The document is a presentation about 21st century learning given in British Columbia in April 2013. It includes slides on topics like the state of the world, the human brain as a learning organism, the relationship between culture and nurture, and the conflict between natural learning and political expectations. The presentation was selectively used depending on the audience, with slides 1-16 providing a personal introduction and slides 17-34 summarizing the brain as a learning organism.
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It's your world to shape
1. The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
www.21learn.org
How to use this presentation;
The set of slides which follow form the basis for some 18
presentations made in British Columbia in the latter part of April
2013.
Those with an asterisk were sometimes missed out, and those from
number 69 onwards were selectively used depending on the interests
of the audience.
際際滷s 1 16 form a personal introduction.
際際滷s 17 34 provide a summary of the brain as a learning organism
際際滷s 35 48 show the relationship between culture and nurture
際際滷s 49 51 show the conflict between natural learning and political expectations
際際滷s 52 58 explore the political dilemma
際際滷s 59 to whatever point the presentation ends including the reserve slides
Nb. 際際滷s 2, 65 and 66 are embedded animations, each of which needs a second click
to activate
2. British Columbia
April,2013
John Abbott, President, The 21st Century Learning Initiative
Its your world to shape, not
just to take.
1
The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
www.21learn.org
4. We have not inherited this world
from our parents,
we have been loaned it by our
children.
Chief Seatle : late 19th century
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5. The task is not so much to see what
no one has yet seen, but to think
what nobody yet has thought about
that which everybody sees.
Schopenhauer, 1788-1860
4
7. The Troubled World of 2013
There are now two and a half times as many people on the Earths surface
as when I was born just before the outbreak of World War Two.
At the most recent count, about 7,000 people (One hundred millionth of the
worlds population) owns more than over 3 billion people, (just under half the
population).
80% of humanity lives on less than $10 a day.
The richest 20% of the worlds population receives 75% of the worlds
income while the poorest 40% receive only 5% or the worlds income.
Of the worlds largest 150 economic entities, 95 are corporations (63.3%).
Wal-Mart, with revenue of $287.99 billion, is the largest corporation on
the planet, and ranks number 22 on the list. The United States is the
worlds largest economy with a total economic output in 2004 of
$11,667,515,000,000.
The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
www.21learn.org
A
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8. David Suzuki, internationally renowned British Columbian geneticist and
environmentalist, born 1936...
...believes that human intelligence and foresight got us into our present pickle by
enabling us to invent such efficient ways of exploiting Nature that our population
growth went into overdrive. Now human intelligence and foresight are all we can
rely on to see us through the tight bottleneck we are fast approaching that
narrowing chasm where far too many people are faced with far too little food and,
very possibly, far too little air.
The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
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9. If civilisation is to survive it
must live on the interest, not
the capital, of nature.
Ecological markers suggest
that in the early 1960s, humans were
using 70% of natures yearly output; by
the early 1980s wed reached 100%; and
in 1999 we were at 125%
Ronald Wright
A Short History of Progress (2004)
9
10. We each see the world from our own perspective.
The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
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And did those feet in ancient time.
Walk upon Englands mountains green:
And was the holy Lamb of God,
On Englands pleasant pastures seen!
Here is mine:
my parents grew up in middle
England in the 20s and 30s
I was born as Britain went
to war with Germany and
bombs fell near my home
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11. My adolescence, and the development
of a Broad Mind
The essential skill is to develop the ability to learn.
However you cant learn how to learn without
learning something. It is much easier to measure
what you have learnt than it is to measure how you
learnt it... Examination results alone dont prove that
you can think straight.
The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
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Derek Pitt, Teacher in the 1950s of A Level History and English, a
keen musician and student of Medieval Art and cricket coach
The roots of civilisation are twelve
inches deep; discuss
(Oxbridge Scholarship question)
12
12. University, and the enthusiasm to
create a better world
Rhum
expedition
1959
Gometra
expedition
1962
University Maiden Eight 1961
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13. From leader of expeditions to being
a Headmaster
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14. So began my search to understand
human learning
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15. The human race is the
planets pre-eminent learning
species it is our brains that
give us our superiority, not
our muscles.
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16. The 21st Century Learning Initiative
The Initiative will facilitate the emergence of new
approaches to learning that draw upon a range
of insights into the human brain, the
functioning of human societies, and learning as
a community-wide activity.
Washington DC
1995 onwards
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17. The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
www.21learn.org
Over 800 lectures
in over 40 countries20
18. The Descent of Mankind
Studies in genetics suggest that the split with the Great
Apes occurred seven million years ago. At twenty years to
a generation that is three hundred and fifty thousand
generations ago, at a minute a generation, this is
equivalent to the minutes we are, on average, awake for
in a year.
