What do children need to know in the digital age?

My Adorable Gift

Words on Marble

Achieving Academic Excellence with Kindness

For teachers, empathy is an indispensable tool of instruction, and arguably, the key attribute (beyond knowledge of content, pedagogy, and student development) to being an effective teacher”. Paul Rogers
The above assertation by Rogers is absolutely true.
Before the last winter break in 2019,we had a first mid term test and I wasn’t truly pleased with the feedback I got from my learners despite the formative way of teaching. Everyone in my class is an automatic member of the kindness council. So, I told them that in the new year some of them will be evicted from the kindness council and others suspended from the council if they don’t improve greatly in their exams especially by having 80% and above in their exams.
So,we had another exam to end the term and failingly some of them tried their possible best to get 80% in their exams but couldn’t while some maintained what they have got.
When we resumed from the winter break, we had a council meeting to deliberate on what should be done to others who were not able to attain the desired target and to my greatest surprise, the pupils with 80% and above were kind enough to say that they should be given a second chance! Being a kind teacher too,I agreed with their resolution.
We had another summative exam 17th- 24th February, 2020 and to my greatest surprise, everyone was at their best and actually attained 80% and more and majority of those who were given a second chance performed more than those who had attained the targeted percentage.

I will like to quote Paul Rogers again: “There are many tools and pathways for the development of empathy associated with a variety of disciplines, e.g., through the language arts in reading, listening, researching and writing about people from other languages and cultures, through deepening our understanding of our interconnectedness with nature, through class and schoolwide dialogues and projects, and through technological tools, like Empatico , that connect classrooms across communities and countries”.

Empatico is a great tool indeed to spark empathy and kindness in our classrooms and also a drive to achieve great heights socially, mentally,emotionally and academically.Below is the graph that shows the improvement of my pupils.

Big thanks to Empatico for helping us spread kindness and empathy. Everyone is happy because no one will be suspended or evicted from the council!
Graph showing my learners’ scores before the kindness council resolutions.

GLOBAL GOALS 2030

#Envision2030: 17 goals to transform the world for persons with disabilities

Imagine the world in 2030, fully inclusive of persons with disabilities

In September 2015, the General Assembly adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development that includes 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Building on the principle of “leaving no one behind”, the new Agenda emphasizes a holistic approach to achieving sustainable development for all.

Visual identity of the SDGs that shows each individual goal in colour boxes

The SDGs also explicitly include disability and persons with disabilities 11 times. Disability is referenced in multiple parts of the SDGs, specifically in the parts related to education, growth and employment, inequality, accessibility of human settlements, as well as data collection and the monitoring of the SDGs.

Although, the word “disability” is not cited directly in all goals, the goals are indeed relevant to ensure the inclusion and development of persons with disabilities.

Inforgraphic that shows where disability is explicitly included in the 17 SDGs

The newly implemented 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development holds a deep promise for persons with disabilities everywhere.

The year 2016 marks the first year of the implementation of the SDGs. At this critical point,  #Envision2030 will work to promote the mainstreaming of disability and the implementation of the SDGs throughout its 15-year lifespan with objectives to:

  • Raise awareness of the 2030 Agenda and the achievement of the SDGs for persons with disabilities;
  • Promote an active dialogue among stakeholders on the SDGs with a view to create a better world for persons with disabilities; and
  • Establish an ongoing live web resource on each SDG and disability.

The campaign invites all interested parties in sharing their vision of the world in 2030 to be inclusive of persons with disabilities.

Please forward your comments, suggestions, references and/or new information on the SDGs and persons with disabilities to enable@un.org or follow us @UNEnable on Facebook and Twitter anduse hashtag #Envision2030 to join the global conversation and help create a world in 2030 that is fully inclusive of persons with disabilities.

