Visualizing Internet of Things in Education:Autumn for Extant Teachers ?

- Student Centric Learning
Management Systems will rule the realm of Internet of Things. Students will learn with greater autonomy and will be on
their own rather than be spoon fed.
- Learning process would be driven by dashboard reflexes. Students would have access through a dashboard to all data that affect
them.
- Teachers will have a dashboard too. Manuals for teachers will set limits for dashboard usage; the role of on campus teacher will shrink.
- Data from all connected IoT
devices, including EI sensors, and student wearables will facilitate student technology
solutions.
- Skilled technological staff will extract, develop and provide
solutions. Data analytics department will emerge as most important support
service.
- The solutions will be useful to management of students even when they are off campus. There will be enhanced use of mobile technologies. Academic management, study process management and support services will be digitized and integrated.
- Students will be reassured with
24/7 sensor driven personal attention.
- Applications will be developed to
meet student needs ranging from knowledge doubts to mood swings to anxiety attacks. Apps
might make learning game oriented. They
will offer personalized strategies to combat absorption apprehensions in
students’ minds.
- Skill shortage of technology support
providers will hit hard. There will be an influx of technology professionals in
to the education industry.
- Departments like language will 'wither away' to computer
based learning. Extant language teachers may have to re-skill or exit. Skills gap will impact edu-thinking. As the industry transforms, EIs will realize they do not really have all the data and analytics skills that are required.
- Information would have a micro and a micro dimension. At the
micro level it is each student and teacher; at macro level it will be aggregated data
watched keenly for trends.
- Armed with sets of voluminous data
and analytics, research will emerge as more important than teaching.
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