In all that time the genetic structure of us humans differs
from the Great apes by less than 2%.
Stone Age Man, on this scale, appeared 60 hours (two and
a half days), while Modern Man, Homo Sapiens appeared
some thirty hours ago, in
Africa, or equivalent to one and a half
days ago.
Each of us is a result of all that evolution.
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19. Mothers and babies need protection for years
hence the need for long term bonding.
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20. The growth of synapses during the first
6 months
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Not until the child is
about three years old
does its brain reach 95%
of structural completion
(that does not mean it
has finished its growth -
far from it for further development involves
removing part of the young brain to enable it to
become more complex)
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21. Tell me and I forget;
show me and I
remember; let me do,
and I understand.
Confucius, 551-479 BC
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How do we learn?
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22. The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
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Probably the earliest
representation of intellectual
thought was the bone
uncovered in France some 15
years ago, covered with a series
of images that archaeologists
and astrophysicists have
identified as the phases of the
moon over a number of nights
as observed from that latitude
32,000 years ago (c. 1,600
generations back.
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23. Babylonian Mathematicians
5,500 years ago (c. 270
generations ago)
The mathematics of space:
60 seconds to a minute,
60 minutes to a degree,
360 degrees to a circle...
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24. Polynesia
...together with their understanding
of the different ocean currents
containing waters of significantly
different temperature and shoals of
different kinds of fish. The skill to do
this is something modern man can
only wonder at...
Apparently the islands of
Polynesia began to be
colonised some 1500 years
ago by people who navigated
entirely on their ability to use
the stars as a chart...
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25. Evolution in Brain
Until the early 19th Century the very best estimate
of the age of the earth had been made in the mid
17th Century which had calculated from the book of
Genesis that the earth had been formed at 4pm on
the 22nd October 4,004 BC. Findings in geology in
the late 18th Century suggested that it really had to
be several million years ago.
Sixty years later in The Origin of Species, Darwin
said, it is not the strongest of the species that
survives, nor the most intelligent. It is the one most
adaptable to change.
Biology at the time lacked any technology that
enabled it to study the structure of the brain at a
scale which could show synaptic development. But
Darwin guessed, psychology will be based on a
new foundation, that of the necessary requirement
of each mental power and capacity by gradation
(evolution). Light will [then] be thrown on the
origins of Man and his history.
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26. Human beings did not fall ready
made from the sky. Many of our
abilities and susceptibilities are
specific adaptations to ancient
environmental problems rather
than separate manifestations of a
general intelligence for all
seasons. (Barrow, 1996)
The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
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The human mind is better equipped to gather
information about the world by operating within it
than by reading about it, hearing lectures on it, or
studying abstract models of it. (Santa Fee Institute, 1995)
Now, in 2013, we understand...
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27. Historical evidence is plentiful for
the first couple of hundred years,
then rapidly diminishes. At the
5,000 year mark visible records
disappear altogether. At the
15,000 year stage humans began
to settle down. Go back to the
50,000 year mark and it seemed
that our slowly evolving ancestors
started to show the first signs of
modern human behaviour.
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28. The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
www.21learn.org
Three different traditions
1) The Judaic-Christian tradition of self improvement, the Book of
Ecclesiastes says, of the writing of books there is no end, and
much study wearies the mind (approximately 800BC)
2) Platonic Thought proposed that philosophers and rulers were
born with gold in their blood, warriors were born with silver in
their blood and farmers and labourers were born with lead. He
believed that nothing in a persons life could change their status.
(428-348BC)
3) The Roman belief in rote learning and
the forcible injection of learning through
the classroom
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29. This began to change slowly
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Roger Ascham, tutor to Queen Elizabeth I and a renowned classical
scholar, sat down in Windsor Castle in the late 1560s to write the
first book in English on education, called The Scholemaster aimed
at correcting the faults of traditional Roman education.
Firstly, he urged cultivation of what he called Hard-Wits rather
than superficial Quick-Wits of those whose memories were good,
but who couldnt work things out for themselves. Because I know
that those which be commonly the wisest, the most learned, the
best men also, when they be old, were never commonly the
quickest of wits when they were young.
Secondly, he urged teachers to be more gentle with their students
and warned them against what he called the Butchery of Laten
go easy on the birch he was saying, for children who only learn
because they are frightened, gain nothing.
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30. Thirdly, Ascham urged that in the attainment of wisdom,
learning from a book or from a teacher is twenty times as
effective as learning from experience because it is an
unhappy mariner who learnt his craft from many
shipwrecks.
