that are highly flexible – with security and safety as high priorities – that support technology today – and tomorrow –which are durable –Use of 16 hours daily, year round –That are inviting and important to the community as a whole

41 What to do: E) Scan the environment continuously. Who really knows what’s on the horizon?

42 In closing: Why not create your future?! Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is ours to win or lose. * Lyndon B. JohnsonLyndon B. Johnson Morning comes whether you set the alarm or not. * Ursula K. Le GuinUrsula K. Le Guin


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