All Doom and Gloom for New Generation of Learners?
In a recent interview, Mark Surman, CEO of the Mozilla Foundation, pointed to the "diversification and democratisation" of teaching on the Internet and, as the creator of the largest social enterprise on the web, he can only greet it with enthusiasm. But what happens to traditional academia and expert educators – for centuries the guiding light of education – in a world where everyone is a learner all of the time and knowledge flows in all directions?
For Surman, there will always be a place for the expert in this new world order. "We need traditional teachers," he affirms. "MOOCs have a role to play there," he says, but also states that, "the real opportunity is that there are other ways to learn."
Who holds the reins of power, whether it’s the teachers or learners, and what they do with it, is a subject that deeply concerns him. On the subject of ONLINE EDUCA BERLIN’s twentieth anniversary conference and the years ahead for eLearning, he says, "the next couple of decades hold both great potential and great peril. Really, what I’d love to see people dig into … is that we can either continue to build opportunity out of what the digital world has brought us or actually entrench power and make things worse."
Teachers and academics may well fear the disruption caused by new technology. As the technology that students are using in their day-to-day lives changes, so do their learning needs.
Craig Weiss, founder of Learning 24/7 and speaker at ONLINE EDUCA BERLIN 2014, is not optimistic about the fortunes of these traditionalists: "Academia just doesn't get it when it comes to online learning ... For whatever reason, academia has this mentality that online learning should be serious and cannot be fun and engaging … No interactivity in anything? Hello, good luck with that."
However, where academics are showing reticence, the corporate sector is progressing quickly. As ONLINE EDUCA BERLIN 2014 keynote speaker Dr Nick van Dam, Global Chief Learning Officer at McKinsey, points out, "A growing number of organisations are starting to use MOOC technology platforms and the pedagogy behind it … MOOCs are a welcome addition to the whole suite of digital-learning solutions that organisations can leverage to swiftly build new capabilities.”
In business and beyond, the leaders of tomorrow will be those who can seize the uncounted benefits of a changing world. John F. Kennedy, van Dam points out, once said that “leadership and learning are indispensable to each other.” Technology may well shake up – or, for some, destroy – the fabric of learning as we know it. But it also offers immense opportunities.
ONLINE EDUCA BERLIN 2014 will take place in the Hotel InterContinental Berlin, 03-05 December 2014.