,
David  Price

David Price’s Followers (12)

member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
Phil Mu...
474 books | 91 friends

Liam Da...
540 books | 248 friends

Gary Mc...
29 books | 9 friends

Ewan Mc...
701 books | 288 friends

Tim
Tim
321 books | 35 friends

Mark Mu...
61 books | 67 friends

Lance
48 books | 2,657 friends

Rachael
0 books | 16 friends

More friends…

David Price

Goodreads Author


Born
Jarrow, The United Kingdom
Website

Twitter

Genre

Member Since
October 2013

URL


David Price, OBE, is a speaker, author, trainer, advisor. For the past 15 years, David has written, talked and advised on some of the biggest challenges facing business, education and society: solving the problems of employee, student and civic disengagement; maximising our potential to be creative, innovative and fulfilled citizens, and understanding the global shift towards open organisations, and systems of learning. In 2009 he was awarded the O.B.E. By Her Majesty the Queen. For services to education. his first book, OPEN: How We'LL Work, Live And Learn In The Future, was published in 2013. Goodreads members voted it the most influential education book in 2014. Sir Ken Robinson wrote that 'from every perspective OPEN will open your mind ...more

Do Tory Chumps Trump Trump?

Not since the publication of the first Harry Potter novel has there been a response to a book (yes, a book!) as we’ve witnessed with the publication of ‘Fire and Fury’, by Michael Wolff. Its anecdotes and rumours will give satirists abundant material with which to poke the hapless leader of the free world. But, while we laugh along with Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel, we in the UK should remembe

Read more of this blog post »
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 07, 2018 05:10
Average rating: 3.91 · 285 ratings · 46 reviews · 5 distinct worksSimilar authors
Open: How We’ll Work, Live ...

3.87 avg rating — 222 ratings — published 2013 — 5 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
The Power of Us: How we con...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 50 ratings3 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Education Forward: Moving S...

by
3.91 avg rating — 11 ratings2 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Time in Africa: Flying and ...

by
it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
Rate this book
Clear rating
Meditations On Living: Volu...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
Rate this book
Clear rating
More books by David Price…
Quotes by David Price  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“When President Obama asked to meet with Steve Jobs, the late Apple boss, his first question was ‘how much would it cost to make the iPhone in the United States, instead of overseas?’ Jobs was characteristically blunt, asserting that ‘those jobs are never coming back’. In point of fact, it’s been estimated that making iPhones exclusively in the US would add around $65 to the cost of each phone – not an unaffordable cost, or an unthinkable drop in margin for Apple, if it meant bringing jobs back home.  But American workers aren’t going to be making iPhones anytime soon, because of the need for speed, and scale, in getting the product on to shelves around the world. When Apple assessed the global demand for the iPhone it estimated that it would need almost 9,000 engineers overseeing the production process to meet demand. Their analysts reported that it would take nine months to recruit that many engineers in the US – in China, it took 15 days. It’s these kind of tales that cause US conservative media outlets to graphically describe Asia as ‘eating the lunch’ off the tables of patriotic, if sleep-walking, American citizens. If Apple had chosen to go to India, instead of China, the costs may have been slightly higher, but the supply of suitably qualified engineers would have been just as plentiful. While China may be the world’s biggest manufacturing plant, India is set to lead the way in the industry that poses the biggest threat to western middle-class parents seeking to put their sons or daughters through college: knowledge.”
David Price, Open: How We’ll Work, Live and Learn In The Future

“Open learning is frequently, and in my view, incorrectly trivialised as people ‘just chatting’ on social media. My belief is that this perception misses the point: ‘open’ is not simply about technology, it’s about behaviour shift as well.”
David Price, Open: How We’ll Work, Live and Learn In The Future

“If collaboration is a headache for learning in the workplace, it’s hard to know where to start with schools. First, most schools don’t call it ‘sharing’ anyway – they call it ‘cheating’. Think about it for a moment: the kids who are now in school will be entering a workplace where internal and external collaboration is the work. We prepare them for this interconnected world, by insisting that almost everything they do, every piece of work they submit, is their own work, not the fruits of working with others, because every student has to have an individual, rigorously assessed, accountable grade – if they don’t, the entire examinations system collapses like a deck of cards.  Except it doesn’t.”
David Price, Open: How We’ll Work, Live and Learn In The Future

Topics Mentioning This Author

topics posts views last activity  
The Seasonal Read...: This topic has been closed to new comments. Summer Challenge 2015: Completed Tasks (DO NOT DELETE POSTS) 3424 688 Sep 01, 2015 07:40PM  



No comments have been added yet.