EDWARD DE BONO'S MESSAGE
15th June 1998
The Edward de Bono Millennium Conference
The Edward de Bono Millenium Conference is now under way.
Last week I set some basic tasks and the response to those tasks will be published
presently to members of the Conference.
It is not my intention to set a new task everyweek, nor to devote the
weekly message exclusively to the Conference which will have its own life and place. To
get things started, however, I want, this week, to set the broad task of considering
EDUCATION into the next millennium. Recent American Presidents and British Prime Ministers
have all stressed education. Tony Blair even declared that his three priorities are
"education, education, and eductaion". Then, very little gets done.
It has to be wondered whether education can ever reform itself to be
relevant to today's needs. There are many wonderful and highly motivated people in
education - I know that from experience. But they are locked into a self-fulfilling system
that makes change very difficult indeed. Peripheral experiments are permitted but
fundamental changes are almost impossible. It is possible to wonder whether education is
too important to be left to educators. Teams of people within the system may not be able
to see the changes that are required.
So this topic is now open to members of the Conference. I shall shortly
contribute my own, rather strong, views on the inadequacy of education today. Why is it
that students in the UK know most of the neames of Henry VIII's wives, perhaps even the
date of the Treaty of Utrecht - but have not the faintest idea how the corner shop works
or how "value is created in society"?
Edward de Bono
in Australia
15th June 1998
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