The 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs) to transform our world:

GOAL 1: No Poverty

GOAL 2: Zero Hunger

GOAL 3: Good Health and Well-being

GOAL 4: Quality Education

GOAL 5: Gender Equality

GOAL 6: Clean Water and Sanitation

GOAL 7: Affordable and Clean Energy

GOAL 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth

GOAL 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure

GOAL 10: Reduced Inequality

GOAL 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities

GOAL 12: Responsible Consumption and Production

GOAL 13: Climate Action

GOAL 14: Life Below Water

GOAL 15: Life on Land

GOAL 16: Peace and Justice Strong Institutions

GOAL 17: Partnerships to achieve the Goal

Resources:

The World’s Largest Lesson

21st Century Learning Skills

21st Century Learning Skills

P21’s Framework for 21st Century Learning

P21’s Framework for 21st Century Learning

P21 skills

21st century skills comprise skills, abilities, and learning dispositions that have been identified as being required for success in 21st century society and workplaces by educators, business leaders, academics, and governmental agencies. This is part of a growing international movement focusing on the skills required for students to master in preparation for success in a rapidly changing, digital society. Many of these skills are also associated with deeper learning, which is based on mastering skills such as analytic reasoning, complex problem solving, and teamwork. These skills differ from traditional academic skills in that they are not primarily content knowledge-based.

During the latter decades of the 20th century and into the 21st century, society has undergone an accelerating pace of change in economy and technology. Its effects on the workplace, and thus on the demands on the educational system preparing students for the workforce, have been significant in several ways. Beginning in the 1980s, government, educators, and major employers issued a series of reports identifying key skills and implementation strategies to steer students and workers towards meeting the demands of the changing workplace and society.

The current workforce is significantly more likely to change career fields or jobs. Those in the Baby Boom generation entered the workforce with a goal of stability; subsequent generations are more concerned with finding happiness and fulfillment in their work lives. Young workers in North America are now likely to change jobs at a much higher rate than previously, as much as once every 4.4 years on average. With this employment mobility comes a demand for different skills, ones that enable people to be flexible and adaptable in different roles or in different career fields.

As western economies have transformed from industrial-based to service-based, trades and vocations have smaller roles. However, specific hard skills and mastery of particular skill sets, with a focus on digital literacy, are in increasingly high demand. People skills that involve interaction, collaboration, and managing others are increasingly important. Skills that enable people to be flexible and adaptable in different roles or in different fields, those that involve processing information and managing people more than manipulating equipment—in an office or a factory—are in greater demand. These are also referred to as “applied skills” or “soft skills”, including personal, interpersonal, or learning-based skills, such as life skills(problem-solving behaviors), people skills, and social skills. The skills have been grouped into three main areas:

a. Learning and innovation skills: critical thinking and problem solving, communications and collaboration, creativity and innovation

b. Digital literacy skills: information literacy, media literacy, Information and communication technologies (ICT) literacy

c. Career and life skills: flexibility and adaptability, initiative and self-direction, social and cross-cultural interaction, productivity and accountability

Many of these skills are also identified as key qualities of progressive education, a pedagogical movement that began in the late nineteenth century and continues in various forms to the present.

Since the early 1980s, a variety of governmental, academic, non-profit, and corporate entities have conducted considerable research to identify key personal and academic skills and competencies they determined were needed for the current and next generation. The identification and implementation of 21st century skills into education and workplaces began in the United States but has spread to Canada, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and through national and international organizations such as APEC and the OECD.

In 1981, the US Secretary of Education created the National Commission on Excellence in Education to examine the quality of education in the United States.” The commission issued its report A Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform in 1983. A key finding was that “educational reform should focus on the goal of creating a Learning Society.” The report’s recommendations included instructional content and skills:

Five New Basics: English, Mathematics, Science, Social Studies, Computer Science

Other Curriculum Matters: Develop proficiency, rigor, and skills in Foreign Languages, Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Vocational Studies, and the pursuit of higher level education.

Skills and abilities (consolidated):

Enthusiasm for learning

Deep understanding

Application of learning

Examination, inquiry, critical thinking and reasoning

Communication – write well, listen effectively, discuss intelligently, be proficient in a foreign language,

Cultural, social, and environmental – understanding and implications

Technology – understand the computer as an information, computation, and communication device, and the world of computers, electronics, and related technologies.

Diverse learning across a broad range – fine arts, performing arts, and vocational

Until the dawn of the 21st century, education systems across the world focused on preparing their students to accumulate content and knowledge. As a result, schools focused on providing literacy and numeracy skills to their students, as these skills were perceived as necessary to gain content and knowledge. Recent developments in technology and telecommunication have made information and knowledge ubiquitous and easily accessible in the 21st century. Therefore, while skills such as literacy and numeracy are still relevant and necessary, they are no longer sufficient. In order to respond to technological, demographic and socio-economic changes, education systems began to make the shift toward providing their students with a range of skills that relied not only on cognition but also on the interdependencies of cognitive, social, and emotional characteristics.

