Live demo of electric taste machine on stage at TEDxBarcelona
Insight Blast at WEF Young Global Leaders Annual Summit, Myunmar
YGL Annual Summit 2013 by YGLvoices on Flickr.
Insight Blast at WEF Young Global Leaders Annual Summit, Myunmar
Insight Blast at WEF Young Global Leaders Annual Summit, Myunmar
YGL Annual Summit 2013 (by YGLvoices) Insight Blast at WEF Young Global Leaders Annual Summit, Myunmar
Adrian David Cheok – Insight Blast on the Future of Education
Adrian David Cheok – Insight Blast on the Future of Education: schools like computer games; learning by doing; digital creative process; kids using teamwork, imagination, problem-solving. Schools must adapt to the rapid change of hyperconnectivity. (At World Economic Forum Young Global Leaders Summit, Yangon/Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar)
New schools, new knowledge for the Internet age, by Adrian David Cheok | Forum:Blog | The World Economic Forum
Although we are now in the age of the Internet, our schools are still stuck in the industrial age. As a result, the gap between our schools and reality is widening and could end in total disruption.
There is a clear link between our schools and the factories of the industrial age. In the production line system developed in the 19th and 20th centuries, each individual had to work at the pace of the industrial process, completing repetitive tasks, and was often banned from speaking.
The current school system is eerily similar. Students move along a linear progression of years, semesters and subjects. Every student studies at the same pace, receives grades and takes exams at the same time. If you excel at maths, you are likely to get bored. If you are bad at maths, you are likely to receive bad grades. No matter, everyone must move straight along the production line and repeat the same task over and over again to pass the exam. In class, you are not allowed to talk but must sit passively and let the teacher transfer information at a set speed.
It is not surprising that schools are modelled on the production line. Society, government and businesses needed manpower for the factories and companies of the industrial age. They set up systems that moulded workers into such manpower.
This model is archaic and unsuited for the Internet age, the age of knowledge. Firstly, we do not need factory workers – we need entrepreneurs, inventors, creative business people and designers. It is difficult to compete in global manufacturing. We can compete only in high value-added sectors such as new products, new services and creative industries.
Secondly, the Internet age allows us to discard the linear model. We have the tools and the ability to learn at our own pace. In fact, we can revive some educational practices of the pre-industrial age, such as the apprentice system. Each person keeps working on something until he or she masters it. A maths exam need not be set for the whole class on a specific day. Instead, students can be given continuous online mini tests. When they have mastered one topic, they move on to the next at their own pace.
The main obstacles to implementing such a new model are the inertia and conservatism of the education sector. However, just like every other industry, education is being disrupted and revolutionized by the Internet. Classes and lectures will go online. Students can view them at their own pace and be evaluated interactively.
Students will be much happier because they can study independently and test their limits (this is how video games work, and games are a good model for learning). Homework, on the other hand, will be done in classrooms and lecture halls. Being physically together will be all about solving problems, doing projects, learning through practical tasks, and working in teams with other students and teachers.
Learning and knowledge production will be done simultaneously. This is much more suited to the great technological and social changes of the 21st century. We need to learn more about tacit knowledge rather than explicit knowledge. Explicit knowledge becomes rapidly out of date when technology is changing so quickly. Tacit knowledge helps us to deal with such change. So does learning by doing and working in teams.
Adrian David Cheok is appointed Advisor to Assemblage which is making exciting new internet communication products
KOLLABORATE.IO
93% of all human communication is visual but most online collaboration solutions are text-based. Until now. Kollaborate introduces real-time visual collaboration without the hassle.
PRESENTATION.IO
Present realtime to anyone on any device. No downloads, no installations, you simply move through your slides, which will change on all devices connected at the same time.
REAKTIFY
A realtime feedback analytics tool. Google Analytics tells you what happened on your site, Kissmetrics tells you who did it, Reaktify tells you why.
Assemblage was founded based on one simple quest; to make it easy to for people and companies to collaborate online with multiple people at the same time. Since that first spark of an idea in 2011, Assemblage products have gone on to help companies and people in over 140 countries around the world to work together real-time on the web.
Adrian Cheok upon appointment as Advisor said: “My interest is in the future of internet where we will have multisensory communication with all the five senses. Assemblage is helping to increase experience communication.”
Adrian David Cheok Speaker at USC Global Conference 2013
Adrian David Cheok Speaker at USC Global Conference 2013
Ars Futura: The Art and Design of Our Digital Futures
Moderator: Scott Fisher
Panelists: Adrian David Cheok, Dooeun Choi, Alex McDowell
Please join the University of Southern California at the 2013 USC Global Conference in Seoul, South Korea, taking place May 23-25, 2013. The conference will take place at the Grand Hyatt Seoul and will reflect on the interrelated themes of science, technology and health; global business, international stability and the rule of law; and education, the arts and cultural institutions.
Latest version our Electric Taste Machine system
Latest version our Electric Taste Machine system by Nimesha Ranasinghe, Keio-NUS CUTE Center.
Adrian David Cheok speaker at TEDxBarcelona
On the 17th of May we will organize the next TEDxBarcelona event with live speakers presenting great ideas. The theme will be: The future of technology and society.
It will take place at CosmoCaixa in Barcelona from 14:00 until 20:00. Most of the talks will be presented in english.
Guest Blogger Fan Yang on Adrian Cheok | TCCHawaii.org
Guest Blogger Fan Yang on Adrian Cheok | TCCHawaii.org
Online chat with only voice or video is outdated! Now you’re able to hug, kiss, smell, or even taste your buddies remotely! Following Adrian, we experienced a fascinating multisensory tour.
The tour started with his early study, the Real World Pacman. With a pair of glasses, real humans become Pacman picking up cookies on the real world streets. But this is just a warm-up. Buckle up, more surprises are coming!
Following the first sense, sight, one of Adrian’s students using sound transformed a regular umbrella into a katana! Different sound effects are displayed by swinging the umbrella in different ways. Certain movement combinations can trigger special sound effects, such as explosion. Added only sound, an umbrella can have much more fun!
The presentation gradually came to its upsurge when the sense of touch was brought up. With a jacket, or just a ring, you can give your loved one a remote hug. As reported by IEEE Spectrum, Adrian is making a huggable Internet! In fact, it’s not just huggable, but also kissable! Kissenger really blew away everybody’s mind last night.
The tour didn’t stop at the sense of touch. It continued blowing everyone further away by digital smell and electrical and thermal taste.
Now with these possibilities, how can we incorporate all five senses into online teaching and learning? Maybe an online “better kisser” course is a good start? The stimulated audience had very inspiring and funny chats too. This session is definitely this year’s “must attend” one! The public can access a recording of the session here: http://squirrel.adobeconnect.com/p86lgb32brf/