The second educational revolution: rethinking
education in the age of technology
A. Collins* & R. Halverson†
*Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
†University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA
Abstract This paper drew upon a recent book (Rethinking Education in the Age of Technology) to sum-
marize a number of prospects and challenges arising from the appropriation of digital technol-
ogy into learning and educational practice. Tensions between traditional models of schooling
and the affordances of digital media were noted, while the promise of these technologies for
shaping a new system of education was reviewed. It was argued that new technology brings
radical opportunities but also significant challenges. The urgency of seeking a coherent model
for the future of education in a technological age was stressed.
Keywords computers and education, educational technology, future of education, history of education,
life long learning, schools and technology.
The world of education is currently undergoing a second
revolution. Digital technologies such as computers,
mobile devices, digital media creation and distribution
tools, video games and social networking sites are trans-
forming how we think about schooling and learning. All
around us, people are learning with the aid of new tech-
nologies: people of all ages are playing complex video
games; workers are interacting with simulations that put
them in challenging situations; students are taking
courses at online high schools and colleges; and adults
are engaging in social networks and online learning
environments to manage their professional lives. New
technologies create learning opportunities that chal-
lenge the traditional practices of schools and colleges.
These new learning niches enable people of all ages to
pursue learning on their own terms. People around the
world are taking their education out of school and into
homes, libraries, Internet cafes and workplaces where
they can decide what they want to learn, when they want
to learn and how they want to learn.
School systems organized around age-grading, tradi-
tional curricular sequencing, accepted professional
accreditation and long-standing funding models have
struggled in adapting to new, learner-directed technolo-
gies. We often think that our current educational institu-
tions have always been here, and have always struggled
to adapt to change. However, the genesis of our current
schooling system occurred in response to a similar tech-
nological and economic tumult – the industrial revolu-
tion. Our current model of schooling grew out of the
technologies and social practices of the industrial
revolution.
The rise of the public schools moved from an appren-
ticeship era to a world of nearly universal schooling that
came to identify learning with schooling. The current
technology revolution differs from the industrial revolu-
tion in one important way. While the industrial revolu-
tion gave rise to a universal schooling system where
none had previously existed, the information technol-
ogy revolution presses a very real, active system to
reconsider its fundamental practices. Our paper high-
lights some of the challenges involved when a technol-
ogy movement seeks to redefine learning in the face of a
vibrant, pre-existing institutional structure.
Accepted: 16 November 2009
Correspondence: Allan Collins, 135 Cedar Street, Lexington, MA
02421, USA. Email: collins@bbn.com
doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2729.2009.00339.x
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Original article
18 © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd Journal of Computer Assisted Learning (2010), 26, 18–27