The Myth of Average: Todd Rose at TEDxSonomaCounty

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  • Опубліковано 18 чер 2013
  • High school dropout turned Harvard faculty talks about how a simple new way of thinking helps nurture individual potential.
    L. Todd Rose is co-founder and president of The Center for Individual Opportunity, an organization dedicated to providing leadership around the emerging new science of the individual and its implications for education, the workforce, and society. In addition, he is a faculty member at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, where he teaches Educational Neuroscience. Todd is also the author of Square Peg: My story and what it means for raising visionaries, innovators, and out-of-the-box thinkers. He can be found online at www.toddrose.com and on Twitter @ltoddrose.
    For more information, visit www.individualopportunity.org or @theendofaverage on Twitter.
    Creative direction, event AV and full service video provided by repertoireproductions.com/

КОМЕНТАРІ • 199

  • @tarundeepgill5352
    @tarundeepgill5352 3 місяці тому +3

    Even after 10 yrs nothing has changed much

  • @travistatman
    @travistatman 5 місяців тому +2

    Love this. How do we design for the edges in a US public education system where the student teacher ratio is 30:1 and teachers have a hard time just getting by on such low wages?

  • @camdawg544
    @camdawg544 3 роки тому +59

    I watched this and thought "Yes! Maybe we'll finally do something" and then looked and saw this was uploaded like 8 years ago. Oh well

    • @Ski4974
      @Ski4974 3 роки тому +2

      Bruh ikr exactly same here

    • @luisqa123
      @luisqa123 3 роки тому +4

      Some things are being done. Like in Acton Academies around the world. In the end you are the one that can bring the change that is needed.

    • @kevinstoller5204
      @kevinstoller5204 2 роки тому +2

      Caleb, don't get discouraged. Change looks like it is slow, until it is fast. I work in the education world and this messaged sparked our company to take action. We were very close to the "tipping point" of flexible educational environments become the norm until COVID put a pause on it - but the movement hasn't stopped! We just need more people to challenge the status quo and BE THE CHANGE!

    • @Torbu6286
      @Torbu6286 4 місяці тому

      It's 10 years now, still waiting

    • @cielapinon8922
      @cielapinon8922 Місяць тому

      literally same

  • @3actartist585
    @3actartist585 Рік тому +2

    Not sure if he ever said it by name, but he is describing UDL - Universal Design for Learning. In case you were wondering...

  • @Cynthia-Landers
    @Cynthia-Landers 8 років тому +26

    Highly recommend Mr. Rose's book, *The End Of Average.* Very excellent & persuasive, it will flesh out everything he says here.

  • @singing.winnie
    @singing.winnie 4 роки тому +61

    'Average' made me feel that I am always insufficient because as Dr Rose says, all people have strengths and weaknesses, but the fact that I am 'below average' in certain capacities made me always hate myself.
    So relieving and happy to hear this talk. It makes me understand that I am normal and that I could be flexible and creative in approaching education etc

    • @Muffinarm_
      @Muffinarm_ Рік тому

      I am below average in many, many ways and so is everybody else. We are not special and most adults vastly overestimate their abilities.

    • @rajmauna
      @rajmauna 5 місяців тому

      Dr. Rose of?

    • @singing.winnie
      @singing.winnie 5 місяців тому

      @@rajmauna the speaker is Todd Rose

  • @matrixinterface
    @matrixinterface 11 років тому +18

    I teach a GED class at a prison and I see the end results of this. So many of these guys do just fine in one subject but terrible in another and as a result they got frustrated, dropped out, and in some cases that lead directly to them getting in trouble.
    Now I am trying to teach them but I am stuck in the same situation that got them there. 25 students, one teacher, not enough funding to even have textbooks for all my students. It's pretty depressing.