Notable efforts were conducted by the US Secretary of Labor’s Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills (SCANS), a national coalition called the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, the international Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the American Association of College and Universities, researchers at MIT and other institutions of higher learning, and private organizations.

Additional research has found that the top skills demanded by U.S. Fortune 500 companies by the year 2000 had shifted from traditional reading, writing and arithmetic to teamwork, problem solving, and interpersonal skills. A 2006 Conference Board survey of some 400 employers revealed that the most important skills for new workforce entrants included oral and written communications and critical thinking/problem solving, ahead of basic knowledge and skills, such as the reading comprehension and mathematics. While the ‘three Rs’ were still considered foundational to new workforce entrants’ abilities, employers emphasized that applied skills like collaboration/teamwork and critical thinking were ‘very important’ to success at work.”

A 2006 report from MIT researchers countered the suggestion that students acquire critical skills and competencies independently by interacting with popular culture, noting three continuing trends that suggest the need for policy and pedagogical interventions:”

The Participation Gap — the unequal access to the opportunities, experiences, skills, and knowledge that will prepare youth for full participation in the world of tomorrow.

The Transparency Problem — The challenges young people face in learning to see clearly the ways that media shape perceptions of the world.

The Ethics Challenge — The breakdown of traditional forms of professional training and socialization that might prepare young people for their increasingly public roles as media makers and community participants.”

According to labor economists at MIT and Harvard’s Graduate School of Education, the economic changes brought about over the past four decades by emerging technology and globalization, employers’ demands for people with competencies like complex thinking and communications skills has increased greatly. They argue that the success of the U.S. economy will rely on the nation’s ability to give students the “foundational skills in problem-solving and communications that computers don’t have.”

In 2010, the Common Core State Standards Initiative, an effort sponsored by the National Governors Association (NGA) and the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO), issued the Common Core Standards, calling for the integration of 21st century skills into K-12 curricula across the United States. Teachers and general citizens also played a critical role in its development along with the NGA and CCSSO by commenting during two public forums which helped shape the curriculum and standards. States also convened teams of teachers to assist and provide feedback as well as they looked towards the National Education Association (NEA) and many other education organizations to provide constructive feedback. As of December 2018, 45 states have entirely adopted the common core standards, one state has adopted half by only adopting the literacy section (Minnesota), and only four states remain who have not adopted into the common core standards of education (Alaska, Nebraska, Texas, and Virginia).

                                                       THE SKILLS

The skills and competencies that are generally considered “21st Century skills” are varied but share some common themes. They are based on the premise that effective learning, or deeper learning, a set of student educational outcomes including acquisition of robust core academic content, higher-order thinking skills, and learning dispositions. This pedagogy involves creating, working with others, analyzing, and presenting and sharing both the learning experience and the learned knowledge or wisdom, including to peers and mentors as well as teachers. This contrasts with more traditional learning methodology that involves learning by rote and regurgitating info/knowledge back to the teacher for a grade. The skills are geared towards students and workers to foster engagement; seeking, forging, and facilitating connections to knowledge, ideas, peers, instructors, and wider audiences; creating/producing; and presenting/publishing. The classification or grouping has been undertaken to encourage and promote pedagogies that facilitate deeper learning through both traditional instruction as well as active learning, project-based learning, problem based learning, and others. A 2012 survey conducted by the American Management Association (AMA) identified three top skills necessary for their employees: critical thinking, communication and collaboration. Below are some of the more readily identifiable lists of 21st century skills.

                                   Common Core

The Common Core Standards issued in 2010 were intended to support the “application of knowledge through higher-order thinking skills.” The initiative’s stated goals are to promote the skills and concepts required for college and career readiness in multiple disciplines and life in the global economy. Skills identified for success in the areas of literacy and mathematics:

Cogent reasoning

Evidence collection

Critical-thinking, problem-solving, analytical

Communication

                                SCANS

Following the release of A Nation at Risk, the U.S. Secretary of Labor appointed the Secretary’s Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills (SCANS) to determine the skills needed for young people to succeed in the workplace to foster a high-performance economy. SCANS focused on what they called “learning a living” system. In 1991, they issued their initial report, What Work Requires of Schools. The report concluded that a high-performance workplace requires workers who have key fundamental skills: basic skills and knowledge, thinking skills to apply that knowledge, personal skills to manage and perform; and five key workplace competencies.

                                         Fundamental Skills

Basic Skills: reads, writes, performs arithmetic and mathematical operations, listens and speaks.

