By the advent of AI tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google Gemini, etc. etc. it is inevitable for the schools to ignore the presence of technology in the schools across globe. Present day learners are not limited to classrooms culture. They are now having broad curriculum understating with the educators around the globe. Certain excepts taken from the Internet to gaze how schools will look like in the coming years across globe.
You may find
that Sandy Speicher leads IDEO’s Design for Learning domain, which brings
human-centered thinking to systemic challenges in education. The work of Sandy
helps educators use design tools and methods to work in new ways, to prepare
for future challenges, and to transform their institutes and communities.
Some children
will be reading in comfortable chairs. It may sound nice that some will be
digging into a scientific research question by conducting readings on a nearby
pond. I truly believe that some will be working on computers refining their
skills in math while others are sequencing DNA. In these instances some will be
collaborating around a design challenge with new friends across the globe.
While one group will reenact a battle from medieval times, while others are
learning on site, at jobs. Building, making, imagining, interacting,
investigating, reflecting, connecting, shaping, participating. There will be
challenge. There will be high expectations. And there will be tons of
variation. I can’t believe I am saying this but with all of its possibility,
the school day of the future will be one thing: it will be designed.
Elliot Eisner a
well known education professors, often asked the question, “If aliens landed on
our planet and walked into our schools, what would they think the school is
meant for?” We’d brainstorm: Learning to sit in rows? Learning to get up and
move en masse at the sound of a bell? Learning to stay in place for 40-minute
increments? Learning to override your bodily functions? Learning to answer the
questions that the person standing in front of the room already knows the
answer to? Needless to say It’s hard not to realize that a school, upon pure
observation, looks like a training ground for behavioral management.
In the end, it
is not that much different than the design of most of our industrial work
environments – time, constraints, structures, tasks, a consistent and organized
system. Sometimes, it’s what we adults tend to design without really thinking.
Take note that
when you watch children – undeniable natural learners – they create different
solutions: play, discovery, interaction. They observe the world, they stick
things in their mouth, they touch things. They connect with the world to learn
it. They experience it through their senses. And very often in discussions with
the people around them, they create language and meaning and amazing new ideas
and interpretations that the rest of us get the benefit of learning from.
It’s not too big
of a leap to want the school day designed around these notions of how we
naturally, and singly, learn. As a teacher designing the day around discovery
of information, connections to real world challenges, discussions digging into
our experiences with the world.
Never hesitate
to keep one thing to keep in mind, of course, is that not every child is
starting in the same place, and not every child is headed toward the same
place. Some need freedom in order to learn. Some need structure. Some need a
mix. You may find that all students need respect for their individuality, trust
in their abilities to succeed, and adults who have the foresight to design
experience to bring out individual greatness.
I can tell you
about the school for instance, is creating an exciting model of individualized
learning that integrates technology and personal attention. Basically, this
means that their school day revolves around formative assessments which
technology helps capture, so that the teachers can look at the data at the end
of the day. So, the teachers discuss – together – how each student is doing,
and develop a strategy for the following day which can include any number of
formats for what the student needs – teacher-led instruction, one-on-one
tutoring, self-learning, or virtual tutoring. Okay so they’ve broken the model
of one class with one teacher and created a network of learning toward specific
goals.
I can tell you about another school Public
School, whose students have unique needs of their own. Too often the majority
of their students are performing at an elementary level when they enter in the
ninth grade. In school they have created a portfolio of adaptive learning
technologies which allow students to access ninth-grade content while learning
basic skills. It’s not "Drill and Kill" -- they’ve integrated
technology into the daily experience by helping students learn to create with
it. This sounds nice it’s putting them on the track not just for incredible
academic gains, but also for immediate relevance in the job market – an
important need for their students.
Then there is Network in which students are
learning in related ways, but with a different design. They use projects to
inspire new understandings. A nice touch is that they’re also using technology
to capture learnings – building videos and slideshow presentations – and
they’re most often working in teams, learning different subject-matter content
through real world challenges.
Now educators
build their curriculum from student passions. This goes for them that they have
a range of approaches – inspiring children through teacher-defined projects,
allowing them to define the end goals of any given exploration, capturing a
student's passion toward a particular topic and using that as the vehicle for
exploration through teacher- or student-defined assignments. Okay so their
school day allows for this range of experience, and the “investigations”
happening throughout the day vary greatly class by class, child by child.
As an educator
all of these innovative models are showing us that incredible results, and
experiences are possible when we design the school day with the needs of the
student in mind. Remember the historic “one-size-fits-all” model of set periods
of time with groups of somewhere between 20-30 kids lined up in rows and one
teacher in the front of the room orchestrating the conversation…. well, Sage on
Stage, Chalk and Talk, and Spray and Pray might just have met their match.
In India central
government is keen to meet the pace with the global standards and technological
advancement through over hauling the education policy of the nation through
NEP. NEP-2020 addresses the personalized progress of the children in school
education through 5+3+3+4 model and stage-oriented learning model which
facilitate the children to hone the skills needed at that particular stage. NEP
also prepares the present learners to have the flexibility of choosing the
right career options after XII for the Higher Education in order to innovate
and create new avenues for others in the form of Startups and starting their
journey of being Entrepreneurs and contributing to the nation growth.
In conclusion
the school day of the future will be unpredictable, inconsistent, and designed
to be wildly relevant for the learner, their engagement, and their development.
Copyright © 2026 amity university | All rights reserved.