Continuing from the last post, here's what I wrote on Rifkin's chapter on education in The Zero Marginal Cost Society:
Chapter 7 on education is eye-opening. It is being transformed from
the authoritarian top-down model where the teacher has all the answers
to collaborative learning experiences with teachers as facilitators.
Critical and holistic thinking are encouraged over memorization.
Previously learning was thought of as a private, autonomous experience
where the knowledge was one's exclusive property, and that one had to
hoard it to compete with others for grades and jobs, just as in the
capitalist paradigm. In the collaborative era knowledge is something to
be shared in a community of peers, thereby creating a public good for
all.
Virtual, online classrooms are currently supplementing
brick-and-mortar and may eventually replace them. Pedagogy is also
having students provide services in their local communities, as well as
engage in environmental projects. Again this encourages moving education
from a private affair into seeing how one empathically relates to
others, their communities and the world at large. Such online classes
also cost considerably less than attending universities, sometimes even
free, thereby making an education available to a much larger portion of
society. One of the primary requisites for a functioning democracy is an
educated, informed and active public, and this new model is 'paving the
way'* toward that end.
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