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Education Technology

The Future Deconstruction of the K-12 Teacher 352

An anonymous reader writes: English teacher Michael Godsey writes in The Atlantic what he envisions the role of teachers to be in the future. In a nutshell, he sees virtual classrooms, less pay, and a drastic decrease in the number of educators, but thinks they will all be "super-teachers". From the article: "Whenever a college student asks me, a veteran high-school English educator, about the prospects of becoming a public-school teacher, I never think it's enough to say that the role is shifting from 'content expert' to 'curriculum facilitator.' Instead, I describe what I think the public-school classroom will look like in 20 years, with a large, fantastic computer screen at the front, streaming one of the nation's most engaging, informative lessons available on a particular topic. The 'virtual class' will be introduced, guided, and curated by one of the country's best teachers (a.k.a. a "super-teacher"), and it will include professionally produced footage of current events, relevant excerpts from powerful TedTalks, interactive games students can play against other students nationwide, and a formal assessment that the computer will immediately score and record.

I tell this college student that in each classroom, there will be a local teacher-facilitator (called a 'tech') to make sure that the equipment works and the students behave. Since the 'tech' won't require the extensive education and training of today's teachers, the teacher's union will fall apart, and that "tech" will earn about $15 an hour to facilitate a class of what could include over 50 students. This new progressive system will be justified and supported by the American public for several reasons: Each lesson will be among the most interesting and efficient lessons in the world; millions of dollars will be saved in reduced teacher salaries; the 'techs' can specialize in classroom management; performance data will be standardized and immediately produced (and therefore 'individualized'); and the country will finally achieve equity in its public school system."
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The Future Deconstruction of the K-12 Teacher

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  • sage (Score:5, Insightful)

    by One With Whisp ( 3931647 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:31PM (#49556847)

    And who answers questions about the lectures?

    performance data will be standardized and immediately produced (and therefore 'individualized')

    What? How is that individualized in any way? Is this not the very inverse of individualized?

    • better education (Score:5, Informative)

      by harvey the nerd ( 582806 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:55PM (#49556943)
      I got such a "super teacher" module for one of my high school kids (Kentucky Educational TV) with some great demos too. AP Physics B all in one year without the usual introductory Physics course. It was great. The kid worked hard, and switched from music and languages in high school to physics in college.

      However she also had a great physics teacher to help her during lunch. I think it might reduce the local teachers time requirement per student 1/2-2/3, but not the skills. Ultimately the kids may have more equal opportunity to determine their level of education by their own interest, ability and effort in such a system.
      • by GargamelSpaceman ( 992546 ) on Monday April 27, 2015 @10:18AM (#49560573) Homepage Journal

        The biggest problem with education is trying to make a horse drink water - the horses that don't feel like drinking at the moment monopolize the resources of everyone and dictate the techniques used. Everyone is led by the teacher in a ritualistic dance at the end of which, if the dance steps are followed, mastery is supposedly achieved. Those who can be engaged by this kind of thing and dance along with the class do well. Those who don't care to dance are unteachable - labeled dumb.

        When first introduced, compulsory education was compulsory because the compulsion was necessary to force parents to give up the labor of their children so they could be educated. Education was an opportunity, and there were few who would not compel their children to take part if they could afford it.

        Today child labor laws and the general way society is configured make children worthless as labor. Time in school is if anything is the financial equivalent of 'free babysitting'.

        After a certain age it's impossible to keep someone in school and learning if they don't want to be there and the level of compulsory education should therefore be low anyway. K-6 makes more sense to be compulsory than beyond.

        The idea that there should be a diploma at the end of it all and that that diploma should 'mean something' undermines the value of that diploma. By insisting that it certify a minimum standard, we guarantee that the standard is very low. If graduation rate is a priority than that priority is at odds with not only the level of the standard, but the possible level anyone can achieve. Catering to students who don't want to learn deprives everyone else. Dragging people kicking and bucking into education sets people against anything to do with it. The process of having education shoved down one's throat even turns people who would otherwise be receptive to education off to it.

        What would be better would be for a certain number of years of education be paid for, and students can go as far as they want. They don't get a diploma, they get a transcript. They learn basic skills, not because they must, but because they are prerequisites to a class they are interested in taking. They want to pass for lots of reasons, such as peer pressure not to be the oldest kid taking the class, but also because they want to take some other class. If someone is behind in some area they can concentrate their efforts there.

