Well, there are reports from all around the world that children are not asking questions to people. Or at least if they have to ask a question to a person, they do that after they have asked their phones. Children don't want to learn how to multiply, divide, add, and subtract because they say they already know how to do that. It's done with phones. Children don't want to particularly learn to read because they say there are things that can read out things to them even if they don't know how to read. At the moment, they don't like to write by hand because they want to know why they should learn to write by hand. Will ever do it in the rest of their lives? So what happens in a world where reading, writing, and arithmetic are treated in such a cavalier manner?...In Killingworth, this is a room: it just looks like a nice lounge with computers and an XBox (@XBox) And the teachers, when I built it, they said, 'Sugata, this is a bit too much. Do you have any idea of what they will do with that XBox? They will do nothing else except play with the XBox.' So I said, 'Well, that's our challenge, isn't it?' If you've gone in there to teach Geography and the students are playing with the XBox, it means that Geography is more boring than the XBox. Then we should re-look at Geography, chuck it from the curriculum, or put it into the XBox. Somehow.
Description of the 1st image: Mitra's SOLE learning laboratory in Killingworth, England. Photo located at blog.ted.com. Kildonan and its IP program claim no ownership over the above image.
For a post discussing Mitra's "The child-driven education," please click here.
For a post discussing Mitra's "The child-driven education," please click here.
For a post discussing Mitra's "Build a School in the Cloud," please click here.
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