December 2008
School administrators and policymakers from more than 30 countries are gathering in Seattle for the fourth annual School of the Future World Summit, hosted by Microsoft Corp.'s Partners in Learning.
The theme, "What's Possible," will enable more than 250 participants to facilitate a global discussion on what schools in the future can look like by examining the areas of instruction, organization design, technology, the challenges of implementing new policy and emerging trends everyone faces as they prepare students for the 21st century global workforce.
"Educators presently face many economic and political challenges, including decreases in funding in tough economic climates as well as the pressure to generate performance results that allow students to compete on a global stage," said Mary Cullinane, director of Innovation for U.S. Public Sector Education at Microsoft.
"We fundamentally believe improving education is a global imperative and strong investment is vital to our future success."
"This event will push people to collaboratively address new ways of thinking and provide specific strategies to implement within their local context, allowing them to turn possibilities into reality."
Summit participants will explore the evolving role of technology as a disruptor and accelerator in education and address factors that enable sustained change and transformative innovation in classrooms.
Attendees will learn from education, business and policy leaders who will discuss what's possible with systems, processes and integrated technology, specifically in this time of a global economic crunch. Leading speakers include the following:
Murray, who has prominently focused on education as a core reform area, will showcase how investment in 21st century career pathways is critical to securing a bright economic and job future.
Education leaders from around the world will share their best practices at the summit, including the following:
The U.S. delegation will also showcase an innovative approach to ensuring students understand the 21st century jobs awaiting them. CareerForward, a project that started in Michigan in partnership between the Michigan Department of Education, Michigan Virtual University and Microsoft Partners in Learning, is now being made available free in the U.S. Students, teachers and schools can implement it either through classroom instruction or individually.
The media-rich online learning program helps to get students thinking about what they want to do with their lives, what types of careers they may want to pursue and what they need to do to succeed.
Students who take the CareerForward course will be better prepared to embrace the global 21st century workplace by learning more about globalization, career planning, financial literacy and entrepreneurship.
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