        Grades aren't important. Make classes pass/fail but keep the standard for passing high enough that students who pass have demonstrated enough understanding to succeed at the next level. Students who excel would have a broader transcript, or complete the courses offered early. But there is no need to penalize someone who struggles in a certain area if they have demonstrated mastery eventually. If they have truly mastered whatever it is, then they should be as able as anyone else who has mastered it to apply it in the future.

        Can older, engaged kids benefit from well produced virtual classes? Sure. Will fourth graders watch the screen intently enough to learn Long Division? Will a 'tech' necessarily be able to answer a frustrated student's questions in a helpful way? If they can, then they aren't too bad at teaching... Couldn't they conceivably do as well as the video teacher? Yep, better probably. And does the video get paused every time one of the kidnergarteners has a question? Does it then become impossible to engage with?

        That's one of the problems with the ritual dance method of teaching. Everyone brings certain things to the table before the class. It's hard not to fall asleep and miss the stuff you need to hear, or waste your energy doing useless ( for you ) dance steps and be too tired from that to learn anything difficult. It's better to be engaged in learning and spend your time on the stuff you don't know. When people do this they apply the sharpest edge to their problems and tend to cut through difficulty like a laser.

        School should make that possible.

    • Re:sage (Score:4, Insightful)

      by msauve ( 701917 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:59PM (#49556947)
      "And who answers questions about the lectures?"

      Yep. And if most students can learn simply by watching videos and then taking tests, why have school at all? They can do that at home.

      Good teachers are much more than subject matter experts - they're sociologists and mentors. Those roles can't be done by some national "super teacher."
      • by nbauman ( 624611 )

        "And who answers questions about the lectures?"

        Yep. And if most students can learn simply by watching videos and then taking tests, why have school at all? They can do that at home.

        Why have videos? They can read books.

        That's what Feynman did with his lectures.

      • Good teachers are much more than subject matter experts

        What's with this dogma that teachers are subject matter experts? Yes, I have had some teachers that knew their subject and were enthusiastic about teaching it. But that wasn't the rule. I attended two different high schools, and my children attended a third. It varies. Some teachers are outstanding, some should be fired with prejudice -- and the quality of the teacher has no impact on the compensation that the teacher receives.

        • by Wycliffe ( 116160 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @09:02PM (#49557443) Homepage

          and the quality of the teacher has no impact on the compensation that the teacher receives.

          I think this is the real problem and unfortunately it doesn't get much better in college. In college you could have a professor
          that was terrible and EVERYONE told the dean he was terrible but even then they didn't do anything about it. And it
          wasn't just tenured professors. Even TAs got this insane treatment. After complaining about a TA that couldn't
          teach and could barely even speak english, the dean actually told me that many foreign TAs were hired before they
          ever set foot on campus and that once they got hear it was too late to do anything about it. What??? You can't fire
          someone that can't do their job? Name one other non-government, non-union job where someone can't be fired for
          sucking at their job.

          I think probably the only way out of this mess in elementary school is with school vouchers and private schools.
          At least then the schools would have to compete and hopefully the bad schools that let bad teachers stay would
          run out of business when they ran out of students. That being said, you have a choice in college and there still
          tended to be some politics that let some bad teachers keep their jobs.

      • Those roles can't be done by some national "super teacher."

        The other problem is who decides the criteria for being "super"? Different people find different teachers effective. For example I know that Feynman was regarded by most as a "super teacher" but I hated his books and found his explanations needlessly complicated and far more confusing than most other textbooks. In short I found him a terrible teacher. I realize I'm in the minority with that but the point is that not everyone will agree on who a super teacher is because different people learn differently.

    • by nbauman ( 624611 )

      And who answers questions about the lectures?

      They'll tell you to look it up on Google.

    • Re:sage (Score:5, Insightful)

      by pepty ( 1976012 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:17PM (#49557017)

      The 'virtual class' will be introduced, guided, and curated by one of the country's best teachers (a.k.a. a "super-teacher"), and it will include professionally produced footage of current events, relevant excerpts from powerful TedTalks, interactive games students can play against other students nationwide,

      "will contain whatever buzzword content sounds good regardless of its impact on understanding of geometry, grammar, US history, chemistry, foreign languages, or coding" more like.

