Friday, March 26, 2010

Best in Blogs: Wikipedia Down, Flash Mobs Up, iPad Exploding Soon

Best in Blogs: Wikipedia Down, Flash Mobs Up, iPad Exploding Soon

What Happens in Schools When Life Has become an Open-book Test? - Copy / Paste by Peter Pappas

What Happens in Schools When Life Has become an Open-book Test? - Copy / Paste by Peter Pappas

5 Lessons America Can Learn From Asia About Higher Education

5 Lessons America Can Learn From Asia About Higher Education: "


An interesting article that may resonate with efforts being undertaken by many institutions worldwide to adopt a more global approach:-






Commentary


Home Opinion & Ideas Commentary


March 7, 2010


5 Lessons America Can Learn From Asia About Higher


Education


By Kishore Mahbubani



U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander, a former president of the University of Tennessee, recently warned that “As with the auto industry in the 1960s, there are signs of peril within American higher education. In


some ways, many colleges and universities are stuck in the past.”



His warning reminded me of a conversation I had with a Harvard university professor who had visited Japan in the 1980s. He was astonished by how advanced Toyota’s manufacturing processes had become. On his return to America, he spoke with a vice president at General Motors and warned him about Toyota’s competitiveness.



The man replied: “Yes, I know. But if I tell the board of GM that Toyota is getting better, I will lose my job, and GM will not change.” This story explains why GM is in such trouble now. (Paradoxically, 20 years later, Toyota has made the same mistakes as GM.) And it holds lessons for American colleges, even though they are global leaders today.



Unquestionably the great American universities—for example, Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, and Yale—stand heads and shoulders above the competition around the world. Yet their enrollment makes up only a fraction of total higher-education enrollment in the United States. And while many American universities have been standing still, their Asian counterparts have surged ahead. With more than 20 million students, China has, since 2005, overtaken America as the world’s largest higher-education sector. The time has come for American higher education to think the unthinkable: that it can learn lessons from Asia. In fact, university leaders and policy makers should consider the following five recommendations:



1) Recognize the central role that higher education plays in a country’s economic health.


A World Bank report has observed, “The success of East Asian economies in building huge stocks of human capital and in utilizing this capital for national development could be explained in terms of a ‘national obsession’ with education.” In China in 1995, only 5 percent of 18- to 22-year-


olds had access to higher education, but by 2007 the proportion had increased to 23 percent. That same period saw the continued rapid growth of the Chinese economy. In 1995 China’s gross domestic product was $728-billion; by 2007 it had grown to $3.251-trillion. The expansion of higher education has not been the sole or main reason for China’s spectacular growth, but it has made a major contribution. The World Bank report concluded: “Economic miracles do not happen out of the blue; they are based on education miracles.”



2) Develop a national higher-education policy.


America has always taken a laissez-faire approach to higher education—in many ways, with excellent results. But it may wish to consider whether new competition justifies a new approach.


China may soon outpace the United States not only in the number of university graduates it produces, but also in the world-class universities it creates. From 1995 to 2000, levels of the Chinese government invested about $20-billion in select universities to improve their facilities and curricula. In the following years, 38 of those universities received additional money. For example, two top institutions, Peking University and Tsinghua University, each received $225-million from 1999 to 2003. Meanwhile, many universities in China were given more freedom to


recruit students and open new programs. They were encouraged to establish connections with top foreign universities and institutes by organizing international conferences, attracting world-renowned scholars, and founding joint-degree or cooperative-research programs. Moreover, the Chinese government began a series of programs to attract and nurture scholars. For example, from 1998 to 2006, through the Changjiang Scholars Program of the Ministry of Education, about 800 professors, more than 90 percent of whom had international work or study experience, were recruited to Chinese higher-education institutions.


