The Most Persistent Myth
Video Statistics and Information
Channel: Veritasium
Views: 2,289,242
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: veritasium, science, education, future, teachers, technology, future of education, revolutionize education, revolutionize, teaching, learning, School, Teacher, Lessons, Student, Students
Id: GEmuEWjHr5c
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 7min 23sec (443 seconds)
Published: Mon Dec 01 2014
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.
While I disagree with several points made in the video, I think that his conclusion about the student's mind being the relevant bottleneck is dead on. A student that doesn't want to learn and/or be in the classroom is not going to retain any of the information that get's shoved into their brain, no matter what tech you use.
That said, I don't think a teacher really has a ton of control over the student's motivation. Sure, a good teacher can often inspire some students, but no teacher can inspire every student in the room every time.
Frankly, any system that forces students to learn against their will, unless it's something totally crucial like reading or writing, is likely doing more harm than good in terms of education. It's important to give people the oppertunity to learn, but it is often just as important to not antagonize people by making them learn something they don't want to and then punishing them when they under-perform.
I usually like veritasium, but in this specific instance I think he's way off the mark.
He opens up the video seemingly claiming that "no technology has revolutionized learning", yet that is clearly not the case. Well maybe not a revolution, but video content, radio, computers and whatnot have certainly helped education considerably.
When we get to the internet, however, how can you deny that there has been a revolution? We have boatloads of tutorials available, great sites that help you study for tests, language learning can now be done almost completely through the internet (and the internet can help facilitate meetups so that you can practice conversation), we have wikipedia...
At 2:38, he specifically mentions
Well yes. That's exactly it. We already know what works and what doesn't. We have wildly successful models elsewhere, and we can already produce software that adapts to each person's learning style. It's also not a lack of content, with the inflated education budgets, we can produce lots and lots of quality material, and people love this kind of thing. The issue, and we all know it, is that those massive bureaucracies will never adapt, they'll insist on ancient testing methodologies (multiple-choice answers for subjective questions, anyone?) and quizzing students for irrelevant factoids (such as dates and names of minor/local historical figures and events) or wasting time with largely useless skills (writing in cursive, roman numerals, imperial system).
The education system is basically a relic from the industrial revolution, and it's main function is to serve as a sort of daycare while parents work.
Just a friendly reminder of something I find relevant to this topic: Dr. Muller wrote his thesis on the effectiveness of Khan Academy videos. He made a video about it.
His criticisms are great, but I think his conclusions are wrong. I don't think learning requires a boost to one's self-esteem.