Let's use video to reinvent education | Salman Khan

1,324,335 views ・ 2011-03-09

TED


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

00:16
Khan Academy is most known for its collection of videos,
0
16236
3000
00:19
so before I go any further,
1
19260
1976
00:21
let me show you a little bit of a montage.
2
21260
3339
00:24
(Video) Salman Khan: So the hypotenuse is now going to be five.
3
24623
3072
00:27
This animal's fossils are only found in this area of South America --
4
27719
3293
00:31
a nice clean band here --
5
31036
1580
00:32
and this part of Africa.
6
32640
2189
00:34
We can integrate over the surface,
7
34853
2166
00:37
and the notation usually is a capital sigma.
8
37043
2841
00:39
National Assembly: They create the Committee of Public Safety,
9
39908
3166
00:43
which sounds like a very nice committee.
10
43098
1961
00:45
Notice, this is an aldehyde, and it's an alcohol.
11
45083
3705
00:48
Start differentiating into effector and memory cells.
12
48812
3245
00:52
A galaxy. Hey! There's another galaxy. Oh, look! There's another galaxy.
13
52081
3720
00:55
And for dollars, is their 30 million,
14
55825
2411
00:58
plus the 20 million dollars from the American manufacturer.
15
58260
3039
01:01
If this does not blow your mind,
16
61323
3500
01:04
then you have no emotion.
17
64847
2007
01:06
(Laughter)
18
66878
1358
01:08
(Applause)
19
68260
5515
01:13
(Live) SK: We now have on the order of 2,200 videos,
20
73799
3981
01:17
covering everything from basic arithmetic, all the way to vector calculus,
21
77804
4191
01:22
and some of the stuff that you saw up there.
22
82019
2217
01:24
We have a million students a month using the site,
23
84260
3404
01:27
watching on the order of 100 to 200,000 videos a day.
24
87688
3548
01:31
But what we're going to talk about in this is how we're going to the next level.
25
91260
4650
01:35
But before I do that,
26
95934
1302
01:37
I want to talk a little bit about really just how I got started.
27
97260
3364
01:41
And some of you all might know,
28
101180
2301
01:43
about five years ago, I was an analyst at a hedge fund,
29
103505
3021
01:46
and I was in Boston,
30
106550
2468
01:49
and I was tutoring my cousins in New Orleans, remotely.
31
109042
3088
01:52
And I started putting the first YouTube videos up,
32
112154
2341
01:54
really just as a kind of nice-to-have,
33
114519
1834
01:56
just kind of a supplement for my cousins,
34
116377
2125
01:58
something that might give them a refresher or something.
35
118526
3008
02:01
And as soon as I put those first YouTube videos up,
36
121558
2640
02:04
something interesting happened.
37
124222
1504
02:05
Actually, a bunch of interesting things happened.
38
125750
2344
02:08
The first was the feedback from my cousins.
39
128118
2238
02:10
They told me that they preferred me on YouTube than in person.
40
130967
4741
02:15
(Laughter)
41
135732
6528
02:22
And once you get over the backhanded nature of that,
42
142733
4290
02:27
there was actually something very profound there.
43
147047
2308
02:29
They were saying that they preferred the automated version of their cousin
44
149379
3826
02:33
to their cousin.
45
153229
1150
02:34
At first it's very unintuitive,
46
154840
1489
02:36
but when you think about it from their point of view, it makes a ton of sense.
47
156353
3758
02:40
You have this situation where now they can pause and repeat their cousin,
48
160135
3820
02:43
without feeling like they're wasting my time.
49
163979
3024
02:47
If they have to review something
50
167027
2372
02:49
that they should have learned a couple of weeks ago,
51
169423
2555
02:52
or maybe a couple of years ago,
52
172002
2222
02:54
they don't have to be embarrassed and ask their cousin.
53
174248
2658
02:56
They can just watch those videos; if they're bored, they can go ahead.
54
176930
3342
03:00
They can watch at their own time and pace.
55
180296
2024
03:02
Probably the least-appreciated aspect of this
56
182344
4801
03:07
is the notion that the very first time
57
187169
2571
03:09
that you're trying to get your brain around a new concept,
58
189764
3848
03:13
the very last thing you need
59
193636
1600
03:15
is another human being saying, "Do you understand this?"