India, too, understands the crucial role of higher education to an emerging power. By 2012, India aims to increase its enrollment by five percentage points. The government has also authorized the


establishment of several dozen universities, including 14 based on world-class standards. A glance at the leading faculty members of great American universities reveals a remarkable number of Indian names: Jagdish Bhagwati (Columbia), C.K. Prahalad and Ashutosh Varshney (University of Michigan), Tarun Khanna (Harvard). Many have advised India on how to create great universities. It should not come as a surprise, then, if India produces the next wave of leading


institutions, in a decade or two.



A study by Goldman Sachs has forecast that by 2050, the world’s four largest economies will be those of China, India, America, and Japan. It made this prediction without factoring in China’s and India’s plans to significantly expand higher education. If such countries surge ahead with national education strategies, can the United States afford not to have one?



3) Don’t assume that America has all the answers.


The latest Times Higher Education ranking still does not have a single Asian institution among the top 20 universities in the world. But as Yale’s president, Richard C. Levin, noted recently, “The list of the world’s top 20 universities is likely to change in the years ahead; the National University of Singapore, to name one, is within striking distance, and China’s Peking and Tsinghua Universities will get there soon.”



Further, in making comparisons with Asian universities, Americans should look at all institutions, not just the most selective. For example, only 33 percent of the freshmen who enter the University


of Massachusetts at Boston graduate within six years; less than 41 percent graduate from the University of Montana; and 44 percent from the University of New Mexico. Indicators compiled by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development have shown that in the United States, just over 50 percent of those who enter traditional college programs go on to complete them, compared with 83 percent in Korea and 91 percent in Japan. An important cultural factor will help the success of Chinese universities: a deep hunger for education in China and in many


other Asian societies. When that hunger is combined with the explosive growth of new universities, we should not be surprised to see spectacular results.



4) Study Asian universities to see what has succeeded and why.


For example, my university, the National University of Singapore, has exposed its students to


global competition by setting up overseas colleges in many corners of the world: Bangalore,


Beijing, California’s Silicon Valley, Shanghai, and Stockholm. Instead of traditional classroom learning, the students are placed in positions with innovative start-ups, working alongside and sharing the same challenges, struggles, and excitements as a real-life entrepreneur. And they have to do all this outside their cultural comfort zones. Singapore itself is very cosmopolitan, with much cultural diversity.



By contrast, many American students continue to be educated in relatively monocultural environments. James B. Hunt, a former governor of North Carolina, has warned: “Our students are trapped in a kind of educational isolationism, which may have suited the industrial age but leaves students desperately underprepared for the demands of the 21st-century global economy.” He urges American colleges to integrate more knowledge of world history, languages, and international affairs into their curricula. Other people have made similar observations, like Morley Safer, of CBS’s 60 Minutes, who said: “As diverse as America has become, it remains


remarkably inward-looking. Without an educational and media establishment that takes on the responsibility of teaching and informing and respecting the riches of foreign cultures, this country


could become a paranoid and parochial suburb of a vital global village.”



5) Seek new partnerships with Asian higher education institutions.


The National University of Singapore has established global partnerships with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in the Singapore-MIT Alliance; with the Johns Hopkins University, in the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music-Peabody Institute collaboration; with Duke University, in the Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School; and with Harvard’s Kennedy School, in the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, among others. Yet few American universities have taken the initiative of reaching out to their Asian counterparts. Instead they have waited for Asian universities to


approach them, often expecting those institutions to come as supplicants rather than equal partners. Meanwhile, opportunities for collaboration abound, not only in the humanities and social sciences, but also in the hard sciences—where cultural and ethnic differences are beginning to matter. For example, the National University of Singapore has become a center of medical research because of observations that some common diseases—lung cancer, obesity, and stroke, to name a few—behave differently among Caucasians than among Asians. The same can also be said about several important drugs. In helping to elucidate the causes and implications, Western medical researchers are making important advances by cooperating with researchers in leading Asian universities.



American college leaders should prepare themselves psychologically for a world in which a key success factor will be partnerships with Asian universities. The good news is that Asian institutions welcome such new partnerships.



