Speech: The Winning 2030 CV

“When I was a student the importance of actually specialising in something – mastering a discipline – was more or less assumed.You want a broad mix of people who excel in a range of speciality fields. But I now have the life experience to confirm the wisdom of what I was taught: yes, you will go badly astray if you pick ten people who collectively specialise in nothing at all.”

Dr Finkel presented the keynote address at the 5th International STEM in Education Conference on Wednesday 21 November 2018. This speech discusses the need to support students to master a discipline, and the importance of mathematics as a foundation for learning.

The full speech is included below, or you can download it as a pdf.

Today I want to set out my case for the enduring relevance of the disciplines.

I want to advocate for a content-rich curriculum.

And I want to focus in particular on the importance of teaching maths, in sequence, through a structured program, and at the level of a student’s real ability.

But I want to get there by way of a parable.

And I call my parable “The Light in the Cave”.

Subtitle: “What I Did on My Holidays”.

A few years ago, I travelled with my family to New Zealand.

We decided to spend a few hours at the Te Anau caves, near the south-western tip of the South Island.

Every year, people flock there in their tens of thousands not so much for the caves – although they’re stunning – but for the glow-worms.

Like a scene from The Phantom of the Opera, you step into a barge that glides silently through the water, shrouded by the subterranean darkness.

Then you look up, and you’re in a grotto, and all you can see are thousands upon thousands of tiny blue pin-points of light.

Now I’m an engineer – and the author of the Finkel Review of the National Electricity Market.

It’s hard to take off your hats when you’re on holiday.

So when I looked at those lights, I thought to myself: what a brilliant mechanism for the efficient conversion of chemical energy into light energy!

It works like this. Glow-worms live on mosquitoes and midges. To catch them, they dangle an invisible web of silken threads and switch on their lights. The light confounds the prey, then the silk entangles the victims.

And the victims provide the energy to keep the lights on. Genius.

So that’s what I saw in the cave: engineering inspiration.

Then there’s my wife, a life scientist. She can tell you that glow-worms are found only in Australia and New Zealand.

And she’s also the very recently retired editor of Cosmos magazine. So she knows a lot about the natural phenomenon of bioluminescence.

Today, we can isolate the luminescent and fluorescent proteins in creatures like glow-worms and jellyfish. And we use gene-editing techniques to modify – for example – the neurons in a fruit fly, so that they flash in different colours depending on the level of electrical activity.

That means we can take images of complex structures like the brain in glorious technicolour.

We move ever closer to answers to the cruellest conditions: dementia, motor neurone disease, schizophrenia.

So that’s my wife’s perspective: great science, great pictures, and great material for Cosmos.

Then there’s my older son, Victor. He’s a management consultant. He deeply respects the Kiwi capacity to monetize what is, when you think about it, colonies of fungus gnats living on mosquitoes in a cave.

And my younger son, Alex. He’s a software engineer who appreciates the way the tour operator keeps iterating and improving the experience.

And as I stepped off the barge I wondered.

Would an astronomer look up, and see a living galaxy of stars?

Would an airline pilot be reminded of the view from the cockpit, flying over a city at night?

Would a historian be intrigued by all the myths and legends we’ve used to explain this phenomenon over the centuries?

I wish I’d had more time to ask.

But just from my sample group of four, it was clear: every one of us, with a grounding in a discipline, stepped off that boat with something distinctive to say.

We’d seen the world in different patterns.

And we’d imagined its possibilities in many forms.

That’s the Parable of the Light in the Cave.

***

When I was a student the importance of actually specialising in something – mastering a discipline – was more or less assumed.

We thought about the skills mix of our future society in the same way we imagined an orchestra.

You want a broad mix of people who excel in a range of speciality fields.

Yes, we do want those people to be able to play together.

And we want them to sound like an orchestra, not several dozen simultaneous solos.

That means – if you’ll excuse the pun – that every one of those musicians needs to have at least two strings to their bow: a primary discipline – the instrument; and a secondary discipline – orchestral performance.

But they can’t master the secondary discipline without reaching a level of proficiency in their instruments first.

And if you think you can, I challenge you to give a clarinet to a ten year old and enrol her on the same day into the school band.

Now, that student could have a genuine passion and talent for music – but until she can manage her fingers, and the breathing, and read music, and produce a noise that isn’t a brain-splitting shriek – she’s got to knuckle down and practice. Solo.

Focus on your discipline – then you’ll see your options expand.

And I internalised that logic. I now understand that a discipline is like a ladder. You have to put in the effort to climb it, step by step, with structure and sequence, accepting the guidance of your teachers.

Learn the principle. Do the practice. Apply the skills. Repeat.

In particular, that’s the approach my parents and teachers took to my mathematical education.

They didn’t leave it to me to decide.

Of course, they didn’t know what I might one day want to do at university.

I didn’t know what I wanted to do at university!

