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Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President [email protected] The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President [email protected] The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

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Page 1: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS [email protected]

The Future of Schools…and

The Schools of the Future

Page 2: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Future of Schools/Schools of the Future

Highlights from…

Trendbook 2011/2012

Top Ten Trends 2011

Top Ten Trends 2012

Schools of the Future– The 5 C’s + 1

Page 3: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 4: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 5: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 6: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 7: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Top 5 % Incomes?

Page 8: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

The Forever Recession?

Page 9: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 10: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 11: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 12: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 13: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Sticky Messages?

70 % of character -building parents already in our schools

Page 14: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

• The plurality of recipients of financial aid are the upper middle class• Sophie’s Choice? Our profile vs. higher ed’s financial aid profile.

Page 15: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 16: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Trendbook 2011/2012

Page 17: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Future of Schools/Schools of the Future

Highlights from…

Trendbook 2011/2012

Top Ten Trends 2011

Top Ten Trends 2012

Schools of the Future

Page 18: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Ten Trends – 2010-11

Trend 3: A Consensus Is Emerging on What Great Teaching Looks Like and the Danger of Its Disappearing in American Schools:

Great teachers ( “teach kids” not subjects) are the hedgehog of independent schools. Meta-analysis of what distinguishes great teachers is that they are smart, and they love kids—they have both high IQ (academic smarts) and high EQ (emotional intelligence).

– Problem 1: The demographics of the teacher pool are alarming.

– Problem 2: Generally poor students choose to be education majors coming from the least selective colleges and universities and have the lowest grades and SAT scores. High-performing college grads don’t choose teaching (vs. high-performing countries).

– Problem 3: Next generation great teaching will be blended, high-tech and high-touch, not an easy combination to retrofit on current faculty.

– Problem 4: Movement in American education in general in the wrong directions—towards standardization, not creativity.

– Problem 5: Good and bad teachers fairly equally distributed throughout the public school system, affluent and poor districts.

– Problem 6: PFB’s extrapolation of Pink’s concepts in Drive: “Too much autonomy given, too little mastery expected”: Professional development over-weighted to serve individuals more so than schools.

Silver Lining: Great teaching the staple of independent school business: We know where to find and train good teachers. (And so does Teach for America.

Page 19: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Toxicity for Kids from the Culture Is Growing

• Parents have most profound impact on morals.• Mixed signals from parents: spectrum from “I

want my child to be happy” (Anthony Campolo) to Black Swan / Tiger Mom expectations of “perfection.”

• Weissbourd’s research: Teens’ perception of what they believe to be the most important value for them in their parents’ mind: 1. For you to be happy 2. Achieving a high level of income3. Having a high status job4. Being a good person who cares about others5. Gaining entrance into a selective college2/3rds public & private school kids thought #1 over #4. ½ of high income private school kids thought #5 over #4.

• Weissbourd’s comment on academic “pressure”: 30-40% of Harvard’s undergrads on anti-depressants.

Page 20: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Future of Schools/Schools of the Future

Highlights from…

Trendbook 2011/2012

Top Ten Trends 2011

Top Ten Trends 2012

Schools of the Future

Page 21: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

The traditional model of college is changing: proliferation of for-profits; hybrid class schedules with night and weekend meetings; online learning.

Graduation rates down while debt and default rates up: One-half graduate within six years; student loan debt is at an all-time high; loan default rates have risen sharply consigning a growing number of students to years of financial misery. (Debt to Degree: A New Way of Measuring College Success – Education Sector, 2011)

Students’ convenience is the future: classes online; study part time; courses from multiple universities; jumping in and out of colleges.

Acute pressure on traditional colleges to adapt (that have difficulty adapting): The nimble models, for-profit and community colleges and online universities, have growing enrollments. (See also Colleges in Crisis: Disruptive change comes to American higher education, by Clayton M. Christensen and Michael B. Horn, Harvard Magazine July-August 2011)

Trend #3: Disruptions in Higher Ed Will Create New Expectations (Source: Chronicle’s College2020 Report, June 2009)

Page 22: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Students now in elementary school are going to expect more: especially more connectivity and creativity.

