By Thomas L. Friedman, NY Times, September 8, 2012
I just arrived in Shanghai, but I’m thinking about Estonia and wondering about something Presidents Clinton and Obama have been saying.
I just arrived in Shanghai, but I’m thinking about Estonia and wondering about something Presidents Clinton and Obama have been saying.
Wired magazine reported last week that public schools in Estonia are
establishing a program for teaching first graders—and kids in all other
grades—how to do computer programming. Wired said that the curriculum was
created “because of the difficulty Estonian companies face in hiring
programmers. Estonia has a burgeoning tech industry thanks in part to the
success of Skype, which was developed in Estonia in 2003.”
The news from Estonia prompted The Guardian newspaper of London to
publish an online poll asking its readers: “Children aged 7 to 16 are being
given the opportunity to learn how to code in schools in Estonia, should U.K.
school children be taught programming as part of their school day?” It’s
fascinating to read about all this while visiting Shanghai, whose public school
system in 2010 beat the rest of the world in math, science and reading in the
global PISA exam of 15-year-olds. Will the Chinese respond by teaching
programming to preschoolers?
All of this made me think Obama should stop using the phrase—first
minted by Bill Clinton in 1992—that if you just “work hard and play by the
rules” you should expect that the American system will deliver you a decent
life and a chance for your children to have a better one. That mantra really
resonates with me and, I am sure, with many voters. There is just one problem:
It’s out of date.
The truth is, if you want a decent job that will lead to a decent life
today you have to work harder, regularly reinvent yourself, obtain at least
some form of postsecondary education, make sure that you’re engaged in lifelong
learning and play by the rules.
Why? Because when Clinton first employed his phrase in 1992, the
Internet was just emerging, virtually no one had e-mail and the cold war was
just ending. In other words, we were still living in a closed system, a world
of walls, which were just starting to come down. It was a world before Nafta
and the full merger of globalization and the information technology revolution,
a world in which unions and blue-collar manufacturing were still relatively
strong, and where America could still write a lot of the rules that people
played by.
That world is gone. It is now a more open system. Technology and
globalization are wiping out lower-skilled jobs faster, while steadily raising
the skill level required for new jobs. More than ever now, lifelong learning is
the key to getting into, and staying in, the middle class.
There is a quote attributed to the futurist Alvin Toffler that captures
this new reality: In the future “illiteracy will not be defined by those who
cannot read and write, but by those who cannot learn and relearn.” Any form of
standing still is deadly.
I covered the Republican convention, and I was impressed in watching my
Times colleagues at how much their jobs have changed. Here’s what a reporter
does in a typical day: report, file for the Web edition, file for The
International Herald Tribune, tweet, update for the Web edition, report more,
track other people’s tweets, do a Web-video spot and then write the story for
the print paper. You want to be a Times reporter today? That’s your day. You
have to work harder and smarter and develop new skills faster.
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