The Curio Cabinet
Summary : Season 2, Episode 4: Why Feedback Is the Most Underrated Technology In one line: Content is everywhere, but real learning depends on feedback and the future of education may be defined less by what's delivered to learners and more by how quickly and meaningfully their thinking gets a response. This episode turns its attention to something deceptively simple but quietly transformative: feedback. While most edtech conversations focus on access more content, more courses, more information research keeps pointing to feedback as one of the most powerful forces in learning. Through the show's four lenses: Artifact - Automated feedback systems. Modern platforms can give instant responses to student work: a calculus answer checked immediately, code run through automated tests, a simulation showing the consequences of a design choice in real time. These systems shorten the feedback cycle from days or weeks to seconds. Research from Make It Stick and John Hattie's work confirms feedback is among the most powerful influences on achievement but only when it's timely, specific, and connected to the learner's thinking. Pattern - Learning has always been feedback-driven. Tutoring works for the same reason early childhood learning works: rapid cycles of attempt → feedback → adjustment. Benjamin Bloom's "two-sigma problem" showed that one-on-one tutoring produces dramatically better outcomes, largely because of immediate, responsive feedback. Vygotsky's "zone of proximal development" describes the same idea, learners thrive in the space where they can succeed with guidance. This echoes Season 2's earlier curio "When the Tutor Is a Machine" AI tutors are trying to replicate a pattern that predates technology entirely. Paradox - Content is abundant; feedback is scarce. Technology has made lectures, tutorials, and entire courses available anywhere, anytime. But a student can watch hours of videos and still not truly learn because information alone doesn't produce understanding. Interaction does, and interaction requires response. Even with AI's rapid advances, there's still a deeper question of trust in who or what is providing the feedback. Signal - The future of learning may be feedback-rich. Instead of organizing learning around occasional high-stakes events (exams, midterms, final assignments), we may shift toward environments where feedback is continuous practice, response, adjustment, iteration at every stage. This mirrors how expertise actually develops in music, athletics, and engineering and how children learn naturally. Technology now makes it possible to bring that pattern into higher education at scale. Reflection: Education often focuses on delivering knowledge, but learning depends just as much on correcting misunderstandings. Feedback turns mistakes into insight it isn't just a response, it's a core mechanism of learning itself. The most important question for education going forward may not be "How do we deliver more content?" but "How do we create more opportunities for meaningful feedback?" Education technology evolves quickly. But the patterns of learning change slowly. That’s why we keep the cabinet open. Thanks for exploring The EdTech Curio Cabinet. Do you have thoughts regarding this Curio you would like to share? Send us an email to curiosteward@gmail.com [curiosteward@gmail.com] You can find us on: youtube - https://www.youtube.com/@CurioSteward Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/ [https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/] TikTok - curiosteward (@curiosteward) | TikTok LinkedIn - Curio Steward | LinkedIn
13 episoder
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