Daniel Pink, A Whole New Mind, video of keynote speech
Posted by: mar10 in Emerging Technologies, Professional Development, tags: daniel pink, whole new mindMany are familiar with Daniel Pink’s thought provoking book, A Whole New Mind (if not, it may prove to be worth your time). Some Lenawee ISD staff members have had a chance to read portions of the book and jigsaw it in a professional setting. Those who have not read the book or just want more media about the thinking behind it may want to view streaming video of Daniel’s keynote address at the 2008 Consortium for School Networking (CoSN) Conference: http://webcast.kzonetworks.com/plugins/webcast/regform.php?id=155 (Viewing from KZO Networks is free, but one must register with a name and email)
Pink’s central ideas in an insufficient nutshell:
Routine work in the USA is disappearing, and right brain abilities (see below) are becoming more critical to our economy. The “write-right” rule applies: If you can write down the steps of a process and there is a right answer, then the task will go to the place that can supply providers of the task at the lowest cost. Right-brain abilities can be nurtured and developed.
Pink claims that the 3 questions that matter now can help determine who gets ahead and who gets left behind:
Can someone overseas do it cheaper?
Can a computer do it faster?
Is what you are doing in demand in and age of abundance?
He says that the 3 factors contributing to the offshoring of logical left-brained tasks are:
Abundance
We’ve experienced huge changes in middle class living standards in the last couple of generations. Example: We now have more automobiles than licsenced drivers. We need self-storage units for our extra stuff outside of our homes which translates into an industry that is larger than the motion picture industry.
Asia
The highly educated fraction of the people in India and China overwhelm entire populations in other regions of the world. By 2010 India will become the world’s largest English-speaking country.
Automation
Routine work that can be done by computers (ie. some kinds of legal work, preparing taxes, etc.) cuts into our need for certain professional services.
There are 6 right-brain abilities that are hard to outsource and automate and matter most in an age of abundance (read the book for detailed definitions and suggestions for exercises):
- Design
- Story
- Empathy
- Symphony
- Play
- Meaning
A big take-away for education:
In schools we now have relatively good access to hardware (computers, camcorders, cameras, headsets, mp3 players/recorders, etc.) and software (Photo Story, iMovie, Audacity, Inspiration, Garageband, web 2.0 apps) that allow students to exercise and grow their right-brain capacities, however it is clear that we need to change our instructional practices and expectations so that students are engaging with these tools in meaningful ways.
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July 25th, 2008 at 7:07 am
This sounds like an interesting read. Does this author speak specifically about changing how we approach basic skills and instruction at both the secondary and college levels to meet these needs? Is there a copy available at the CeMat?