    • Re:sage (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:40PM (#49557115)

      What? How is that individualized in any way? Is this not the very inverse of individualized?

      HIs "vision" of education is silly. If the kids are watching a recorded lecture, there is no reason for them to be assembled in one place, and there is no reason that they should all be watching the same lecture. It will be individualized by letting each student progress at their own pace. Except we already have that. It is called Khan Academy [khanacademy.org], and while it works well for bright, motivated students, it leaves the dumb, unmotivated students even further behind.

    • by Kohath ( 38547 )

      The FAQ. If a million students see the same lesson, how many genuinely unique questions would be asked?

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      So who supervises the children, who ensures they play well together, who ensures they learn life and citizen lessons, who ensure the actually learn the material. Let me guess armed guards with tasers and handcuffs, they are really fucking cheap and hell, when it comes to the US the will be more than ample law enforcement types who would switch to school enforcement in order to 'play' with the kiddies, hell there would a whole bunch of pseudo conservative, pseudo religious types who would pay to play.

      Qual

    • "And who answers questions about the lectures?"

      Why should they be questioning anything?

      We have spent a lot of millions on those super-teachers and then more millions on licensing the products from the tech corporations that support all this show. They know better!

      Remember, poor bastard: we are not educating here: that's for the real people aka "The Rich".
      We are nurturing minions!

    • And who answers questions about the lectures?

      NY has "solved" this with EngageNY. This is a series of modules that the teachers are required to use to teach their subjects. The modules say just what they are supposed to teach, how they are to teach it (both method and emotion used), the exact wording they must use, the questions that students should ask, and the responses that the teachers should give. It's an exact script so actual teachers aren't really needed anymore, just glorified actors. Which means

  • by DanDD ( 1857066 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:33PM (#49556857)

    Wow, sounds like "one size fits all" to me. What a dismal world.

    Some kids do great with books and classroom materials. Others of us excelled with a rapid flurry of hands-on programming and lab exercises, with healthy doses of welding, machining, soldering, and troubleshooting.

    This sounds like a dismal future for public school, and a bright opportunity for private & charter schools.

    • "and the country will finally achieve equity in its public school system."

        As if the inequity was due to the books. When they figure out how to motivate the parents equally, then they might get somewhere on the equal results front.

    • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @09:05PM (#49557465) Journal

      We may not have flying cars, but we already have a one-size-fits-all educational system. Mainstreaming, where slower learners and those with reduced cognitive function are added to classrooms (with and without aids, depending on severity) brings up the bottom, and all but the brightest on standardized are discouraged from entering "gifted and talented" programs. Teaching is aimed at producing the maximum number of passing grades on standardized tests.

      The top and bottom 2% are weeded out - charter schools or G/T at the top, traditional special ed for those who will never achieve. The other 96% are lumped together and the teacher is salary-bound to make as many of them pass as possible. That means standardized worksheets and test prep pretty much from day one. The result? The bottom 10%, which would require extraordinary help to pass, are dropped as a waste of effort, the next 30% get most of the attention to try and get them to make the grade, and the rest of the class pretty much floats for the year with little or no real instruction because they learn well enough from the books and videos to get a passing grade. Anyone in the top 30 percentile points is bored to tears.

      There are exceptions to this, of course. Some teachers put in lots of extra time and effort, others are the truly gifted teachers who weave engaging lesson plans and get the kids interested enough to retain the knowledge and pass the tests without crazy drilling. But, for the most part, when your job depends on hitting a number and there's no accounting for whether you have the smart class or the dumb class you're going to get a rhythm down and stick to it. At least if the test scored come back poor, you can open you planner and show all the drills and fact sheets you went over showing you covered the material.

      It's pretty damned sad.

      (Oh, and as for private schools...have you seen the cost? It's unlikely a family with 2 children who aren't in the top 10% of wage earners are going to be able to afford 12 years of private education. The opportunity is there, but the consumers to support it are pretty thin.)

  • by jedidiah ( 1196 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:35PM (#49556859) Homepage

    I dunno. I'm not an educator, but I'm pretty sure that when I was in school that there was more to the class than just the lecture. I don't think you can just roll a copy of something from "The Great Courses" and declare yourself done.

    I would be very worried about any teacher that would reduce their own job to that.