But right from the beginning, they knew that maths was likely to be extremely important, and mastering it would maximise my choices.

So they made sure that I worked at it until I didn’t have to work at it – starting with the times table.

At first, I had to stop and think – all the time. It was tedious. But I wanted to do well. That made me determined.

And soon enough I could see “11 times 12” or “nine squared” and the answer just sprang up in my mind unbidden, so that I wasn’t even conscious my brain was doing any work.

By the time I got to university I had reached a level of proficiency that allowed me to devote all my mental energy to mastering engineering.

Again, I worked at it. I became an incurable engineer just like I’d become a human calculator: rung by rung, climbing the ladder.

The next step for me was setting up a company, Axon Instruments, to commercialise a technology I’d developed in the course of my PhD and post-doc.

One of the first things I had to do was staff it.

In the early days, that was very easy.

It was a one-person company, and that person was me.

I got on very well with myself.

But at the time I only had one product. And everything about it could be handled within my skillset.

Then people started buying my product. And other people started dreaming up ways to better it. And if I wanted to stay in business, then my company had to develop more sophisticated technologies, and expand.

And so, for the first time, I had to extrapolate from my own experience to the broader question of what makes a good professional CV, for people with skillsets very different from my own.

When you’re in business, it’s not an abstract inquiry. I had to stake my own money, and my company’s reputation, and my family’s future, on my ability to determine which candidates were best equipped to help me succeed.

And I was uncertain of many things at this point in my life – like my bank balance, because there were many, many days when I was too terrified to look at it.

But at least when it came to hiring, I knew exactly what I wanted.

Discipline experts who could work together – not generalists who thought the same.

I’m talking here about serious specialisation. For example, a first sub-specialty of electronics engineers expert in working with analogue circuits, and a second sub-speciality of electronics engineers expert in working with digital circuits.

And the many experts I hired served Axon Instruments extraordinarily well.

In the end, I was employing nearly a hundred and fifty people.

That gave me the sample set to test and refine the selection methods, because that’s how engineers are trained to think – it’s all about optimising.

We put job candidates through their paces with some seriously challenging scenarios. We called the interviews auditions.

It was always interesting to compare the candidates’ academic transcripts to their performance in those auditions.

For me, it confirmed once and for all that there’s no tension between drilling extremely hard in your chosen subject and being extremely creative.

On the contrary, the most creative candidates were usually the most capable, like virtuoso jazz players.

***

Since that time, I’ve seen a lot of teams, in business and in research, and I’ve sat on a lot of boards.

I would still build my company exactly the same way.

But I now have the life experience to confirm the wisdom of what I was taught: yes, you will go badly astray if you pick ten people who collectively specialise in nothing at all.

And I worry that we, as a nation, will go the same way, if we take away from the next generation of workers the disciplinary ladders that we climbed ourselves.

If we strip back the expectation that students will study hard content, in sequence, through direct instruction.

And if we bulk out every study program with the same generic soft skill components.

In short: if we raise a generation who come out of the glow-worm cave perhaps ready to talk – but with nothing distinctive to say.

Why would we take that route? There are any number of rationales presented, and usually, by thoughtful people, with the very best of intentions.

The argument usually begins with the undeniable premise that we live in interesting times.

The labour market is changing. And the robots are coming for our jobs.

How many robots, and which jobs?

You can take your pick from the projections.

The most famous study, from Oxford University, estimated that 47% of jobs in the United States were at risk of automation by 2030.

That was published in 2013.

Then four years later they revised their numbers. Now it was 27% – which only works out to a difference of approximately 43 million people.

That’s Oxford.

The OECD says 14%.

PriceWaterhouseCoopers says 37%.

CitiGroup says 57%.

McKinsey says somewhere between 400 million and 800 million jobs worldwide.

So, from this we can safely conclude that the future is uncertain.

And from that premise, some people reason that the only way to approach it is to hedge our bets.

Don’t encourage students to limit themselves to a discipline, they say. Encourage everyone to be a capable generalist instead.

Teamwork! Emotional intelligence! Public speaking! Creative thinking! That’s what will make them adaptable, so that’s what we ought to teach.

And let students acquire those generic skillsets by following their passions.

What does that look like in practice?

It means putting the expectation on teenagers to pick from over a hundred different courses available to them in Years 11 and 12.

At the same time, training their minds on the importance of graduating with the highest possible ATAR, on the understanding that the higher the number, the wider the choice.

And giving them minimal guidance on the discipline-specific knowledge they might actually need to do well in a particular degree.

Yes, I am thinking in particular here about the removal of prerequisites from university course guides.

And most of all, I am thinking of the messages we give to students about the importance of focus and mastery in maths.

Why do I focus on mathematics?

Partly, because it’s a skillset that’s fundamental to science, to commerce, to economics, to medicine, to engineering, to geography, to architecture, to IT.

And partly, because it’s the textbook example of why you need to learn things in sequence through hard work, with the guidance of an expert teacher – and the very clear message from schools that it’s a priority.