  • @DarkVader23
    @DarkVader23 4 роки тому +10

    I was told i would not pass grade 5 and my parent had to hear from the teacher at the time that i would be a drop out. I struggled with changing schools in secondaries( High school) and barely made it out. I am now a Nurse with 2 specialties, being told I am the best Nurse to learn from and I am also an Instructor at a top university in Canada. Medicine and Nursing is my passion. I always loved studying biology but couldn't do it. The school i was in at the time had other subjects I had to pick by default (combination) with it and I was not good in them. I dropped and had to do math, physics and design where i was a below average student. After high school, I was able to rebuild and joined a Nursing school where I struggled at the beginning but started to excel and finished my studies as one of top performers.

  • @jlshoem
    @jlshoem 5 років тому +27

    They could not teach me trigonometry in one year, in high school. One year later, in electronics school, in the army, they taught it to me in 3 DAYS. I kid you not.

    • @justjen5808
      @justjen5808 4 роки тому +12

      Models of self-directed education know this. You can't force anyone to learn anything. Once it's relevant to your life, you'll learn it efficiently. Designing to the average is harmful in so many ways! And here we are years later and still doing the same old shite in most schools.

    • @lampyrisnoctiluca9904
      @lampyrisnoctiluca9904 3 роки тому +1

      Believe you. I went to one of my college classes twice, and still understood nothing. Then one guy came to give a guest lecture to which I went because of compeletelly different class. The thing only consisted of one third of his one hour speech and I understood everything. I even thanked him afterward. I passed this time, just because I forced myself to go even though I had a migrene.

    • @jlshoem
      @jlshoem 3 роки тому +2

      @@lampyrisnoctiluca9904 When I asked the Army instructor why he could it in 3 days when the high school teacher could not do it in 9 months, he said, "We do things a little differently here".

    • @lampyrisnoctiluca9904
      @lampyrisnoctiluca9904 3 роки тому

      @@jlshoem Of course they do. They are the army after all. They care about teaching, and not the curriculum. Sad but true.
      My subject was geology of mineral deposits. The guy was talking about how the mountains look differently based on how they are formed. Deposits you could find there were just mentioned.

  • @sonyadenaeyer-louzon8412
    @sonyadenaeyer-louzon8412 6 років тому +27

    I just want to say thank you. I was searching for engaging staff videos as part of a principals qualification course that I am currently taking. I came across your video while searching for videos that support reaching all students. I found myself talking out loud to your video, yelling "yes, yes" often. Near the end though, I actually laughed in happiness. My son also was a high school drop out (identified as gifted with a communication learning disability). He is currently in his last year of college in Toronto (for technology), tutoring, working as a TA, and working in an internship program. His professors have personally spoken to him about greater things (creating a published paper about work he is doing, continuing his education in another field, possibly becoming a professor himself). Anyway..., thank you so very much for your video. It is the exact message I was looking for!

  • @nevolution2
    @nevolution2 10 років тому +17

    Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is the concept he is talking about.

  • @angiebusby24
    @angiebusby24 10 років тому +1

    You are so right. Great comparisons.nice to hear someone talk about the situation with real concern and passion.

  • @joshatyt
    @joshatyt 11 років тому +2

    This means a lot to anyone who ever felt like and oddball outlier in school knowing they had so much more to offer.

  • @angelicasbestversion3301
    @angelicasbestversion3301 5 років тому +1

    Wow! Thank you for this talk.

  • @laurarattaymaloney4537
    @laurarattaymaloney4537 11 років тому +1

    I can so relate to the ideas presented in this talk. So good to know that science and technology can help us nurture so many more to success.

  • @loopgooru
    @loopgooru 7 років тому +18

    Great talk ... read the book "End of Average" as well. Life changing it was. Thanks for this incredible piece of work Todd.

  • @Daktari_Muhati
    @Daktari_Muhati 2 роки тому

    Many thanks Rose, this is very impactful.

  • @paulhami
    @paulhami 10 років тому +5

    Tod Rose nails it! We don't just squander talent by targeting the "average", we do incalculable harm to the psyche of millions of children. Tod's analogy of the adjustable seat, and his comparison of that to the ways that digital technology can make learning work better for countless learners is brilliant.

