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‘How can schools use data and artificial intelligence to broaden education and break down barriers for pupils?’

Prepar­ing stu­dents for the future of work is quite a chal­lenge, and one that is fac­ing gov­ern­ments and insti­tu­tions across the globe as they try to meet the Unit­ed Nations’ goal of inclu­sive and qual­i­ty edu­ca­tion for all. It’s clear that to meet this chal­lenge there is a need to explore new approach­es to edu­ca­tion. At Bett, one of the many themes explored by lead­ing edu­ca­tors is the oppor­tu­ni­ties pre­sent­ed by edu­ca­tion tech­nol­o­gy or edtech.

New edu­ca­tion approach­es will be dri­ven by inno­v­a­tive prac­tice, but be sup­port­ed with rel­e­vant tech­nol­o­gy. They will be required to oper­ate at both an infra­struc­ture and ped­a­gog­i­cal lev­el to ensure learn­ers every­where have the best oppor­tu­ni­ties. Along the way, their per­son­al data will need to be secured, main­tained and trans­ferred safe­ly as they move through an edu­ca­tion sys­tem and even on into the work­place. The issues range from the basic tech­nol­o­gy require­ments – all schools need fast, sta­ble inter­net access to unlock their poten­tial – to more com­plex ques­tions about pri­va­cy, big data and even break­ing down social and cul­tur­al stereo­types.

With wide­spread inter­net access in the UK, pupil pri­va­cy and online safe­ty is a hot top­ic. Schools are aware of how exposed data can be online and it’s why many of them shy away from the envi­ron­ment. The immi­nent Gen­er­al Data Pro­tec­tion Reg­u­la­tion (GDPR) will intro­duce a new role of data pro­tec­tion offi­cer to many schools. In the short term, this is like­ly to come as an added respon­si­bil­i­ty to staff, many of whom will not be ful­ly pre­pared. But those schools that encour­age data man­age­ment exper­tise will be able to use and inter­pret their data to under­stand learn­ing trends bet­ter, and enable them to address social chal­lenges.

Bett has part­nered with Kidza­nia and Havas to explore the career role-play options select­ed by 60,000 chil­dren at the attrac­tion. The results showed girls were 2,000 per cent more like­ly to choose a gen­der stereo­typ­i­cal role. They typ­i­cal­ly chose an option that was below their age and skill lev­el. Schools sit on rapid­ly grow­ing data sets; cor­rect use of them has the poten­tial to shape gov­ern­ment respons­es and school-lev­el appli­ca­tion of inno­va­tion to break down the invis­i­ble bar­ri­ers that are hold­ing chil­dren back.

With grow­ing num­bers of chil­dren in edu­ca­tion, the rise of adap­tive learn­ing, pow­ered by arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence, will become increas­ing­ly impor­tant. Hav­ing access to sys­tems that enable teach­ers to com­pile lessons at scale, and which run at the pace of each stu­dent account for per­son­al growth and pro­vide detailed ana­lyt­ics to show not just results but the effort being input by the stu­dents, will be trans­for­ma­tive. It will free up teach­ers’ time to focus on one-to-one ses­sions with those who are strug­gling and accu­rate­ly track progress. In time it could allow employ­ers to see how new employ­ees like to learn and cre­ate learn­ing envi­ron­ments that meet the UN’s glob­al goal for edu­ca­tion.

Today’s eight year olds, the alpha gen­er­a­tion, are well versed in dig­i­tal con­tent con­sump­tion and cre­ation, draw­ing on tablets and mobile devices, mak­ing videos, tak­ing pic­tures and gam­ing. Edtech is sec­ond nature to them. But, through the growth in the children’s book mar­ket, we can also see they still love the phys­i­cal act of turn­ing paper pages. What’s clear is they expect to see all these approach­es with­in their learn­ing envi­ron­ments and, more impor­tant­ly, they expect to con­tin­ue to cre­ate in those for­mats as they progress.

The most for­ward-look­ing schools have embraced flipped, project-based and prob­lem-solv­ing learn­ing approach­es as part of their teach­ing and have a one-device-per-per­son pol­i­cy. They are teach­ing cod­ing, robot­ics and oth­er STEAM-relat­ed activ­i­ties [sci­ence, tech­nol­o­gy, engi­neer­ing, art and math­e­mat­ics] to fos­ter a pas­sion in both boys and girls. They are meet­ing the needs of the emerg­ing tech­nolo­gies and those jobs that haven’t yet been invent­ed.