60
195260
2742
03:18
And that's what was happening
61
198454
1394
03:19
with the interaction with my cousins before,
62
199872
2095
03:21
and now they can just do it in the intimacy of their own room.
63
201991
5506
03:28
The other thing that happened is --
64
208573
1697
03:30
I put them on YouTube just --
65
210294
2814
03:33
I saw no reason to make it private,
66
213811
1799
03:35
so I let other people watch it,
67
215634
1602
03:37
and then people started stumbling on it,
68
217260
1976
03:39
and I started getting some comments and some letters
69
219260
3498
03:42
and all sorts of feedback
70
222782
2206
03:45
from random people around the world.
71
225012
1936
03:46
These are just a few.
72
226972
1674
03:49
This is actually from one of the original calculus videos.
73
229922
3026
03:53
Someone wrote it on YouTube, it was a YouTube comment:
74
233440
3081
03:56
"First time I smiled doing a derivative."
75
236545
2691
03:59
(Laughter)
76
239260
2896
04:02
Let's pause here.
77
242180
1802
04:04
This person did a derivative,
78
244006
1952
04:05
and then they smiled.
79
245982
1177
04:07
(Laughter)
80
247183
1781
04:08
In response to that same comment --
81
248988
1683
04:10
this is on the thread, you can go on YouTube and look at the comments --
82
250695
3451
04:14
someone else wrote: "Same thing here.
83
254170
1778
04:15
I actually got a natural high and a good mood for the entire day,
84
255972
3073
04:19
since I remember seeing all of this matrix text in class,
85
259069
4428
04:23
and here I'm all like, 'I know kung fu.'"
86
263521
2715
04:26
(Laughter)
87
266260
4261
04:30
We get a lot of feedback along those lines.
88
270545
2351
04:32
This clearly was helping people.
89
272920
1681
04:34
But then, as the viewership kept growing and kept growing,
90
274625
3702
04:38
I started getting letters from people,
91
278351
2571
04:40
and it was starting to become clear
92
280946
1737
04:42
that it was more than just a nice-to-have.
93
282707
2082
04:44
This is just an excerpt from one of those letters:
94
284813
3423
04:48
"My 12 year-old son has autism,
95
288260
2471
04:50
and has had a terrible time with math.
96
290755
2222
04:53
We have tried everything,
97
293001
1235
04:54
viewed everything, bought everything.
98
294260
1976
04:56
We stumbled on your video on decimals, and it got through.
99
296260
3685
04:59
Then we went on to the dreaded fractions.
100
299969
1984
05:01
Again, he got it.
101
301977
1151
05:03
We could not believe it.
102
303152
1166
05:04
He is so excited."
103
304342
1217
05:06
And so you can imagine,
104
306444
1366
05:07
here I was, an analyst at a hedge fund --
105
307834
4134
05:11
it was very strange for me to do something of social value.
106
311992
3269
05:15
(Laughter)
107
315285
1951
05:17
(Applause)
108
317260
6680
05:23
But I was excited, so I kept going.
109
323964
3272
05:27
And then a few other things started to dawn on me;
110
327260
2698
05:29
that not only would it help my cousins right now,
111
329982
2468
05:32
or these people who were sending letters,
112
332474
2055
05:34
but that this content will never grow old,
113
334553
2872
05:37
that it could help their kids or their grandkids.
114
337449
3294
05:40
If Isaac Newton had done YouTube videos on calculus,
115
340767
4762
05:45
I wouldn't have to.
116
345553
1238
05:46
(Laughter)
117
346815
1785
05:48
Assuming he was good. We don't know.
118
348624
2612
05:51
(Laughter)
119
351260
2602
05:53
The other thing that happened -- and even at this point, I said,
120
353886
3040
05:56
"OK, maybe it's a good supplement. It's good for motivated students.
121
356950
3214
06:00
It's good for maybe home-schoolers."
122
360188
1826
06:02
But I didn't think it would somehow penetrate the classroom.
123
362038
3275
06:05
Then I started getting letters from teachers,
124
365337
2126
06:07
and the teachers would write, saying,
125
367487
1825
06:09
"We've used your videos to flip the classroom.
126
369336
2221
06:11
You've given the lectures, so now what we do --"
127
371581
2577
06:14
And this could happen in every classroom in America tomorrow --
128
374182
3538
06:17
"what I do is I assign the lectures for homework,
129
377744
3254
06:21
and what used to be homework,
130
381022
2023
06:23
I now have the students doing in the classroom."
