Icdk outlook No. 04, May 2019 The Future of Education
Figure 3. An increasing need for soft skills
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outlook-future-of-education
Figure 3. An increasing need for soft skills
CEO’s evaluation of relative importance of and need for skills 18 Source: PwC’s 20 th Global CEO survey, 2017 (n=1379) 17 Reigeluth, 2012 18 Q1: In addition to technical business expertise, how important are the following skills to your organisation? Q2: How difficult, if at all, is it for your organisation to recruit people with these skills or characteristic? Danish Agency for Science and Higher Education 15 Most of the newly established institutions in the US recognize a need for cooperating more closely with industry and thus develop the learning objectives and curriculum of their new educations in close collaboration with industry partners, even in fields such as liberal arts or computer science. These alternatives are not only changing the shape of education but are adapting the content to the changing demands of the labour market as well. Changing the content of education at American institutions does not go without concern. As with unbundling, educators discuss the implications of creating educational content on the premises of industry demands as some argue that education is supposed to build a foundation for more than ‘just’ employment. The demand for new skills is being addressed in most reports on the future of work and if the educational system is not adapting, they project a large skills-gap in the future 19 . This either leaves the responsibility of re-skilling to the companies or calls for change in the educational content. The institutions can however also foster the needed soft skills through new ways of learning, which might foster the soft skills in demand without necessarily making the curriculum more job-focused. The following section looks into new ways of learning to consider how to promote the soft skills that are expected to rise in demand. 3.1.2 Ways of learning In a system where practically everyone agree, that students learn at a different pace and where student motivation is key to ensure life-long learning, it is remarkable that the current educational system is designed as a “one-size fits all’ model, developed in the industrial age. This somewhat provoking message from Charles M. Reigeluth of Indiana University is part of the discussion on how the ways of learning need to change 20 . The new paradigm that is called for, may change the role of the teacher to a mentor and facilitator of learning, as the role of students change towards a self-directed learner and teacher. The groundworks have already been made for making such a change, with the emergence of 19 See fx Illanes et al. of McKinsey Global Institute, 2018 20 Reigeluth, 2012 Download 1.75 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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