Release date: June, 2011
In 2010 a bi-partisan group of California Legislators asked CCST to assess
the state's innovation 'ecosystem' and offer a specific list of recommendations for legislators to
enhance the state's ability to foster and benefit from innovation. CCST convened a series of roundtables with
academic, industry and research leaders across the state in late 2010 to seek input on the
challenges faced by California. These groups cited three principal areas needing attention: support for the innovation
process itself, impending water shortages, and digital education.
As part of the process to help develop specific legislative ideas for responding to these areas,
on March 25, 2011, the California Teacher Advisory Council convened a group of teachers and administrators, representatives from technology companies,
philanthropies, policy groups, STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) networks and
publishers on the grounds of Cogswell Polytechnical College in Sunnyvale, California to discuss digital education.
Both anecdotal observations and neuroscience research highlight that digital
natives - young people who have never known an environment where they
are not surrounded by technology - learn differently. How we take advantage of these changes and shifts to shape
the classroom of the future will have profound implications for industry, as well
as education.
The summit focused on three questions:
- What does a digitally designed and enhanced classroom look and feel
like?
- How will it transform teaching and learning - the culture of a school?
- What is the toolkit to accomplish this type of transformation?
This summary covers the main presentations and discussions at the summit,
including:
- the keynote address by Cogswell Polytechnic College's President,
Charles Haskell;
- three demonstrations of how different tools can be used in the
classroom (along with a response and reflection from Cal TAC member
Jeff Foote);
- a discussion of new partnerships and how these could be launched
and strengthened;
- an example of how one California high school already has embraced
the digital future; and
- a discussion of specific next steps emerging from the summit.