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Quoted from Wired Magazine interview
February 1996
Could technology help by improving education?
I used to think that technology could help education. I've
probably spearheaded giving away more computer equipment to schools
than anybody else on the planet. But I've had to come to the inevitable
conclusion that the problem is not one that technology can hope
to solve. What's wrong with education cannot be fixed with technology.
No amount of technology will make a dent.
It's political problem. The problems are sociopolitical. The problems
are unions. You plot the growth of the NEA (National Education
Association) and the dropping of SAT scores, and they're inversely
proportional. The problems are unions in the schools. The problem
is bureaucracy. I'm one of these people who believes the best
thing we could ever do is go to the full voucher system.
I have a 17-year-old daughter who went to a private school for
a few years before high school. This private school is the best
school I've seen in my life. It was judged one of the 100 best
schools in America. It was phenomenal. The tuition was $5,500
a year, which is a lot of money for most parents. But the teachers
were paid less than public school teachers - so it's not about
money at the teacher level. I asked the state treasurer that year
what California pays on average to send kids to school, and I
believe it was $4,400. While there are not many parents who could
come up with $5,500 a year, there are many who could come up with
$1,000 a year.
If we gave vouchers to parents for $4,400 a year, schools would
be starting right and left. People would get out of college and
say, "Let's start a school." You could have a track
at Stanford within the MBA program on how to be the business person
of a school. And that MBA would get together with somebody else,
and they'd start schools. And you'd have these young, idealistic
people starting schools, working for pennies.
They'd do it because they'd be able to set the curriculum. When
you have kids you think, What exactly do I want them to learn?
Most of the stuff they study in school is completely useless.
But some incredibly valuable things you don't learn until you're
older - yet you could learn them when you're younger. And you
start to think, "What would I do if I set a curriculum for
a school?"
God, how exciting that could be! But you can't do it today. You'd
be crazy to work in a school today. You don't get to do what you
want. You don't get to pick your books, your curriculum. You get
to teach one narrow specialization. Who would ever want to do
that?
These are the solutions to our problems in education. Unfortunately,
technology isn't it. You're not going to solve the problems by
putting all knowledge onto CD-ROMs. We can put a Web site in every
school - none of this is bad. It's bad only if it lulls us into
thinking we're doing something to solve the problem with education.
Lincoln did not have a Web site at the log cabin where his parents
home-schooled him, and he turned out pretty interesting. Historical
precedent shows that we can turn out amazing human beings without
technology. Precedent also shows that we can turn out very uninteresting
human beings with technology.
It's not as simple as you think when you're in your 20s - that
technology's going to change the world. In some ways it will,
in some ways it won't.
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