  • @erenaksu5302
    @erenaksu5302 9 років тому +25

    I am one of those kids as well... I will not rest until the idea discussed in this video comes to life and is institutionalized in different areas around the world. So many geniuses are lost due to our poorly designed educational system.
    We need to start creating a future for our children that allows people to think for themselves and learn in the environments that are best suited(customized) for them. I hope you are all as inspired as I am by this talk. Thank you Todd Rose, there is still hope.

    • @gigixxx1836
      @gigixxx1836 6 років тому

      Eren Aksu hi how's it going? U still inspired? Lmaoo

  • @defypark4595
    @defypark4595 4 роки тому

    Very inspirational!!! Thank you for your revolution! I whole-heartedly want to support your journey to desgin to edges rather than design on average!

  • @asunciondiezarce1828
    @asunciondiezarce1828 5 років тому

    Thank you so much. Thanks also to UA-cam

  • @melovescoffee
    @melovescoffee 7 років тому +61

    From a language and science buff who never got to go to university because i couldn't get any help with math, thank you. "Well, that's unfortunate. Good luck with your factory job" My parents even went as far as letting me work summers in a chicken slaughter house to 'show me what will happen to people who don't pick themselves up by the bootstraps, yadda yadda' instead of actually helping me get help. I almost ended school with 3 highest possible end grades on 3 seperate subjects, the rest was good to average... but that didn't matter to anyone. All they could say is "you spoiled your chances because you failed math!" In this world, you get one chance only to reach for the highest.... in your darn teens. Really? This is the best society can come up with?

  • @thiagodesouzaleao2792
    @thiagodesouzaleao2792 Рік тому +2

    Pretty inspiring and touching. I'll play it for my kids. They need to know they're valuable diamonds in the world.

  • @mattrice8739
    @mattrice8739 3 роки тому +4

    I completely understand where he is coming from. I did poorly in elementary and secondary school. College was a struggle as well. However, I had to learn for myself how I best mastered materials. I now have two masters degrees 3.89/4.0. I try to convey this to the teachers I work with and that they need to properly differentiate in the classroom.

  • @deeplife9654
    @deeplife9654 Рік тому +3

    I have just finished the first 100 pages of his book and then came here . I am still in awe of what I discovered. all the standards and methodology are designed for average people , not for me. I have struggled my whole my life following the standards and practices set for the average guys.

  • @GabrielleRaymond0
    @GabrielleRaymond0 11 років тому +2

    It is refreshing to hear an effort to revamp our dated educational system. This presentation gives me hope for a future where students can embrace their strengths and their interests, ideally leading to a classroom where all learners feel empowered.

  • @imafan4435
    @imafan4435 6 років тому +1

    Beautiful talk! UDL with the right technology. Have tears, we can't afford to lose one.

  • @BenGurewitz
    @BenGurewitz 11 років тому +4

    I Truly believe this is the is the future of our world. We must create change in our education system. this is time to make a diffrence

  • @thomashenz8045
    @thomashenz8045 8 років тому +6

    I quit high school since month ago and this Ted Talk is very inspiring, Thank You

  • @parisarouhani1939
    @parisarouhani1939 11 років тому +2

    This is an amazing video!!! These insights are applicable to not only education but to broader society. And it was beautifully delivered!

    • @ertanagen873
      @ertanagen873 3 роки тому

      Hello parisa I read todd rose's book if you want talk about this video

  • @alejandromonge931
    @alejandromonge931 2 роки тому

    This was a great thank you for telling this to the world. I have classmates who are like this

  • @wendycorrea1
    @wendycorrea1 5 років тому +5

    I wish we changed the overall Education system. A lot of facets of the Education system, mindsets, openness to the new and the uncertain and overall system needs to change. Will it ever happen? I would hope so. I'm glad someone's creating awareness about it.