131
383069
2952
06:26
And I want to pause here --
132
386045
2468
06:28
(Applause)
133
388537
4593
06:33
I want to pause here, because there's a couple of interesting things.
134
393154
3297
06:36
One, when those teachers are doing that,
135
396475
2201
06:38
there's the obvious benefit --
136
398700
1536
06:40
the benefit that now their students
137
400260
2500
06:42
can enjoy the videos in the way that my cousins did,
138
402784
2522
06:45
they can pause, repeat at their own pace, at their own time.
139
405330
3406
06:48
But the more interesting thing -- and this is the unintuitive thing
140
408760
3181
06:51
when you talk about technology in the classroom --
141
411965
2378
06:54
by removing the one-size-fits-all lecture from the classroom,
142
414367
2886
06:57
and letting students have a self-paced lecture at home,
143
417277
3000
07:00
then when you go to the classroom,
144
420301
1651
07:01
letting them do work, having the teacher walk around,
145
421976
2500
07:04
having the peers actually be able to interact with each other,
146
424500
3086
07:07
these teachers have used technology to humanize the classroom.
147
427610
5634
07:13
They took a fundamentally dehumanizing experience --
148
433268
2462
07:15
30 kids with their fingers on their lips,
149
435754
2491
07:18
not allowed to interact with each other.
150
438269
1954
07:20
A teacher, no matter how good,
151
440247
1492
07:21
has to give this one-size-fits-all lecture to 30 students --
152
441763
3309
07:25
blank faces, slightly antagonistic --
153
445096
2363
07:27
and now it's a human experience,
154
447483
1571
07:29
now they're actually interacting with each other.
155
449078
2309
07:31
So once the Khan Academy --
156
451411
2785
07:34
I quit my job,
157
454220
1152
07:35
and we turned into a real organization --
158
455396
2444
07:37
we're a not-for-profit --
159
457864
1793
07:39
the question is, how do we take this to the next level?
160
459681
3094
07:42
How do we take what those teachers were doing to its natural conclusion?
161
462799
3508
07:46
And so, what I'm showing over here,
162
466331
1905
07:48
these are actual exercises
163
468260
2634
07:50
that I started writing for my cousins.
164
470918
2318
07:53
The ones I started were much more primitive.
165
473260
2096
07:55
This is a more competent version of it.
166
475380
3370
07:58
But the paradigm here is, we'll generate as many questions as you need,
167
478774
3389
08:02
until you get that concept, until you get 10 in a row.
168
482187
3049
08:05
And the Khan Academy videos are there.
169
485260
1976
08:07
You get hints, the actual steps for that problem,
170
487260
2333
08:09
if you don't know how to do it.
171
489617
1957
08:11
The paradigm here seems like a very simple thing:
172
491598
2310
08:13
10 in a row, you move on.
173
493932
1198
08:15
But it's fundamentally different
174
495154
1580
08:16
than what's happening in classrooms right now.
175
496758
2287
08:19
In a traditional classroom,
176
499069
1902
08:20
you have homework, lecture, homework, lecture,
177
500995
3241
08:24
and then you have a snapshot exam.
178
504260
1839
08:26
And that exam, whether you get a 70 percent, an 80 percent,
179
506123
3657
08:29
a 90 percent or a 95 percent,
180
509804
1445
08:31
the class moves on to the next topic.
181
511273
2443
08:33
And even that 95 percent student --
182
513740
1745
08:35
what was the five percent they didn't know?
183
515509
2009
08:37
Maybe they didn't know what happens when you raise something to the zeroth power.
184
517542
3821
08:41
Then you build on that in the next concept.
185
521387
2249
08:43
That's analogous to -- imagine learning to ride a bicycle.
186
523660
3340
08:47
Maybe I give you a lecture ahead of time,
187
527024
2869
08:49
and I give you a bicycle for two weeks, then I come back after two weeks,
188
529917
3913
08:53
and say, "Well, let's see. You're having trouble taking left turns.
189
533854
3150
08:57
You can't quite stop. You're an 80 percent bicyclist."
190
537028
3237
09:00
So I put a big "C" stamp on your forehead --
191
540289
2422
09:02
(Laughter)
192
542735
1062
09:03
and then I say, "Here's a unicycle."