Why this extraordinary explanation?
I was once in Italy myself, but I
thanked God that my abode there was
but nine days. I saw in that little time,
in one city, more liberty to Sin than
ever I saw in our noble city of London
in nine years.
Consequently Ascham piously defined
the indisputable role of the school
master as a censor of what their
students should learn.
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31. Behaviourism and JB Watson
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JB Watson (1878-1958), denied that evolution
has any part to play in the understanding of the
human brain. It was all to do with the
relationship between what a teacher put in,
and what a child observed. He believed that
learning should become something that
schools did to you, and quality instruction as
being infinitely more important than
encouraging students to think for themselves.
He believed that childrens minds were putty to
be shaped by well-trained teachers... (the
shadow of this thinking has deadened that
imagination of millions of children and
frustrated a large number of teachers).
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32. Einstein disagreed profoundly
It is almost a miracle that
modern teaching methods
have not yet entirely
strangled the holy curiosity
of enquiry; for what this
delicate little plant needs
more than anything, besides
stimulation, is freedom.
Albert Einstein, 1889 - 1955
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33. In the 1980s cognitive science,
began drawing upon neurobiology
began to undermine the claims of
the behaviourists
Learning does not require time
out from productive activity;
learning is at the heart of
productive activity
Shoshana Zuboff, 1988
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34. (Professor) Baroness Susan Greenfield
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SUSAN GREENFIELD CBE is an eminent neurobiologist
who was appointed Director of The Royal Institution in
London in 1998. Since 1996 she has been Professor of
Pharmacology at the University of Oxford. Her research
concentrates on understanding brain functions and
disorders, such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases,
as well as the physical basis of consciousness. She has
also spoken out about the impact of social networking
sites and the amount of time children and young people
spend in front of computer screens.
Her most serious warning: By the middle of this
century, our minds might have become infantilised -
characterised by short attention spans, an inability to
empathise and a shaky sense of identity,
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36. The complexities of our minds and bodies bear
witness to a long history of subtle adaptation to the
natural world by our innumerable ancestors.
Literally every child is born with a mind and body
that recreates the imprint of the history of our
species.
Neural Darwinism (Gerald Edelman 1987)
or the grain of the brain
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37. Crazy by Design
We have long suspected that there is
something going on in the brain of the
adolescent, apparently involuntarily, that is
forcing apart the child/parent relationship.
Adolescence is a period of profound
structural change, in fact the changes taking
place in the brain during adolescence are so
profound, they may rival early childhood as a
critical period of development, wrote
Barbara Strauch in 2003.
The teenage brain, far from being
readymade, undergoes a period of
surprisingly complex and crucial
development. The adolescent brain is crazy
by design.
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38. Becoming Adult
From the earliest of times the progression
from dependent child to autonomous adult
has been an issue of critical importance to all
societies.
The adolescent brain, being crazy by design,
could be a critical evolutionary adaptation that
has built up over countless generations, and is
essential to our species survival. It is
adolescence that drives human development
by forcing young people in every generation to
think beyond their own self-imposed
limitations and exceed their parents
aspirations. These neurological changes in the
young brain as it transforms itself means that
adolescents have evolved to be apprentice-like
learners, not pupils sitting at desks awaiting
instruction.
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2002
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39. Flow
Neuroscientists, together with psychologists and
evolutionary scientists are starting to show that
youngsters who are empowered as adolescents to
take charge of their own futures will make better
citizens for the future than did so many of their
parents and their grandparents who suffered from
being overschooled but undereducated in their
own generations.
Students who get the most out of school, and
have the highest future expectations, are those
who find school more play-like than work-like.
The 21st Century Learning Initiative -
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Clear vocational goals and good work experiences do not guarantee a
smooth transition to adult work. Engaging activities with intense
involvement regardless of content are essential for building the
optimism and resilience crucial to satisfying work lives.
1997
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40. Dont Fence Me In Cole Porter, 1934
Oh, give me land, lots of land under starry skies above,
Don't fence me in.
Let me ride through the wide open country that I love,
Don't fence me in.
Let me be by myself in the evenin' breeze,
And listen to the murmur of the cottonwood trees,
Send me off forever but I ask you please,
Don't fence me in.
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41. Our enormously productive economy...demands that we make consumption
our way of life, that we convert the buying and use of goods into rituals, that
we seek our spiritual satisfaction, our ego-satisfaction, in consumption... We
need things consumed, burned up, replaced and discarded at an ever
accelerating rate. quoted in The Waste Makers, 1960
On September 14th 2011, half
a century later, the largest
shopping centre in Europe
Westfield Stratford was
opened as the only gateway to
the Olympic Park of 2012; in
floor area it is 20 times that of
St Pauls Cathedral.