  • @jebediahwinston1547
    @jebediahwinston1547 3 роки тому

    whoah, one of the first Ted talks I actually was really enjoying

  • @truelyfine
    @truelyfine 10 років тому +6

    As a techie, I've always felt computers would accelerate learning. But it was never clear how this would or could come to fruition. Drill and kill, repetition, automatic marking? Feedback via computerized measurement of the learning process?
    The allegory in the talk is that the computer might compensate for weaknesses, reinforcing strengths, and adjusting difficulties in the course materials, and doing this in the background for each user. The computational abilities of the computer become the training wheels for the brain.
    To be useful we would need to create a list of adjustable criteria, making the text longer or shorter, making the math harder or easier, changing the number of steps in the problem.Then as the student works on the problems, adjustments are made - sort of how a perceptive human instructor will ask leading questions, trying to coax the next bit of progress from the interactive mind.

    • @robinfell
      @robinfell 6 років тому

      Read DISTRUPT CLASSROOM - this will illuminate computer opportunity in the classroom.

  • @studiox2495
    @studiox2495 3 роки тому

    The dude speaks with his heart.

  • @tylor2765
    @tylor2765 5 років тому +4

    That's it! We need adjustable desk sizes!

  • @Babarudra
    @Babarudra Рік тому

    A story I know far too well. Sadly, I never really found my way. I have a happy life, I enjoy what I do, but I could have enjoyed it much sooner if I had had the opportunities presented to me. I've shared this with a couple friends who are teachers, I hope they get something out of it, and I hope their students do too. Thank you for your story.

  • @agracemartin
    @agracemartin 9 років тому +16

    This was a very good example that no human being can be "average." When we teach to the average we are not really catering to anyone's needs.

  • @ShawnRavenfire
    @ShawnRavenfire 10 років тому +7

    I wish they'd had specialized learning like this when I was in school. I was so bored with the "average" lessons, then after some testing, they bumped me up to the "gifted" program, where I couldn't keep up.

  • @MosesTesfai
    @MosesTesfai 2 роки тому

    Excellent presentation.

  • @Butch9339
    @Butch9339 10 років тому

    A ted talk that brings home a reality. That we all know ones it is explained, presented to us. Our lives are filled with examples of this assumption that "average" should be the standard, while it works for none of us, as in no-one.
    Pass this on to those who continue to think or act as though teaching, learning, living, and looking for the "Average" is
    "best".

  • @tammybukowski9509
    @tammybukowski9509 3 роки тому +1

    Motivating!

  • @d8100060
    @d8100060 10 років тому

    This is an excellent video and shows the need for UDL: Universal Design for Learning. It should be presented at the start of the new school year at all faculty meetings.

  • @jamesmckenna1528
    @jamesmckenna1528 8 років тому +19

    I love this speech, but to better espouse the virtues of UDL, it should have accurate closed-captioning.

  • @lelaelaily4206
    @lelaelaily4206 10 років тому

    really inspirational

  • @ahmedalhashemi4161
    @ahmedalhashemi4161 10 років тому

    Thank you

  • @heinzfries9774
    @heinzfries9774 10 років тому

    That would be so brilliant!

  • @aarons1972
    @aarons1972 Рік тому

    Great talk! Shakespeare "deigned" his plays to the edges of the human experience and that's why he continues to have nearly universal appeal. Jonas Salk curing polio is a myth, which is a blatant reminder that we must teach our children HOW to think, not WHAT to think, but the point is still well taken.

  • @scanny51
    @scanny51 8 років тому

    Wonderful Thanks

  • @mariamansari8951
    @mariamansari8951 3 роки тому

    This should have way more views

  • @mohameddarwish6746
    @mohameddarwish6746 Рік тому

    I could only say thank you for this talk, my 8 year old son is suffering from this miss-designed educational system.

  • @leesa1963able
    @leesa1963able 10 місяців тому

    Loved! Just watched as part of my requirements at EGCC… appreciate this classical approach. Ad respected manner in which the message came full circle to advance truth! Much better than the Canadian rainbow cupcake theory !!

