introduction to the education technology landscape - ashish dhawan
TRANSCRIPT
Over the last 20 years, technology in
education has not been very effective…
But, the next decade may turn out to be
very different.
What is changing? Disrupting Class
Customization Can every child get her own playlist?
1
Motivation & Engagement Is there a child who doesn’t like digital content?
2
Democratization Can we "Lift the Floor" for all children?
3
Potential of Personalized Learning
Textbooks
Sequential
Annual Tests
Minimal Peer to Peer Learning
Teacher
Digital Content
Adaptive
Instant Feedback
Collaborative
Coach
One Size Fits All Personalized
“Go” to Harvard and MIT without being admitted…
Disruption has begun in Higher-Ed and Test –Prep
Coursera provides
online courses from the best universities for free with more than a million
enrolments
Udacity provides
university-level education which is
high-quality and low cost
Grockit is the world’s fastest
growing test prep service which uses social networking to make
kids in an adaptive and personalized environment
Benchprep is
world’s first and only cross-platform test prep course company used by
200,000 students
EdX offers free
courses from MIT, Harvard, Berkeley and
Texas
Western Governors University is an accredited online
university offering online bachelor’s and master’s degree programs with more
than 30,000 students
Source: Company Websites
K-12 Ed-Tech Market Map
ICT
Content Assessments
Platforms
Devices
Blended Learning
Source: CSF Analysis
The impact of use of ICT on learning outcomes is inconclusive
Overview • Teacher tool with interactive multimedia
content • Increasingly available in regional languages • Advantages include easy-to-explain content,
in-built assessments etc. • >20% penetration in the target market size of
1 lac schools • Capex of Rs. 2.5 – 3 lac per classroom but low
cost projectors may change that • Students are charged Rs. 120-150 pm as part
of the fee • Globally, the impact of ICT use on learning
outcomes is unclear Challenges • No third party assessment of impact of use on
learning outcomes in India • Teacher training has been ignored and hence
utilization is low • Little differentiation on content
Players Schools Focus
12,000 Diversified
6,000 Tier 2 & 3
3,000 Diversified
2000 Diversified
400 Tier 3 & 4
NA NA
300 Tier 3 & 4
NA NA
NA NA
ICT Private Schools - Market Landscape*
ICT could become an effective learning tool if the issues around teacher training and quality of
content are resolved
Source: Industry discussions, World Bank Info Dev, CSF research and analysis * Only private schools. These estimates are based on our current understanding and the actual numbers may vary
Digital textbooks are changing the way our students learn
• eBooks crossed hardcover sales in Adult Category in Q1FY12 in the US
• Increasing e-book penetration: US (16%), UK (17%), Korea (12%) and India (2%)
• Digital textbooks first move into higher-ed - achieve 5% penetration in the US
• Governments in Korea, US and China push for use of digital textbooks in schools
• NCERT offers free digital textbooks for Grade 1- 12 in Hindi, English and Urdu
• 1000 books in a single device
• Interactive and rich content - Text + videos + animation + audio
• Cheaper than printed books
• Instantly updated
• Ability to highlight, notes & search
• Lighter backpacks
Kindle eBook reader Digital bookstore with over 1 million paid titles and 2.5 million free
iPad tablet Digital bookstore with 1.5 million titles
Nexus tablet Bookstore with millions of free books
Nook eBook reader Digital bookstore with over 3 million titles
Kobo eBook reader Digital bookstore with nearly 3 million titles
Sony eBook reader Digital bookstore
Disruption led by 6 players with innovative hardware and redefined distribution
Disruption in publishing market Superior value proposition
India market is nascent with some early steps towards digitization. Drop in prices of tablets will the key growth driver
Source: AAP, Bowker Market Research, Company websites, CSF Analysis
Content Paid Digital Content
Source: LearnNext
ICT
Content Assessments
Platforms
Devices
Blended Learning
Digital is taking over traditional learning models
Growth in paid digital content category will be driven by demand for more curriculum linked content by students and parents
Business model in India
• Supplemental curriculum linked content for students and teachers
• Effective tool for personalized learning • Key reasons for adoption: easy access, freedom to
choose, interactive, curriculum linked and in-built assessments
• Multiple channels of adoption (internet and offline)– Cloud, USB, SD Card and CD ROM
• Marketing directly to consumers is tough -Conversion rate is ~2%
Challenges
• Quality of content needs to improve • Competition from free content • Low device penetration
School Home
• Blended Learning Schools
• Virtual Schools
• Supplemental • Advanced • Language • Test Prep
Florida Virtual School K-12
ICT B2C Players
Paid Digital Content
ICT – Extension of school
B2C – Only students/parents
Publishers – Bundling content
Not present in India
Source: Industry discussions, CSF analysis
Note: Indicative list of players
Content Open Educational Resources (OER)
Source: Sree Karpakavalli Vidyalaya Middle School (Students using Khan Academy)
ICT
Content Assessments
Platforms
Devices
Blended Learning
High-quality free content is increasingly becoming available
• 3400 videos including K-12 math
• 400 million interactive problems
• 200 million views • Salman Khan, the
most watched teacher in the world, is available on Youtube
• Free K-12 digital textbooks for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM)
• 10,000+ resources
• 17+ million views
• High quality, easy access and FREE • Licensed under Creative Commons which can
allow reuse, revise, remix and redistribution • Platforms which curate and share have emerged -
Creative Commons, Curriki etc. • Increasing integration of curriculum linked
content in classrooms
• Launched in June 2012
• Offers 200 online courses from 33 universities including Stanford, Princeton, Brown, Penn, Columbia etc.
