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    Students to be taught Twitter in school?

A leaked curriculum report has suggested primary school children will be expected to learn about web tools and even spellcheck – assuming they haven’t mastered them already.

By Nicole Kobie, 25 Mar 2009 at 12:20

Children could be required to learn about Twitter, Wikipedia and other web tools in school, under new draft curriculum plans which won praise from the government’s tech education body.

According to the plans, which were seen by the Guardian newspaper, web and new media skills could be taught alongside handwriting and literacy. Drawn up by former Ofsted head Sir Jim Rose, the full report is set for release next month.

Among other curriculum changes, primary school children would be expected to understand blogging, podcasts, Wikipedia and Twitter, as well as be able to type and use a spellcheck – skills many students arguably know better than many of their teachers.

Stephen Crowne, the head of tech-in-schools body Becta, said that technology may well be an everyday part of students’ lives, but bringing it into classrooms will help them use it intelligently and bring lessons to life.

"The effective use of technology not only complements, but enhances traditional core skills such as reading and writing, and boosts interest in what children are learning," he said in a statement.

"This is no substitute for good teaching, but is a vital tool to develop knowledge and understanding and prepare children for the world.”

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1 comments

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social media skills are not tech skills! - Arunn Ramadoss, Micro Focus

It’s a confusing decision to change the school curriculum to incorporate the likes of Twitter, as it seems to be a knee-jerk reaction to the latest ‘trendy’ technologies. Young children will continue to adopt the latest interactive technologies as part of their social development.


At a time when there are half as many computer science graduates today than five years ago, we should instead be focusing attention and investment on science and technology in our older children's curriculum. Only this way will we build a more successful British software industry and deliver graduates with the essential skills to run the IT systems at the heart of organisations in the UK and overseas.


With regard to focused education on Twitter, an architect wouldn’t begin their career studying how to craft ornate window frames, rather than foundations. The same principle should apply to the education of technology.

By Ip_arunnramadoss on Thursday Mar 26

0 people out of 0 found this comment useful.

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