DocumentCode
747134
Title
Digital Technology and the Skills Shortage
Author
Holmes, Neville
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput., Tasmania Univ., Hobart, Tas.
Volume
40
Issue
3
fYear
2007
fDate
3/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
100
Lastpage
99
Abstract
Governments and businesses in many advanced countries complain about the current skills shortage. They blame it for high wages, lowered economic growth, outsourcing, the need to import skilled workers, the failure of medical care, the high rates of car accidents and unemployment, and pretty well any instance of technical malfunction and project failure. The irony of this is that digital technology could be used both to raise the average skill level of most young people and also to depopulate jails by using the same technique to rehabilitate the misfits who so often end up there. To achieve this, however, our whole approach to education must be redesigned, the education profession reorganized, the school system remodeled, and parents constrained to share the responsibility for their children´s education. Even then, it would take a generation for the investment to start paying off
Keywords
educational computing; digital technology; education profession reorganization; school system; Animals; Cats; Displays; Dogs; Education; Instruments; Microcomputers; Natural languages; Rhythm; Writing; computers and society; computing profession;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9162
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MC.2007.88
Filename
4134010
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