    • by Chris Katko ( 2923353 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:03PM (#49556965)
      In otherwords, morons are leading morons in the great education debate. Classrooms are failing to teach huge amounts of children because we've decided "one learning method is better than all, and any kids who don't succeed must be broken." and now we're going to take that to the point that it's literally impossible to do anything but put the big glowing screen on and let the last of our kids brains melt away.

      Between the stupidity of "leaders" in teaching, and zero tolerance insanity, homeschooling or private schooling my children looks better and better every day.
      • by cas2000 ( 148703 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:27PM (#49557049)

        not necesarily morons, just slaves to fashionable management ideology.

        what's pushing this is the management class's absolute loathing of skilled individuals. they demand that every worker be a replacable component and they simply don't care that that means loss of productivity through loss of experience, skill, and talent.

        they have this attitude towards workers in education and every other industry - whether for-profit or not-for-profit. it's what they're taught, and it's what they believe.

      • by Rhys ( 96510 )

        Look and see if you have local Montessori schools. We're big fans of our local preschool + K classroom, and hope he can get into the school proper (but its new, and small relative to the preschool -- the headmaster though is awesome to talk to and seems to really know his stuff and have good but kind control of the class.)

      • by jasenj1 ( 575309 )

        "Between the stupidity of "leaders" in teaching, and zero tolerance insanity, homeschooling or private schooling my children looks better and better every day."

        Homeschooling rocks. You can do everything from completely pre-canned video courses online to doing everything via cobbled together public domain content.

        Of course, your child(ren) and whoever does the teaching must take to it. But if it works, it works quite well.

    • by nbauman ( 624611 )

      I dunno. I'm not an educator, but I'm pretty sure that when I was in school that there was more to the class than just the lecture. I don't think you can just roll a copy of something from "The Great Courses" and declare yourself done.

      I would be very worried about any teacher that would reduce their own job to that.

      This reveals my age, but I remember when I was waiting in my home room in the morning and some of the kids in the back of the room were excited about something.

      A kid had just built one of the first transistor radios from schematics.

      I saw a transistor for the first time.

      It was not in the textbooks.

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
      The larger hole you missed was having fewer "super-teachers" and the super teacher does more and is paid less than today's teachers. If they are so "super" why are they paid even less than today?
  • by toonces33 ( 841696 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:37PM (#49556865)

    Say some kid doesn't quite get what they were talking about in the lesson, and has additional questions. Where would that kid go? The local tech wouldn't be of any use - the kid's family would need to hire an outside tutor or some such. And if the family can't afford a tutor, well that's too bad.

    • Say some kid doesn't quite get what they were talking about in the lesson, and has additional questions. Where would that kid go?

      To the FAQ page?

      Seriously, while I doubt very much that educator is going to disappear, a great deal of the raw information is quite susceptible to computerization.

      The most important thing you need a teacher for at that level is the socialization skills - we have less need of well-educated psychopaths than you might think (other than politicians and such, of course)....

      • Is education about information, or about skills (in the subjects, but also meta-skill at learning in a classroom and by oneself, plus handling deadlines/difficulties/failure/criticism/success...) + socialization w/ peers, teachers, admins, gurlz,... ?

      • by plopez ( 54068 )

        What if the kid can't read? Is disabled ot live in some backwater like Appalachia were ignorance is a virtue.

  • Wow total distopia (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:38PM (#49556869)

    This is the stupidest thing I have seen all day, all week, all month.

    Leave education to the professionals please. Pay more and hire better folks.

    • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

      Even if you're just "rolling a tape", you still have to manage the students. The "educator" is not just devaluing his own job but that of the tech. In all likelihood, the "tech" could probably get a better job somewhere else. The catch about the tech is he/she would need to be able to troubleshoot.

      The same is kind of true of the "student management" aspect of the task. This "educator" seems to be just assuming that everything will go as easily as possible (both the tech and the cat herding).

      If anything this

      • In all likelihood, the "tech" could probably get a better job somewhere else.

        You are forgetting the craze to make everyone in the country an I.T. Guru/ Rockstar Coder and if there is any shortfall fill gap with bodies from whatever the low wage country du jour is.

    • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:12PM (#49556999)

      This is the stupidest thing I have seen all day, all week, all month.

