Technology's Challenge to Education – Westminster eForum Transcript

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Technology's Challenge to Education – Westminster eForum Transcript

David Braben, Founder and Chairman of Frontier, recently attended the Westminster eForum as a guest speaker where, while stood amidst an audience of professionals and politicians, gave a talk on the current state of affairs with ICT in British education. The full transcript can be read on the Frontier Website.

Once you're finished reading (it's quite long!), we're interested to see what your own thoughts are on ICT in education and computer games courses within universities, so leave us a comment.
 
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I wonder what sort of feedback he received from that talk.
My fiancée recently quite her job and decided to go to university, but as a mature student she had to complete an Access to University course first, which included ICT. It was incredibly basic stuff, and like David says in his script the teacher was only a few pages in front of the students. In fact, the other students who were finding it difficult(! there are some !) came to Becky (my fiancée) for help instead of the teacher.
On another note, my 4 year old daughter can find her way round Photoshop quiet easily now, so I dread to think how bored she's going to be in her ICT classes.
 
I'm not sure what the response from politicians were, but even having these events where the games industry can express itself and discuss the necessary route forward for the industry with the government is a step in the right direction. There was a Q&A which took place after (talks were segmented into two individual speakers followed by a Q&A). These were too long to display in the original post, but OK to post here. Dr. Rachel O’Connell was the talker who went after David:

Q: Professor Richard Noss: From the London Knowledge Lab, University of London and also the Technology Enhanced Learning Research Programme.
I agree with every word you said, David, and I speak as an ex-mathematician. I ought to just say as an aside, computer science is not the only subject where mathematics has been dropped from many university courses, engineering is another one. Rachel looked shocked when you said it, and she looks even more shocked now. However, here’s one thing I just want to take issue with. You said let’s give kids of higher ability the opportunity to study computer science and that’s fine, but it isn't just children of higher ability. Some of the most powerful ideas of our time are ideas taken from computer science and taken from the idea of programming and the idea of modelling and it isn't an exaggeration to say that maybe we wouldn’t be in the economic mess that we are now in if people had a better understanding of what it means to make a mathematical model, what it means to write a computer programme - not that they become computer programmers and work for your excellent company, David, but that they understand what it means to have a programme written and what it means when you use a programme what lies behind it. So if you just strip out the word higher ability and say students, I would be much happier.

A: David Braben:
To be honest…..well firstly I would like to apologise, that is essentially what I mean, is the ability to do computer science in the lower school would make a phenomenal difference because it would show, I mean ICT is essentially a functional teaching….when it is supporting subjects across the board I think it is fine, when it becomes a subject in its own right, as you are saying, it can be very, very dull for almost all students. If there were a separate computer science at GCSE, I think that would be fantastic. You are absolutely right, as well, on the other point which is its all STEM subjects, what are commonly and collectively called STEM subjects that are suffering, i.e. science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. The reason I pulled out computer science is that’s the one I have got actual figures for from e-skills, those figures, by the way, came from e-skills and the council of professors and heads of computer science. So these are real figures and they’re a shocking drop, but what’s important is the drop was a sharp one, it wasn’t a gradual one, it was a sharp one, just as the kids who had done GCSE at ICT were coming out, so I think there is a very high correlation. There is no certainty that it’s due to ICT, but there is a very high set of evidence. I know figures from other universities which are actually much more dramatic, but unfortunately I can't share those because I don’t have permission to do so. But I think the point here is, yes, I would echo your point. So many of the things that I learnt in my day are things you could do with computer science, you know things that your kid was talking about with Nintendogs, I think that is fantastic and in fact my very first game [Elite]….all sorts of people were forecasting profit ratios and things like that, which I thought wow that’s really complex, but it’s great that people are doing that, they are putting that much level of effort in, just to make their game play experience better and I think schools can embrace that with both hands, and the more I see it….some schools do, so please don’t take this as a criticism across the board, but it is just that ICT has a very, very low expectation of the children.

Q: Mike Cameron: Specialist Schools and Academies Trust.
David I think you would probably be surprised that I also agree with everything you said apart from the characterisation of why the problem starts with ICT. About 10 years ago I was a Head of ICT in a school with a lower sixth of around 200 students, with 8 students in the computer studies group. The following year with the introduction of the ICT GCE, we had 120. Now that wasn’t just because I’m a charismatic and you know excellent teacher, it was because those students were in that bubble that suddenly the school had a large investment in technology and availability of the technology, and they were a group who had gone through the lower school without having been able to access it and therefore they didn’t have the skills, the basic ICT skills that we had. Now the problem that created was that to go from 8 students to 120, from one teacher to four or five teachers, it wasn’t about bringing in skilled computing or ICT teachers, it was bringing in anyone who knew which way up the keyboard went, and therefore the rich content that there is in the ICT GCE in particular, wasn’t taught in a way that was actually beneficial or exciting for the students and that’s why you have got this follow through into no computer study students going through A-level and you have got now a very low number of computer study students going into universities. And the other thing I just want to add there is one of the problems here is that you are saying essentially that what the universities are teaching isn't right for you, the universities say to me what the schools are teaching at A-level isn't right for the universities and the A-level teachers are saying well what they are learning in the lower school at GCSE and Key Stage 3 isn't right for the A-level studies, so someone has got it wrong in all those places, and that’s the issue that has to be tackled.