• 1.6 million registered students in 190 countries
• Largest publisher of free and open textbooks
• Free courses from MIT, Harvard, Berkeley and Univ of Texas
• Nascent market in India - focus on translation into local languages, potential to make content using best teachers in the system
• Wide offline distribution possible as SD Cards can be inserted into phones and tablets
• IT for Change pilot in Karnataka to train govt. school teachers in using OER
Source: Company websites, CSF analysis
There is an App for everything…
• Point solutions which provide supplemental content that engage kids for a short time
• 80,000 educational apps are available. Mainly for early literacy, math, geography etc.
• 10x increase in educational app downloads from 25m in 2009 to 270m in 2011
• 87% education apps are free; paid apps have an average cost of $3.3
• iOS and Android have emerged as two major app platforms
• Need to aggregate and curate relevant apps as the number of available apps has increased
• Monetization of apps is still a challenge
Major app platforms
• 550,000 apps for iPad, iPhone and iTouch
• 21 categories including education
• More than 30 billion downloads
• 600,000 apps for android devices
• More than 20 billion downloads
• More than 500 million active device users
• 90,000 apps for blackberry mobiles
• More than 3 billion downloads
• 88,000 apps for windows based mobiles
Source: Company websites, McKinsey mEducation Report
…and 87% of these are available for free
Assessments
Source: www.durangoherald.com
ICT
Content Assessments
Platforms
Devices
Blended Learning
No standardized assessment = No accountability
• No standardized assessments till Grade 10
• Less than 2% the size of the US market (>$2.7bn)
• Currently only elite private schools use regular standardized assessments
• Why low-stake standardized tests?
• Monitor and evaluate national education system
• Provide feedback to teachers, parents and children
• Provide information on trends in learning outcomes
• New digital assessments models are emerging – GoToTest, EI Detailed Assessment tool etc.
• Strong growth potential as various states push education reforms and accountability initiatives. Formative assessments market to grow with introduction of CCE
• Increasing device penetration will move Assessments towards a digital centric model (Think, CAT!)
India Assessments Landscape
Source: OECD, The Parthenon Group Industry discussions
US Assessment Market 2009-10
$1.27bn $1.49bn
24% 18%
76% 82%
0%
50%
100%
High Stakes State-Level Tests
Classroom Assessment
Online Print
Models which efficiently manage data and learning are now emerging Overview
• Platforms enable creation, sharing and collaboration of content:
• Student: Student performance data, learning management and student information (SIS)
• Teachers: Teacher sharing and collaboration
• Most of these platforms are device & OS agnostic and provide offline access
• Global market for LMS / SIS is well developed; Indian market is nascent and fragmented
• IT@Schools in Kerala is using an open SIS platform across 15,000 schools covering 7 million students
• Emergence of several learning management platforms such as Edutor, AcrossWorld etc.
• TES UK has 500,000 free resources used by 2.1 million teachers. Recently launched in India
• Edmodo is a social learning network for teachers and students with more than 10 million registered users
• End-to-end platforms are emerging which integrate learning platform with student information, integrate assessments etc.
Source: CSF Analysis
Platform Landscape
Type Details Players
Data Platforms
• Organize and analyze student and teacher data, both for admin and performance metrics
• Traditionally: school schedules, report cards etc.
Learning Platforms
• Facilitate management of learning process
• Traditionally: Class registers, study groups etc.
