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Sal Khan: Let's teach for mastery -- not test scores | TED Talk | 2015

Would you choose to build a house on top of an unfinished foundation? Of course not. Why, then, do we rush students through education when they haven't always grasped the basics? Yes, it's complicated, but Sal shares his plan to turn struggling students into scholars by helping them master concepts at their own pace.  Created by Sal Khan.

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  • winston baby style avatar for user Lemon COOKIE Sprite
    What about peer attitude, if my best friend is way farther in math then I am, then obviously, unless I was absolutely amazing, I would begin to feel stupid, or behind, how would you suggest we fix this?
    (42 votes)
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    • blobby green style avatar for user Wieck.Parker
      That attitude is the result of our herd based learning. If you had a group grow up with the style discussed it likely wouldn't have that effect any more than traditional education style. Think about school currently, there is no shortage of cruelty as the result of students doing poorly/well. People can be mean, they will always find a reason to be mean, we can't avoid this. What we can avoid is a faulty education.
      (81 votes)
  • starky tree style avatar for user David Wise
    Gold. Unfortunately, the system of education is linear and there is a timeline and curriculum to meet, some kids meet the milestones some just fall off the edge. I'm coming back and having a second turn. I was outside of the classroom more than I was in it. I finished grade 11 in 1984. I am 52 years old and am only just about to finish a degree. Khan Academy is my goto, thank you very much.
    (44 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Good Boy A.
    i agree but disagree.

    Consider this:
    learning how to read is like building a foundation and mastering calculus is like building a 150 floor building. Every person have different speed to build at each step/ floor. The smarter one can build a foundation in a week but the one who not gifted can build it in 1 months. Because you only need the foundation the difference are only 3 weeks, it's not significant compared to your age.

    But what if you have to build a 150 floor building? The not gifted one can build it 4 times slower. Let say the smarter one can mastered calculus in 5 years so the not gifted one can mastered calculus in 20 years. How about more complex studies that even the smarter one can master in 10 years?
    The more intelligence you are, the faster you can study. You can't deny it.

    "I'm not good at it" doesn't mean I can't do it but I need extra time to do it which is not efficient way to study. Better to take another study.
    (0 votes)
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  • leaf green style avatar for user FrankGibney
    We would like to help Kahn Academy "turn the Pyramid upside down" for Blind and Visually Impaired students who aren't currently given the time to attain "mastery-based learning" because the learning content they are given is too inaccessible. Could we discuss this?
    (15 votes)
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  • duskpin ultimate style avatar for user kevin chang
    How would you guys think I should improve my math? By doing problems every day? What would you guys recommend?
    (11 votes)
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  • leaf yellow style avatar for user Michelle Baskey
    My kids are homeschooled, part by me and part by a homeschool agency. The agency is really good and uses Khan Academy as homework, bit my eldest child is in his second year if high school and is struggling to grasp certain concepts. The agency though is continuing to move onto new concepts and he is really struggling. Is there anyway that I can help this?
    (10 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Farah M'timet
    I'm in graduate school and I haven't realize how many gaps I have until I hit the advanced macro and micro classes. my school adapts a module system of two months to master things so this is giving me anxiety and I find myself struggling to master both. do you have any advice?
    (7 votes)
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  • mr pants green style avatar for user josh.ashesimmer
    At , why does Sal talk about how society as a pyramid as if it isn't that now? It is, right?
    (4 votes)
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  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Alpha Wolfie
    This is super touching! My math isn't that good.
    (5 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user George B. Fomba, Jr.
    Hi Sir can I starts Khan Academy with a coach? How?
    (5 votes)
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Video transcript