Beyond these recommended institutional responses, the United States government may also wish to commission a national study of American universities. It may well reveal that the top institutions remain far ahead of the pack. But it may also show that the brain gain that has resulted from so many doctorates’ being conferred on non-Americans who remain in the United States after graduation could become a brain drain, as those students increasingly choose to


return to their home countries. American society may discover itself short of crucial, high-level brainpower.



It is time for American higher education to begin conceiving of the possibility of real global competition from Asia. That may now seem almost inconceivable. But as the recent rapid rise of Asian universities suggests, what may once have been inconceivable can quickly become a reality.



Kishore Mahbubani is a professor of public policy at the National University of Singapore. He has also served as the ambassador of Singapore to the United Nations. He is author of many books on Asia and foreign policy, including The New Asian Hemisphere: The Irresistible Shift of Global Power to the East (Public Affairs, 2008).



Copyright 2010. All rights reserved.








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Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

To my surprise, New Jersey is 21st Century Ready! The state that I reside in is actually "committed to preparing students to live and work effectively in the 21st century" (Partnership for 21st Century Skills, 2010). I would like to know if my school district plans on partnering up with P21 to "help our students understand, connect to and act on critical global issues by integrating 21st century perspectives into curricula in all Core Curriculum Content Standard areas" (Partnership for 21st Century Skills, 2010).
I feel this is an extremely informative Website. I was happy to see that P21 was working hard to implement seven strategies to promote success for all students. I especially was impressed with the mention of fusing the three Rs and four Cs into the education system because as P21 states, "Higher standards are essential" (Partnership for 21st Century Skills, 2010). I feel holding students to higher standards is crucial to their success.
One aspect of the website that I did not like was that it is necessary to click on multiple links to find out one bit of information, and this may be too time consuming for some. On the other hand, maybe it is a very user friendly site, but the user is not technologically inept.
Although this website claims to being committed to its fourteen state partners, I feel that my school district is not taking advantage of this partnership. Ken Kay, the president of P21, emphasized how "every student needs to be 21st century ready" (Partnership for 21st Century Skills, 2010). I think educators need to be 21st century ready so we can prepare our students to be 21st century ready.

Reference:
Partnership for 21st Century Skills. (2010). Fusing the Three Rs and Four Cs for 21st Century Readiness. [Motion picture]. United States: Partnership for 21st Century Skills.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Blogging in the Classroom

I would love to start a blog in my ninth grade English classroom. I had an idea to assign an outside reading novel and then assign critical thinking questions, and have my students collaborate with their class members as well as with other students of the same level. I think as time went on, we could expand our horizons and start to interact with students from other schools outside of our district, perhaps even in neighboring states, and eventually worldwide. I always plan on assigning outside reading for all of my students, but end up only accomplishing the task with my honor students. My college prep kids sometimes fall through the cracks because I run out of time, but this would be a terrific way to access the assignment-through blogging. I know my students would enjoy collaborating with their peers, and also with students from other schools. I think if my students felt the impact of their learning, and realized other kids were doing what they were doing, it would make it that much more interesting for them.

Blogging about an outside reading novel would enhance their reading and writing skills because they would have to read the novel before they could intelligently answer the questions and discuss. Also, if they knew a variety of students were going to see their work and discuss the novel with them, they would think twice about jotting down just anything, or reading the cliffs notes. This would also offer the students who don't speak up in class, to offer their insights. This classroom blog could serve as a learning tool for all students. They would interact with other students about a novel they truly like, and they could gain knowledge and be able to expand on their ideas.

I think this type of blogging activity enhances the lesson because we read various novels in class, and I think this would be an extension of this. I always tell my students, "The more you read, the smarter you become. You are exercising your mind, and you are expanding your vocabulary. All of this will help you function as a productive member of society, and wouldn't it be cool to use a big word once in a blue moon?"

Thursday, March 4, 2010

First time blogger

Hello fellow bloggers! I have just created my first blog for my first graduate level technology course.