Why School Should Be More Like Summer Camp
Salman Khan, a rising star in the education world, has a vision for a new kind of classroom
- By Megan Gambino
- Smithsonian.com, October 01, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
What is the biggest obstacle to reaching this school of the future?
It is very hard to de-program the model that we grew up in. To some degree, our notion of school is adults scheduling every hour of a child’s time. You have to de-program that in the leaders of the first one or two or ten schools. But, I think all of this can be done over the next five or ten years.
As you say, we take the traditional school model for granted—teachers lecturing for 40-90 minute class periods devoted to separate subjects and then assigning homework. But, how and when did this take root?
The Prussians came up with it. To their credit, they said, “We want to have everyone educated.” How do we get everyone educated? Well, it was the late 1700s, early 1800s. Assembly line factories were producing things fairly inexpensively and in reasonable quality, so the Prussians said let’s see if we can industrial revolutionize teaching.
Before that, you would have the master teacher work with one student or small group of students at a time. They said, “Well, how do we get that to scale? We put these students in age-based cohorts and move them at the same pace.”
In the mid-1800s, the model got brought over to the U.S., with a very egalitarian motive: Let’s have universal public education and do it reasonably cost effectively. The Land Grant universities come about, so university was much more accessible. We start to have textbooks, but we need to standardize what a high school diploma means, so we understand what students are coming to the universities with or are entering the job market with. That is when you had the Committee of Ten say there will be primary school and secondary school. In secondary school, you will learn algebra and then geometry and then trigonometry. You will learn physics near the end, and you will learn earth science near the beginning.
As someone with three degrees from MIT and an MBA from Harvard, you have had success within this system. But, what, in your mind, are its biggest flaws?
The biggest flaw is the dearth of time for creativity. This is probably hitting the affluent more than anyone else, strangely enough. I actually felt like I was lucky growing up. My mom was a single mom. We didn’t have a lot of money, so I didn’t take any classes. I was what they used to call in the ‘80s a “latchkey kid.” I would come home, and my mom wouldn’t come home for a couple of hours. I essentially had the afternoons at my disposal.
Frankly, most of my peers, their kids are completely booked. From morning until nighttime they are either in school or some type of soccer or piano practice or they are doing homework, and then they go to sleep. There is no breathing room at all for a child of any age to say, let me create something. Let me invent a new game. Let me just play.
You have created a library of over 3,000 videos explaining everything from basic trigonometry to the Law of Thermodynamics to the Cuban Missile Crisis and Obamacare. What is the key to an effective video lecture—one that will get through to students?
The tone should be respectful. Respectful means not talking down and not talking above. You have to view the viewer as someone who is just like you, someone who is smart and capable of knowing the information, but who just doesn’t know it right now.
Make sure that you cover all of the details. Make sure you cover all the whys. Make sure you draw all the connections. These are things I never had the luxury to do in my schooling. I never had the time or luxury to think, why do I carry a “1” when I add? The class was moving on. But now I do have time. This is my job. My value-add is to think about those and to try to give a little bit more of that intuition and texture. If it can be a little bit quirky and funny, I think it connects with people even more.
How are teachers incorporating your videos and software into their instruction?
The simplest way is teachers writing on the top of the chalkboard on Day 1, if you are ever stuck on anything in this classroom, this site called Khan Academy might help you. There are a lot of supplemental learners—people who are taking a chemistry class at their high school or university and using Khan Academy as a tutor.
The next level is flipping the classroom. When Khan Academy was just ramping up and I was still doing this as a hobby, I would get these emails from teachers saying that they didn’t have to give these lectures anymore. They could say, “We are covering systems of equations or we are covering meiosis. Here is a Khan Academy video that you might want to watch before our next class.” Then, they could use class time to actually do problem solving with students and work directly with them. They essentially had “flipped” the classroom. What used to be homework—the problem solving—was now in the classroom; what used to be class work—the lectures—was now happening at home.
The deepest [application] is the classrooms where the students really are all learning at their own pace. Teachers have the students working on the Khan Academy exercises and videos at their own time and pace, and then the teachers get data and can intervene when appropriate. The class time is being used for interventions with or between students or open-ended projects.
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Comments (5)
The school of the future that Mr. Khan is imagining is happening now and has happened in the past ...in Montessori schools. Montessori schools have lots to teach the traditional American public school, but our traditional American school system is not probing, is not listening, is not making connections with what already exists. It is truly a shame.
Posted by Marie Smith on February 20,2013 | 01:47 AM
So much of this sounds just like Montessori school!
Posted by Jonathan on October 23,2012 | 01:03 AM
Where was this guy when I was growing up? School in our little coal patch town was a crashing bore with tens-years-out-of-date textbooks and not much of a science curriculum. Your destiny was to become a coal miner or a coal miner's wife, way back when. My mom had me reading at a college level by the time I hit first grade, and they did not know what to do with me. We had no advanced placement, so you crept and creaked along at the pace of the slowest learners who, after all, didn't need to be rocket scientists to dig coal. Things haven't improved a great deal in our part of Pennsylvania, with education budgets gutted to the bone, and the emphasis on regurgitating answers on preprogrammed tests, like little drones. Kids get penalized for creative thinking and curiosity. Mining is largely, and thankfully, gone by the wayside, but not the regressive attitudes about learning.
Posted by Julieann Wozniak on October 14,2012 | 04:30 PM
Please spellcheck: Kahn != Khan at least in three places.
Posted by Surio on October 6,2012 | 07:40 AM
Mr. Khan raises some interesting points, especially noting that letter grades can harm learning and that over-scheduling and homework takes away from a student's time to be creative, to imagine, and to have fun. It is great to have an up and coming well-known personality that speaks about these issues. I also disagree with a couple of Mr. Khan's points. First, while personalized and individual learning sounds interesting and beneficial, I also think it would cause some problems. If students are spread out and all doing their own thing, it may become very difficult to promote and implement collaborative group work. Simply put, how can a cohort of students get together and learn Topic A, if they are all independently working on Topics B, C, D and E. Research has clearly shown that students learn a great deal working with their peers and through social interaction and social learning. Perhaps there is a model that works this out, especially for large urban areas with great numbers of students. Maybe a solution would be to use custom cohorts for progression through courses and topics. The second point I disagree with is the idea of year round schooling. Given the proper environment, students do continue to learn things like literacy and numeracy (English and math here in North America) during summer break at the same rate as they do during school. It is my firm belief that summer is the time when our kids should be outside, experiencing the world and learning from it. There are important things to learn in life, and they don't all have to happen in school, even if school becomes more creative and responsive to student needs. I've written more about this on my blog: http://physicsoflearning.com/edblog/tag/summer/
Posted by Doug Smith on October 1,2012 | 05:28 PM