British family life is in crisis
proclaimed the Telegraph last
week. It is parents who are to
blame who by working like pit
ponies to house our offspring,
feed them and keep them in with the latest digital cameras and micros scooters, it seems we have
created a generation of miserable children who are wallowing in materialism. We spend 贈7.3 billion
on toys in children's bedrooms, when what they really need is to play outside with friends and family.
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42. If civilisation is to survive it must live on the interest, not the capital, of
nature. Ecological markers suggest that in the early 1960s, humans were
using 70% of natures yearly output; by the early 1980s wed reached
100%; and in 1999 we were at 125%. A Short History of Progress, 2004
The Ultimate Ecological Crisis
50
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43. Asked on 1st January 2000 what chance he gave the world
of surviving the next thousand years, Sir Martin Rees, the
Astronomer Royal and later President of the Royal Society
said; Im not sure about the next millennium but I think I
give us a 50/50 chance of surviving the next hundred
years. I fear that the speed of mans technological
discoveries is outpacing our wisdom and ability to control
what we have discovered
When our first granddaughter was born a year
ago, our doctor said with great pleasure she
has a 25 % chance of living to the age of 100.
For her to do that we have to educate the next
generation to bring technological knowledge
and wisdom together.
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44. So What Now?
Formal schooling, therefore, has to start a
dynamic process through which students are
progressively weaned from their dependence
on teachers and institutions, and given the
confidence to manage their own learning,
collaborating with colleagues as appropriate,
and using a range of resources and learning
situations.
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45. Subsidiarity
It is wrong for a superior to
keep to itself the right of making
decisions for which an inferior is
perfectly capable of doing for itself.
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46. The Political Dilemma
Much to my surprise I cant really fault your
theory. You are probably educationally right;
certainly your argument is ethically correct.
But the system youre arguing for would require
very good teachers. Were not convinced that
there will ever be enough good teachers. So,
instead, were going a teacher-proof system of
organising schools for that way we can get a
uniform standard. Verbatim report of conclusions of presentation
made to the Prime Ministers Policy Unit,
Westminster March 1996
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48. It has been the lack of real understanding about
education and learning amongst teachers that
has allowed successive governments to bully the
profession. Teachers undoubtedly need to
understand the theory of learning. Deprived of a
real understanding of both pedagogy and policy
they are simply parroting the latest curriculum
directives.
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49. The problem is one of Synthesis
Synthesis is the drawing together of ideas, whereas the
essential Western tradition of education is reductionism
reducing complex issues to easily studied separate
bits. The problem with that is that it becomes ever more
difficult to see the Big Picture.
Have you a mind big enough to get around all these
issues and tease out the common threads?
Education is the ability to perceive the hidden
connections between disparate phenomena
(Vaclav Havel, 2000)
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50. Time is going by
"The biggest crisis we are facing is a Crisis of Meaning. The
tremendous social changes of the last 100 years have stripped
modern society of that which gives us meaning be it in our roots to
our ancestors, religions, spirituality, our relationship to nature......
Within this Crisis of Meaning our young people are facing a MORAL
crisis - a crisis of values. Without these anchors young people no
longer understand the value of perseverance, learning for learning's
sake etc.. Instead our daily lives are filled with a pursuit of money
and temporary ecstasy. Both of these goals are
unfulfillable and result in a misguided frenzy in the
pursuit of the next thrill, or in depression.
E-mail from Dr Rolando Jubis, Psychologist and Counselor
Jakarta International School, 11/11/00
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51. ...fears that the ever-growing disconnection of the human race from
the rest of nature is a link that is not only being diminished, it is
being completely eliminated for the first time in the history of our
species. This is going to change the world in a horrible way: what
kind of parents are these zombies going to grow up to be, if they
grow up?
Robert
Bateman:
British
Columbian
painter,
conservationist,
and
philanthropist
(born 1930) ...
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52. Upon this gifted age, in its dark hour,
Rains from the sky a meteoric shower
Of facts....They lie unquestioned, uncombined.
Wisdom enough to leech us of our ill
Is daily spun, but there exists no loom
To weave it into fabric.
Edna St. Vincent Millay "Huntsman, What Quarry"
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53. There is a tide in the affairs of men which,
taken at the flood, leads on to fortune...
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54. ...But omitted, and the voyage of their life
is bound in shallows and miseries...
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55. ... On such a full sea are we now afloat, and we
must take the current when it serves -- or lose the
ventures before us.
William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar, Act 4, Scene 3
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