193
543821
1762
09:05
(Laughter)
194
545607
1094
09:06
But as ridiculous as that sounds,
195
546725
1835
09:08
that's exactly what's happening in our classrooms right now.
196
548584
3652
09:12
And the idea is you fast forward
197
552260
2609
09:14
and good students start failing algebra all of the sudden,
198
554893
2986
09:17
and start failing calculus all of the sudden,
199
557903
2304
09:20
despite being smart, despite having good teachers,
200
560231
2358
09:22
and it's usually because they have these Swiss cheese gaps
201
562613
2744
09:25
that kept building throughout their foundation.
202
565381
2209
09:27
So our model is: learn math the way you'd learn anything,
203
567614
3578
09:31
like riding a bicycle.
204
571216
1346
09:32
Stay on that bicycle. Fall off that bicycle.
205
572586
3071
09:35
Do it as long as necessary, until you have mastery.
206
575681
3031
09:38
The traditional model,
207
578736
1500
09:40
it penalizes you for experimentation and failure,
208
580260
2572
09:42
but it does not expect mastery.
209
582856
2023
09:44
We encourage you to experiment. We encourage you to fail.
210
584903
3064
09:47
But we do expect mastery.
211
587991
1650
09:51
This is just another one of the modules.
212
591181
1920
09:53
This is trigonometry.
213
593125
1420
09:54
This is shifting and reflecting functions.
214
594569
2515
09:57
And they all fit together.
215
597831
1404
09:59
We have about 90 of these right now.
216
599259
1958
10:01
You can go to the site right now,
217
601241
1609
10:02
it's all free, not trying to sell anything.
218
602874
2072
10:04
But the general idea is that they all fit into this knowledge map.
219
604970
3140
10:08
That top node right there, that's literally single-digit addition,
220
608134
3119
10:11
it's like one plus one is equal to two.
221
611277
2275
10:13
The paradigm is, once you get 10 in a row on that,
222
613576
2352
10:15
it keeps forwarding you to more and more advanced modules.
223
615952
3183
10:19
Further down the knowledge map,
224
619159
3079
10:22
we're getting into more advanced arithmetic.
225
622262
2247
10:24
Further down, you start getting into pre-algebra and early algebra.
226
624533
3173
10:27
Further down, you start getting into algebra one, algebra two,
227
627730
3743
10:31
a little bit of precalculus.
228
631497
1532
10:33
And the idea is, from this we can actually teach everything --
229
633402
3197
10:36
well, everything that can be taught in this type of a framework.
230
636623
3842
10:40
So you can imagine -- and this is what we are working on --
231
640489
2809
10:43
from this knowledge map, you have logic, you have computer programming,
232
643322
3563
10:46
you have grammar, you have genetics,
233
646909
2500
10:49
all based off of that core of, if you know this and that,
234
649433
3159
10:52
now you're ready for this next concept.
235
652616
2340
10:55
Now that can work well for an individual learner,
236
655869
2302
10:58
and I encourage you to do it with your kids,
237
658195
2132
11:00
but I also encourage everyone in the audience to do it yourself.
238
660351
3039
11:03
It'll change what happens at the dinner table.
239
663414
2202
11:05
But what we want to do
240
665640
1156
11:06
is use the natural conclusion of the flipping of the classroom
241
666820
3078
11:09
that those early teachers had emailed me about.
242
669922
2373
11:12
And so what I'm showing you here,
243
672319
1593
11:13
this is data from a pilot in the Los Altos school district,
244
673936
2888
11:16
where they took two fifth-grade classes and two seventh-grade classes,
245
676848
3316
11:20
and completely gutted their old math curriculum.
246
680188
2251
11:22
These kids aren't using textbooks, or getting one-size-fits-all lectures.
247
682463
3435
11:25
They're doing Khan Academy, that software, for roughly half of their math class.
248
685922
3993
11:29
I want to be clear: we don't view this as a complete math education.
249
689939
3207
11:33
What it does is -- this is what's happening in Los Altos --
250
693170
2898
11:36
it frees up time -- it's the blocking and tackling,
251
696092
2401
11:38
making sure you know how to move through a system of equations,
252
698517
2976
11:41
and it frees up time for the simulations, for the games,
253
701517
2635
11:44
for the mechanics, for the robot-building,
254
704176
2016
11:46
for the estimating how high that hill is based on its shadow.
