1 / 17

Future Trends in Education

Future Trends in Education. Impacts on What We Do And How We Do It. How has public education changed in the last 100 years?. 1914-2014. Have these changed in the last 100 years?. Textbooks? Communicating information to parents? Written communication by students?

drew-clay
Télécharger la présentation

Future Trends in Education

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Future Trends in Education Impacts on What We Do And How We Do It

  2. How has public education changed in the last 100 years? 1914-2014

  3. Have these changed in the last 100 years? • Textbooks? • Communicating information to parents? • Written communication by students? • Times schools are open/closed? • School schedules? • The role of the teacher? • The role of the administrator?

  4. Long Term Trends • Increasing dominance of technology in the economy and society • Expanding education throughout society, throughout lifetimes • Declining middle class; a widening gap between the "haves" and "have-nots" • Increasing metropolitanization/suburbanization • Growth of service-sector employment • Rise of knowledge industries and knowledge-dependent society • Increase in corporate conglomerates and mergers

  5. Long Term Trends (continued) • Increasingly global economy • Shifts in traditional nuclear family; more single-parent families • Increasing personal and occupational mobility • Growing demands for accountability in use of public funds • Increasing concern over privacy • Increasing privatization of government services.

  6. TRENDS TO CONSIDER • Education • Demographics • Technological • Economic • Political • Social

  7. Education Trends • Competition among schools for students, educators and funds is increasing. • Calls for education accountability at all levels are increasing. • More school districts and states are contracting for education services. • The demand for education professionals is rising.

  8. Demographic Trends • "Minority" students are beginning to form the student majority. • School segregation is increasing. • Disproportionate numbers of women and children are filling the ranks of the poor. • The number of senior citizens is growing.

  9. Technological Trends • Investments in technology infrastructure and equipment for schools are expanding. • Technology increasingly is being used to change what happens in the classroom or school.

  10. Economic Trends • Wealth is becoming concentrated in a shrinking elite. • The unemployment rate does not reveal the extent of employment problems. • The demand for technically skilled workers is high.

  11. Political Trends • The call for public accountability is increasing as taxpayers question the spending habits and policies of representative government. • The federal government is continuing to devolve power. • Distrust of the federal government is rising. • Unions are seeking new ways to be effective. • Term limits on governors and state legislators are growing more common.

  12. Social Trends • Consumer behavior is becoming driven by a desire to self-differentiate. • More Americans are espousing the principles of simplicity and community. • Nonprofit organizations are playing an increasingly important role in providing social services. • New social ills are revealing the dark side of progress.

  13. Future Trends in Continuing Education Refer to Handout

  14. Evolution • High compliance • Time-driven • Labor intensive • Subject knowledge • Rote learning, memorizing • Focus on academic weaknesses • Government "owned" and operated • High achievement • Results-driven • Capital intensive • Process knowledge (learning to learn) • Critical thinking • Focus on academic strengths • Government in partnership with interested parties

  15. Evolution • School time • Teacher-centered • Textbook funds • One pace for all • Buildings • Mass instruction • Learning anytime, anyplace • Student-centered • Education resource funds • Different rates and styles of learning • Multiple access points for learning • Personalized instruction

  16. Open Source High School An example of what the future might hold….

  17. Reference Future trends affecting education (1999). Education commission of the states. CO: Denver. Retrieved on November 9, 2010 from http://www.ecs.org/clearinghouse/13/27/1327.htm

More Related