The third podcast between Amit Pawar and myself in our #eduTechTalks series is now available on Spotify – click below to listen or here to launch.
There is also a FaceBook Page here where you can follow along and get updates on that platform if you prefer.
In this podcast we talk with Don Carlson, the Director of Education for Microsoft in Asia Pacific (who happens to be the boss of Amit and myself!) as he shares his experienced insights into the education sector. In particular, he highlights the shift he has seen where the Ministries of Education now get the reasoning for the “why” they need to digitally transform, and instead are now asking “how” do we do this most effectively.
To achieve this successfully, it must be about the people and not just about the technology.
Enjoy the podcast and please share any feedback or questions in the comments below.
I’m always interested in the results of these types of surveys as they tend to be quite candid coming from teachers with strong opinions about what works and what does not work in their classrooms, especially when it comes to technology. NZ’s own www.educators.co.nz website picked up the results of this survey and published an article on it here.
The key findings identified included:
The biggest factor needed to successfully transform teaching and learning experiences was educator skill sets – particularly being trained to optimise tech in the classroom
1 in 3 respondents believed that they are currently unable to equip students with the skills needed to succeed in the future workplace within their current school curriculum and ways of teaching
The most important skills that educators rank as required for students included problem solving (71%), skilled communication (68%), collaboration with others (61%), digital media literacy (57%) and data analytics & visualisation (56%)
91% of respondents believe students will not be able to adopt to the changing workforce requirements and skills with low digital literacy
The last one is particularly challenging for schools and led to the release of a whitepaper in NZ by Microsoft’s Managing Director Barry Sheers entitled Youth, Technology & Disruption. This is a great read and lays out the key things for schools and teacher training institutes to be considering when it comes to equipping educators to be effective in the teaching of digital literacy/fluency skills.
“Technology cannot replace great teaching but it can make great teachers even better. We are inspired to work with educators, with students, with school leaders, on their journey to redefine learning in and out of the classroom.”