New tech tools are available thanks to the pandemic – now educators are figuring out how to use them together with more traditional activities to build skills relevant to future workplaces
- Hong Kong’s international schools get some of the best results worldwide because they stay on top of technological innovation and educational modernisation
- Belinda Greer, CEO of the English Schools Foundation (ESF), describes an approach that tries to balance Play-Doh with coding and Zoom calls
Education has historically evolved at a steady pace, with curricula gradually updated every few years, depending on new findings from studies among students and faculty. More recently, however, things have been changing at breakneck speed.
Even before Covid-19 a trend started among more affluent schools for students to be given laptops or tablets from an early age. Now, technology and education-based video games are becoming staples of modern curricula, with the old focus on rote learning far less important than holistic development and preparing children for the modern world and ever-changing working environments.
This gives educators the exciting, but never-ending challenge to evolve to provide children with a holistic and relevant education. Schools that fall behind will quickly find their methods becoming obsolete, and their students will suffer because of it.
One of the reasons Hong Kong’s international schools consistently get some of the best results worldwide is that they are constantly on the forefront of technological innovation and educational modernisation. And although they’ve all faced a mighty challenge with the Covid-19 pandemic causing school closures for three years, the lessons learned during this difficult period will last forever.