Just after 2020, minority students will outnumber whites: many being “first gen” students.

Beyond the elite private colleges and flagship public universities, competition for students will increase: choices based on price, convenience, and the perceived strengths of the institutions.

Value proposition of college education is challenged: Bureau of Labor Statistics – only 39 percent of the jobs in the 10 fastest-growing occupations will require a college degree. If traditional colleges cannot keep costs affordable, other college models will take their place.

Implications for Independent Schools: Our college-prep value proposition increases as higher ed’s is challenged.

Trend #3 Disruptions in Higher Ed Will Create New Expectations (Source: Chronicle’s College2020 Report, June 2009)

Page 23: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Future of Schools/Schools of the Future

Highlights from…

Trendbook 2011/2012

Top Ten Trends 2011

Top Ten Trends 2012

Schools of the Future

Page 24: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Are We Ready for the Big Shifts in Education? (cf. MacArthur Foundation, 21st. C. Learning)

The Big Shifts

Knowing……………. Doing

Teacher-centered…… Student-centered

The Individual………. The Team

Consumption of Info…Construction of Meaning

Schools………………..Networks (online peers & experts)

Single Sourcing………..Crowd Sourcing

High Stakes Testing……High Value Demonstrations

Page 25: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

“So What’s it Gonna Be, Eh?”

The End!

Page 26: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

PLCs & Crowdsourcing Lessons & Curriculum

Page 27: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Othello – Orson Wells (1952)Othello – Laurence Olivier (1965)Othello – Laurence Fishbourne (1995)Othello – Cheers version (1983)

Return

Page 28: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xL2PutgTRI

Run

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Page 29: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Run Return

Page 30: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Experiential Ed:•21st C. Skills & Values•Demonstrations of Learning- The 5 C’s.

Page 31: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Rio Grande School (NM)

Page 32: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Run Clip

Lamplighter School (TX) Egg Business

Page 33: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

NAIS’s Challenge 20/20: High Noon

Sharing our planet: Issues involving the “global common”• Global warming• Biodiversity and ecosystem losses• Fisheries depletion• Deforestation• Water deficits• Maritime safety and pollutionSharing our humanity: Issues requiring a global commitment & covenant• Massive step-up in the fight against poverty• Peacekeeping, conflict prevention, combating terrorism• Education for all• Global Infectious Diseases• Digital divide• Natural disaster prevention and mitigationSharing our rulebook: Issues needing a global regulatory approach• Reinventing taxation for the 21st century• Biotechnology rules• Global financial architecture• Illegal drugs• Trade, investment, and competition rules• Intellectual property rights• E-commerce rules• International labor and migration rules.

Page 34: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

20/20 Fay School Entrepreneurship:Global Problem: Water DeficitsGlobal Solution: WaterWalker

Fay School (MA) 8th graders

Page 35: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Challenge 20/20: Montessori School of Denver

Return

Page 36: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Falmouth Academy’s Submersible Robot

Creativity, Robotics, Teaming and STEM

Return

Page 37: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Expeditionary Leadership TrainingUpper School “Borders” Project – Watershed School, CO

NOLS-based Leadership Basics:Taking Care of…1.Yourself…2.Your Stuff…3.Your Responsibilities to the Team

In the context of real-world project-based learning and problem-solvingMeasured by CWRA critical-thinking assessment.Results: Outperformed 99% of college freshmen

Return

Page 38: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Grant Wood’s Victorian Survival

Smithsonian Podcast interpretation by Katy Waldman, Holton Arms School

Demonstration of Learning

Page 39: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Crowdsourcing Meets Gaming

Average young person today will spend 10,000 hours with onlinegaming (same amount of time in school from grades 5 – 12). See www.worldwithouttoil.com Return

Gaming as an amazing new therapy for kids with autism: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCWYFo7HesA

Page 40: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Top 5% Incomes

Page 41: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Top 5% Incomes

Page 42: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Top 5% IncomesPFB: The “X-Factor”: increasing market share.What are your three scenarios?

