Education
in My Eyes
By
Rickey Watson Jr.
The views of Jeffrey R. Young are much unbiased. I admire the fact that he chose diverse
sources to gather his information. His
main objective was simply to respond to a very bold statement made by Dekunle
Somade, a senior at the U. of Maryland at College Park. Somade said, “There's
not really much need for teachers anymore, since so much material is online.” Jeffrey
propose a very valid question in response to this statement. But the question is a question that is hard
to answer in a world filled with people of many different thoughts, styles,
preferences, taste, etc.
Learning is different for everyone. The way one learns is different and it has
nothing to do with what century we are in.
It is true; people evolve, people change. Change is inevitable to a world that is constantly
evolving.
But just as Charles Darwin describes his theory of
natural selection; how organism that adapt to their environment tend to
survive, this is true for people with technology as well.
This world is centered on technology and some people
have to face it.
On the other hand, some things that are taught
cannot be taught through online sessions.
I’m in an acting school and a lot of things we focus on are physical
aspects. We do a lot of hands-on
work. I can’t imagine trying to take a
movement class via “SKYPE”, LOL. However, some classes I rather take online
like lecture classes or writing classes and so forth, because those classes are
classes that are self-explanatory that requires skills that we should already
have: reading, understanding, analyzing, writing, and simply following
directions.
So there are a lot of things to take into
consideration with this question, being culturally relevant, but yet needing
things that a computer class cannot offer.
As far as my opinion on this subject matter, I feel
that just as Mr. Randy Bass, executive director of
Georgetown University's Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship
argued, “Courses won’t go away completely…they do provide a handy framework... (he)
hopes that professors will stop thinking of them as a goal unto themselves and
focus more on linking skills conveyed in the classroom to hands-on student
activities.”