Thinking Skills: thinks creatively, makes decisions, solves problems, visualizes, knows how to learn, and reasons

Personal Qualities: displays responsibility, self-esteem, sociability, self-management, and integrity and honesty

Workplace Competencies

Resources: identifies, organizes, plans, and allocates resources

Interpersonal: works with others (participates as member of a team, teaches others new skills, serves clients/customers, exercises leadership, negotiates, works with diversity)

Information: acquires and uses information (acquires and evaluates, organizes and maintains, and interprets and communicates information; uses computers to process information)

Systems: understands complex inter-relationships (understands systems, monitors and corrects performance, improves or designs systems)

Technology: works with a variety of technologies (selects technology, applies technology to task, maintains and troubleshoots equipment)

Partnership for 21st Century Skills (P21)

In 2002 the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (now the Partnership for 21st Century Learning, or P21) was founded as a non-profit organization by a coalition that included members of the national business community, education leaders, and policymakers: the National Education Association (NEA), United States Department of Education, AOL Time Warner Foundation, Apple Computer, Inc., Cable in the Classroom, Cisco Systems, Inc., Dell Computer Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, SAP, Ken Kay (President and Co-Founder), and Dins Golder-Dardis. To foster a national conversation on “the importance of 21st century skills for all students” and “position 21st century readiness at the center of US K-12 education”, P21 identified six key skills:

Core subjects.

21st century content.

Learning and thinking skills.

Information and communication technologies (ICT) literacy.

Life skills.

21st century assessments.

7C Skills have been identified by P21 senior fellows at P21, Bernie Trilling and Charles Fadel:

Critical thinking and problem solving

Creativity and innovation

Cross-cultural understanding

Communications, information, and media literacy

Computing and ICT literacy

Career and learning self-reliance

             The Four Cs

The P21 organization also conducted research that identified deeper learning competencies and skills they called the Four Cs of 21st century learning:

Collaboration

Communication

Critical thinking

Creativity

The University of Southern California’s Project New Literacies website list four different “C” skills:

Create

Circulate

Connect

Collaborate

Participatory culture & new media literacies

Researchers at MIT, led by Henry Jenkins, Director of the Comparative Media Studies Program, in 2006 issued a white paper (“Confronting the Challenges of a Participatory Culture: Media Education for the 21st Century”), that examined digital media and learning. To address this Digital Divide, they recommended an effort be made to develop the cultural competencies and social skills required to participate fully in modern society instead of merely advocating for installing computers in each classroom. What they term participatory culture shifts this literacy from the individual level to a broader connection and involvement, with the premise that networking and collaboration develop social skills that are vital to new literacies. These in turn build on traditional foundation skills and knowledge taught in school: traditional literacy, research, technical, and critical analysis skills.

Participatory culture is defined by this study as having: low barriers to artistic expression and civic engagement, strong support for creating and sharing one’s creations, informal mentorship, belief that members’ own contributions matter, and social connection (caring what other people think about their creations).

 Forms of participatory culture include:

Affiliations — memberships, formal and informal, in online communities centered around various forms of media, such as message boards, metagaming, game clans, and other social media).

Expressions — producing new creative forms, such as digital sampling, skinning and modding, fan videomaking, fan fiction writing, zines, mash-ups.

Collaborative Problem-solving — working together in teams, formal and informal, to complete tasks and develop new knowledge (such as through Wikipedia, alternative reality gaming, spoiling).

Circulations — shaping the flow of media (such as podcasting, blogging).

The skills identified were:

Play

Simulation

Appropriation

Multitasking

Distributed Cognition

Collective Intelligence

Judgment

Transmedia Navigation

Networking

Negotiation

A 2005 study (Lenhardt & Madden) found that more than one-half of all teens have created media content, and roughly one third of teens who use the Internet have shared content they produced, indicating a high degree of involvement in participatory cultures. Such digital literacies emphasize the intellectual activities of a person working with sophisticated information communications technology, not on proficiency with the tool.

