Earlier this year, Molly Moody of Class Size Matters interviewed Nikhil Goyal, seventeen-year old student
writer and international speaker, to discuss his new book, One Size Does Not Fit All: A Student’s Assessmentof School. Goyal is well known as an advocate for student voice. In addition
to his book, published in 2012, you can find his writing in
the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, MSNBC, NPR, NBC
Nightly News, Huffington Post, Education Week and other news outlets.
Below, Goyal discusses his view of the U.S. public
school system, technology and other education topics.
Molly: What is your optimal design for a school system
Nikhil: First, we should get rid of the compulsory
school system. Second, students need to have ownership and agency over their
learning. The role of a teacher becomes a mentor and facilitator rather than a
"sage on the stage." Intrinsic motivation to learn something
outweighs everything else. Third, schools should look less like prisons and
more like startups and horizontal work environments. Research has concluded
that a school's design can impact a child's learning greatly. Fourth, grades
and testing should be abolished. In lieu of this, portfolio-based assessments
can be added. And lastly, learning should happen in the context of the
community and the city.
What are the top 4
classroom changes you would have liked to see implemented in your own school?
What role do you
think smaller class sizes could play in schools, and in obtaining the C’s you
mentioned in the book (creative thinking, critical thinking,
imagination…etc)?
So many “reformers”
right now are trying to revamp the teaching profession with merit pay, younger
and less experienced teachers in the classrooms, etc. Do you think we need
changes to the profession?
What is your
personal relationship with technology and what do you think of the current plan
to hand student data over to inBloom, Inc?
What are your
suggestions for people applying to colleges, or thinking about applying? Are
you considering college for yourself?
What advice would
you give to other young people/students looking to share their voice?
What are your next
plans? Policy? Entrepreneurship? Advocacy? All of the above?
I just graduated high school
in January. I plan on taking a year and a half off until going to college. I'm
launching an organization called Learning Revolution to create walkouts and
school protests to promote specific platforms for transforming schools.
To read more about Nikhil Goyal’s book, One Size Does Not Fit All: A Student’s Assessment
of School, and his latest appearances, visit his website: www.nikhilgoyal.me
Once it was a rule that "little children should be seen and not heard". What are the credentials and qualifications of this "child" to be taken seriously by anybody?
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