In this episode, Sean and Kelly talk about the future. Looking into the past 20 years+ years of teaching and looking back at how we were taught as children, what has changed? Just as our teachers prepared us for our present, how are we preparing our students?
We should no longer try to prepare our students for jobs that may not be there when they enter the workforce. Instead, we should focus our preparation on how they can take advantage of the emerging technologies that are coming into existence. How are we teaching them to look out for the both the dangers and the benefits of Big Data, Machine Learning, social media and robots? What skills are we focusing on that wil lallow them to pivot and prosper in this exponentially changing world?
The future is reliant on what our students of today will create.
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Links:
- Sean Tibor — The personal website of Sean Tibor. Opinions are my own.
- The world’s fastest framework for building websites | Hugo — The world’s fastest framework for building websites
- A whole new world: Education meets the metaverse — The metaverse is upon us. Soon it will be as omnipresent as TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook (now Meta). As technology advances to bring us new immersive and imaginary worlds, how we educate children and prepare teachers must also advance to meet these new opportunities.
- Prospects for children in 2022: A GLOBAL OUTLOOK — In 2021, the Office of Global Insight and Policy (OGIP) produced a medium-term analysis of global trends in support of UNICEF’s preparation of a new Strategic Plan.
- Python Editor for micro:bit — The new Alpha version of the micro:bit python editor
- "No, really. Why coding?" — “Everybody should learn how to code.”
Over the years, you’ve probably seen a million variations on this quote. Let’s challenge this assertion. Why learn to code? What’s in it for the learner? Why should they care? And where do they start?
- Python RegEx Cheat Sheet Updated for 2022 - NetAdmin Reference — This Python RegEx cheat sheet will show you the most commonly used regular expressions that any network or system admin can use as a quick reference.
- Second Life realtor makes $1 million - GameSpot — Ailin Graef--who is better known by the name Anshe Chung--works as a real estate developer. She buys property, develops it, resells it, and uses the profits to buy even more. Her business has rapidly snowballed, and she has just made her first million--although none of the "property" is real.
- Did You Know; Shift Happens - Globalization; Information Age - YouTube — Created by Karl Fisch, and modified by Scott McLeod; Globalization and The Information Age
- Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing - Wikipedia — Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing is an application software program designed to teach touch typing.