I'm here today to talk about the two ideas that, at least based on my observations at Khan Academy, are kind of the core, or the key leverage points for learning. And it's the idea of mastery and the idea of mindset. I saw this in the early days working with my cousins. A lot of them were having trouble with math at first, because they had all of these gaps accumulated in their learning. And because of that, at some point they got to an algebra class and they might have been a little bit shaky on some of the pre-algebra, and because of that, they thought they didn't have the math gene. Or they'd get to a calculus class, and they'd be a little bit shaky on the algebra. I saw it in the early days when I was uploading some of those videos on YouTube, and I realized that people who were not my cousins were watching. (Laughter) And at first, those comments were just simple thank-yous. I thought that was a pretty big deal. I don't know how much time you all spend on YouTube. Most of the comments are not "Thank you." (Laughter) They're a little edgier than that. But then the comments got a little more intense, student after student saying that they had grown up not liking math. It was getting difficult as they got into more advanced math topics. By the time they got to algebra, they had so many gaps in their knowledge they couldn't engage with it. They thought they didn't have the math gene. But when they were a bit older, they took a little agency and decided to engage. They found resources like Khan Academy and they were able to fill in those gaps and master those concepts, and that reinforced their mindset that it wasn't fixed; that they actually were capable of learning mathematics. And in a lot of ways, this is how you would master a lot of things in life. It's the way you would learn a martial art. In a martial art, you would practice the white belt skills as long as necessary, and only when you've mastered it you would move on to become a yellow belt. It's the way you learn a musical instrument: you practice the basic piece over and over again, and only when you've mastered it, you go on to the more advanced one. But what we point out -- this is not the way a traditional academic model is structured, the type of academic model that most of us grew up in. In a traditional academic model, we group students together, usually by age, and around middle school, by age and perceived ability, and we shepherd them all together at the same pace. And what typically happens, let's say we're in a middle school pre-algebra class, and the current unit is on exponents, the teacher will give a lecture on exponents, then we'll go home, do some homework. The next morning, we'll review the homework, then another lecture, homework, lecture, homework. That will continue for about two or three weeks, and then we get a test. On that test, maybe I get a 75 percent, maybe you get a 90 percent, maybe you get a 95 percent. And even though the test identified gaps in our knowledge, I didn't know 25 percent of the material. Even the A student, what was the five percent they didn't know? Even though we've identified the gaps, the whole class will then move on to the next subject, probably a more advanced subject that's going to build on those gaps. It might be logarithms or negative exponents. And that process continues, and you immediately start to realize how strange this is. I didn't know 25 percent of the more foundational thing, and now I'm being pushed to the more advanced thing. And this will continue for months, years, all the way until at some point, I might be in an algebra class or trigonometry class and I hit a wall. And it's not because algebra is fundamentally difficult or because the student isn't bright. It's because I'm seeing an equation and they're dealing with exponents and that 30 percent that I didn't know is showing up. And then I start to disengage. To appreciate how absurd that is, imagine if we did other things in our life that way. Say, home-building. (Laughter) So we bring in the contractor and say, "We were told we have two weeks to build a foundation. Do what you can." (Laughter) So they do what they can. Maybe it rains. Maybe some of the supplies don't show up. And two weeks later, the inspector comes, looks around, says, "OK, the concrete is still wet right over there, that part's not quite up to code ... I'll give it an 80 percent." (Laughter) You say, "Great! That's a C. Let's build the first floor." (Laughter) Same thing. We have two weeks, do what you can, inspector shows up, it's a 75 percent. Great, that's a D-plus. Second floor, third floor, and all of a sudden, while you're building the third floor, the whole structure collapses. And if your reaction is the reaction you typically have in education, or that a lot of folks have, you might say, maybe we had a bad contractor, or maybe we needed better inspection or more frequent inspection. But what was really broken was the process. We were artificially constraining how long we had to something, pretty much ensuring a variable outcome, and we took the trouble of inspecting and identifying those gaps, but then we built right on top of it. So the idea of mastery learning is to do the exact opposite. Instead of artificially constraining, fixing when and how long you work on something, pretty much ensuring that variable outcome, the A, B, C, D, F -- do it the other way around. What's variable is when and how long a student actually has to work on something, and what's fixed is that they actually master the material. And it's important to realize that