Education in the Information Age

Advances in technology have had a significant positive impact on the modern classroom. But, it has also become increasingly challenging to keep up with the pace of these technological advances. In order to meet society’s needs, the classroom and the very nature of what is taught in them will inevitably have to undergo some significant revisions. One such revision concerns our definition and understanding of what constitutes literacy and perhaps even what we understand by education.

A sound definition of what constitutes the “information age” is not easy to come by. However, a possible definition may be: the overabundance of information through digital media, made possible by the ubiquity and (relative) ease of access to the Internet and the World Wide Web. The most challenging aspect of the information age for classroom learners resides in managing the cast amount of information at their disposal. This is a relatively new phenomenon and one that distinguishes the modern classroom from those that precede it.

Navigating the plethora of digital information available on the Web is becoming increasingly more intuitive for younger generations. In contrast to previous generations, they appear more readily able to use new digital interfaces such as touch screens. In addition, they also seem to have a more natural affinity for the software that makes navigating the Web possible. For instance, they know where to click and understand how hyperlinks function.

However, navigating the Web is one thing, being able to manage the vast amount of information is entirely another. This is where educational institutions might be able to assist. The skills required to manage information are indispensable in the workplace and beyond. Being able to spell correctly is becoming less significant. (After all, there are digital means of checking spelling). What becomes more important is being able to trawl through, sift, select and organise vast amounts of digitally available information.

An education (in the “information age”) may translate into a series of skills that allow an individual to do precisely the functions I have just outlined There simply is no substitute for “deep understanding, experience and intuition” (Birkenshaw, 2018). In addition to these essential skills for the twenty-first century worker, I would also like to add some degree of computer programming. Already, schools have begun to introduce games designed to teach the very basics of programming language into the earliest stages of a learner’s intellectual development. These games are precursors to later programming classes.

I would imagine that the argument behind the “early start” at the fundamentals of programming is similar to the argument behind an early start for learning any language namely, that there is a critical age beyond which learning any language becomes increasingly challenging (Abello-Contesse, 2008). I for one support the introduction of programming into the academic school curriculum. Basic thought processes linked to computing such as the ability to analyse, and the ability to categorise, are indispensable as technology becomes more pervasive.

In sum, what we understand to constitute both “literacy” and an “education” certainly need to undergo a major revision as modern society moves beyond the influence of print media and into a new era of digitalization. As we progress along these lines, the classroom and what is taught will also need to undergo a revision. Of critical importance in these revisions is the primacy of the principles of programming and the ability to navigate and manage the overwhelming amount of digital information available in the World Wide Web and the Internet.

Some even suggest that we have moved beyond the “information age” into what can be called “the new information age” (Wadhwa, 2011)!

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References

Abello-Contesse, C. (2008). Age and the critical period hypothesis. ELT Journal, 63, 170-172. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/elt/ccn072

Birkenshaw, J. (2018). Beyond the information age. Retrieved from

https://www.wired.com/insights/2014/06/beyond-information-age/

Wadhwa, V. (2011). The new Information Age. Retrieved from https://techcrunch.com/2011/04/10/the-new-information-age/

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