Why, why, why does our education system look so similar to the way it did 50 years ago? Millions of students were failing then, as they are now — and it’s because we’re clinging to a business model that clearly doesn’t work. Education advocate Geoffrey Canada dares the system to look at the data, think about the customers and make systematic shifts in order to help greater numbers of kids excel.
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Interesting, Ted Talks about Education
Our failing schools. Enough is enough! | Geoffrey Canada
August 5, 2015
More from this series:
- Do schools kill creativity? | Sir Ken Robinson
- Every kid needs a champion | Rita Pierson
- Grit: the power of passion and perseverance | Angela Lee Duckworth
- Our failing schools. Enough is enough! | Geoffrey Canada
- How to escape education’s death valley | Sir Ken Robinson
- Teach every child about food | Jamie Oliver
- Why some of us don’t have one true calling | Emilie Wapnick
- Learn to read Chinese … with ease! | ShaoLan
- Teach girls bravery, not perfection | Reshma Saujani
- Teach girls bravery, not perfection | Reshma Saujani
- What’s so sexy about math? | Cédric Villani
- Let’s teach for mastery — not test scores | Sal Khan
- Why open a school? To close a prison | Nadia Lopez
- 3 rules to spark learning | Ramsey Musallam
- How to design a library that makes kids want to read | Michael Bierut