255
706216
2882
11:49
And so the paradigm is the teacher walks in every day,
256
709122
2556
11:51
every kid works at their own pace --
257
711702
1778
11:53
this is actually a live dashboard from the Los Altos school district --
258
713504
3531
11:57
and they look at this dashboard.
259
717059
1571
11:58
Every row is a student.
260
718654
1690
12:00
Every column is one of those concepts.
261
720368
1868
12:02
Green means the student's already proficient.
262
722260
2143
12:04
Blue means they're working on it -- no need to worry.
263
724427
2524
12:06
Red means they're stuck.
264
726975
1261
12:08
And what the teacher does is literally just say,
265
728688
3245
12:11
"Let me intervene on the red kids."
266
731957
1675
12:13
Or even better, "Let me get one of the green kids,
267
733656
2365
12:16
who are already proficient in that concept,
268
736045
2046
12:18
to be the first line of attack, and actually tutor their peer."
269
738115
3513
12:23
(Applause)
270
743260
5601
12:28
Now, I come from a very data-centric reality,
271
748885
3351
12:32
so we don't want that teacher to even go and intervene
272
752260
2739
12:35
and have to ask the kid awkward questions:
273
755023
2046
12:37
"What don't you understand? What do you understand?" and all the rest.
274
757093
3310
12:40
So our paradigm is to arm teachers with as much data as possible --
275
760427
3235
12:43
data that, in any other field, is expected,
276
763686
2050
12:45
in finance, marketing, manufacturing --
277
765760
2039
12:47
so the teachers can diagnose what's wrong with the students
278
767823
2797
12:50
so they can make their interaction as productive as possible.
279
770644
2888
12:53
Now teachers know exactly what the students have been up to,
280
773556
2834
12:56
how long they've spent each day, what videos they've watched,
281
776414
2885
12:59
when did they pause the videos, what did they stop watching,
282
779323
2834
13:02
what exercises are they using, what have they focused on?
283
782181
2723
13:04
The outer circle shows what exercises they were focused on.
284
784928
2873
13:07
The inner circle shows the videos they're focused on.
285
787825
2705
13:11
The data gets pretty granular,
286
791141
1437
13:12
so you can see the exact problems the student got right or wrong.
287
792602
3087
13:15
Red is wrong, blue is right.
288
795713
1729
13:17
The leftmost question is the first one the student attempted.
289
797466
2974
13:20
They watched the video over there.
290
800464
1642
13:22
And you can see, eventually they were able to get 10 in a row.
291
802130
2944
13:25
It's almost like you can see them learning over those last 10 problems.
292
805098
3355
13:28
They also got faster -- the height is how long it took them.
293
808477
3087
13:33
When you talk about self-paced learning, it makes sense for everyone --
294
813481
4499
13:38
in education-speak, "differentiated learning" --
295
818004
2421
13:40
but it's kind of crazy, what happens when you see it in a classroom.
296
820449
3682
13:44
Because every time we've done this, in every classroom we've done,
297
824155
4444
13:48
over and over again, if you go five days into it,
298
828623
2324
13:50
there's a group of kids who've raced ahead
299
830971
2013
13:53
and a group who are a little bit slower.
300
833008
1913
13:54
In a traditional model, in a snapshot assessment,
301
834945
2403
13:57
you say, "These are the gifted kids, these are the slow kids.
302
837372
2912
14:00
Maybe they should be tracked differently.
303
840308
1968
14:02
Maybe we should put them in different classes."
304
842300
2230
14:04
But when you let students work at their own pace --
305
844554
2404
14:06
we see it over and over again --
306
846982
1601
14:08
you see students who took a little bit extra time
307
848607
2425
14:11
on one concept or the other,
308
851056
1851
14:12
but once they get through that concept,
309
852931
2196
14:15
they just race ahead.
310
855151
1348
14:16
And so the same kids that you thought were slow six weeks ago,
311
856523
3372
14:19
you now would think are gifted.
312
859919
1659
14:21
And we're seeing it over and over again.
313
861602
1992
14:23
It makes you really wonder
314
863618
1785
14:25
how much all of the labels maybe a lot of us have benefited from
315
865427
3299
14:28
were really just due to a coincidence of time.