      Leave education to the professionals please. Pay more and hire better folks.

      Pay more?

      Tell that to the taxpayer , and maybe you'll remember why we're having this discussion.

      • The taxpayer pays plenty for education.
        The problem is they don't get the product they pay for.

        • The taxpayer pays plenty for education. The problem is they don't get the product they pay for.

          The taxpayer has the same problem with government.

          I wonder which problem stands a better chance.

          • I would gladly pay more to get less government .

            • by dryeo ( 100693 )

              Be careful what you wish for. Usually the parts of government that is cut is the part that serves the people. Emergency services, food inspection, road and bridge inspection etc. Meanwhile the parts that infringe on peoples rights are expanded, there's always more money for the spy agencies, the prison industry (who are promised X number of prisoners), and hundred dollar hammers from the Congress-mans/Mayors buddy.
              You are right about spending more money though

      • by AK Marc ( 707885 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @11:11PM (#49557927)
        Last I looked, the taxpayer paid about $3 for every $1 spent on education. Unfunded mandates like NCLB and such take most of the money. The rest of the non-classroom money goes mainly to facilities.

        The problem isn't price, it's value. Public education is cheaper than most private education. All the conservative studies that show it expensive look at education-only schools (the ones that have the facilities provided out of a separate budget, and no government oversight, so almost no compliance costs). When you look at it with those constraints, private should be about 1/3 the cost of public. But it fails even then. Public is more effective and cheaper, in most cases.the government is always cheaper and more effective (like the IRS and Social Security), but the complaints are with the conservative legislators who saddle the department with stupid rules, not their ability to execute them.
  • Ahh, the telescreen from Orwell's 1984 [wikimedia.org] will finally be installed in all classrooms, feeding only appropriate knowledge into the young minds who know better than to ask questions anyway.

    Now if you'll excuse me, I think now is an excellent time for a Two Minutes Hate!

  • If we do this, we'll achieve equity by destroying the entire system and smearing the remains into an inch-high paste, using BS like this as a binding agent. Meanwhile, the children of the highly paid "super-teachers" will probably go to traditional private schools, just like the children of the rich do now.

  • by Skarjak ( 3492305 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:44PM (#49556897)
    At a time when we are realizing that students aren't all the same and we need to adapt our teaching strategies to each of them, this dude brilliantly claims that the future is to sit them all in front of a screen with no support. We need to hire more teachers, not less. Size of classroom is one of the most important variables for the effectiveness of teaching.
    • ...Size of classroom is one of the most important variables for the effectiveness of teaching.

      Why is it when we attend free public school we demand an effective teaching scenario, and yet when we shell out $20,000/year to attend college, we don't mind watching that student/teacher ratio turn to shit as we sit in a single classroom full of hundreds of students and pay dearly for such ineffectiveness?

      A shitload of dead-broke, well-educated minds want to know.

      • Those lectures with hundreds of students were, at least in my experience, often followed by much smaller workshops or labs with the instructor's graduate student assistants. That's typically when you got your questions answered in more detail. Also, at the collegiate level, I suppose instructors figure that students should need a bit less hand-holding at that point. It's not all that dissimilar to tech conferences at the professional level. You generally only get the high points and broad brush strokes

    • by ranton ( 36917 )

      At a time when we are realizing that students aren't all the same and we need to adapt our teaching strategies to each of them, this dude brilliantly claims that the future is to sit them all in front of a screen with no support. We need to hire more teachers, not less. Size of classroom is one of the most important variables for the effectiveness of teaching.

      He is talking about 20 years from now. Technology has a habit of changing at an accelerated rate, so to envision what technology will provide in 20 years it is probably better to compare today's technology with 1975 tech. So take a look at Siri and Cortana compared to voice recognition and natural speech processing in 1975. Take a look at the amount of information is retrievable in Wikipedia with what existed in an Altair 8800.

      Imagine going back to 1975 and describing the world wide web, ordering on Amazon,

  • I describe what I think the public-school classroom will look like in 20 years,

    A grab bag for corporate interests to get the advertising message right into classrooms and capture the market at its youngest and most impressionable through a hodgepodge of incompatible proprietary technologies put there by uninformed school departments and selected from a pork barrel of suppliers who paid the biggest lobbying fees to the politicians responsible for ensuring the "very best for growing young minds".

