Technologies such as artificial intelligence, robotics, and biotech are redefining what it means to be human鈥攁nd employable.
Jobs are disappearing as automation replaces the need for people. New occupations are emerging that demand competencies that can transfer across the multiple assignments workers will experience in their lives. The disappearance of global boundaries presents opportunities鈥攁nd risks鈥攆or all workers.
These changes demand a significant, ambitious evolution in how we prepare students for their future in a world that鈥檚 increasingly volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous. We need a relevant and modernized education.
In this special collection of Commentary essays, professors, advocates, and futurists challenge us all to deeply consider how schooling must change鈥攁nd change soon鈥攖o meet the needs of a future we cannot yet envision.
This special section is supported by a grant from the Noyce Foundation. Education Week retained sole editorial control over the content of this package; the opinions expressed are the authors鈥 own, however.
Read more from the collection.
Mass schooling may have served us well so far throughout much of modern history, but the 21st century bears little resemblance to the past. Children today must still learn traditional disciplines such as math and language, but these are not enough if they are to succeed in a very different world. So why not also teach entrepreneurship? Social sciences? Technology and engineering? Wellness?
What should we teach young people in an age where search engines have answers for factual and procedural knowledge? When artificial intelligence analyses, synthesizes, and creates? We must begin by pushing a lot harder to reach 鈥渢ransfer"鈥攖he ability to use one鈥檚 competencies outside an original classroom setting, in the real world, perhaps many years hence. This was always the goal of an education but rarely a deliberate, comprehensive, systematic, and demonstrable focus. In essence, we should be 鈥渇lipping the curriculum,鈥 inverting our focus from information and knowledge into expertise and transfer (refer to chart below).
Further, we need urgent action on the nonacademic qualities young people need for success. And so, we need to shift from a purely knowledge-based education toward a focus on skills (creativity, critical thinking, communication, and collaboration), character (mindfulness, curiosity, courage, resilience, ethics, leadership), and meta-learning (learning how to learn, growth mindset, metacognition). 69传媒 will need to prepare students to find the intersection between these four dimensions of knowledge, skills, character, and meta-learning.
Such a re-imagining of education will require a profound redesign of curricula where modernizing what students learn is an imperative. Where science, technology, engineering, and math matter more than ever, but humanities and arts remain essential, each discipline borrowing from the other for a deeply versatile education. Where skills, character, and meta-learning are developed deliberately and fully, not haphazardly. Where working with others, at school, in the community, and in the workplace is as vital as ensuring growth at every academic level, allowing top students to thrive while assisting all students in the areas where they are struggling.
Time is running out, but luckily, we know how to redesign curricula. We need only the vision and courage to do so.