Finding a balance
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Photo by Wiros on Wikimedia Commons |
Here’s another response to a question I received from participants during the recent webinar I presented for EDEN. You can watch the entire webinar on YouTube at this link. The question is one of several I couldn’t answer in full because of time constraints, so here is the question again with a few additional thoughts:
A major challenge at the moment, especially for teachers, but also translated to students, is keeping up with the curriculum. This limits the possibility of allowing students to learn on their own and finding their own path of learning. This period could be a window of opportunity in personalised learning, in finding students finding “their own pathway.” How do you create a balance?
Some would argue that the over-stuffed ‘just in case’ curriculum is responsible for a lack of time for other activities such as creative expression, transferrable skills or entrepreneurship. It’s certainly the reason there is little or no opportunity to pursue personalised learning in schools. Personalised learning (not to be confused with personal learning) is rarely possible because there is simply no time or space for it. A ‘just for me’ curriculum is anathema to most government education departments, because it would be considered to be too expensive. So most countries persist with the tired old, tried and tested bloated curriculum that prepares children for the past rather than the future.
Finding a balance by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.