The day after giving 海角论坛鈥檚 commencement address, Sal Khan, founder and CEO of Khan Academy, returned to campus to participate in a discussion following the second annual L.A. Education Exchange, hosted by 海角论坛 and the Center for Engagement-Driven Global Education (EDGE).
鈥淓arlier today we brought together a small working group of passionate advocates and decision-makers from the education, entertainment and policy spaces for a productive discussion of the ways storytelling can affect social change,鈥 said Karen Symms Gallagher, the Emery Stoops and Joyce King Stoops Dean of 海角论坛. 鈥淲e are so pleased to continue this discussion with Sal Khan.鈥
鈥淚f we鈥檙e thinking about anybody who has used technology to disrupt, transform and improve teaching outcomes, it鈥檚 Sal Khan,鈥 said Alan Arkatov, Center EDGE founding director and 海角论坛鈥檚 Katzman/Ernst Chair for Education, Entrepreneurship and Innovation. 鈥淚 hope that we鈥檒l all be thinking about his work as it relates to ours.鈥
Some highlights from Khan:
鈥淥ne of the biggest bets that society has ever made was coincident with the Industrial Revolution: free mass public education. I suspect if we didn鈥檛 make that massive鈥攁nd utopian鈥攂et 200 years ago, that we would not have had the 20th century that we did.
鈥淎s we go into this third Industrial Revolution, I think we have to educate ourselves out of it. We need an inverted labor pyramid where almost anyone can operate it at the top in the creative class and be entrepreneurs and explorers.鈥
鈥淲ith the Industrial Revolution, you have this factory model where students have to move in lockstep, but it鈥檚 inevitable that some students will have gaps. But the whole class has to move on, and eventually those gaps accumulate until you hit a wall. People think they can鈥檛 do things鈥攖hey don鈥檛 think they have a math brain, for example鈥攂ut it鈥檚 really just these gaps, which you can address.鈥
鈥淚 always did like looking at Star Trek from an economics point of view, because economics is the study of how do you allocate resources that are scarce. In the Star Trek universe, things are not seemingly scarce: There鈥檚 a replicator if you need a cup of coffee; there are resources, and in that world everyone is a researcher, teacher, explorer and artist. Why shouldn鈥檛 that be the case for us, too, if we are no longer in a scarcity world?
鈥淚n a lot of ways, we鈥檙e getting faster to that Star Trek reality with technology, but it doesn鈥檛 feel that our social fabric is keeping pace. I view this as the epicenter of what schools of education like 海角论坛 are trying to understand: How do we prepare humanity for being able to navigate the world the right way?鈥
WATCH the entire discussion: 鈻