  • @marvoilove
    @marvoilove 11 років тому +1

    not only will kids benefit, those making the educational materials will also be challenged to create better tools for kids these days because some of the adults will realize that they could also have had better schooling experiences had they been taught with their individuality in mind! thankyou, awesome person/teacher =]

  • @ramonaevans1884
    @ramonaevans1884 2 роки тому

    outstanding

  • @KlemzyEmpireDIY
    @KlemzyEmpireDIY 24 дні тому

    Fundamentally re-imagine the foundations of our institutions of Opportunity like Education, in ways that it nurtures the potentials of every single individuals; therefore expand our talent pool, makes us far competitive in the world . Let learning methods be flexible to accommodate all learners .

  • @johncarr9029
    @johncarr9029 6 років тому +5

    the Educational system was built to take people from being creative, and making a system that makes the prepared for a Industrial community, so when they are of age to work. They can be placed into a manufacturing plant. Be a machine and do a job. I am a late bloomer, when the internet allows me to learn WHAT I LOVE, and Nothing more... Finding again that I CAN LEARN WHAT I LOVE, How can you not love to learn...

  • @heinzfries9774
    @heinzfries9774 10 років тому +1

    I'm the average student and because of the importance that's given to grades, more often than not I feel like I'm not good at anything. This TED talk really means a lot to me, I think it's helped me resolve an inner conflict I'd been having for a few months. Thank you.

  • @MelissaMagnus
    @MelissaMagnus 10 років тому +4

    Awesome! Let's nurture our children's talents, they are the future. :) I had an awesome maths teacher at school, he let the kids work at their own pace. The kids with talent could move through the years work and were allowed to go on the next years work. I did 2 years of math in 1 year. That could be a way to nurture them, letting them work at their own pace. And also not condemning them for the subjects they fail at, but praising them for the ones they are good at.

  • @vitesa3867
    @vitesa3867 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for all your insight. My son is struggling with school though he is "gifted" and passes all PSATs with extremely high scores. He is depressed and anxious and might become a drop-out. Any advice?
    I have some extreme edge talents and weaknesses and managed to have graduate degrees. However, I am at a loss on how to support him.

  • @Linkfiremblemace
    @Linkfiremblemace 11 років тому +1

    Simplicity is the optimal form of function.

  • @paigedux2448
    @paigedux2448 11 років тому

    Excellent point! We create average in educational system because it physically impossible for one teacher to attend wide range of abilities and deficiencies of multiple individuals. Technology IS the answer. There is an iPad ( or whatever brand you prefer) for every child out there. Technology could and should be teaching aid, co-educator. So, please write the programs designing to edges.

  • @xSilverPhinxx
    @xSilverPhinxx 11 років тому

    Interesting TED talk.

  • @MAPBill
    @MAPBill 10 років тому +4

    Yeah, I do agree the comparison is indeed not that valid. But I guess it does make sense that customized learning environments and schools would improve education. I'd like more depth on this talk.
    About the cockpits, well, I think the presentation shows that the designers finally opted for versatile cockpits instead of multiple monolithic ones.
    P.S.: TYT Too Strong!

  • @DerekOldfield
    @DerekOldfield 10 років тому +12

    You and Sal Khan need to get together. He also despises the one-pace-fits-all approach, as do I.

  • @streetpr4phet404
    @streetpr4phet404 3 роки тому +24

    anybody here from class lol

  • @davidmosher4153
    @davidmosher4153 7 років тому

    Rose makes some valid points during his Ted Talk. I particularly like his emphasis on not focusing on the average. I feel as educators we worry so much about the average students that many times we forget about students at the top and the bottom. That is why educators have started to focus more on differentiating the lesson to reach all students. I must disagree that the responsibility of teaching the students relies on the companies that supply the texts. Educators have the ability to adjust the text or technology accordingly to reach every student in their classroom. Could some of the text in our schools be designed better? Yes, but it is our job as educators to create a lesson for all of our students.

