Difference between revisions of "Knewton"
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'''Knewton''' is an education technology company founded in 2006 that specialises in 'adaptive' online learning. | '''Knewton''' is an education technology company founded in 2006 that specialises in 'adaptive' online learning. | ||
− | Knewton's technology claims to be able to 'personalise' online education content by: tracking students' activity; using the enormous amounts of pupil data it has collected to predict how best to teach a concept, and then suggesting next steps for the student based on that 'predictive power'. | + | Knewton's technology claims to be able to 'personalise' online education content by: tracking students' activity; using the enormous amounts of pupil data it has collected to predict how best to teach a concept, and then suggesting next steps for the student based on that 'predictive power'. As ''Politico'' notes: 'By monitoring every mouse click, every keystroke, every split-second hesitation as children work through digital textbooks, Knewton is able to find out not just what individual kids know, but how they think.'<ref>Stephanie Simon, [http://www.politico.com/story/2014/05/data-mining-your-children-106676.html#ixzz3jrmiqgSH Data mining your children], ''Politico'', 15 May 2014</ref> |
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+ | Knewton claims this makes education more efficient and effective. A report by [[McKinsey & Company]] in 2013 found that expanding the use of data in K-12 schools and colleges could drive at least $300 billion a year in added economic growth in the U.S. by improving instruction and making education more efficient. | ||
==Student profiling== | ==Student profiling== | ||
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As ''Education Week'' notes: | As ''Education Week'' notes: | ||
:'Clearly you do not need teachers in this scenario, except perhaps to supervise the students as they work on their devices. Class sizes can expand significantly. You do not even need schools. All a student needs is some sort of computer and a connection to the internet.' | :'Clearly you do not need teachers in this scenario, except perhaps to supervise the students as they work on their devices. Class sizes can expand significantly. You do not even need schools. All a student needs is some sort of computer and a connection to the internet.' | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Data privacy== | ||
+ | ''Politico'' reports in 2014 Knewton CEO dismissing parents concerns about companies collecting huge amounts of data on their children: “They’d rather the NSA have it?” he asked. “What, you trust the government?” Ferreira said he often hears parents angrily declaring that their children cannot be reduced to data points. “That’s not an argument,” Ferreira said. “I’m not calling your child a bundle of data. I’m just helping her learn.”<ref>Stephanie Simon, [http://www.politico.com/story/2014/05/data-mining-your-children-106676.html#ixzz3jrmiqgSH Data mining your children], ''Politico'', 15 May 2014</ref> | ||
==Partners with publishers== | ==Partners with publishers== |
Revision as of 22:03, 25 August 2015
Knewton is an education technology company founded in 2006 that specialises in 'adaptive' online learning.
Knewton's technology claims to be able to 'personalise' online education content by: tracking students' activity; using the enormous amounts of pupil data it has collected to predict how best to teach a concept, and then suggesting next steps for the student based on that 'predictive power'. As Politico notes: 'By monitoring every mouse click, every keystroke, every split-second hesitation as children work through digital textbooks, Knewton is able to find out not just what individual kids know, but how they think.'[1]
Knewton claims this makes education more efficient and effective. A report by McKinsey & Company in 2013 found that expanding the use of data in K-12 schools and colleges could drive at least $300 billion a year in added economic growth in the U.S. by improving instruction and making education more efficient.
Contents
Student profiling
According to Inside Higher Ed:
- One of [Knewton's] goals is to create individual, psychometric profiles that would presume to say, with statistical authority, what students know and how they learn. Such records could theoretically follow those students into the job market, profoundly affecting how they are viewed by graduate school admissions committees and potential employers'.[2]
Data-driven schooling
Jose Ferreira, of Knewton in 2014 said this of the company's ability to predict how a student will learn, and its reliance on big data to 'teach' students:
- 'Education happens to be the world's most data minable industry by far.
- So one of the things that fakes us out about data in education is because it is so big - like the fourth biggest industry in the world - it produces incredible quantities of data... Knewton today gets five to ten million actionable data points per student per day. Now we do that, because we get people, if you can believe it, to tag every single sentence of their content - we have a large publishing partnership with Pearson, and they've tagged all of their content... If you tag all of your content, and you do it down to the atomic concept level, down to the sentence, down to the clause, you unlock an incredible amount of trapped, hidden data.
- We literally know everything about you and how you learn best. Everything. Because we have five orders of magnitude more data about you than Google has. We literally have more data about our students than any company has about anybody else, about anything, and it's not even close. That's how we do it.[3]
As Education Week notes:
- 'Clearly you do not need teachers in this scenario, except perhaps to supervise the students as they work on their devices. Class sizes can expand significantly. You do not even need schools. All a student needs is some sort of computer and a connection to the internet.'
Data privacy
Politico reports in 2014 Knewton CEO dismissing parents concerns about companies collecting huge amounts of data on their children: “They’d rather the NSA have it?” he asked. “What, you trust the government?” Ferreira said he often hears parents angrily declaring that their children cannot be reduced to data points. “That’s not an argument,” Ferreira said. “I’m not calling your child a bundle of data. I’m just helping her learn.”[4]
Partners with publishers
Knewton's Adaptive Learning Platform claims to transform digital content from education publishers into an adaptive online learning experience. It has signed deals with textbook giants like Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Cambridge University Press and Macmillan Education to add an adaptive-learning layer to their content. In November 2011, Pearson and Knewton agreed on a plan to convert an open-ended number of Pearson products to Knewton’s adaptive format.
People
Knewton has a name for its employees: 'Knerds'
- Jose Ferreira, founder CEO; ex-Kaplan executive; former strategist for John Kerry’s 2004 presidential campaign; former partner at New Atlantic Ventures (formerly Draper Atlantic); currently serves on the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on Education & Skills, as well as the advisory boards for Laureate International Universities, Cambridge University Press, and the ASU/GSV Education Innovation Summit.
- David Liu, chief operating officer
- David Kuntz, chief research officer
- Charlie Harrington, Co-Head of Knewton London; formerly of Morgan Stanley
Investors
Investors in Knewton include:
- Atomico
- GSV Capital
- Accel Partners
- First Round Capital
- Bessemer Venture Partners
- FirstMark Capital
- Founders Fund
- Pearson[5]
- Reid Hoffman
- Ron Conway[6]
Contacts
- Address: New York (HQ), 100 5th Avenue, New York, NY 10011
- London office: Knewton opened its London office in Tech City October 2013.
- Website: www.knewton.com
References
- ↑ Stephanie Simon, Data mining your children, Politico, 15 May 2014
- ↑ Steve Kolowich, The New Intelligence, Inside Higher Ed, 25 January 2013
- ↑ Anthony Cody, Is Common Core Creating the Code for a Computerized Education System?, Education Week, 9 May 2014
- ↑ Stephanie Simon, Data mining your children, Politico, 15 May 2014
- ↑ Knewton Secures $33 Million to Expand the Personalization of Education, Knewton website, 13 October 2011
- ↑ Knewton profile, Crunchbase, accessed August 2015