4.8 • 2.2K Ratings
🗓️ 21 May 2019
⏱️ 58 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In today’s episode Alex and Mimi chat Dr. Rhonda Lenton President and Vice-Chancellor of York University. As the global work environment shifts to new technologies with bigger demands, our education also needs a reboot. Hear Rhonda’s thoughts on the future of formal education.
Rhonda was a first generation student of her family, even though her parents never went to university, they made it a priority for her and her twin, to get a great education. She studied sociology which gave her a great grounding in how people think. And during the time of the second wave of feminism, she found momentum in activism, which compelled her interest in equality and social justice. This has been a thread throughout her entire career in academia. Firmly believing that every student should have a right to a good education, leading to work possibilities at the top regardless of gender, race or wealth.
“Resilience from an early age is a character i’d encourage parents to pay close attention to” - Rhonda [21:42]
The demands on students leaving college with a degree and entering the workplace, isn’t the simple path it once was. She should know, given that York is the 5th leading University in Canada and ranked 26th in the world on educational impact. Yet still she finds students struggling with the transition. This challenge is now her challenge.
“You can’t change uncertainty, all you can do is figure out a way to function in a world full of it”
- Rhonda [20:50]
Rather than giving up, she’s yet again, battling for something she believes in. That formal education still has its place, it just needs to adapt like the world around it that is moving so quickly. She says that education needs to be more fluid, flexible and work with businesses and nonprofits to gear students and companies up for inevitable future change.
Few errors in life are things you can’t bounce back from” - Rhonda [23:20]
She’s working with giant companies like Shopify to create a new “flipped classroom” approach to learning. Giving students more vocational and work based learning opportunities, with tutors acting more like facilitators to overcome learning boundaries and resulting career difficulties. Less about boring lectures, It’s been her goal to find emerging needs in the job market and stay current when it comes to providing curriculum.
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Hope you enjoyed this week’s episode with Dr. Rhonda Lenton , you can find out more about her here:
Produced by Jason Sanderson - Podcast Tech
Full show notes: https://www.ikonns.com/podcast/episode30
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hello my beautiful friends and welcome to the icons podcast. Today we have a very special |
0:07.6 | guest, Ronda Hi Ronda. It's such a pleasure to have you here tonight. Thank you so much for |
0:11.9 | having me. Yeah, we're casually introducing Ronda Bois. It's actually Dr. Ronda Lenton and |
0:16.3 | it's the president of York University as you all found out from our intro as well. But it's such |
0:21.6 | a pleasure to have you and we've now met each other on numerous occasions and it's great to have |
0:27.9 | you. So thank you for being here. Is there anything you want to start off with? That's a very |
0:32.9 | many questions for you. But I think the most important thing is really for me that I'm curious |
0:37.7 | to find out is your journey of becoming a president. One of the biggest universities in the world |
0:44.5 | and also in Canada. How did you get to become a president of York University? Can you go back |
0:50.8 | way back, play back? Well, I'll say one thing for sure. I never started off thinking that I was going |
0:57.3 | to be a university president. I think that says something for what I say to students now. You can't |
1:03.2 | always chart it all out. You have to think about the opportunities that you have on the way. |
1:08.0 | Absolutely. But I'm a twin and there's five of us, we're a family of five. And from a very young age, |
1:16.3 | my mother and father really emphasized higher education as an opportunity. You know, I'm very |
1:22.5 | fortunate to be born in a country such as Canada where higher education can make such a difference. |
1:28.2 | And there was just no question sort of when we were growing up that we were all going to university. |
1:32.9 | We were the first in our family to go to university. And it was always a privilege for me. And so |
1:38.8 | as a first generation student, I really got to appreciate what a difference higher education could make. |
1:46.5 | And especially now where, you know, two thirds of all emerging jobs require higher education, |
1:54.3 | automation and AI are impacting something like 40 to 70 percent of all jobs. So you really |
2:01.0 | understand that the global knowledge economy, how important higher education was. |
2:06.1 | So we were not a wealthy family. We were a working class family, but just prioritized |
... |
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