All posts tagged with Education

An Industry Reborn

Like millions of others, I was watching intently as Steve Jobs unveiled the new IPad.

I’m definitely getting one.  I honestly don’t think I know exactly how I will use it, but I know I will… a lot.

It’s always hard to predict exactly what impact a device like this will have, especially before it’s been in the hands of users.  But one thing I do know is that at least one old, tired industry has finally woken up to a new day.

I’ve blogged about how baffled I am with the textbook industry before.  It’s amazing to me that 10 years after Half.com (and 10 years since the end of encyclopedias), the best that we have is Chegg and its imitators.  And 10, 50, 75 years before that, our grandparents and great grand parents were educated by the same old textbook product used in college campuses today.

But the events of the day made it obvious that those days are finally over.  First was a conversation with my old colleague Bill Rieders, who runs the Digital Business for Cengage Learning.  He really gets the evolving media ecosystem, and even if big companies aren’t always the most nimble, I feel confident that the educational publishers know that the days of expensive paper books are over.  More than ever, I think they are trying hard to be part of a better solution, rather than defending an old one.

Then the iPad announcement confirmed what has already been obvious since the Kindle and iPhone.  Our consumption of content is changing dramatically as the medium through which we consume it changes.  It doesn’t actually matter if the iPad wins, or the Nook wins, or something from a startup wins.  Something different from a laptop will be in the backpacks of millions of kids soon that will be infinitely better suited for delivering an educational experience to students.  And that experience will be incredibly deep and broad, social, interactive, and dynamic.

It’s fun watching an old industry get reborn.  And it’s even more fun when that industry is in the business of enriching the minds and lives of students everywhere.  Talk about change you can believe in!

Can I Sign Up My Daughter for a Singaporean Education?

When I was growing up, my parents were adamant about providing me an “American Education”.  Luckily, I had the means and opportunity to attend an American international school both in the Philippines and Hong Kong, and got a pretty good K-12 education.

However, I’m not sure how attractive an “American Education” really is these days given how the US stacks up against some other countries in areas like Science and Math.  Looks like there may be a lot of other good models out there:

Recently, my brother’s family moved to Singapore (#1 on the list above).  His daughter Rachel is in 4th grade, and while I know that she was studying hard at her old school, Singapore is a whole new level of intensity. An email I got from my brother was particularly interesting:

“Rachel is in the 4th grade, but I would consider her tests to be pretty damn hard. She is supposed to do complex math problems without using algebra.  Just using the “model” method.”
First, I don’t think I did any math problems resembling algebra when I was in elementary school.  Second, I never heard of the model method.  But the more I read about it, the more I was intrigued. I’d always thought that superior performance in math and science in other countries was mainly due to heavy drilling and repetition, not a fundamentally different teaching pedagogy.  The Washington Post had a short article about the Model Method and lessons from the Singaporean education system in general a few months back.  One could probably learn even more by taking a serious look at countries that perform similarly to the US but have much lower per capital GDP (like Lithuania).
This got me thinking.  If we know that the US education system lags other countries in Science and Math why should we be constrained to that system?  Wouldn’t it be interesting to have an after school program modeled after the best practices of education systems around the world?  Or, couldn’t there be an online math and science academy based on the same premise that is a viable and cost effective alternative to private schools?
I’d love to hear everyone’s thoughts, as well as other teaching methods that have been effective in other countries but not widely available in the US.  I think making these available is an interesting opportunity, because national boundaries for educational curriculum should become increasingly artificial.
Rob Go Thanks for visiting my blog! Learn more about me or ask me a question.