                            EnGauge 21st Century Skills

In 2003 the North Central Regional Educational Laboratory and the Metiri Group issued a report entitled “enGauge® 21st Century Skills: Literacy in the Digital Age” based on two years of research. The report called for policymakers and educators to define 21st century skills, highlight the relationship of those skills to conventional academic standards, and recognize the need for multiple assessments to measure and evaluate these skills within the context of academic standards and the current technological and global society. To provide a common understanding of, and language for discussing, the needs of students, citizens, and workers in a modern digital society, the report identified four “skill clusters”:

Digital-Age Literacy

Inventive Thinking

Effective Communication

High Productivity

                         OECD Competencies

In 1997, member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development launched the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) to monitor “the extent to which students near the end of compulsory schooling have acquired the knowledge and skills essential for full participation in society”. In 2005 they identified three “Competency Categories to highlight delivery related, interpersonal, and strategic competencies;”

Using Tools Interactively

Interacting in Heterogeneous Groups

Acting Autonomously

                  American Association of College and Universities

The AAC&U conducted several studies and surveys of their members. In 2007 they recommended that graduates of higher education attain four skills – The Essential Learning Outcomes:

Knowledge of Human Cultures and the Physical and Natural World

Intellectual and Practical Skills

Personal and Social Responsibility

Integrative Learning

They found that skills most widely addressed in college and university goals are:

Writing

Critical thinking

Quantitative reasoning

Oral communication

Intercultural skills

Information literacy

Ethical reasoning

A 2015 survey of AAC&U member institutions added the following goals:

Analytic reasoning

Research skills and projects

Integration of learning across disciplines

Application of learning beyond the classroom

Civic engagement and competence

ISTE / NETS Performance Standards

The ISTE Educational Technology Standards (formerly National Educational Technology Standards (NETS)) are a set of standards published by the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) to leverage the use of technology in K-12 education. These are sometimes intermixed with information and communication technologies (ICT) skills. In 2007 NETS issued a series of six performance indicators (only the first four are on their website as of 2016):

Creativity and Innovation

Communication and Collaboration

Research and Information Fluency

Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and Decision Making

Digital Citizenship

Technology Operations and Concepts

ICT Literacy Panel digital literacy standards (2007)

In 2007 the Educational Testing Service (ETS) ICT Literacy Panel released its digital literacy standards:

Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) proficiencies:

Cognitive proficiency

Technical proficiency

ICT proficiency

A person possessing these skills would be expected to perform these tasks for a particular set of information: access, manage, integrate, evaluate, create/publish/present. The emphasis is on proficiency with digital tools.

Dede learning styles and categories

In 2005, Chris Dede of the Harvard Graduate School of Education developed a framework based on new digital literacies entitled

Neomillennial Learning Styles:

Fluency in multiple media

Active learning based on collectively seeking, sieving, and synthesizing experiences.

Expression through non-linear, associational webs of representations.

Co-design by teachers and students of personalized learning experiences.

Dede category system

With the exponential expansion of personal access to Internet resources, including social media, information and content on the Internet has evolved from being created by website providers to individuals and communities of contributors. The 21st century Internet centered on material created by a small number of people, Web 2.0 tools (e.g. Wikipedia) foster online communication, collaboration, and creation of content by large numbers of people (individually or in groups) in online communities.

In 2009, Dede created a category system for Web 2.0 tools:

Sharing (communal bookmarking, photo/video sharing, social networking, writers’ workshops/fanfiction)

Thinking (blogs, podcasts, online discussion fora)

Co-Creating (wikis/collaborative file creation, mashups/collective media creation, collaborative social change communities)

World Economic Forum

In 2015, the World Economic Forum published a report titled ‘New Vision for Education: Unlocking the Potential of Technology’ that focused on the pressing issue of the 21st-century skills gap and ways to address it through technology. In the report, they defined a set of 16 crucial proficiencies for education in the 21st century. Those skills include six “foundational literacies”, four “competencies” and six “character qualities” listed below.

Foundation Literacies

Literacy and numeracy

Scientific literacy

ICT literacy

Financial literacy

Cultural literacy

Civic literacy

Competencies

Critical thinking/problem solving

Communication

Collaboration

Character Qualities

Creativity

Initiative

Persistence/grit

Adaptability

Curiosity

Leadership

Social and cultural awareness

                               National Research Council

In a paper titled ‘Education for Life and Work: Developing Transferable Knowledge and Skills in the 21st Century’ produced by the National Research Council of National Academies, the National Research defines 21st century skills, describes how the skills relate to each other and summaries the evidence regarding 21st century skills.

As a first step toward describing “21st century skills,” the National Research Council identified three domains of competence: cognitive, interpersonal, and intrapersonal while recognizing that the three domains while different, are intertwined in human development and learning. These three domains represent distinct facets of human thinking and build on previous efforts to identify and organize dimensions of human behaviour. The committee produced the following cluster of 21st century skills in the above mentioned 3 domains.