316
868750
2582
14:34
Now as valuable as something like this is in a district like Los Altos,
317
874487
5032
14:39
our goal is to use technology
318
879543
1693
14:41
to humanize, not just in Los Altos, but on a global scale,
319
881260
2976
14:44
what's happening in education.
320
884260
2503
14:46
And that brings up an interesting point.
321
886787
2301
14:49
A lot of the effort in humanizing the classroom
322
889112
2730
14:51
is focused on student-to-teacher ratios.
323
891866
2920
14:54
In our mind, the relevant metric is:
324
894810
2499
14:57
student-to-valuable-human-time- with-the-teacher ratio.
325
897333
3902
15:01
So in a traditional model, most of the teacher's time
326
901259
2525
15:03
is spent doing lectures and grading and whatnot.
327
903808
2372
15:06
Maybe five percent of their time is sitting next to students
328
906204
2896
15:09
and working with them.
329
909124
1160
15:10
Now, 100 percent of their time is.
330
910308
2007
15:12
So once again, using technology, not just flipping the classroom,
331
912339
3270
15:15
you're humanizing the classroom, I'd argue,
332
915633
2358
15:18
by a factor of five or 10.
333
918015
2014
15:20
As valuable as that is in Los Altos,
334
920656
1730
15:22
imagine what it does to the adult learner,
335
922410
2041
15:24
who's embarrassed to go back and learn stuff
336
924475
2063
15:26
they should have known before going back to college.
337
926562
2452
15:29
Imagine what it does to a street kid in Calcutta,
338
929038
5933
15:34
who has to help his family during the day,
339
934995
2742
15:37
and that's the reason he or she can't go to school.
340
937761
2406
15:40
Now they can spend two hours a day and remediate,
341
940191
2483
15:42
or get up to speed and not feel embarrassed
342
942698
2325
15:45
about what they do or don't know.
343
945047
2189
15:47
Now imagine what happens where --
344
947666
1628
15:49
we talked about the peers teaching each other
345
949318
2911
15:52
inside of a classroom.
346
952253
1809
15:54
But this is all one system.
347
954086
1730
15:55
There's no reason why you can't have that peer-to-peer tutoring
348
955840
3302
15:59
beyond that one classroom.
349
959166
2070
16:01
Imagine what happens if that student in Calcutta
350
961260
2976
16:04
all of the sudden can tutor your son,
351
964260
2168
16:06
or your son can tutor that kid in Calcutta.
352
966452
2461
16:09
And I think what you'll see emerging
353
969381
1855
16:11
is this notion of a global one-world classroom.
354
971260
5903
16:17
And that's essentially what we're trying to build.
355
977862
3374
16:21
Thank you.
356
981822
1152
16:22
(Applause)
357
982998
6911
16:31
Bill Gates: I'll ask about two or three questions.
358
991220
2436
16:33
Salman Khan: Oh, OK.
359
993680
1722
16:35
(Applause continues)
360
995426
1333
17:02
(Applause ends)
361
1022971
1349
17:04
BG: I've seen some things you're doing in the system,
362
1024344
2936
17:07
that have to do with motivation and feedback --
363
1027304
2437
17:09
energy points, merit badges.
364
1029765
2471
17:12
Tell me what you're thinking there.
365
1032260
2031
17:14
SK: Oh yeah. No, we have an awesome team working on it.
366
1034315
2596
17:16
I have to be clear, it's not just me anymore.
367
1036935
2103
17:19
I'm still doing all the videos,
368
1039062
1485
17:20
but we have a rock-star team doing the software.
369
1040571
2302
17:22
We've put a bunch of game mechanics in there, where you get badges,
370
1042897
3159
17:26
we're going to start having leader boards by area, you get points.
371
1046080
3259
17:29
It's actually been pretty interesting.
372
1049363
1826
17:31
Just the wording of the badging,
373
1051213
1559
17:32
or how many points you get for doing something,
374
1052796
2207
17:35
we see on a system-wide basis,
375
1055027
1637
17:36
like tens of thousands of fifth-graders or sixth-graders
376
1056688
2638
17:39
going one direction or another, depending what badge you give them.
377
1059350
3175
17:42
(Laughter)
378
1062549
2063
17:44
BG: And the collaboration you're doing with Los Altos,
379
1064636
2600
17:47
how did that come about?
