education in a digital democracy

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Embracing the Change, Embracing the Change, Challenge, and Charge of the Challenge, and Charge of the 21st Century 21st Century Education in a Digital Democracy Mark David Milliron President and CEO League for Innovation

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Education in a Digital Democracy. Embracing the Change, Challenge, and Charge of the 21st Century. Mark David Milliron President and CEO League for Innovation. Change. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Education in a Digital Democracy

Embracing the Change, Challenge, and Embracing the Change, Challenge, and Charge of the 21st CenturyCharge of the 21st Century

Education in a Digital Democracy

Mark David MillironPresident and CEO

League for Innovation

Page 2: Education in a Digital Democracy

“Today we are witnessing the early, turbulent days of a revolution as significant as any other in human history. A new medium of human communications is emerging, one that may prove to surpass all previous revolutions -- the printing press, the telephone, the television, the computer -- in its impact on our economic and social life.”

Change

Page 3: Education in a Digital Democracy

*Newsweek, 1998

Date Invention Years To Mass Use•1873 Electricity 46•1876 Telephone 35•1886 Gas Automobile 55•1906 Radio 22•1926 Television 26•1975 PC 16•1983 Mobile Phone 13•1994 The Web 4

Change

Page 4: Education in a Digital Democracy

• Passive– Print Media– Audio Media– Visual Media– Multi-Media

• Interactive – Print Media– Audio Media– Visual Media– Multi-Media

Change

Page 5: Education in a Digital Democracy

Nielsen/Net Ratings; Newsweek

•Internet has more than 262,000,000 users•Internet traffic doubles every 100 days•Average surfer spends 8.8 hours per week on 9 sites•1.2 Billion Web Pages (doubles each year – 38 pages a second)

•AOL Web sites 35,000,000 unique visitors•AOL 21+ Million paying subscribers•AOL-IM at 43 Million•1.1 Million concurrent users•760 Million messages daily (2x the USPS)

Change

Page 6: Education in a Digital Democracy

Newsweek; U.S. Department of Commerce; Forrester; Dertouzos

•A third of “wired” adults shop online•Almost ½ of Americans send an e-mail each day•36 Million obtain one weekly news story online •Consumer E-Commerce $300 Billion by 2002•B-to-B E-Commerce $2.7 Trillion by 2004

Change

Page 7: Education in a Digital Democracy

• Customer Relationship Management– Lead to Loyalty

WEB

PHONE

FIELD

MARKETING

SALES SERVICE

INTERN

E

T

Change

Page 8: Education in a Digital Democracy

“In the next 50 years, schools and universities will change more and more drastically than they have since they assumed their present form more than 300 years ago when they organized themselves around the printed book.”

Peter Drucker

Change• Change in Education

Page 9: Education in a Digital Democracy

• Change in Higher Education– Over Half of Classes use E-mail– Close to 2 of 5 Use Internet Resources– Approximately 50-80% of students and

faculty access the Internet each day– Expansion of “virtual” colleges and

universities– “Crescendo in E-Major”

*K.C. Green, 1999

Change

Page 10: Education in a Digital Democracy

*Newsweek

Change

Page 11: Education in a Digital Democracy

• The “DotCommies” are coming!– Baby Boom Echo – 88 million strong– 77% could not live w/o their PC– 92% think technology will improve their

educational options– Video games to surpass movies– Use for entertainment, learning, communication,

shopping – View tech as an appliance – a different level of

savvy– Faculty, Administrators, Community

Change

Page 12: Education in a Digital Democracy

If you have two or more e-mail addresses If you get a nervous tick after not checking your e-mail for more than 12

hours If you wake up at 3 a.m. to go to the bathroom and on the way back to bed

you check your e-mail If you can’t sit through an entire movie without having at least one device on

your body beep or buzz If your minister uses PowerPoint If your first thought after seeing this list is that you’d like to get a copy so you

can e-mail it to someone

. . . You May Be a DotCommieYou May Be a DotCommie

Page 13: Education in a Digital Democracy

Change

Page 14: Education in a Digital Democracy

• Significant access challenges for minorities and rural areas

• Whites are 2x as likely to have Internet access as Blacks and Hispanics

• Household Income of $75,000 are 20 times more likely to have access to the Internet

*Federal Computer Week, July 1999

Challenge

Page 15: Education in a Digital Democracy

• Majority minority schools lag almost 20% behind the national average in Internet connectivity

• Fewer than 39% of low income schools have a classroom with an Internet connection

• 17% of 17-year olds are functionally illiterate

*NCES

Challenge

Page 16: Education in a Digital Democracy

• The Digital Divide • IT Workforce Shortages

– A Nation of Opportunity Reportwww.workforce21.org

• Rate of Change• Human Connections• Creating “Successful” Balance

Challenge

Page 17: Education in a Digital Democracy

Charge

• To be the key community catalyst of learning about, with, and beyond technology.

Goals

Page 18: Education in a Digital Democracy

Charge: Learning About

“The successful professional for the twenty-first century is either a business-savvy technologist or a technology-savvy businessperson.”

Alan Cooper

Page 19: Education in a Digital Democracy

Charge: Learning About•Catalyze the Conversation •Become the community access leader•Collaboration with large and small business•Technology literacy to technology savvy•From technology pipelines to cycles (short- and long-term)

Page 20: Education in a Digital Democracy

• Foster Learning Connections– Content– Context– Community

Charge: Learning With

Page 21: Education in a Digital Democracy

• Communication and Collaboration• Dynamic Presentation• Research and Reference• In-Class to In-Home to At-Work• Faculty-Driven to Student-Driven• Emerging Resources • The New Basic Skill

Charge: Learning With

Page 22: Education in a Digital Democracy

– From Lead to Lifelong Learner!

WEB

PHONE

IN-PERSON

RECRUITING

LEARNING

SERVICE

INTERN

E

T

Charge: Learning With• Learner-Relationship Management

Page 23: Education in a Digital Democracy

• 21st Century Learning Outcomes– Technology skills (computer literacy, Internet skills, retrieving and managing information via technology) – Communication skills (reading, writing, speaking, listening) – Computation skills (understanding and applying mathematical concepts and reasoning, analyzing and using numerical data)

Charge: Learning Beyond

Page 24: Education in a Digital Democracy

• 21st Century Learning Outcomes– Critical thinking and problem solving skills (evaluation, analysis, synthesis, decision making, creative thinking)– Information management skills (collecting, analyzing, and organizing information from a variety of sources)– Interpersonal skills (teamwork, relationship management, conflict resolution, workplace skills)

Charge: Learning Beyond

Page 25: Education in a Digital Democracy

• 21st Century Learning Outcomes– Personal skills (ability to understand and manage self, management of change, learning to learn, personal responsibility, aesthetic responsiveness, wellness)– Community skills (ethics; citizenship; diversity/pluralism; local, community, global, environmental awareness)

Charge: Learning Beyond

Page 26: Education in a Digital Democracy

Embracing the Change, Challenge, and Embracing the Change, Challenge, and Charge of the 21st CenturyCharge of the 21st Century

Education in a Digital Democracy

Mark David MillironPresident and CEO

League for Innovation

Page 27: Education in a Digital Democracy

• www.league.org– Searchable Database, Publications, Resources, Transformational Learning Connections—LeagueTLC

[email protected]• Conferences and Events

– Conference on Information TechnologyAnaheim, CA, November 15-18, 2000

– InnovationsAtlanta, February 28 – March 2, 2001

Connecting with the League