Published by Sunday Punch Dagupan Pangasinan September 24, 2019
Skills and the Meaning of Life
By Virginia
Jasmin Pasalo
Competitive edge in the 21st century
requires that educational institutions have
to evolve a framework that would enhance the capacity of students to succeed in
their lives and chosen careers during the Information Age. The book 21st Century Skills: Learning for Life in
Our Times written by Bernie Trilling and Charles Fadel, describes the “21st century skills movement”,
or how the global landscape for learning is reshaping itself, and what the global
transformation is all about.
Based on a framework developed by the Partnership
for 21st Century Skills, the book discusses three clusters of
skills: a) Learning and innovation skills, b) Digital literacy skills, and c) Life
and career skills.
Learning and innovation skills equips the students “about the mental
processes required to adapt and improve upon a modern work environment.” Under
this are the four C’s: Critical thinking, Creativity, Collaboration and Communication.
Digital Literacy skills enables the student to discern facts,
assess the source of information, and understand the technology behind them.
Listed under this cluster are: Information technology, Media literacy and
Technology literacy.
Life and career skills focuses on
enhancing the capacity of students to effectively direct their life and career
choices. The skills under this cluster: Flexibility, Leadership, Initiative, Productivity
and Social skills.
Students are self-educating themselves, based on
information available on the information highway, without guidance from the
academe. Without guidance and a workable framework, students swim in the sea of
information, unable to frame the questions and derive answers that is possible
only with a clear vision and a viable strategy.
In the book 21
Lessons for the 21st Century, Yuval Noah Harari probes into
today’s most urgent issues as advances in technology overtakes our
comprehension of it. He discusses the challenges of navigating life for the
human species to survive. He explores, with the increasing sophistication of
Artificial Intelligence (AI) approximating, or even surpassing, our own
intellectual capacities, how we may avoid the possibility of becoming the “useless class” when most of our
physical and mental challenges could be better performed by AI.
In the concluding part of the book (Part V, under
the subheading “Resilience”), Harari
poses a question, “How do you live in an
age of bewilderment, when the old stories have collapsed and no new story has
yet emerged to replace them?” He suggests the following:
a. Education.
develop the ability to make sense of information, to tell the difference
between what is important and what is unimportant, and above all to combine the
bits of information into a broad picture of the world.”
b. Meaning. What
is the purpose and meaning of life?
c. Meditation.
Focus on the breath and observe the reality of the moment.
In the continuing process of “skilling”, it is
important to know the reality of oneself, while still possible, before algorithms
define what we are and what we should know about ourselves. Surviving the 21st
century is not the ultimate goal, but knowing the purpose and meaning of life,
enjoying each breath, and flowing consciously with the rhymes and rhythms of
the universe.
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