Cognitive Competencies

Cognitive processes and strategies: Critical thinking, problem solving, analysis, reasoning and argumentation, interpretation, decision-making, adaptive learning

Knowledge: Information literacy, ICT literacy, oral and written communication, and active listening

Creativity: Creativity and innovation

Intrapersonal Competencies

Intellectual openness: Flexibility, adaptability, artistic and cultural appreciation, personal and social responsibility, appreciation for diversity, adaptability, continuous learning, intellectual interest and curiosity

Work ethic/conscientiousness: Initiative, self-direction, responsibility, perseverance, grit, career orientation, ethics, integrity, citizenship

Positive core self-evaluation: Self-monitoring, self-evaluation, self-reinforcement, physical and psychological health

Interpersonal Competencies

Teamwork and collaboration: Communication, collaboration, cooperation, teamwork, coordination, interpersonal skills

Leadership: Responsibility, assertive communication, self-presentation, social influence with others

                                 Implementation

Multiple agencies and organizations have issued guides and recommendation for implementation of 21st century skills in a variety of learning environments and learning spaces. These include five separate educational areas: standards, assessment, professional development, curriculum & instruction, and learning environments.

The designs of learning environments and curricula have been impacted by the initiatives and efforts to implement and support 21st century skills with a move away from the factory model school model and into a variety of different organizational models. Hands-on learning project-based learning have resulted in the development of programs and spaces such as STEM and makerspaces. Collaborative learning environments have fostered flexibility in furniture and classroom layout as well as differentiated spaces, such as small seminar rooms near classrooms. Literacy with, and access to, digital technology has impacted the design of furniture and fixed components as students and teachers use tablets, interactive whiteboards and interactive projectors. Classroom sizes have grown to accommodate a variety of furniture arrangements and grouping, many of which are less space-efficient than traditional configurations of desks in rows.

Reference

In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 13:55, August 23, 2019, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/21st-century skills

Skills for the 21st Century

Today’s children will enter a labour market that, for many, will be profoundly different from the one in which their parents worked. This transformation – often dubbed the Fourth Industrial Revolution – is built on a raft of developments in areas like machine learning,robotics, nanotechnology and biotechnology.Once largely disconnected, these technologies are becoming increasingly integrated and, as a result, are driving economic change at a pace without historical precedent.Complicating this shift is that some of the poorest countries have yet to experience even the equivalent of the rapid industrialization wrought by the Second Industrial Revolution. But they, too, will be affected. Some will be able to take advantage of new technologies, allowing at least parts of their economies to leapfrog into the future; but others may suffer, as automation eats into their competitive advantage of low-cost, low-skilled labour.
Are children acquiring the skills to thrive in the Fourth Industrial Revolution? There are reasons to be concerned. According to UNESCO, 250 million children worldwide are basically illiterate and innumerate, while 200 million young people will leave school lacking the skills they need to thrive. And even for those who are acquiring basic reading and numeracy skills, the workplaces of the future increasingly require digital skills – and digital literacy.
Definitions vary, but, according to the World Economic Forum, these skills can be divided into three broad categories: Foundational Literacies, including traditional literacy and numeracy and also – among others – ICT, scientific and cultural literacies; Competencies, including critical thinking, creativity, communication and collaboration; and Character Qualities, including curiosity, adaptability and leadership. The OECD also emphasizes that non￾cognitive skills, such as communication, creativity, collaboration and empathy, will continue to determine career success.
While acquiring a broader range of skills is clearly an advantage for any individual, there is much debate over whether even highly skilled workers – such as radiographers and economists – can expect to enjoy stable job prospects in the twenty-first century.On the other hand, while previous industrial revolutions did indeed destroy jobs, over time, more jobs were created than were lost. Whether that pattern will hold true in the Fourth Industrial Revolution remainsto be seen.

SKILLS FOR THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY

Akpan Funke

Akpan Funke is an educator with ten years of teaching experience ranging from the Kindergarten class to primary classes and English Language tutor. She is currently a year six class teacher with an international school in Lagos,Nigeria.

She is a certified Microsoft Innovative Educator and a trained Montessorian.

Also hold a Nigeria Certificate in Education (NCE).

She is the lead columnist for EduPlus.school. blog