- Critical Thinking
- Complex Problem Solving
- Judgment and Decision Making
- Active Listening
- Computers and Electronics
- Mathematics
- Operations and Systems Analysis
- Monitoring
- Programming
- Sales and Marketing
We talk about graduating students who are college and career ready, yet we focus almost all of our time, energy, and resources on things for which neither colleges nor employers are looking.
Not only are we not preparing our students for the workplace of their futures, well beyond 2013 and the list above. We're still preparing them for the factory jobs of the 1950s in which compliance, basic reading and writing skills and the ability to calculate were all you needed to be successful.
The more we focus on standardized tests as the driving force in education, the more we make it impossible for our students to develop the skills they most desperately need. You cannot measure critical thinking, active listening, complex problem solving, or any of the above skills on a multiple choice test. As much as the corporate reform movement of the past 15 years has complained that schools are not properly preparing students for the workforce, nothing has forced schools to shift focus away from those skills our students most need more than the corporate reform movement.
Our students need to be able to critically think, problem solve, evaluate difficult situations, and actively listen, yet we continue to put the greatest importance on multiple choice tests, ensuring that none of those things can be a focus in schools. Our students need to learn to use computers, electronics, and to program, yet we put policies in place to prevent them from even taking the electronics they already own - the very electronics they will need to utilize in the workforce - out of their pockets.
Basically, we have turned schools into places where we prepare students for the realities of our past. While some overcome this insanity to become successful, pointing to them as a reason to continue with this broken system is like pointing to the 90 year old smoker as a reason to give our children cigarettes.
It is time to confront the realities of the 21st Century. We don't know what jobs will be available to our students in the future. Many of them don't exist yet. We do know that skills like critical thinking, problem solving, and decision making are becoming more important. That should drive what we do in schools.
Ten years ago, the world was very different than it is right now. The phone in your pocket didn't exist. No smartphone did. There was no such thing as an iPad or a digital tablet. Now, those items are ubiquitous.
My fifth grade students are 10 and 11 years old. What will the world look like when they are looking for jobs?
I don't know, but I do know it won't look like the 1950's.
So stop trying to force me to prepare them for that.