"There’s a dark little joke exchanged by educators with a dissident streak: Rip Van Winkle awakens in the 21st century after a hundred-year snooze and is, of course, utterly bewildered by what he sees. Men and women dash about, talking to small metal devices pinned to their ears. Young people sit at home on sofas, moving miniature athletes around on electronic screens. Older folk defy death and disability with metronomes in their chests and with hips made of metal and plastic. Airports, hospitals, shopping malls—every place Rip goes just baffles him. But when he finally walks into a schoolroom, the old man knows exactly where he is. “This is a school,” he declares. “We used to have these back in 1906. Only now the blackboards are green.”
-Wallis, Claudia and Steptoe, Sonja. "How to Bring Our Schools out of the 20th Century" Time. Dec 18, 2006.
In the intro to this article, the authors point out that while the world is changing rapidly around us, education seems to be a bit frozen in time. So the question is, how is my school, North Hunterdon High School, manging to catch up and keep up with the times??
In many ways, North Hunterdon High School, is embracing 21st Century Skills and even leading the movement in our district, county, and state. Four years ago, as part of a literacy program, a group of 7 teacher, including myself, designed a course based on 21st Century Skills. This course, Advanced Academic Literacies (AAL) is geared to prepared students to be successful members and contributors to the 21st Century. The course is intended to train students in a variety of literacy skills that they can apply throughout their academic and professional careers, including reading, writing, listening, and speaking skills, as well as information, science, economics, technology, mathematics, social, visual, global and multicultural studies. In reality when faced with time constraints and varying classroom dynamics, we cover some of these topics in greater depth than other. The course theme (adventure tour companies) engages students in working as teams to develop plans for a travel company and to create all the materials associated with running a business and operating an international tour, from the inception of a company name to the simulation of an authentic corporate presentation. Effective groups (and not all are effective!) are marked by team unity, work ethic, professionalism, and creativity. From mind-sparking and reframing to organization and time management, AAL students learn to (or at least have the opportunity to learn to) communicate, overcome obstacles, evaluate information, conduct research, transfer knowledge, apply revisions, embrace technology, and market their products. The fact that we were asked to create the course, given time to create the materials (we have no text book - all of our extensive materials are teacher created), and are currently entering our 4th year of teaching this required course is proof that my school has embraced 21st Century skills.
However, in many ways, North Hunterdon still needs to continue to get on board with this agenda. One semester of 21st century skills is not enough. We need to continue to train teachers about how to integrate these skills (technology, authentic problem solving situations, social skills, communication, team work, etc.) into all aspects of the curriculum. Many teachers are already very innovative and/or eager to learn new strategies, but others remain hesitant, sceptical, and even critical of these changes. Over the least 4 years of creating and then implementing AAL, I have been shocked by the resistance we have faced from, not administrators, but other teachers about the validity and necessity of 21st century skills. But on the other hand, I have so many supportive and creative colleagues as well. I guess like anything else in education and life, change takes time and is never easy. But I don't think there is any way to ignore that education is moving towards 21st century learning. And if we don't get on board we will be left behind.