You can’t just trust your passions to help you meander through it.

So it’s particularly vulnerable when we shift the focus from hard content to soft skills.

We have the Year 11 and 12 course enrolment data to confirm it. These show a 20 year decline in the proportion of students taking intermediate and advanced maths at Year 12. And it’s worse for girls. In 2016, just 7% of female Year 12 students took advanced maths compared with 12% of male students.

We also have a recent study from Western Australia.

The heads of the maths departments in fifty high schools were surveyed on the reasons why students were turning away in droves from their more advanced maths classes.

And the three stand-out reasons were exactly what I’ve heard, and I’m sure you’ve heard, from teachers all over the country.

One. It’s not required for entry to university.

Two. Other courses are easier.

Three. Everyone says you can maximise your ATAR – and thereby, your choices – if you just drop down a level in maths.

The logic is beguiling – especially when it’s coupled with the message that the future is all about the soft skills.

But we also know that the logic is false – because we know what happens to those students who opt for easier courses with more soft skill components in school.

They arrive at university – and discover they’re in the same unprepared position as that ten year old holding a clarinet in her hand for the first time the same day she was enrolled in the school band.

They’ve got to grapple with a discipline like science, or commerce, or architecture, whilst simultaneously trying to fill the maths gap.

And at that stage, what choice do they have?

They can drop out of university. They can find another course – after drawing a cross through all the courses involving maths. Or they can struggle through – and then find themselves at the end of the degree, competing for a job with students who were better prepared, and thriving from Day One.

Consider the data compiled by the University of Sydney, and presented this year.

Students who took only elementary maths for the HSC course were twice as likely to fail both first year biology and first year chemistry, compared to those who opted for intermediate or advanced maths.

Another study conducted at Western Sydney University in 2009 looked at first year university mathematics. Every one of the students who entered with advanced maths passed. 77% of those with only elementary maths failed. That’s four out of five, failed.

And yet cohort after cohort of school leavers keeps repeating the pattern, and we continue to allow it – even encourage it.

Where is the duty of care?

We have another paper from the University of Sydney, published in 2013.

Even at an institution with high ATAR requirements, 9% of students in science degrees had no mathematics study in senior secondary years, and 17% had only elementary mathematics, with no calculus.

Fewer than half of the students in science degrees met the “assumed knowledge” of advanced maths to enrol in the first year Differential Calculus unit.

And the same study confirmed, once again, that higher levels of mathematics taken for the HSC are strong predictors of success in first-year science, as well as first year maths.

Now if you were a teenager in the United Kingdom, and you wanted to study at one of the elite universities – called the Russell Group – you would open up the Group’s annual guide.

And there you would see, very clearly stated, what subjects are essential for entry into every university course, and which are useful.

For example, students thinking of engineering would learn that advanced level maths is essential.

Discipline-based courses like maths, English, physics, biology, chemistry, geography and history are identified as “facilitating subjects” – the subjects most likely to be required or preferred for entry.

Generic courses like Critical Thinking and General Studies are less important and, quote, “usually better taken only as an extra”.

So the message is very clear: generic courses cut your choices.

The Russell Group universities understand their place in the education continuum, from primary to secondary to tertiary.

They have recognised their responsibility to make it clear to school principals where the priorities need to lie.

Compare that to the lack of guidance sent by Australian universities to students and principals.

There was a time when prerequisites were clearly stated in the course guides.

And then, about fifteen years ago, they mysteriously began to slip away.

For some universities, and some courses, intermediate or advanced mathematics might still be explicitly required – but the number of those institutions and courses has dwindled.

Some have replaced “prerequisite” with “assumed knowledge”.

They are not the same. The word “prerequisite” means that the subject is compulsory; the phrase “assumed knowledge” means the subject is nice to have. There is no possible way in English to interpret them to mean the same.

It is not clear to me why the universities even mention 'assumed knowledge’ if there is no formal requirement for students to have done the preparatory courses.

On the evidence from the University of Sydney, perhaps it might be more accurate to replace the phrase “assumed knowledge” with a longer phrase, “you will not comprehend or pass this course unless you take this subject but the choice is yours.

I believe we can do better.

We have to do better than mixed signals.

We have to get across that maximising your choices is not the same as maximising your ATAR.

And we have to ensure that the ladders to opportunity – the disciplines – are strong.

The students of today are no less capable than the students of my generation. The students in Australia are no less capable than their peers in the United Kingdom.

And they will be creative. They will be adaptable. They will run at the future with the confidence that it’s theirs to mould.

But only if we give them the chance to come out of the glow-worm cave with something distinctive to contribute.

So let’s teach them every day they’re in the classroom, by the content we teach and the things we say.

Mastering a discipline is mastering your destiny.

And your eyes will be open to the ever-changing opportunities in an extraordinary world.

Enjoy this conference – and May the Force be With You.

THANK YOU