I see a lot of internal contradictions in this, but I can't tell if that's because I'm misreading it or not. For example, when I read this:
In particular, it is suggested that we need an ‘Odyssean’ education so that a substantial fraction of teenagers, students and adults might understand something of our biggest intellectual and practical problems, and be trained to take effective action.
My reaction hinges on the numerical interpretation of "substantial" (whose emphasis is mine). Is it 5%, compared to a current <1%? Then yeah, that seems doable. Is it a 20%? Then no, that doesn't seem doable, and seeking to write a class on integrative systems thinking that the 80th percentile student can survive is probably going to make it a worthless class.
Although they would not put it like this, most prominent people in the education world tacitly accept that failing to develop the talents of the most able is a price worth paying to be able to pose as defenders of ‘equality’.
To the extent that this report is an attack on the doomed quest for equality and a proposal to educate students according to their talents, I am entirely in favor.
Given the lack of empirical research into what pupils with different levels of cognitive ability are capable of with good teachers, research that obviously should be undertaken, and given excellent schools (private or state) show high performance is possible, it is important to err on the side of over-ambition rather than continue the current low expectations.
Agreed that this research should obviously be undertaken. But I think wording this as "err on the side of over-ambition" is a mistake; the current philosophy of equality errs on the side of over-ambition, and in some sense that is its root problem! If you have the "ambitious" goal of putting every child through university, the only result is the debasement of the university degree to something of no value. The necessary change is reducing ambitions down to something realistic- educate each child as far as it makes sense for them to go- and once you accept that individuals have different limits, then it becomes possible to make the full use of each child.
Programmes in America have shown that ‘adolescents scoring 500 or higher on SAT-M or SAT-V by age 13 (top 1 in 200), can assimilate a full high school course (e.g., chemistry, English, and mathematics) in three weeks at summer residential programs for intellectually precocious youth; yet, those scoring 700 or more (top 1 in 10,000), can assimilate at least twice this amount…’ (Lubinski, 2010).
Yep. But again, note the fractions here- students that are 1 in 200! That hardly seems like a substantial fraction to me.
...In particular, it is suggested that we need an ‘Odyssean’ education so that a substantial fraction of teenagers, students and adults might understand something of our biggest intellectual and practical problems, and be trained to take effective action.
My reaction hinges on the numerical interpretation of "substantial" (whose emphasis is mine). Is it 5%, compared to a current <1%? Then yeah, that seems doable. Is it a 20%? Then no, that doesn't seem doable, and seeking to write a class on integrative systems thinking that the 80th percentil
The soon-to-be-resigning Dominic Cummings, advisor to the Education Secretary of the Coalition government, has released a 250-page manifesto describing the problems of the British educational establishment ("the blob" in Whitehall parlance) and offering solutions. I post this here because both his analysis and recommendations are likely to be interesting to LW, in particular an increased emphasis on STEM, broader knowledge of the limits of human reasoning and how they relate to managing complex systems, an appreciation for "agenty"-ness in organizational leadership, whole-brain emulation, intelligence enhancement, recursive self-improving AGI, analysis of human interactions on a firm evolutionary-psychological basis, and a rejection of fashionable pseudoscientific theories of psychology and society. Relevant extracts: