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It is believed that we now live in the Age
of Knowledge
Knowledge is the full utilization of
information and data, together with the potential of
people’s skills, competencies, ideas, intuitions,
commitments and motivations. To understand that information
is not the same as knowledge, these different terms must
first be defined. Data is simply the representation of
facts, and as such forms the basis for intelligent actions.
Information is data in context, the meaning of data.
Knowledge is the awareness and understanding of facts,
truths or information gained in the form of experience or
learning. Finally, knowledge begets wisdom and wisdom only
comes about when knowledge is assimilated and internalized,
when it changes existing behavior patterns and makes things
better. Karl M. Wiig provides us with the following
definition of Knowledge: knowledge – the insights,
understandings, and practical know-how that we all posses –
is the fundamental resource that allows us to function
intelligently. Over time, considerable knowledge is also
transformed to other manifestations – such as books,
technology, practices, and traditions – within organizations
of all kinds and society in general. Knowledge is one, if
not THE, principal factor that makes personal,
organizational, and social intelligent behavior possible.
What makes this current era of society more an
‘Information Age’ rather than a ‘Knowledge Age’ is the
immense amount of propositional knowledge available by so
many sources, without the ability to teach the procedural
knowledge that comes from experience and practice. This
propositional knowledge is the driver of our post-industrial
society, yet the ‘Age of Knowledge’ is identical to the ‘Age
of the human race’, recognition of the power of knowledge is
as old as civilization. The difference in the 21st century
is the speed, capacity and technology to access the wealth
of information.
It can be seen that the ‘Age of Knowledge’ is a
misnomer that simply portrays the use of fashionable
language, and that it has been in existence for the most
part of a millennia. What is different however, is the
enormity of acquisition and distribution of information for
knowledge purposes, primarily brought about by the
development and application of sophisticated communication
techniques. It is widely believed that the ‘Information
Age’, where large amounts of information were acquired,
processed and distributed has given way to the next stage of
evolutionary development; the Knowledge Age. This period of
advancement is one where it is realized that information
itself is worthless unless it is internalized and utilized
by a beneficiary, effectively becoming knowledge. However
the notion of the sudden emergence of this ‘Age of
Knowledge’ seems deceptive, as stated earlier, considering
that mankind has acquired and utilized knowledge since
Neanderthal periods. Who had the knowledge to create fire?
To create the wheel? This ‘knowledge’ is not some newly
achieved phenomenon for this era of mass technology; it is
something that has been harnessed and used for centuries. As
economist Kunda Dixit believes: A new buzzword has entered
the development lexicon: “Knowledge Society” – the
Information Age is the Age of Knowledge, we are told. There
is a danger that the wisdom of the ages is going to be
another piece of jargon. And like all the extinct buzzwords
that preceded it, “knowledge” will end up in that dusty
shelf where all past development cliches are stored.
However, the 21st Century does seem to be
expanding its technology and ability to convey information
in leaps and bounds. This era is one of a smarter, more
informed generation of people. More usable information is
being created and learnt – 90% of the scientists who have
ever lived and worked do so right now. The incredible growth
in computing power combined with telecommunications enables
the rapid spread and application of information and ideas.
The progression and transformation of these so-called ‘Ages
of Information and Knowledge’ from the earlier, labor
intensive days of the ‘Industrial Revolution’, which spanned
more than one hundred years, has been rapid and exponential,
due to the new and improved ways of thinking and the
introduction of innovative and improved technology. These
innovative ideas and technology have continued to advance
rapidly through the last few centuries, setting the stage
for the seemingly boundless advancements in methods of
conveying information to the masses, and the beginnings of
being able to teach knowledge through the progression of
technology.
It can be understood that, in the 21st Century,
the importance of information is a key factor in
ascertaining security, prosperity and quality of life. The
emphasis of modern technology – computers,
telecommunications, and multimedia – enables the quick
exchange of information. With the driving technological
force of this era, the computer is a critical component in
the majority of workplaces. Basic computer skills are now
becoming just as important as basic literary and numeracy
skills. Those with the ability to use a computer are exposed
to expanses of data, information and programs enabling them
to access and utilize that information, and advanced
telecommunications that allow the easy transfer of
information. More and more people are enjoying the benefits
of powerful knowledge tools in what could more accurately be
described as the ‘Age of Information Technology’. These
amplifiers for our thinking and communicating are becoming
tools for our personal development. The number of ways we
can now communicate and store information is bewildering and
finding the right choice of Hardware and Software to convey
and communicate ideas and knowledge is becoming harder. The
examples, of resource choices given by Bernie Trilling and
Paul Hood, are astonishing:
…printed report, electronic document, magazine article, e-zine
article, book, e-book, print ad, TV ad, Web ad, phone call,
cell phone call, Internet phone call, voice mail,
telemarketing, fax, pager, Web page, e-mail, snail mail,
spreadsheet, simulation, database, multimedia presentation,
slides, overheads, floppy disk, tape, video, CD, DVD, radio,
TV, Web-TV, teleconferencing, virtual reality – workers will
be perpetually faced with choosing the right medium for the
right message for the right audience.
Multimedia offers a wide bandwidth for
information and communication, utilizing many different
mediums as stated above. The Internet offers the potential
for the largest explosion of information communication. It
can make an unprecedented amount of data available to a
learner at any given time. With the uses of virtual reality,
tours and education included on sites such as those of
Libraries, Museums and Universities, one no longer needs to
visit the other side of the globe to experience a country,
artwork, historical place or vacation spot. During the
Industrial Age, the gap between the rich and poor was not as
broad as it is in the 21st century. However, without strong
social initiatives to make these technological advancements
available to everyone, the existing differences between
‘knowledge rich’ and ‘knowledge poor’ will rapidly increase.
At present, the speed of growth and the capacity of these
technologies and thus knowledge are concentrated in the same
countries in which wealth and power are concentrated. How
can the 21st century be heralded as an ‘Age of Knowledge’
when only the privileged can gain access to that knowledge?
Surely knowledge is the right of all people and not
something that can be given or taken away by those in power.
Should those with knowledge attempt to spread this
intellectual wealth around to those who are ‘knowledge’
disadvantaged? The problem with this approach is how. Fidel
Castro made his opinions on the problem clear at a UNESCO
conference in July 1999.
If only two per cent of Latin America has the Net, we must
invent something else
...If peasants can’t read or write, how can we reach them?
Poorer countries without the resources to spread technology such as
the internet are going to be left behind in the wake of the
21st century Technological Revolution. Even if these poorer
countries were able to supply computers and the Internet,
extensive capital and infrastructure would be required to
enable the people to become educated to the, insights,
understanding and practical know-how to use such technology.
A problem of a similar persuasion is occurring in richer
countries. Governments, Educators and students who also lack
the necessary skills to use current computer technologies
are being left behind both intellectually and in the
advancing techno-savvy job market. After all, who wants to
hire a person who isn’t computer literate? Theoretically, a
student need not go on to further education if they have the
skills and ability to utilize the Internet, information that
an educator could provide is already available at their
fingertips, just a mouse-click away. H. G. Wells voiced such
a vision in 1938, of a world where technological advances
could be utilized by any student in any part of the world:
An immense and ever-increasing wealth of Knowledge is
scattered about the world today; Knowledge that would
probably suffice to solve all the mighty difficulties of our
age, but it is dispersed and unorganized. We need a sort of
mental clearing house for the mind: a depot where knowledge
and ideas are received, sorted, summarized, digested,
clarified and compared.
The 21st century is such a world, ‘Wired, Webbed and
Windowed’.
The contemporary age has often been characterized as an ‘Age
of Knowledge’ which has superseded the former ‘Age of
Information’. Knowledge is not a new phenomenon, it is often
redefined by individuals who interpret it differently or
wish to distinguish it from terms such as information, but
the basic principle is not something that has been created
as a new buzz-word for a new millennium. Data is facts,
information is the meaning of data, knowledge is the
awareness of these facts through experience, and wisdom
comes only when knowledge is used for improvement. With the
decline of the ‘Industrial Age’ to the ‘Information Age’,
technology flourished and expanded. Science, Engineering and
Technology developed powerful tools and methods for
exploring and generating new knowledge, learning how our
world works, and applying that knowledge to solving problems
in our society. The creation of hundreds of programs to
present and convey information have helped to expand the
reach of the common man to someone on the opposite side of
the earth. However this wondrous ‘Knowledge Age’ has not
filtered across and prospered in all areas of the globe and
nor will it for some time, if ever. The problem of this
suspension of information to poorer countries is as worrying
as the impending problems of cyber-space technology taking
over the role of educators. Thirty years from now big
University campuses will be relics, having been traded in
for the Internet which is patiently waiting at the end of a
button. Not to say that all technology is bad; nearly all
advances in technology, computing and education have been
advantageous, but can the simply structured wealth of
information on the Internet take over from the knowledge
that can be bestowed by books, an experienced educator, or
from life experiences? Perhaps, rather than aspiring to an
‘Age of Knowledge’, the world might instead aspire to a
‘society of learning’, in which people are continually
surrounded by, immersed in, and absorbed in learning
experiences.
ENDNOTES
1 Karl M. Wiig, On the Management of Knowledge, Position
Statement: Knowledge Management Forum, (New York, February
6, 1996).
2 Kunda Dixit, “Exiled to Cyberia: A Third World View of the
Knowledge Society”, D & C Development and Co-Operation
Journal, Vol 4. (July/August 2000), p15.
3 Bernie Frilling & Paul Hood, “Learning, Technology and
Education Reform in the Knowledge Age”, Educational
Technology Magazine. (May/June, 1999).
4 Fidel Castro, United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization Conference, (Havana, July 1999).
5 H. G. Wells, “The Brain: Organization of the Modern
World”, World Brain, (New York, 1938), p49.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Dixit, Kunda. “Exiled to Cyberia: A Third World View of
the Knowledge Society”, D & C Development and Co-Operation
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2. Duderstadt, James J. “The Future of the University in an
Age of Knowledge”, JALN, Volume 1, Issue 2, August 1997.
3. NASA, “Every Child a Knowledge Explorer”, NASA Learning
Technologies White Paper. Washington, October, 2002.
4. Slovin, Dr Malcolm, Transitioning to the Knowledge Age.
Virginia, Engineering, Management & Integration Inc, 2003.
5. Theunissen, Christopher. “Managing intelligence in an Age
of Knowledge”, African Security Review, Vol 8 No 3, 1999.
6. Trilling, Bernie & Hood, Paul. “Learning, Technology and
Education Reform in the Knowledge Age”, Educational
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7. Ashkenazi, Dr Guy. “Learning in the Age of Knowledge”,
http://www.fh.huji.ac.il/~guy/projects/interaction.html,
2000, Department of Science The Hebrew University,
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8. Kelly, Eamonn. “The Knowledge Age: fad or a fundamental
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http://www.scenario-planning.com/ekelly.htm< , 1997,
SYNTHESIS-Papers and Articles, Scottish Enterprises.
9. Web Genius. “The six Knowledge Age Skills”,
http://www.futureproofyourcareer.com< ,
2002, How to find your life’s purpose and ideal career,
Career Mentoring Institute, New Zealand.
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