A: David Braben:
Just to answer that, I think on your last point, I think all of them flow from each other. This is my point, the reason to advocate something like reintroduction of what was called computer science, it can still be called ICT and yes ICT was introduced for the best possible motives to make sure you catch the kids who don’t have coverage of it at home or whatever, but I think there are better ways to do that. But also if we can try and encourage the range, the curriculum within ICT to be a lot more compelling, that will then ripple through, it will make it easier at A-level, it will make it easier at tertiary level, it will make it easier for us to get the decent graduates, because this is something that’s going to affect Britain very, very badly in relation to the rest of the world because this is not a problem that is in the rest of the world.
 
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Cont.

Q: Bruce son: Sometime accidental computer science teacher.
My son and I spent forever playing Elite and my computer science club equipped with that and a few hours of playing with a BBC without actually having a BBC in front of us, the Model B, my little computer science club, without any official lessons, taught a guy who was building the sort of data parks where Governments park all their data, the sort of guy who was building a super computer, he wrote….his mother wrote in the Christmas card this year and the guy who was the PR fellow for the biggest research lab in Britain. These people are seriously technical and they are seriously self taught, they did not get it from me, I promise, because I don’t have that knowledge or that skill. What I did do was run every Saturday afternoon for some years a computer science club, this got them out of doing rugby and cross country, and much more important it got them into meeting world experts who would come and sit round when the school sort of didn’t encourage it anymore, around my kitchen table at home, and these same kids would come and there would be a dozen of us on a Saturday and somebody from the service provider would trogg up and discover she was cracking good at teaching and changed her job to running teams of programmers because she had met a dozen enthusiasts in class. Now where is, I ask, the David Braben’s school of computer science that runs when America does the pirate shop for latchkey kids, when Britain does the extension school for difficult children and kids in families with problems and the gifts and talent workshops are doing very serious and very valuable things. But if we did have that school of computer science on the side, with topics that you people in industry have provided as are interesting as opposed to what we in schools provide as are valuable to the £5 billion a year software industry. I have the feeling that you could turn the thing around.

A: David Braben:
Well firstly you are very kind to say so and I feel a bit embarrassed, guilty, that a lot of your time was spent playing Elite, hopefully you enjoyed it. Yes, I mean you make a very serious point that is something that I have been giving a lot of thought to and a group of us have started a charity with that exact intention in mind, this isn't a moneymaking exercise. I can't yet say what we are planning to do because it involves commercial partners that we are trying to put in place, but certainly the intent is there. Yes, I have visited schools, I have talked to kids, I’ve talked at universities, I have given lectures, you know, I do appreciate that there can be a lot of motivational elements here, especially with the games industry being so exciting to kids, but I think it’s more….the point that you said is that real excitement of discovery that the openness of a machine like the BBC Micro which unfortunately, with hardware these days we just don’t see because there are so many vested commercial interests of the closed platforms as opposed to open platforms. All of that side of things yes, I mean that’s what I want to try and address from the point of view of how it can be brought into school.

Dr. Rachel O’Connell:
And in my experience there is a lot of young people that are using the SDK that Facebook provide on their application platform to develop games and there is some really exciting stuff that is going on. And I totally agree with you that setting up clubs and stuff like that would be good, but we can harness the fact that the kids are online and doing stuff more effectively as well, so you extend the reach of those clubs.

David Braben:
Actually just one other point. I mean the things like…the sort of things that you run they are absolutely fantastic to kids, you know after school clubs and things like that, they are, if you like, they are the last vestiges that they are keeping the spirit of computer science alive, but I would love to see that during normal lessons.
 
Hi,

I think that the basic ought to be taught for those who don't understand computers. The computer revolution has come quite fast and has taken a fair few people by surprise. I'd say the should be given a chance to learn that stuff.

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I myself would love to have been(or indeed love to be) taught computer science even at my advancing years.
games have bee my biggest love for 30 years and I'd love to recreate the famed titles of my youth.
 
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