quarta-feira, junho 24, 2009

Note to President Obama: Want to Fix the Schools? Look to Portugal!



Note to President Obama: Want to Fix the Schools? Look to Portugal!:
    To show the way, I suggest the president take a look at a modest country across the Atlantic that's turning into the world leader in rethinking education for the 21st century.

    That country is Portugal. Its economy in early 2005 was sagging, and it was running out of the usual economic fixes. It also scored some of the lowest educational achievement results in western Europe.

    So President Jose Socrates took a courageous step. He decided to invest heavily in a "technological shock" to jolt his country into the 21st century. This meant, among other things, that he'd make sure everyone in the workforce could handle a computer and use the Internet effectively.

    This could transform Portuguese society by giving people immediate access to world. It would open up huge opportunities that could make Portugal a richer and more competitive place. But it wouldn't happen unless people had a computer in their hands.

    In 2005, only 31% of the Portuguese households had access to the Internet. To improve this penetration, the logical place to start was in school, where there was only one computer for five kids. The aim was to have one computer for every two students by 2010.

    So Portugal launched the biggest program in the world to equip every child in the country with a laptop and access to the web and the world of collaborative learning. To pay for it, Portugal tapped into both government funds and money from mobile operators who were granted 3G licenses. That subsidized the sale of one million ultra-cheap laptops to teachers, school children, and adult learners.

    Here's how it works: If you're a teacher or a student, you can buy a laptop for 150 euros (U.S. $207). You also get a discounted rate for broadband Internet access, wired or wireless. Low income students get an even bigger discount, and connected laptops are free or virtually free for the poorest kids. For the youngest students in Grades 1 to 4, the laptop/Internet access deal is even cheaper -- 50 euros for those who can pay; free for those who can't.

    That's only the start: Portugal has invested 400 million euros to makes sure each classroom has access to the Internet. Just about every classroom in the public system now has an interactive smart board, instead of the old fashioned blackboard.

    This means that nearly nine out of 10 students in Grades 1 to 4 have a laptop on their desk. The impact on the classroom is tremendous, as I saw this spring when I toured a classroom of seven-year-olds in a public school in Lisbon. It was the most exciting, noisy, collaborative classroom I have seen in the world.

5 comentários :

Anónimo disse...

Por favor, marquem depressa um frente-a-frente José Sócrates - Manuela F. Leite!!

Anónimo disse...

E afinal quem é Don Tapscott ? Um jornalista de investigação do Sol que traiu o chefe? Não..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Tapscott

"[...] His most famous book, co-authored with Anthony Williams and published in 2006 is Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything. Wikinomics was the best selling Management book in the US of 2007 and has been translated into 22 languages.[...]"

"Don Tapscott (born 1947) is a Canadian business executive, author, consultant and speaker based in Toronto, Ontario, specializing in business strategy, organizational transformation and the role of technology in business and society. Tapscott is chairman of business strategy think tank New Paradigm (now nGenera Insight), which he founded in 1993. Tapscott is also Adjunct Professor of Management at the Joseph L. Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto.[1]

Tapscott holds a B.Sc. in Psychology and Statistics, and an M.Ed. specializing in Research Methodology. He also holds two honorary Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) granted by the University of Alberta in 2001, and Trent University in 2006.[2][3] While earning his Master's of Education at the University of Alberta, he ran for mayor of Edmonton in the 1977 municipal election.[4] [5]

Tapscott has authored or co-authored thirteen books on the application of technology in business and society. His most recent book, released in 2008 and entilted "Grown Up Digital: How the Net Generation is Changing Your World," draws upon a 4.5 million dollar research study of over 11,000 young people and examines how the net generation is changing the world and all of its instutions.[6] "Grown Up Digital" is a follow up to his popular 1997 book "Growing Up Digital: The Rise of the Net Generation" which explained the business and social impact of the first generation to come of age in the digital world. His most famous book, co-authored with Anthony Williams and published in 2006 is Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything. Wikinomics was the best selling Management book in the US of 2007 and has been translated into 22 languages.[7]

His 2003 book,The Naked Corporation: How the Age of Transparency Will Revolutionize Business co-authored with David Ticoll describes how corporate transparency, accountability, and stakeholder relationships are the new frontier for competitive innovation. His 2000 release Digital Capital: Harnessing the Power of Business Webs describes how business webs are replacing the traditional model of the firm and changing the dynamics of wealth creation and competition.Digital Economy: Promise and Peril In The Age of Networked Intelligence, published in 1995, was one of the first books to describe how the Internet would change business and society. Tapscott is probably best known for his 1992 book Paradigm Shift: The New Promise of Information Technology."

Miguel

Luís Caetano disse...

Enquanto o país que não se deixa governar ridiculariza o Magalhães, a medida é elogiada num dos blogues de informação mais lidos do mundo. Já no último sábado, no programa A Força das Coisas, da Antena 2, António Câmara, da ydreams o descreveu como uma revolução na educação tecnológica.

Caty Waves disse...

Por favor, não mostrem isto aos que combatem o que o Governo tem feito pela Educação em Portugal.

Nuno disse...

"Por favor, marquem depressa um frente-a-frente José Sócrates - Manuela F. Leite!!"
Caro anónimo, eu tb gostava muito de assistir esses debates para se assitir em directo à vacuidade do pensamento da proto salazarenta senhora, mas a senhora vai andar a fugir do debate como o diabo da cruz com as mais variadas desculpas que consigam imaginar (política de verdade, não sei se está a ver!), sobretudo se o lider da oposição marcar as eleições foram para a mesma data!
Cpmts