Since Sylvia introduce them to me last year
in H807, I have been looking at these and it's always interesting to compare to
other research going on, like the Towards
Maturity Benchmarking. (what's interesting is that both organisations have
used videos alongside the reports this year.)
Horizon 2012 Key
Trends
People
expect to be able to work, learn, study whenever and wherever they want
to.- The
technologies we use are increasingly cloud-based, and our notions of IT
support are decentralised
- the world
of work is increasingly collaborative, +driving changes in the way student
projects are structured.
- The
abundance of resources and relationships made easily accessible via
internet is increasingly challenging us to revisit our roles as educators
- Education
paradigms are shifting to include online learning, hybrid learning and
collaborative models
- There is a new emphasis in the classroom on more challenge-based and active learning.
Technologies to
watch
- mobile
apps
- tablet
computing
- gesture
based computing
- the internet of things
Interestingly if
you look back over the Horizon report, you will find many of the trends are the
same - which means we are still talking and thinking about the same things. In
2011 electronic books and mobile technology were the technologies to watch, and
you can see how these have moved on to apps. Game based learning has also been
on the horizon since 2005 in some shape or form, alongside the challenge of
digital literacy. It makes one wonder what we have been doing to improve
digital literacy if it has been a challenge for over five years.
I
also took a wider look at the future of learning and what innovation may be. I
came across a number of resources on the European Commission
Institute for prospective technologies.
The future of Learning 2010
is a vision from Teacher of what learning will look like. There are some
interesting insights in the report including:
- Learning
objectives to focus on competencies rather than knowledge
- learning
to be tailored to the needs of individual
- learning
to be more active and connected to real life
- technologies
to be an integrated part of learning and life
- teachers
to become life-long learners themselves.
The
competencies talked about were:
- traditional
basic skills
- communication
skills
- digital
competence
- transversal
(learning to learn, innovation and creativity)
- social
and civic skills
It's
interesting that establishing and developing oneself, living and working with others
and coping with change seem to be prime focus - areas that probably sit comfortably
in the life-long learning sector.
We can't
say that technology isn't changing the way we learn. We have more access to
information and more need to make sense of it - but in an increasingly social
online world, it's interesting that core personal and identity development
seems to be a key driver in the perceptions of teachers. It's also interesting
that some of this echoes the practices of some breakaway educational movements
like that of Montessori.
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