Karachi:
Pakistan’s first international education and cultural festival, School of Tomorrow (SOT), will be held
on November 28-29, 2015 at Beach Luxury Hotel in Karachi.
Themed“The
End of Education?* (*as we know it), the two-day festival will feature educators,
thought leaders, celebrities, policy makers, journalists, historians, artists,
performers, environmentalists, social activists and media persons. With over 42
sessions and more than 150 speakers coming from Pakistan and around the world,
the two-day event will be free and open to the public.
Activities
at SOT 2015 will include moderated panel discussions, interviews with prominent
individuals,keynote talks with question-answer sessions, interactive workshops,
robotics and film making workshops, interactive science exhibition, art installations,
hackathon, the arts of storytelling, mushairas,
as well as puppetry, theatre and a musical concert. A workshop for over 400
public school teachers will also be part of the event.
The
primary focus of the discussions will be to understand how key external forces
such as geopolitics and global security, media and digital technologies, art
and culture and the environment and society are shaping 21st century schools
and to propose new directions for the future. Additionally, a predominant theme
will be public-private education partnerships.
The
SOT conference series was initiated by Beaconhouse 15 years ago as a quest to
redefine education and to explore the shape of schools in a yet-unknown future. Typically held every 3 to 5 years, the last
SOT event was in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in November 2012.
It may be pertinent to mention
that Beaconhouse had originally planned the School of Tomorrow 2015 as a
nationwide series of events in Lahore, Islamabad and Karachi. However, due to the
highly unrealistic stance of the Punjab and Federal governments regarding the ongoing
private schools’ fee issue,the event has now been restricted to Karachi only.The
position taken by the Punjab and federal governments has, in turn, denied the
people of Lahore and Islamabad an opportunity to participate in what would have
been the first-ever open-to-public international education and cultural festival
in the two cities – as well as an unprecedented opportunity for professional
development for teachers from public and private sector schools.
thank you for sharing dear ♡♡
ReplyDeleteMakeupoholics