not only will this make the student learn their exponents better, but it'll reinforce the right mindset muscles. It makes them realize that if you got 20 percent wrong on something, it doesn't mean that you have a C branded in your DNA somehow. It means that you should just keep working on it. You should have grit; you should have perseverance; you should take agency over your learning. Now, a lot of skeptics might say, well, hey, this is all great, philosophically, this whole idea of mastery-based learning and its connection to mindset, students taking agency over their learning. It makes a lot of sense, but it seems impractical. To actually do it, every student would be on their own track. It would have to be personalized, you'd have to have private tutors and worksheets for every student. And these aren't new ideas -- there were experiments in Winnetka, Illinois, 100 years ago, where they did mastery-based learning and saw great results, but they said it wouldn't scale because it was logistically difficult. The teacher had to give different worksheets to every student, give on-demand assessments. But now today, it's no longer impractical. We have the tools to do it. Students see an explanation at their own time and pace? There's on-demand video for that. They need practice? They need feedback? There's adaptive exercises readily available for students. And when that happens, all sorts of neat things happen. One, the students can actually master the concepts, but they're also building their growth mindset, they're building grit, perseverance, they're taking agency over their learning. And all sorts of beautiful things can start to happen in the actual classroom. Instead of it being focused on the lecture, students can interact with each other. They can get deeper mastery over the material. They can go into simulations, Socratic dialogue. To appreciate what we're talking about and the tragedy of lost potential here, I'd like to give a little bit of a thought experiment. If we were to go 400 years into the past to Western Europe, which even then, was one of the more literate parts of the planet, you would see that about 15 percent of the population knew how to read. And I suspect that if you asked someone who did know how to read, say a member of the clergy, "What percentage of the population do you think is even capable of reading?" They might say, "Well, with a great education system, maybe 20 or 30 percent." But if you fast forward to today, we know that that prediction would have been wildly pessimistic, that pretty close to 100 percent of the population is capable of reading. But if I were to ask you a similar question: "What percentage of the population do you think is capable of truly mastering calculus, or understanding organic chemistry, or being able to contribute to cancer research?" A lot of you might say, "Well, with a great education system, maybe 20, 30 percent." But what if that estimate is just based on your own experience in a non-mastery framework, your own experience with yourself or observing your peers, where you're being pushed at this set pace through classes, accumulating all these gaps? Even when you got that 95 percent, what was that five percent you missed? And it keeps accumulating -- you get to an advanced class, all of a sudden you hit a wall and say, "I'm not meant to be a cancer researcher; not meant to be a physicist; not meant to be a mathematician." I suspect that that actually is the case, but if you were allowed to be operating in a mastery framework, if you were allowed to really take agency over your learning, and when you get something wrong, embrace it -- view that failure as a moment of learning -- that number, the percent that could really master calculus or understand organic chemistry, is actually a lot closer to 100 percent. And this isn't even just a "nice to have." I think it's a social imperative. We're exiting what you could call the industrial age and we're going into this information revolution. And it's clear that some things are happening. In the industrial age, society was a pyramid. At the base of the pyramid, you needed human labor. In the middle of the pyramid, you had an information processing, a bureaucracy class, and at the top of the pyramid, you had your owners of capital and your entrepreneurs and your creative class. But we know what's happening already, as we go into this information revolution. The bottom of that pyramid, automation, is going to take over. Even that middle tier, information processing, that's what computers are good at. So as a society, we have a question: All this new productivity is happening because of this technology, but who participates in it? Is it just going to be that very top of the pyramid, in which case, what does everyone else do? How do they operate? Or do we do something that's more aspirational? Do we actually attempt to invert the pyramid, where you have a large creative class, where almost everyone can participate as an entrepreneur, an artist, as a researcher? And I don't think that this is utopian. I really think that this is all based on the idea that if we let people tap into their potential by mastering concepts, by being able to exercise agency over their learning, that they can get there. And when you think of it as just a citizen of the world, it's pretty exciting. I mean, think about the type of equity we can we have, and the rate at which civilization could even progress. And so, I'm pretty optimistic about it. I think it's going to be a pretty exciting time to be alive. Thank you. (Applause)