Let's teach for mastery -- not test scores | Sal Khan

2,236,464 views ・ 2016-09-26

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
I'm here today to talk about the two ideas that,
0
12954
2926
00:15
at least based on my observations at Khan Academy,
1
15904
2358
00:18
are kind of the core, or the key leverage points for learning.
2
18286
3878
00:22
And it's the idea of mastery
3
22188
2016
00:24
and the idea of mindset.
4
24228
1785
00:26
I saw this in the early days working with my cousins.
5
26037
2834
00:28
A lot of them were having trouble with math at first,
6
28895
2480
00:31
because they had all of these gaps accumulated in their learning.
7
31399
3054
00:34
And because of that, at some point they got to an algebra class
8
34477
2989
00:37
and they might have been a little bit shaky on some of the pre-algebra,
9
37490
3402
00:40
and because of that, they thought they didn't have the math gene.
10
40916
3445
00:44
Or they'd get to a calculus class,
11
44385
1663
00:46
and they'd be a little bit shaky on the algebra.
12
46072
2762
00:48
I saw it in the early days
13
48858
1570
00:50
when I was uploading some of those videos on YouTube,
14
50452
3528
00:54
and I realized that people who were not my cousins were watching.
15
54004
3277
00:57
(Laughter)
16
57305
1865
00:59
And at first, those comments were just simple thank-yous.
17
59194
3866
01:03
I thought that was a pretty big deal.
18
63084
1969
01:05
I don't know how much time you all spend on YouTube.
19
65077
2452
01:07
Most of the comments are not "Thank you."
20
67553
2087
01:09
(Laughter)
21
69664
1457
01:11
They're a little edgier than that.
22
71145
1638
01:12
But then the comments got a little more intense,
23
72807
2431
01:15
student after student saying that they had grown up not liking math.
24
75262
4456
01:19
It was getting difficult as they got into more advanced math topics.
25
79742
3199
01:22
By the time they got to algebra,
26
82965
1528
01:24
they had so many gaps in their knowledge they couldn't engage with it.
27
84517
3328
01:27
They thought they didn't have the math gene.
28
87869
2073
01:29
But when they were a bit older,
29
89966
1480
01:31
they took a little agency and decided to engage.
30
91470
2243
01:33
They found resources like Khan Academy
31
93737
1852
01:35
and they were able to fill in those gaps and master those concepts,
32
95613
3150
01:38
and that reinforced their mindset that it wasn't fixed;
33
98787
2590
01:41
that they actually were capable of learning mathematics.
34
101401
3565
01:44
And in a lot of ways, this is how you would master a lot of things in life.
35
104990
4053
01:49
It's the way you would learn a martial art.
36
109067
2299
01:51
In a martial art, you would practice the white belt skills
37
111390
3166
01:54
as long as necessary,
38
114580
1413
01:56
and only when you've mastered it
39
116017
1551
01:57
you would move on to become a yellow belt.
40
117592
2135
01:59
It's the way you learn a musical instrument:
41
119751
2071
02:01
you practice the basic piece over and over again,
42
121846
2294
02:04
and only when you've mastered it,
43
124164
1588
02:05
you go on to the more advanced one.
44
125776
1671
02:07
But what we point out --
45
127471
1340
02:08
this is not the way a traditional academic model is structured,
46
128835
4485
02:13
the type of academic model that most of us grew up in.
47
133344
3335
02:16
In a traditional academic model,
48
136703
1542
02:18
we group students together, usually by age,
49
138269
2419
02:20
and around middle school,
50
140712
1279
02:22
by age and perceived ability,
51
142015
1846
02:23
and we shepherd them all together at the same pace.
52
143885
2558
02:27
And what typically happens,
53
147038
1297
02:28
let's say we're in a middle school pre-algebra class,
54
148359
2501
02:30
and the current unit is on exponents,
55
150884
1794
02:32
the teacher will give a lecture on exponents,
56
152702
2190
02:34
then we'll go home, do some homework.
57
154916
2285
02:37
The next morning, we'll review the homework,
58
157225
2054
02:39
then another lecture, homework, lecture, homework.