    • by solios ( 53048 )

      My high school had something like that [wikipedia.org] in the 90s. It was a cheap way to inject advertising into a completely captive audience under the guise of "educational" programming.

      Viewing was initially mandatory but early in eleventh grade I unplugged the damned thing so I could study and the response from the teacher and the rest of the class was a mix of acceptance and relief. That year the school was running the thing first and third lunch (lunch being three 30 minute periods) which meant our class got it twic

  • So, basically, it's going to be just like school is today, except the teachers will be working remotely?

    I suspect that veteran teacher has been doing it so like that he can't get outside of the box and imagine education without classrooms, schools, or even structured classes.

    I think the future is going to look a lot more like home schooling (possibly in groups to get around the whole school-as-babysitter issue that allows parent to hold jobs) than anything close to the institutions teachers currently work i

  • by chiasmus1 ( 654565 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:52PM (#49556933) Homepage

    There was an idea to do something related not too long ago. Universities and Community Colleges panicked and thought all of their students would leave in the future and move completely online. MOOCs would traditional education.

    The reality is that not all people want to learn that way. The Slashdot crowd might be able to be completely successful watching a screen and talking to an in-class "Tech", but most people are not like that. Many people attend community colleges and smaller universities because they can ask questions and get answers in a much smaller and personal setting.

    If this idea had true mass potential, it would have happened already and community colleges would already be gone.

  • And Drum Machines (Score:4, Insightful)

    by dcollins ( 135727 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @06:53PM (#49556935) Homepage

    What this most reminds me of -- A drummer friend of mine was told, as a teenager by an older adult drummer in the 80's, not to take up the instrument because in the future all drumming would be done by electronic drum machines.

  • I'm putting this guy's speech on the level of this. Compare and enjoy [mentalfloss.com].
  • by Peter H.S. ( 38077 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:10PM (#49556993) Homepage

    This won't work at all. One of the most basic requirements of teaching is that your teaching level correspond to those you teach; aim to high and you loose them because they don't understand, aim to low and you loose them because they are bored. Having one "super teacher" yapping one-way lectures from a giant screen without the "teacher" knowing what his pupils can, is simply a lost cause when it comes to engaging and teaching the pupils.

    And why the giant screen? Why not having each pupil following an individual course on individual screens instead of forcing everybody to follow the same course. And why the classroom at all if its only function is to supervise discipline among the inmates/pupils.

    (Why not just strap the pupils to a chair in their home and force feed them lectures through Occulus rift headsets and noise-cancelling headphones; it is easy to motive the pupils through reinforcement stimuli like tasing them gently if they have wrong answers. This will be very cheap and is guaranteed to produce marvellous results.)

  • by Ethan Bernard ( 2954293 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:11PM (#49556997)

    "...relevant excerpts from powerful TedTalks..."

    I threw up a bit in my mouth when I read that.

    • by Livius ( 318358 )

      He did say 'powerful' TedTalks, so we really can't judge until they have some of those.

  • That does not make sense. If you want to attract great talent, offer great pay. Isn't that what we say in the private sector? If it is true then teachers need more money, not less.

  • I'm not sure being a high school teacher counts as being a 'content expert,' and based on the teachers I've known, I'd guess a low percentage of teachers have particularly deeper knowledge than whatever textbook they are teaching from.

    Being a teacher at the high-school and elementary school level is more about classroom management and communicating the ideas, not about being an 'expert.'

    Also, good luck finding someone you can pay $15 an hour to fix computers and take care of a classroom full of kids.
  • Somebody thought of something very similar back in the early 1960s. Put the best lecturer in the school system in front of the television and sit the kids in the auditorium so they can watch and listen. The Miami-Dade County schools tested it for junior high school, using it for civics class in 9th grade and I forget what in the 7th and 8th. About two-thirds of the kids had the television course, and the rest of us had standard instruction. It was a complete disaster. The kids were wild at the best of time
  • ...that this giant screen will be streaming the very best, most informative lessons available, from subject experts around the world. While I see it streaming whatever commercially-laden content can be produced by the lowest bidder, or whichever church has the largest voter turnout in the school board elections, or whatever company has a CEO that golfs with the secretary of education.

