10 skills you need to thrive tomorrow – and the universities that will help
you get them
[image: Bryan Molina a 8th grader works on his robot in the bilingual,
project lead the way class at Escuela Vieau Middle School in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin January 26, 2012 . With manufacturing companies complaining about
a skills gap with today's students some schools are offering classes that
prepare students for real world trade skills. After years of cutting
workforces, manufacturing executives complain they cannot find enough
people with skills needed to thrive in modern factories. Some 600,000
skilled manufacturing positions are currently unfilled in the United
States, according to a survey by Deloitte and The Manufacturing Institute]
Image: REUTERS/Darren Hauck
19 Aug 2016  Paul Kruchoski
<https://www.weforum.org/agenda/authors/paul-kruchoski>

   1. Policy adviser, US Department of Stat


We are awash today with visions for the university of tomorrow. Everyone
will have a cloud-based robotic tutor on a tablet, which will curate
everything we need to know. Six-week short courses or coding academies are
all we will require. The world of education will be all digital and
individualized, allowing you to learn from your laptop from anywhere
on-demand.

There is just one problem with these visions: they miss the mark on what
students need to learn to succeed.
New jobs require new skills

In the Fourth Industrial Revolution
<https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/01/the-fourth-industrial-revolution-what-it-means-and-how-to-respond/>,
universities and companies face numerous shifts, from emerging technologies
like autonomous transportation to broader social changes like the growing
global middle class. The World Economic Forum’s *Future of Jobs* report
<http://reports.weforum.org/future-of-jobs-2016/> highlights how these
trends are transforming the workforce. The top trend in the report, though,
is the changing nature of work. Work today is increasingly collaborative
and focused on solving complex problems in creative ways. Work is also more
trans-disciplinary than before: just look at how Google hired psychologists
to help coders design fonts, and anthropologists to better understand how
their users think and behave.
[image: alt]

The problem is that none of these skills are easy to learn alone, online,
or without effort. They take practice, and they demand rich, human
interactions. We learn to be complex thinkers, to manage relationships, and
to be emotionally intelligent by practicing those skills, with others, on
problems big and small.

The Fourth Industrial Revolution is also bringing us a new meta-trend: a
faster pace of change. There is no doubt that technological trends and the
list of skills above will continue to shift over the next five years.
Adaptation will be the order of the day. Workers at all levels will need to
continue learning new knowledge and gaining new skills throughout their
lives.

So what does the university of the future look like, and what does it do?
A university fit for the Fourth Industrial Revolution

First, the university of tomorrow will focus on imparting cognitive and
cross-functional skills, like critical thinking, creativity, collaboration,
and complex problem solving. Students will learn by combining studies with
practical application, such as internships, applied “laboratories” for both
STEM and non-STEM courses.

Models such as cooperative education, with alternating semesters of study
and work experience, will spread further from those countries – including
Australia, Brazil, Canada, Germany and the United States – where it is
already a common educational practice.

New models, like design workshops, will also continue to grow and flourish.
Stanford’s cross-disciplinary design workshops
<http://dschool.stanford.edu/classes/> on topics such as how to improve the
healthcare system are one model. The Institute for Design and Public Policy
<http://ce.risd.edu/pages/summer-institute-for-design-and-public-policy>,
created by the Rhode Island School of Design and the US Department of
State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, is another.
[image: A participant at the Institute for Design and Public Policy at the
Rhode Island School of Design]

The university of tomorrow will also focus on “learning to learn”. Learning
is a lifelong process, and with today’s pace of change, everyone will need
the tools to learn throughout life. “Grit” or persistence lies at the heart
of the lifelong learning process, so university educators will push
students to develop the resilience to master challenging material outside
the classroom.

Universities may push for more guided research, require students to
complete a capstone or thesis (as many already do), or develop new options
entirely. Regardless of discipline, universities will try to instil
foundational skills, such as how to find new sources of information, seek
out experts and formulate effective questions. Two current examples are the
explosion of interest in information sciences and the increasing use of
information sciences techniques in many disciplines.

Education technology has a role. But its role is to support the learning
process, not to supplant it entirely. Education technology can deliver
content or provide research tools. It can even help educators track and
identify individual students’ weakest areas. Many education technology
companies are pursuing these goals already. Yet the core skills of tomorrow
demand richer, deeper human interaction as students learn.
The university of tomorrow is already here

William Gibson said: “The future is already here – it’s just not very
evenly distributed.” This is particularly apt for the future university:
many universities already offer many or all of the educational elements
described above, and most are not new. Cooperative education started over a
century ago in the United States. The first “lab” classes in the social
sciences are decades old. Teaching the use of good questions to refine
thinking is an education practice that dates back to Socrates. Even new
models, like the design workshop, have been around for more than a decade.

Yet many universities do not use these models at all, while many others
cannot or do not offer them to every student in every discipline. The task
ahead is to make these learning experiences more universal and accessible.
We are long past the days when complex problem-solving and creativity were
only being taught to a few leaders at the top or to students at only the
most elite universities. If we are going to make the most of the Fourth
Industrial Revolution, we need everyone to reach their full potential,
whether leader, manager, employee, artist, or entrepreneur. Many of the
tools we need are already here. It’s on us to put them to good use.

*The author is a Global Shaper <https://www.globalshapers.org/> in the
Washington DC Hub. The Annual Curators Meeting of the Global Shapers
community is taking place in Geneva, Switzerland from **19 to 22 **August.*


YR Raghavan

__._,_.___


​Circulated by:
K.Raman.​

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Thatha_Patty" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to