380
1067260
2177
17:49
SK: Los Altos, it was kind of crazy.
381
1069461
3039
17:52
Once again, I didn't expect it to be used in classrooms.
382
1072524
2809
17:55
Someone from their board came and said,
383
1075357
1879
17:57
"What would you do if you had carte Blanche in a classroom?"
384
1077260
2827
18:00
I said, "Well, every student would work at their own pace,
385
1080111
3016
18:03
on something like this, we'd give a dashboard."
386
1083151
2197
18:05
They said, "This is kind of radical. We have to think about it."
387
1085372
3199
18:08
Me and the rest of the team were like, "They're never going to want to do this."
388
1088595
3802
18:12
But literally the next day they were like, "Can you start in two weeks?"
389
1092421
3421
18:15
(Laughter)
390
1095866
1451
18:17
BG: So fifth-grade math is where that's going on right now?
391
1097341
2897
18:20
SK: It's two fifth-grade classes and two seventh-grade classes.
392
1100262
2999
18:23
They're doing it at the district level.
393
1103285
1866
18:25
I think what they're excited about is they can follow these kids,
394
1105175
3072
18:28
not only in school; on Christmas, we saw some of the kids were doing it.
395
1108271
3413
18:31
We can track everything, track them as they go through the entire district.
396
1111708
3528
18:35
Through the summers, as they go from one teacher to the next,
397
1115260
2928
18:38
you have this continuity of data that even at the district level, they can see.
398
1118212
3800
18:42
BG: So some of those views we saw were for the teacher
399
1122036
3200
18:45
to go in and track actually what's going on with those kids.
400
1125260
3691
18:48
So you're getting feedback on those teacher views
401
1128975
2326
18:51
to see what they think they need?
402
1131325
1713
18:53
SK: Oh yeah. Most of those were specs by the teachers.
403
1133062
4356
18:57
We made some of those for students so they could see their data,
404
1137442
3010
19:00
but we have a very tight design loop with the teachers themselves.
405
1140476
3112
19:03
And they're saying, "Hey, this is nice, but --"
406
1143612
2224
19:05
Like that focus graph, a lot of the teachers said,
407
1145860
2389
19:08
"I have a feeling a lot of the kids are jumping around
408
1148273
2540
19:10
and not focusing on one topic."
409
1150837
1602
19:12
So we made that focus diagram.
410
1152463
1473
19:13
So it's all been teacher-driven. It's been pretty crazy.
411
1153960
2640
19:16
BG: Is this ready for prime time?
412
1156624
1573
19:18
Do you think a lot of classes next school year should try this thing out?
413
1158221
4354
19:22
SK: Yeah, it's ready.
414
1162599
1158
19:23
We've got a million people on the site already,
415
1163781
2718
19:26
so we can handle a few more.
416
1166523
2932
19:29
(Laughter)
417
1169479
1757
19:31
No, no reason why it really can't happen
418
1171260
1976
19:33
in every classroom in America tomorrow.
419
1173260
2610
19:35
BG: And the vision of the tutoring thing.
420
1175894
2480
19:38
The idea there is, if I'm confused about a topic,
421
1178398
2838
19:41
somehow right in the user interface,
422
1181260
2152
19:43
I'd find people who are volunteering,
423
1183436
2136
19:45
maybe see their reputation,
424
1185596
1738
19:47
and I could schedule and connect up with those people?
425
1187358
3177
19:50
SK: Absolutely. And this is something I recommend everyone in this audience do.
426
1190559
3749
19:54
Those dashboards the teachers have, you can go log in right now
427
1194332
3062
19:57
and you can essentially become a coach
428
1197418
1818
19:59
for your kids, your nephews, your cousins,
429
1199260
2976
20:02
or maybe some kids at the Boys and Girls Club.
430
1202260
2829
20:05
And yeah, you can start becoming a mentor, a tutor,
431
1205113
2532
20:07
really immediately.
432
1207669
1472
20:09
But yeah, it's all there.
433
1209165
1393
20:11
BG: Well, it's amazing.
434
1211150
1158
20:12
I think you just got a glimpse of the future of education.
435
1212332
3062
20:15
BG: Thank you. SK: Thank you.
436
1215418
1818
20:17
(Applause)
437
1217260
3722
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