The Most Persistent Myth

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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.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 11 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/slottmachine πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Dec 01 2014 πŸ—«︎ replies

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

some might blame this state of affairs on the inertia of our educational institutions. It's just too hard to get a huge bureaucracy to change

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.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 6 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/fimbulvntr πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Dec 01 2014 πŸ—«︎ replies

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.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 1 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/jonathansalter πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Dec 02 2014 πŸ—«︎ replies

His criticisms are great, but I think his conclusions are wrong. I don't think learning requires a boost to one's self-esteem.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 1 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/godless_communism πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Dec 01 2014 πŸ—«︎ replies
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this will revolutionize education no prediction has been made as often or as incorrectly as that one in 1922 it was Thomas Edison who declared that the motion picture is destined to revolutionize our educational system and that in a few years it will supplant largely if not entirely the use of textbooks yeah and you know how that worked out by the 1930s it was radio the idea was you could beam experts directly into classrooms improving the quality of education for more students at lower cost and that would mean you require fewer skilled teachers a theme common to all of the proposed education revolutions like that of educational television in the 1950s and 60s studies were conducted to determine whether students preferred watching a lecture live or sitting in an adjacent room where the same lecture was broadcast via closed-circuit TV what would you prefer in the 80s there was no debating computers were the revolutionary solution to our educational woes they were audio-visual interactive and could be programmed to do almost anything you like well at the time they could run Oregon Trail but their potential was obvious researchers suspected that if they could teach kids to program say how to move a turtle around a screen then their procedural reasoning skills would also improve so how did it go well the students got better at programming the turtle but their reasoning skills were unaffected even by the 1990s we had not learned from the failure of our past predictions and I quote the use of video discs in classroom instruction is increasing every year and promises to revolutionize what will happen in the classroom of tomorrow video discs yeah those giant oversized CD things remember when they revolutionized education nowadays plenty of things are poised to revolutionize education like smart boards smartphones tablets and MOOCs those are massive open online courses and some believe we're getting close to a universal teaching machine a computer so quick and well programmed that is basically like having your own personal tutor in Sheen a student could work through well-structured lessons at their own pace receiving immediate and personally tailored feedback and all without the interference of a meddlesome and expensive teacher do these claims sound familiar over the past 100 years a lot of areas of life have been revolutionized but education is not one of them by and large students are still taught in groups by a single teacher and that is not what a revolution looks like some might blame this state of affairs on the inertia of our educational institutions it's just too hard to get a huge bureaucracy to change but I think the reason technology hasn't revolutionized education is something else something that goes to the very heart of what education is let's consider the process of learning say you want to teach someone how a human heart pumps blood which learning a do you think would be more effective this animation with narration or this set of static pictures with text obviously the animation is better I mean for one thing it shows exactly what the heart does for decades educational research focused on questions like this does a video promote learning better than a book our live lectures more effective than televised lectures is animation better than static graphics in all well-controlled studies the result is no significant difference that is so long as the content is equivalent between the two treatments the learning outcomes are the same with all different media how is this possible how can something which seems so powerful like animation be no more effective than static graphics well for one thing animations are fleeting and so you might miss something as they go by Plus since the parts are animated for you you don't have to mentally envision how the parts are moving and so you don't have to invest as much mental effort which would make it more memorable in fact sometimes esthetic graphics perform better than animations and I think this points to a really fundamental aspect of Education which is it doesn't matter what happens around the learner we are not limited by the experiences we can give to students what limits learning is what can happen inside this head that is where the important part of learning takes place no technology is inherently superior to any other researchers spent so much time investigating whether one medium or technology was more effective than another that they failed to investigate exactly how to use the technology to promote meaningful thought processes so the question really is what experiences promote the kind of thinking that is required for learning recently that research is being conducted and we're finding out some pretty important stuff I mean it may sound obvious but it turns out learning with words and pictures together whether they're animation & narration or static pictures and text works better than words alone also we see that anything which is extraneous needs to be eliminated from a lesson for example on-screen text competes with visuals so learners perform better when it is omitted than when it is present now that we know how best to make educational videos and any experience can be simulated in the video setting YouTube must be the platform that will revolutionize education I mean the number of educational videos on YouTube is increasing every day so why do we need teachers well if you think that the fundamental job of a teacher is to transmit information from their head to their students then you're right they are obsolete I mean you probably imagine a classroom where this teacher is spewing out facts at a pace which is appropriate for one student to fast for half and to slow for the rest luckily the fundamental role of a teacher is not to deliver information it is to guide the social process of learning the job of a teacher is to inspire to challenge to excite their students to want to learn yes they also do explain and demonstrate and show things but fundamentally that is beside the point the most important thing a teacher does is make every student feel like they are important to make them feel accountable for doing the work of learning all of this is not to say technology has had no impact on education students and teachers work and communicate via computers and videos are used both inside and outside of classrooms but all of this is best characterized as an evolution not a revolution the foundation of Education is still based on the social interaction between teachers and students for as transformative as each new technology seems to be like motion pictures or computers or smart boards what really matters is what happens inside the learners head and making a learner think seems best achieved in a social environment with other learners and a caring teacher [Music] [Music]
Info
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
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