  • @Qantas94Heavy
    @Qantas94Heavy 10 років тому +1

    The problem is not "just" on one level (the material), it is also the responsibility of people on all levels (education directors, teachers, parents) to allow for this change to occur, and not to sideline students who don't necessarily conform to an education system which is dysfunctional and unable to allow each student to reach their own potential, instead things such as the "No Child Left Behind Act" end up disadvantaging others while extracting the potential of the very bottom, what a shame.

  • @carmendanies5612
    @carmendanies5612 3 роки тому

    Love the premise, but do we have enough applied research to support this at University level? Or is technology leading, because as an entity Education moves slow as a large organization?

  • @dpbode
    @dpbode 10 років тому +1

    in the future when Luke Pecard says to those of the 21st Century "we have evolved without the need for money and position, we are interested in the personal growth of the individual"..... I look forward to the 24th Century coming sooner.

  • @tracyneal6932
    @tracyneal6932 4 роки тому

    Wow that dropout rate is astounding!

  • @Nosmilegrin
    @Nosmilegrin 11 років тому

    Agreed. education system needs a change for improvement.
    Perhaps the best solution is the aid of technology. or a better teacher student ratio instead to meet the individual needs of the students.
    Also, perhaps we also need to change how we evaluate our students' performance in a subject like science...
    But I believe that there is a need to set a an AVERAGE STANDARD when it comes to READING it's a very important skill everybody should master.

  • @FernandoSV
    @FernandoSV 11 років тому +1

    I agree 105% with this, let's destroy averages, they are unreal

  • @366media
    @366media 8 років тому +1

    There is a pretty major error in the transcript / closed captioning at the 1:20 mark. Can it be changed the to correct wording?

  • @vroxlincoln9139
    @vroxlincoln9139 4 роки тому

    True. Now the quarantine is ongoing, most teachers did teach trough online classes, but they just read through the text book or giving us slides to understanding. And lets be true, its overwhelming and boring just to hear one person saying.

  • @annabelclara
    @annabelclara 11 років тому

    Design for the margins...Universal Design for Learning represent!!

  • @SaraRingbauer
    @SaraRingbauer 9 років тому +4

    The idea of individualized education sounds great, but I would like to see more on the methodology to implement it in all classrooms. Also, I wonder could technology have helped the student in reading class so that he could have learned to read on level and not had reading problems in science in the first place?

    • @TheTechyTeachersTechTips
      @TheTechyTeachersTechTips 8 років тому +1

      +Sara Ringbauer Check out digital badging as one possible methodology to achieve individualization. My UA-cam channel has some examples.

    • @maryfrawley5551
      @maryfrawley5551 4 роки тому

      I hear you. It's fine to adapt everything to the kids until they get to a standardized test.

  • @pathak07
    @pathak07 11 років тому

    Talk is very realistic

  • @danielz.cabrera2988
    @danielz.cabrera2988 3 роки тому

    remember that education is now a business and that even though we need change and not be normal its up to politicians and multimillion book companies to allow for this to happen.

  • @friendlyone2706
    @friendlyone2706 Рік тому

    An applicable answer was developed over 100 years ago. Look up Montessori.

  • @user-ek8fy9uz5f
    @user-ek8fy9uz5f 5 років тому +3

    could you make some korean Subtitle? please~~

  • @antiwarhooligan
    @antiwarhooligan 11 років тому +1

    they aim at being 'average', & average is sub-par. Everyone should strive for excellence and nothing less.

  • @walterhaas5960
    @walterhaas5960 11 років тому

    Think of the talented people out there who could be thriving if we knew how to find and nurture them. This goes beyond education - it's the core of the American Dream.

  • @jeannedarlington935
    @jeannedarlington935 Рік тому +1

    Text to speech and speech to text for the win. Now if we can get the curriculum to be developmentally appropriate and get rid of standardized testing & report cards, our kids might stand a chance.

  • @christinepalumbo3669
    @christinepalumbo3669 Місяць тому

    What is the research study he cites? Anyone know?