59
159303
2348
02:41
That will continue for about two or three weeks,
60
161675
2261
02:43
and then we get a test.
61
163960
1175
02:45
On that test, maybe I get a 75 percent,
62
165159
3318
02:48
maybe you get a 90 percent,
63
168501
1417
02:49
maybe you get a 95 percent.
64
169942
1984
02:51
And even though the test identified gaps in our knowledge,
65
171950
2747
02:54
I didn't know 25 percent of the material.
66
174721
1959
02:56
Even the A student, what was the five percent they didn't know?
67
176704
2972
02:59
Even though we've identified the gaps,
68
179700
1813
03:01
the whole class will then move on to the next subject,
69
181537
2538
03:04
probably a more advanced subject that's going to build on those gaps.
70
184099
3402
03:07
It might be logarithms or negative exponents.
71
187525
3373
03:10
And that process continues, and you immediately start to realize
72
190922
3031
03:13
how strange this is.
73
193977
1175
03:15
I didn't know 25 percent of the more foundational thing,
74
195176
2771
03:17
and now I'm being pushed to the more advanced thing.
75
197971
2445
03:20
And this will continue for months, years, all the way until at some point,
76
200440
3712
03:24
I might be in an algebra class or trigonometry class
77
204176
2440
03:26
and I hit a wall.
78
206640
1257
03:27
And it's not because algebra is fundamentally difficult
79
207921
2654
03:30
or because the student isn't bright.
80
210599
3992
03:34
It's because I'm seeing an equation and they're dealing with exponents
81
214615
3311
03:37
and that 30 percent that I didn't know is showing up.
82
217950
2729
03:40
And then I start to disengage.
83
220703
2829
03:44
To appreciate how absurd that is,
84
224469
3426
03:47
imagine if we did other things in our life that way.
85
227919
2745
03:51
Say, home-building.
86
231124
1454
03:52
(Laughter)
87
232602
2673
03:56
So we bring in the contractor and say,
88
236878
3394
04:00
"We were told we have two weeks to build a foundation.
89
240296
2548
04:02
Do what you can."
90
242868
1336
04:04
(Laughter)
91
244228
2303
04:06
So they do what they can.
92
246985
1792
04:08
Maybe it rains.
93
248801
1156
04:09
Maybe some of the supplies don't show up.
94
249981
1969
04:11
And two weeks later, the inspector comes, looks around,
95
251974
3310
04:15
says, "OK, the concrete is still wet right over there,
96
255308
2665
04:17
that part's not quite up to code ...
97
257997
1852
04:20
I'll give it an 80 percent."
98
260838
1358
04:22
(Laughter)
99
262220
1064
04:23
You say, "Great! That's a C. Let's build the first floor."
100
263308
2735
04:26
(Laughter)
101
266067
1018
04:27
Same thing.
102
267109
1154
04:28
We have two weeks, do what you can, inspector shows up, it's a 75 percent.
103
268287
3839
04:32
Great, that's a D-plus.
104
272150
1159
04:33
Second floor, third floor,
105
273333
1246
04:34
and all of a sudden, while you're building the third floor,
106
274603
2778
04:37
the whole structure collapses.
107
277405
1436
04:38
And if your reaction is the reaction you typically have in education,
108
278865
3244
04:42
or that a lot of folks have,
109
282133
1341
04:43
you might say, maybe we had a bad contractor,
110
283498
2106
04:45
or maybe we needed better inspection or more frequent inspection.
111
285628
3093
04:48
But what was really broken was the process.
112
288745
2249
04:51
We were artificially constraining how long we had to something,
113
291018
3029
04:54
pretty much ensuring a variable outcome,
114
294071
2373
04:56
and we took the trouble of inspecting and identifying those gaps,
115
296468
3524
05:00
but then we built right on top of it.
116
300016
1933
05:01
So the idea of mastery learning is to do the exact opposite.
117
301973
2937
05:04
Instead of artificially constraining, fixing
118
304934
2468
05:07
when and how long you work on something,
119
307426
1988
05:09
pretty much ensuring that variable outcome,
120
309438
2218
05:11
the A, B, C, D, F --
121
311680
1673
05:13
do it the other way around.
