Giving Compass' Take:
- Gregg Behr discusses how learning ecosystems improve educational outcomes by incorporating community resources such as libraries, museums, and businesses.
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“Tending soil.”
That’s how Fred Rogers described Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, his beloved television program that aired from 1968 to 2001. Grounded in principles gleaned from top learning scientists, the Neighborhood offered a model for how “learning ecosystems” can work in tandem to tend the soil of learning.
Today, a growing body of evidence suggests that Rogers’ model was not only effective, but that real-life learning ecosystems – networks that include classrooms, living rooms, libraries, museums, and more – may be the most promising approach for preparing learners for tomorrow. As such, cities and regions around the world are constructing thoughtfully designed ecosystems that leverage and connect their communities’ assets, responding to the aptitudes, needs, and dreams of the learners they serve.
Efforts to study and scale these learning ecosystems at local, state, and federal levels would position the nation’s students as globally competitive, future-ready learners.
The Challenges of Incorporating Learning Ecosystems Into Education Systems
For decades, America’s primary tool for “tending soil” has been its public schools, which are (and will continue to be) the country’s best hope for fulfilling its promise of opportunity. At the same time, the nation’s industrial-era soil has shifted. From the way our communities function to the way our economy works, dramatic social and technological upheavals have remade modern society. This incongruity – between the world as it is and the world that schools were designed for – has blunted the effectiveness of education reforms; heaped systemic, society-wide problems on individual teachers; and shortchanged the students who need the most support.
“Public education in the United States is at a crossroads,” notes a report published by the Alliance for Learning Innovation, Education Reimagined, and Transcend: “to ensure future generations’ success in a globally competitive economy, it must move beyond a one-size-fits-all model towards a new paradigm that prioritizes innovation that holds promise to meet the needs, interests, and aspirations of each and every learner.”
What’s needed is the more holistic paradigm epitomized by Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood: a collaborative ecosystem that sparks engaged, motivated learners by providing the tools, resources, and relationships that every young person deserves.
Read the full article about learning ecosystems by Gregg Behr at Getting Smart.