Be Very Afraid |
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"At the end of the first such get together, a senior policy maker, who had been hugely engaged for some hours in deep conversation with primary through to university students, was asked for a view. 'Frankly,' he volunteered 'I'm terrified! They are so far ahead of where I thought we were.' "And thus began what has become an annual event - Be Very Afraid, held at BAFTA with around ten to a dozen institutions featured each year. Sometimes they are the same institutions - their annual progress is always enlightening - sometimes new ones are added. The age phase goes from primary to university level and each year around 200 senior key influencers and some celebrities from cinema and TV are invited along - as a networking opportunity alone it is worth being there! These days they have got over the fright, but relish the conversations! A DVD captures the student interviews and is widely circulated after the event, and the website takes a huge number of hits from all round the world. "We've seen primary girls, worried about their peers' grasp of basic grammar, creating and sharing a 'Noun Rap'; we've seen undergraduates with social websites running collecting voters' voices through phone boxes and influencing elections in South America; we've seen secondary students podcasting healthy eating recipes to a weekly audience that includes teachers; the diversity is electrifying. But one common item is always on show, and it is the engagement and animation of the learners when talking, most especially to each other, about their projects. They share a language of technology, learning, ambition and delight, without any age barriers. "Be Very Afraid poses a number of questions for policy makers. It is clear that the old 'factory schools' who were 'delivering' a curriculum into 'empty vessels' are disappearing. But what is replacing them is exciting AND effective. Be Very Afraid annually brings us all up to speed with what our children are capable of, when you add inspired techers, new technology, imagination and a little space into the mix. It has beome a major fixture for senior policy makers and for those who care about the future of cinema, television, games and learning. Nowadays, they are afraid to miss it." With support from Apple, Becta, BAFTA, Edexcel, heppell.net, The Innovation Unit, Nintendo, Promethean, RM, Roxio. |