122
313980
1484
05:15
What's variable is when and how long
123
315844
1792
05:17
a student actually has to work on something,
124
317660
2094
05:19
and what's fixed is that they actually master the material.
125
319778
3247
05:23
And it's important to realize
126
323445
1651
05:25
that not only will this make the student learn their exponents better,
127
325120
3365
05:28
but it'll reinforce the right mindset muscles.
128
328509
2958
05:31
It makes them realize that if you got 20 percent wrong on something,
129
331491
3428
05:34
it doesn't mean that you have a C branded in your DNA somehow.
130
334943
3389
05:38
It means that you should just keep working on it.
131
338356
2434
05:40
You should have grit; you should have perseverance;
132
340814
2492
05:43
you should take agency over your learning.
133
343330
2141
05:45
Now, a lot of skeptics might say, well, hey, this is all great,
134
345908
2990
05:48
philosophically, this whole idea of mastery-based learning
135
348922
2721
05:51
and its connection to mindset,
136
351667
1436
05:53
students taking agency over their learning.
137
353127
2099
05:55
It makes a lot of sense, but it seems impractical.
138
355250
3135
05:58
To actually do it, every student would be on their own track.
139
358409
3397
06:01
It would have to be personalized,
140
361830
1624
06:03
you'd have to have private tutors and worksheets for every student.
141
363478
3182
06:06
And these aren't new ideas --
142
366684
1499
06:08
there were experiments in Winnetka, Illinois, 100 years ago,
143
368207
2826
06:11
where they did mastery-based learning and saw great results,
144
371057
2818
06:13
but they said it wouldn't scale because it was logistically difficult.
145
373899
3297
06:17
The teacher had to give different worksheets to every student,
146
377220
2907
06:20
give on-demand assessments.
147
380151
1288
06:21
But now today, it's no longer impractical.
148
381463
2261
06:23
We have the tools to do it.
149
383748
1366
06:25
Students see an explanation at their own time and pace?
150
385138
2595
06:27
There's on-demand video for that.
151
387757
1595
06:29
They need practice? They need feedback?
152
389376
2072
06:31
There's adaptive exercises readily available for students.
153
391472
4440
06:36
And when that happens, all sorts of neat things happen.
154
396311
2594
06:38
One, the students can actually master the concepts,
155
398929
2773
06:41
but they're also building their growth mindset,
156
401726
2195
06:43
they're building grit, perseverance,
157
403945
1797
06:45
they're taking agency over their learning.
158
405766
2023
06:47
And all sorts of beautiful things can start to happen
159
407813
2557
06:50
in the actual classroom.
160
410394
1636
06:52
Instead of it being focused on the lecture,
161
412054
2058
06:54
students can interact with each other.
162
414136
1818
06:55
They can get deeper mastery over the material.
163
415978
2158
06:58
They can go into simulations, Socratic dialogue.
164
418160
2353
07:00
To appreciate what we're talking about
165
420537
2679
07:03
and the tragedy of lost potential here,
166
423240
4047
07:07
I'd like to give a little bit of a thought experiment.
167
427311
3143
07:10
If we were to go 400 years into the past to Western Europe,
168
430985
5066
07:16
which even then, was one of the more literate parts of the planet,
169
436075
3164
07:19
you would see that about 15 percent of the population knew how to read.
170
439263
3727
07:23
And I suspect that if you asked someone who did know how to read,
171
443556
3638
07:27
say a member of the clergy,
172
447218
1896
07:29
"What percentage of the population do you think is even capable of reading?"
173
449138
3612
07:32
They might say, "Well, with a great education system,
174
452774
3561
07:36
maybe 20 or 30 percent."
175
456359
2244
07:39
But if you fast forward to today,
176
459424
1587
07:41
we know that that prediction would have been wildly pessimistic,
177
461035
3015
07:44
that pretty close to 100 percent of the population is capable of reading.
178
464074
4125
07:48
But if I were to ask you a similar question:
179
468223
2551
07:51
"What percentage of the population do you think is capable
180
471494
3539
07:55
of truly mastering calculus,
181
475057
2873
07:57
or understanding organic chemistry,
182
477954
3013
08:00
or being able to contribute to cancer research?"
