Change, continuing to learn, and Bloom's taxonomy keeps blooming
- The challenges that we face
- The need for well educated, creative and innovative people who can work together
- The need for all of us to make dramatic changes in the ways we see things
- The need to find ways to "regroup" to face our uncertain future together, collaboratively, rather than in destructive competition
Like other "finite world" videos it raises the need for new approaches and new thinking - because of the challenges of living in a world that is not based on ideas of continuing growth. By contrast Martin Ford doesn't seem concerned about any finite world issues - his concern is about robots reducing the need for human labour, and what that will do to our ideas about work.
- Martin Ford asks - Will automation lead to economic collapse - http://singularityhub.com/2010/05/21/computers-to-take-human-jobs-shutdown-global-economy-get-fords-book-free/
- Computers To Take Human Jobs, Shutdown Global Economy? http://singularityhub.com/2010/05/21/computers-to-take-human-jobs-shutdown-global-economy-get-fords-book-free/
I was most interested in the comments on his ideas, which are also emphasising the need for new thinking - especially in the area of work and how we view it (my highlights):.
Ford doesn’t leave his readers with just another doomsday scenario, he does his best to find a solution. No, he doesn’t think we should (or perhaps even can) avoid automation. Instead, TLITT explores some pretty radical ways that we could put purchasing power back in the hands of the masses and create non-traditional jobs with economic incentives. He speaks of ‘recapturing wages’ by imposing capital/labor taxes on industries as they automate, and value added taxes to goods as they become cheaper. These taxes should not be large enough to discourage automation, but they could (Ford proposes) provide revenue for a new kind of job.
Ford’s ‘virtual jobs’ are incentivised programs that would reward people for pursuits such as education, civic service, journalism, and environmental responsibility. These jobs would be paid for by the state through the revenue gained through recaptured wages. Those who accomplished more in their virtual jobs would receive higher wages, thus providing the financial incentive that everyone needs to feel like they are really working. There would be some industries and some workers that exist outside of this new system, and plenty of space and encouragement (Ford says) for entrepreneurs, who would still have the most potential for monetary gain.
So, to paraphrase Ford’s solution in my own words: we should take money from automating industries to fund a state guided program that gives money to consumers in exchange for working at bettering themselves. Sounds like a decent plan. Never gonna happen.
edited by Dougald Hine and Keith Kahn-Harris - Despatches from the Invisible Revolution. Some of the practical outworking or these ideas will be visible soon when Nikki Fishman and I launch 'Collage - Age of Collaboration"
- Email to Michel Bauwens - P2P and Landscape of Change - http://dadamac.posterous.com/p2p-and-landscape-of-change
- ‘Despatches from the Invisible Revolution’ E-book published by New Public Thinkers launch evening 29 February, at Free Word in London http://bellacaledonia.org.uk/2012/02/17/here-now/
I believe strongly in learning by doing - mixing practical work with analysis and theory. It's how I prefer to learn and so I identify with others who favour that approach as well. To me it's the natural way to approach learning, and living, and therefore life-long-learning.
So this weekend I was glad to learn (and to share with others) that Weezie is continuing her alternative learning journey - Latest from my "fellow student" Weezie -The Eduventurist Project 2012
Some links then led me to the Khan Acadamy, and from what Salman Khan was saying I think I must have been lucky with how I learned maths - and how I was taught to teach it. . Khan Academy seems to be helping a lot of people, with an approach that is appreciated for its intimate and somewhat informal approach - more like having a friend explain things to you.
- Is the Khan Academy The Future of Education? (video) - http://singularityhub.com/2010/09/11/is-the-khan-academy-the-future-of-education-video/
- Salman Khan Speaks at GEL (Good Experience Live) Conference -
- The Ad Hoc Enquiries: Do you have a new theory? http://thrivingtoo.typepad.com/thriving_too/2012/01/the-ad-hoc-enquiries-do-you-have-a-new-theory.html
Reading Tessy Britton's recent posts on the Social Brain linked me to Bloom's Taxonomy. That took my mind back to the 1970's, when I was writing my final dissertation as a trainee teacher. I had chosen the topic "Think Child!" ( -which was an exploration of what that common admonition really means - using the structure of Bloom's taxonomy to guide me through the analysis).
- Bloom's taxonomy http://projects.coe.uga.edu/epltt/index.php?title=Bloom%27s_Taxonomy
I guess that in one way and another I've been studying that taxonomy ever since.