  • The very last jobs to be automated will be those requiring human interaction. This is what 95% of what a teacher's job is. People who make this prediction are woefully out of touch and think of teachers as mere babysitters. Schools are where kids learn to interact with other people, and in essence, what it means to be human. What exactly is the minimum-wage tech going to do when a child refuses to do their work? What will they do wen a child starts crying because other children are bullying them? When
  • If that vision comes to pass, then our education system will have imploded and we'll be producing generations of uneducated students.

    I cannot think of a single person who hasn't had one or two teachers who've made a huge difference in his or her life. And I cannot think of a single child who would prefer a screen to a living human being. What a pile of hogsh*t.

  • there's too much money at the county (parish) level to reduce employment. public schools make up a majority of the full-time jobs in 50 counties of my state. the teachers (unions) provide political pressure/support across the board. yes, reducing teacher head-count might make rational sense. politically, nope.
  • by Toddlerbob ( 705732 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:41PM (#49557127)

    The TFA is an excellent example of that fraction of the population who has no idea what a K12 teaching job actually entails, but somehow thinks they understand it completely. As one of the respondents in this thread (who did understand it) put it, real teaching jobs will be one of the last to go, as they entail interaction between human beings. It's in the interaction that the best teaching happens. That's why K12 classes need to be smaller, and not like my 200+ member Biology 1 lecture at university forty years ago.

    • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @09:23PM (#49557533) Journal

      Unfortunately, that is the crux of the problem. The cost of any service or product that requires real human interaction is skyrocketing when compared to other fields. Every technology sector job is based on one human producing a product which will be used by thousands to millions of people with almost no incremental cost. Electronics are assembled more and more by machine. Mineral exploration and energy production is becoming automated. Factory farming and staple goods production is the culmination of 200 years of industrial revolution efficiency.

      Look at anything where costs are increasing fast and you'll find people - one on one interaction - is at the root. Unfortunately, public education is under the thumb of reduced municipal revenues at a time when more and more is expected. We can't go back to a one room school house and school finishing up at a 3rd grade level for 90% of the population, which is where much of the current "overtaxed" public seems to feel we should go.

      I don't see this ending well.

  • by stevebyan ( 806118 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:50PM (#49557177)
    Hugo Gernsback wrote an editorial advocating a similar idea in the May 1956 issue of his "Radio-Electronics" magazine as a solution to the educational needs of the USA to produce enough technicians and engineers to defeat the Soviets in the technological arms race. See page 33 in the PDF scan of that issue at AmericanRadioHistory.com [americanradiohistory.com].
    "THE ELEMENTS OF TELEDUCATION"
    "... The threat to our future can be met ..."
    (snip)

    "In short, without going into details, this is the way the proposed system, outlined by the writer in 1945, works:

    "From a central point or points the best technical and science teachers in the land instruct via large wall projection color television AA the classes in the land. If the instructor of the moment is at Yale, the rest of the country is connected to that point. The next lecture may come from MIT in Massachusetts, from Caltech in California or from any other point because all institutions of learning are tied in to the national teleducation closed-circuit hookup. Such lectures will not be merely talk. The teacher - be he a physics, chemical, electrical or electronics professor - will instruct directly from the laboratory all important experiments and make clear any technical point by actual physical demonstration."

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Which failed. All attempts using more modern technology have also failed. I can conclude conclude that some group of educators is insane: They are trying the same thing over and over again and expect a different outcome. It may also be a factor, that the "Peter principle" was discovered in the educational field and only latter found to apply elsewhere as well.

  • The student loans will be so high that mc'ds is a better job.

  • Recipe for failure (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ortholattice ( 175065 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @07:53PM (#49557185)

    My step-daughter was literally math-illiterate upon entering college - very poor math SATs, couldn't multiply 1-digit numbers without a calculator, and didn't know that a+b commutes but a-b doesn't. I spent several hours a day 3-4 days a week with her, and through tremendous effort and lots of tears she earned all A's in Calculus 1 and 2 and Statistics. There is simply no way she could have even passed without my help (and a boost of self-motivation by a short stint in the real world earning near minimum wage with no college degree and no future).

    Rich people will hire tutors to do the same thing. Poor people can't afford to and rarely have anyone like me around to help. So the rich will get ahead regardless of ability; other than a few exceptionally talented ones, the poor will get further behind, continuing the cycle of failure and poverty.