183
480991
3286
08:04
A lot of you might say, "Well, with a great education system,
184
484301
2897
08:07
maybe 20, 30 percent."
185
487222
2022
08:09
But what if that estimate
186
489778
1313
08:11
is just based on your own experience in a non-mastery framework,
187
491115
3387
08:14
your own experience with yourself or observing your peers,
188
494526
2832
08:17
where you're being pushed at this set pace through classes,
189
497382
2789
08:20
accumulating all these gaps?
190
500195
1339
08:21
Even when you got that 95 percent,
191
501558
1641
08:23
what was that five percent you missed?
192
503223
1812
08:25
And it keeps accumulating -- you get to an advanced class,
193
505059
2727
08:27
all of a sudden you hit a wall and say,
194
507810
1872
08:29
"I'm not meant to be a cancer researcher;
195
509706
2003
08:31
not meant to be a physicist; not meant to be a mathematician."
196
511733
2928
08:34
I suspect that that actually is the case,
197
514685
1977
08:36
but if you were allowed to be operating in a mastery framework,
198
516686
3826
08:40
if you were allowed to really take agency over your learning,
199
520536
3417
08:43
and when you get something wrong,
200
523977
1596
08:45
embrace it -- view that failure as a moment of learning --
201
525597
2792
08:48
that number, the percent that could really master calculus
202
528413
3957
08:52
or understand organic chemistry,
203
532394
1760
08:54
is actually a lot closer to 100 percent.
204
534178
2502
08:57
And this isn't even just a "nice to have."
205
537601
2857
09:01
I think it's a social imperative.
206
541019
2063
09:03
We're exiting what you could call the industrial age
207
543511
3851
09:07
and we're going into this information revolution.
208
547386
3804
09:11
And it's clear that some things are happening.
209
551646
2174
09:13
In the industrial age, society was a pyramid.
210
553844
2113
09:15
At the base of the pyramid, you needed human labor.
211
555981
4652
09:21
In the middle of the pyramid, you had an information processing,
212
561085
3333
09:24
a bureaucracy class,
213
564442
1598
09:26
and at the top of the pyramid, you had your owners of capital
214
566064
3674
09:29
and your entrepreneurs
215
569762
1999
09:31
and your creative class.
216
571785
1452
09:33
But we know what's happening already,
217
573904
1796
09:35
as we go into this information revolution.
218
575724
2015
09:37
The bottom of that pyramid, automation, is going to take over.
219
577763
2953
09:40
Even that middle tier, information processing,
220
580740
2325
09:43
that's what computers are good at.
221
583089
1626
09:44
So as a society, we have a question:
222
584739
1747
09:46
All this new productivity is happening because of this technology,
223
586510
3118
09:49
but who participates in it?
224
589652
1330
09:51
Is it just going to be that very top of the pyramid, in which case,
225
591006
3195
09:54
what does everyone else do?
226
594225
1341
09:55
How do they operate?
227
595590
1166
09:56
Or do we do something that's more aspirational?
228
596780
2420
09:59
Do we actually attempt to invert the pyramid,
229
599581
3110
10:02
where you have a large creative class,
230
602715
2001
10:04
where almost everyone can participate as an entrepreneur,
231
604740
3681
10:08
an artist, as a researcher?
232
608445
1945
10:10
And I don't think that this is utopian.
233
610850
1930
10:12
I really think that this is all based on the idea
234
612804
2364
10:15
that if we let people tap into their potential
235
615192
2184
10:17
by mastering concepts,
236
617400
1964
10:19
by being able to exercise agency over their learning,
237
619388
3577
10:22
that they can get there.
238
622989
1342
10:24
And when you think of it as just a citizen of the world,
239
624672
4000
10:28
it's pretty exciting.
240
628696
1263
10:29
I mean, think about the type of equity we can we have,
241
629983
2628
10:32
and the rate at which civilization could even progress.
242
632635
3204
10:36
And so, I'm pretty optimistic about it.
243
636339
2213
10:38
I think it's going to be a pretty exciting time to be alive.
244
638576
3563
10:42
Thank you.
245
642163
1166
10:43
(Applause)
246
643353
5477
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7