Teach Middle East Magazine May-June 2019 Issue 5 Volume 6 | Page 43

Sharing Good Practice less water – they presented their solution at Oxford University, 400 students went on a march in Peru, a huge mural was created in India and Portugal, so students will be reminded of the project every single day. If we fail to give our students the skills they need to successfully navigate their reality, we risk a future where technology has undue influence over our lives. Imagine this scenario: A woman gets into a self-driving car on her way home from work. In order to get the ride for free, she is forced to spend 20 minutes at the fast food restaurant that sponsored her trip. This has become a new way of advertising. After eating an unhealthy snack that she really didn’t need, she passes the rest of the time by sharing a few highly biased, government sponsored news stories on her social media feeds. The government software that constantly analyzes social media data increases her social credit score by 2 points. She knows that her social credit score is close to being high enough to give her access to a better job. She checks her smartphone to see whether her child has had a good day at school. Her son has been angry 2 times, stressed for less than 30 minutes, and spent a few minutes laughing at lunch time, all of which has been recognized by the facial recognition software and cameras that are located throughout the school. Upon arrival at home, she unlocks her front door with the aid of neural sensors attached to her eyeglasses and before proceeding to ask her home network to order dinner for her family. This story is dangerously close to being reality. In Beijing people do have a social credit connected to face recognition. In Chinese schools, children’s emotions are scanned every 20 seconds, and mind controlling devices are available on the internet for no more than US$250. Schools need to transform and we need to question ourselves how. The home networks that we use like Amazon’s Alexa and Google Home, to turn on our lights, buy goods and order food, send our data to their companies every few minutes so that advertising can be better targeted to our desires. Jane Goodall, world renowned primatologist and anthropologist, founded the Roots & Shoots programme with the goal of bringing together youth to work on environmental, conservation and humanitarian issues. In 2018, Roots and Shoots approached Timmers to collaborate in developing Innovation Lab Schools in Africa and South America. Each lab school aims to offer a free quality education to children living in rural areas. The facilities are typically equipped with an internet connection, laptops and educational resources including Lego WeDo and Minecraft. Apart from a local teacher, students will learn by having a Skype lesson offered by a global teacher community of one thousand educators. Students across Class Time | | May - Jun 2019 | 43