    There is something about individual interaction that can't be duplicated with a computer or projection screen. A 50-to-1 student/teacher ratio with little individual one-on-one instruction is going to make things much worse.

    • And what about the need for people to think independently? Who's view of history and current events will be taught? Where will children learn the skills to create and innovate from a video screen?
  • No different than when the "talkie" was expected to revolutionize education. The thing that drives teacher count and pay is the need to adapt the education to individual pupils.

    Moreover, if the Tech doesn't have any child skills, it will likely be a 1:20 ratio, and you are right back at $1/student hour just for the tech.

    Change needs to happen, but the most economical solution is parent involvement.

  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @08:33PM (#49557335)

    No one will listen to recorded, broadcast lessons. They want a live teacher giving a lecture.

    They tried that with sports and no one watches sports broadcasts. Everyone goes to a local game instead, even though the local performances aren't as good as the best athletes in the world.

    They tried that with dramatic performances, and no one watches movies. Everyone would rather go to a community theater performance.

    They tried that with music, and no one listens to pre-recorded music. Everyone would rather listen to a live performance.

    Recorded content and broadcasting are a fad.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @08:52PM (#49557409)

    This has been "envisioned" time and again for at least half a century. It always fails. Sure, most teachers are not really good, but as it turns out, they are a lot better than a good one on a TV screen. Distance education works only for those that can also self-learn. That experience has been made by distance educators time and again, whether snail-mail and paper, email, TV, videos or interactive virtual classrooms were used. For most peoples, an educator that is not physically there does not cut it.

    This whole thing is only intended to make education a lot cheaper, not better. And it fails at that.

  • by jim_deane ( 63059 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @09:11PM (#49557483) Journal

    Every technical revolution in education since Edison's wax cylinder phonograph or prior has been prophesied to replace classroom teachers.

    A brief list:
    The Gutenberg press.
    Edison's phonograph.
    Classes by mail.
    Voice radio.
    Television.
    Two way video.
    Multi user computer terminals.
    Microcomputers.
    Multimedia software.
    The internet.

    This too will become a minor fad, blossom, fade, and find a very minor place in the ongoing art of education.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday April 26, 2015 @09:42PM (#49557617)
      that the author is pointing out is that it'll be incredibly profitable to run these sorts of "schools". Sure, they won't work. But who cares so long as the money keeps flowing in. And what alternative will you have? Unless you're rich there won't be any. Sure, some of the /. crowd might realize that's morally wrong, but the rest of America will continue to blame themselves. It's something we do a lot of and goes back to that whole puritanical self flagellation thing that's been buries in our skulls.
  • I describe what I think the public-school classroom will look like in 20 years, with a large, fantastic computer screen at the front, streaming one of the nation’s most engaging, informative lessons available on a particular topic. ...And I stopped. This guy doesn't get it.

    You could have the most engaging, informative lesson on the face of the planet, and kids may still not listen to it. Maybe they didn't get much sleep last night. Perhaps they ate at McDonalds for breakfast and have a sugar rush. Sometimes they feel depressed, because they just broke up with their significant other. Maybe the topic is about mathematics, a subject that's just difficult to understand. There's a possibility the student is dyslexic. And this is not even the tip of the iceberg.

    Generally, humans need inspiration, and they are best inspired by other humans, education no exception. There is a small subset of students who possess enough initiative and tenacity that, even at a young age, they find success by their own merits. But the majority of students face challenges that interfere with their motivation to learn. They need to be coached through these challenges, actions requiring insight into the human psyche, something computers have yet to achieve.

    To draw a parallel, do we yet see any high school sports teams being coached by a computer? Shouldn't a computer be better equipped to analyze plays, to determine strengths and weaknesses of players, and to determine strategies that have the greatest probability of success? What does the coach have that the computer doesn't?

  • never going to fly. Why? Because it sounds too much like everyone gets the same quality of education in that scenario. Rich and upper middle class families don't want that. Why? Because they paid lots of money to buy a home in a neighborhood with other wealthy home owners. High value homes pay higher property tax and more property tax means more money for schools. Which means that Jr. gets an unfair advantage (one of many, but that's another issue) over kids in less wealthy families. And the folks with mone

  • Must be a freak wormhole. This sounds like 1950s view of the future of education that didn't happen and we look back on and laugh at.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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