CONTENTS

Preface
I. A new era
• Globalization, the first sign of change
• English - the new planetary language
• A change in the scale of education
II. Education and its context
• Education and business
• Education and the state
III. The digital habit
• The new digital culture
• Digital projects
• Time for assimilation
IV. The extended school
• Education at a critical moment
• A definition of the extended school
• Yesterday: concentrated knowledge
• Today: knowledge disseminated
• Tomorrow: knowledge connected
V. New tools and old
• Chalk and blackboard
• The spinning globe
• Microscopic life
• Desk and work
• The computer garden
• Slides and liquid Crystal
• Projectors and projections
• Dry and digital copies
VI. Digital transition
• Continuing education
• Cultural exchange
• The mental switch
• Critical thought
• Internal communication
• Educational frontier posts
• Technological updating
• Creativity and deregulation
VII. Means and ends
• Values for today and for always
• Technocentrality and consumerism
• Software in the public domain
VIII. The digital library
• Atoms versus bits
• The dual book
• Digital quality
• Reading and writing
• Text and hypertext
• Consult and navigate
IX. The home computer
• A new piece of furniture or a new instrument?
• Playthings and electronic toys
• Robots for assembly
• The silent printer
• The community network
X. New instruments of thought
• Word processors, a new way of writing
• A friendly mouse
• More portable learning
• Designing with computers
• The golden link in communications: the modem
• Electronic mail always arrives at its destination
• Fax, a threatened species
• WWW: three magic letters
• Reliable and accessible data bases
• Tables, abacus and spreadsheet
• The Scanner, a bridge between two worlds
• New interfaces and old keyboards
• Presentation aids
• So-called multimedia
• Digital cameras without film
• Digital videos in schools
• Music for all
XI. Presence and remote presence
• Features of distance education
• The three generations
• Synchronous and asynchronous moments
• Spaces for meeting
• Classrooms open to the world
• The advantages
• New educational niches
• A new type of teacher and student
XII. Talents and handicaps
• The right to communication
• The obstacle of the keyboard
• The obstacle of the screen
• The expression of individual talent
Conclusions

VI. DIGITAL TRANSITION

Continuing education

Continuing education is the key to the transformation towards digital education. It needs to be taken very seriously, not only from a technological aspect but from all those aspects needed to open up the process of education to the world. It is necessary to create awareness of the need for continuing education. As technological innovation speeds up the anguish caused by falling behind is greater, not only from missing the knowledge train but also because of losing the work for which we were trained. In addition, professional career studies tend to get shorter as they avoid overburdening with obsolete information, and in particular because they do not wish to delay entry onto the job market. For all these reasons it is urgently necessary to give consideration to and act regarding continuing education cycles.

Above all, the freedom to learn is not negotiable. On the basis of this freedom, future codes and guidelines will arise for a globalized education. As part of this process it is necessary to discover the pleasure of learning, the emotion of mastering a new tool, avoiding the fear and anxiety caused by change. To seek out the best "teachers of teachers", expand teaching criteria, set new targets and objectives. To learn to teach while learning, to learn alongside students, to learn from students, to learn while investigating.

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