Return

Page 43: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

NAIS Parent Motivation Survey – 2011(High Income Families, Actively Searching)

Parents Who Push: Seek challenging schools for their kid they consider very smart and “gifted”

– Messages about test scores & college placement:

– “An environment where your child is free to be challenged by teachers who are free to teach.”

Success-Driven Parents: Seek schools that will help their kids get into top tier colleges as a step to a successful life

– Messages about quality and diversity of student body:

– “Excellence, not standardization, is the standard.”

Page 44: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

NAIS Parent Motivation Survey – 2011(High Income Families, Actively Searching)

Special Kids Parents: Seek a school that can meet their child’s unique learning or behavior or personality needs.

– Messages about high quality teachers and high academic standards to help their child reach his or her potential:

– “You expect success. We make it happen.”

Character-Building Parents: Seek a school that emphasizes strong moral and character values, good citizenship, and high academic standards:

– Messages about “the second curriculum”:

– “Sometimes an education is about more than just knowing the right answer. It’s about knowing what’s right.”

Page 45: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

NAIS Parent Motivation Survey – 2011(High Income Families, Actively Searching)

Public School Proponents: Seek the best public school because they believe those schools can provide all their kids need.

– Messages: Don’t bother with this group – Unlikely to win them over.

Other Sticky Messages?

– “Can you afford not to afford an independent school education?”

– “We know your kid. The colleges know us.”

Return

Page 46: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Demonstrations of Learning: “What you do, not what you know, the ultimate test of education.” ~PFB Tweet

1. Conduct a fluent conversation in a foreign language about of piece of writing in that language. (Stanford University requirement)

2. Write a cogent and persuasive opinion piece on a matter of public importance.

3. Declaim with passion and from memory a passage that is meaningful, of one’s own or from the culture’s literature or history.

4. Demonstrate a commitment to creating a more sustainable and global future with means that are scalable

5. Invent a machine or program a robot capable of performing a difficult physical task.

Page 47: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Demonstrations of Learning

6. Exercise leadership in arena which you have passion and expertise.

7. Using statistics, assess if a statement by a public figure is demonstrably true.

8. Assess media coverage of a global event from various cultural/national perspectives. (“Arab Spring” vs. 6th grade US history unit on “causes of the revolution”)

9. Describe a breakthrough for a project-based team on which you participated in which you contributed to overcoming a human-created obstacle.

10. Produce or perform or stage or interpret a work of art.Return

Page 48: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Ten (more) Trends for School Leaders to Ponder(see Top Ten Trends 2010-11 PPT for First Ten)

1. Boards Become Focused on the Strategic: NAIS’s Trendbook 2011-12

2. Disruptions in K-12 Education Will Provide New Challenges

3. Disruptions in Higher Ed Will Produce New Expectations

4. The Future of Mobile is the Future of Everything

5. Market Segmentation as the New Marketing Imperative

6. Cosmopolitanism Emerging as the “Sixth Competency” Schools of the Future

7. Hyper-Parenting Exerting a Heavy Toll on Kids

8. Beyond the 3 R’s of Recruitment, Reward, & Retention: Managing Talent a Priority

9. The Profession will be Professionalized

10. Schools will be more Flexible, Accommodating, and InnovativeReturn

Page 49: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

Cannon School Mobile App

Page 50: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassett@nais.org The Future of Schools…and The Schools of the Future

The Forever Recession

• Seth Godin’s Blog: The Forever Recession (and the Coming Revolution) Cyclical recessions vs. forever recessions: the “race to the bottom” to return industrial factories to the U.S. will inevitably fail because someone elsewhere will always be able to produce goods cheaper.

• The coming revolution will be Internet-based: entrepreneurs who will network, market, create to produce value.

• Tom Friedman Oct 21, 2011 Op Ed “One Country – Two Revolutions” : The coming revolution here now, in Silicon Valley. The cloud & mobile computing making everyone a potential Mark Zuckerberg.