  • @gracemontenegro-shehers1039
    @gracemontenegro-shehers1039 8 днів тому

    1) of course we're spending more money on education than ever before - that's how inflation and population growth works. 2) When kids dropout we do NOT "loose" them - school is not the end-all of a human's potential. Love the basic premise here but I can't finish the video because those two issues made me mad lol

  • @HitmanNr47
    @HitmanNr47 11 років тому

    I agree that we have to change something but what if the changes proposed in this talk help some kids while other kids struggle with it and fall behind? You can't only look at who benefits from such measure but also who might have a disadvantage.

  • @sacrosanct23
    @sacrosanct23 10 років тому

    the one thing that i believe weakens his vital message [and countless others] is the often throwaway line 'be competitive in the world' 'on the world stage' et al. how about 'CONTRIBUTORS TO THE WORLD'

  • @criticalpotato8958
    @criticalpotato8958 4 роки тому

    Great concept. This has been my life's dream to do something that revolves around my idea. I have a thing or two to contribute. Would love to get in touch.

  • @rachellehuddleston-lorton8277
    @rachellehuddleston-lorton8277 3 роки тому

    Dropping out of high school does not mean that a kid will not succeed or that bright minds are lost to society. I dropped out of high school, went on to college in my twenties and graduate school.

  • @ENoob
    @ENoob 3 роки тому

    "one size fits no-one" we call it.

  • @ReaganStein-ui6zq
    @ReaganStein-ui6zq Місяць тому

    I think that the average is good! Average size is a good size!

  • @user-sz1wt9iu1b
    @user-sz1wt9iu1b 4 місяці тому

    Дякую за цікаві матеріали

  • @eddie123e
    @eddie123e 10 років тому +2

    Brilliant video - average is not a human concept - it is a mathematical concept. You can have an 'average' hat size' or be of 'average' weight but you cannot have an 'average' human being. In standardised scoring only 7% of children score 100!

  • @yousifalshehab4995
    @yousifalshehab4995 3 роки тому +1

    as much as i love what this guy is saying, its never gonna happen, schools have been the same for decades with minor changes, and their gonna be the same for decades to come maybe with minor changes aswell

  • @karlhiscock92
    @karlhiscock92 6 років тому +3

    ...High school drop out rates are actually declining ...on average

  • @abigailsmith6977
    @abigailsmith6977 8 років тому +6

    He's assuming that skill with using a machine (iPad, etc.) is a given. But students need to be trained in how to use the technology they are presented with, and there is a variance in ease by which students grasp those skills, just as there is a variance in the ease by which students are able to read.
    High tech doesn't have to be the answer. It always sounds so good, but it is always much more of a nightmare to implement than you'd think. (Things breaking, compatibility issues, teachers and students need training, support staff must be hired, etc. etc.) We have several decades now, of a time-honored tradition of educational technology promising to radically improve education, and then ending up collecting dust in a storage closet. ;) I work in a technology-heavy field; I love bells and whistles just as much as the next person. But it really needs to be used VERY judiciously and wisely - at the K-12 level especially.
    Here's the thing: even in a screen-free classroom, you can still make sure that content is presented to students in a variety of ways, to meet them where they are. You can still differentiate instruction without an iPad. In fact, certified teachers are trained in this. Let's let them do what they know how to do.

  • @MrC0MPUT3R
    @MrC0MPUT3R 11 років тому +1

    In 3rd grade they branded me as slow because I was bored with school. That affected my ENTIRE life. Literally.

  • @parisarouhani1939
    @parisarouhani1939 10 років тому

    Actually, we do in fact have a dropout crisis. If anything, 1.2 million is a conservative estimate -- credible sources report the number to be even greater than that each year (PBS's recent report estimates the number to be over 1.3 million dropouts annually)

  • @droko9
    @droko9 6 років тому +1

    Please filter out the high pitch whine

  • @powermikertje
    @powermikertje 11 років тому

    I'd like to see an/some average in global income though =)