Tablet are becoming the preferred form factor for personalized learning • Much cheaper than laptops, small size, portable
and touch screen • Emerging as a major form factor in education:
• Digitized textbooks • Interactive apps for education • Viewing videos / animated content
• Fragmented market with 90 players by Q2 FY13 • Central (Aakash) and State Government (UP,
Goa, Karnataka) push • International initiatives
• Turkey Faith project – 15m tablets sold to across 40,000 schools in 4 years
• Peru OLPC – More than 850,000 laptops distributed. However, program has shown no improvement in learning outcomes
• Thailand One Tablet Per Child Program - Almost 900,000 tablets ordered in June 2012
• Improving price performance will make tablets more affordable and the device of choice for personalized learning
Source: IDC, CyberMedia Research, CSF Analysis
India Tablet Market Landscape
19
69
117
261
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
2010 2011 2012E 2016E
Global Tablet Sales
2010-16E (in millions)
Micromax 18%
Samsung 13%
iPad 12%
Others 56%
As the Peru OLPC experiment has shown, a device must be bundled with appropriate
content to make it an effective learning tool
1118
73
0
40
80
2011 2012E 2015E
India Smartphones Sales 2011-15E (in millions)
Mobile is emerging as a useful device for English language learning • India is the 2nd largest mobile market in the world
with 919m subscribers in March 2012
• Strong application in English language learning, assessments, teacher training and distance learning
• Airtel is partnering with content providers such as Britannica and LearnNext to offer supplemental content, encyclopaedias, and educational games
• People in China, Bangladesh , Korea and Indonesia are learning English through SMS and audio lessons using mobiles
• Urban Planet Mobile has over 100,000 subscribers in Indonesia
• BBC Janala aims to teach English to 25 million by 2017 in Bangladesh
• Vodafone pilot for Math homework using mobiles in South Africa
India Smartphone Landscape
Source: TRAI, McKinsey mEducation Report, Research and Markets
• Smartphone is the largest growing segment with expected CAGR of 60% till 2015
• Entry level smartphones cost less than Rs. 4,000
Blended learning has the potential to disrupt the traditional school design
• International models
• Why
• Who all are doing this
• Trends
Why Blended Learning?
• Time: Learning is no longer restricted to the school day or the school year
• Place: Learning is no longer restricted to the walls of the classroom
• Path: Learning is no longer restricted to the pedagogy used by the teacher. Interactive and adaptive software allows students to learn in a method that is customized to their needs.
• Pace: Learning is no longer restricted to the pace of an entire classroom of students.
Source: Digital Learning Now!, Innosight Institute
Rocketship Education Lab Rotation Model
Concept • Students rotate on a fixed schedule or at the
teacher’s discretion among locations on the brick-and-mortar campus within a given course or subject each day
• At least one of these spaces is a learning lab for predominantly online learning, while the additional classroom(s) house other learning modalities
Case Study
• Rocketship Education provides education to 1,328 urban kids in K-5 in San Jose, California
• Students learn 75% offline and 25% online in a learning lab. Each student attends one block of Math/Science, one block of Learning Lab, and two blocks of Literacy/Social Studies each day
• Rocketship Schools are among the top 15 for academic performance among low-income schools in California. Results in $500,000 savings per school in traditional school expenditures that Rocketship reinvests in others parts of its model
Source: Classifying K-12 Blended Learning and The Rise of K-12 Blended Learning, Innosight Institute
Lab Rotation Model, Rocketship Education
Carpe Diem Collegiate High School and Middle School Individual-Rotation model
Concept
• Students rotate on an individually customized, fixed schedule among learning modalities, at least one of which is online learning within a given course or subject each day
• An algorithm or teacher sets individual student schedules
Case Study
• Carpe Diem Collegiate High School and Middle School provides education to 273 students in Grade 6-12 in Yuma, Arizona
• The school has 300 individual cubicles and computers. Students rotate throughout the day between online activities in the learning center and face-to-face classroom instruction, where a teacher re-teaches or enhances the material introduced online. Each rotation lasts 55 minutes. Students complete the online/face-to-face cycle 2 – 3 times a day
• In 2010, CDCHS ranked first in its county in student performance in math and reading and ranked among the top 10 percent of Arizona charter schools
Individual-Rotation model, Carpe Diem Collegiate High School and Middle School
Source: Classifying K-12 Blended Learning and The Rise of K-12 Blended Learning, Innosight Institute
Education technology is not a silver bullet…
Cautiously optimistic
― Historically, impact of use on learning outcomes is unclear and
open to debate
―Peru OLPC: Research indicates no evidence that the program increased
learning in Math or Language
―Many initiatives have put technology before education
― Early signs to show that this may be changing
―JPAL study on Pratham’s computer-assisted learning program for math
revealed that math scores increased by 0.47 standard deviation
―What works clearinghouse cites various studies which show improvement
in math and reading skills in kids who were taught using technology
Source: Poverty Action Lab, World Bank Ed-Tech Blog, Inter-American Development Bank Report, What Works Clearinghouse, CSF Analysis
…but the next decade may turn out to be different
EdTech environment will change in next 3 – 5 years
― High performance tablets for less than $50
― Ubiquitous 4G network
― Content explosion
― Mapped to curriculum
― Integrated platforms with assessments
― Community and collaboration
Source: Poverty Action Lab, World Bank Ed-Tech Blog, Inter-American Development Bank Report, What Works Clearinghouse, CSF Analysis