Innovative learning space takes shape in County Durham Greenfield Arts is to become part of Professor Sugata Mitra鈥檚 new global educational experiment: The School in the Cloud. The centre has undergone a major transformation to include two new creative spaces that will provide a social area for independent learning by students and the wider community, as well as helping with on-going research. works together with Greenfield Community College and students there have been part of Professor Mitra鈥檚 research for several years. He will be launching this new learning lab, funded through his 2013 TED Prize, on Thursday 13 February 2014. As part of the event, students will be linking up with India via Skype.Designed to be very different to a normal classroom, the room has an 鈥榦utdoor feel鈥 鈥 including artificial grass - and unusual seating and decoration to make it an attractive and social space to spend time in.Katy Milne, Director of Arts and Creativity at Greenfield, said: 鈥淭his is a fantastic opportunity to continue this global research and development into enquiry-based approaches to learning here at Greenfield Arts. It鈥檚 a chance to learn above and beyond the curriculum, helping to ignite a curiosity for learning, and that鈥檚 what makes it really exciting.鈥淲e are confident that the new spaces will offer a range of opportunities for creativity and learning for our students, local primary schools and the wider community.鈥Greenfield Community College is one of two schools in the UK (the other is ), alongside five other sites in India, that will be part of on-going research over the next three years into how children learn using the Internet in groups.鈥淭he School in the Cloud is learning at the edge of chaos,鈥 explains Prof Mitra. 鈥淭his is a community, place and experience that enables us to discover and explore children鈥檚 learning as a self organising system.鈥淥ur hope is for children to be prepared for the future because they are confident and curious problem solvers who, by tapping into global networks, can work together to use technology and find solutions to 鈥榖ig鈥 questions.鈥TED Prize 2013 winner Prof Mitra was Chief Scientist at NIIT when he set up the first 鈥榟ole in the wall鈥 15 years ago, knocking through a wall in his office to install a computer which was freely accessible to the adjoining slum. It was an instant hit with groups of Indian street children, who learnt how to use the computer and Internet by themselves.Further experiments in more remote locations helped to define a new way of learning 鈥 minimally invasive education 鈥 as well as inspiring the film Slumdog Millionaire.In recent years this idea has rapidly gathered pace, evolving into over 100 Self-Organised Learning Environments (SOLEs) all over the world where children search for answers to 鈥榖ig鈥 questions. It has also inspired Self Organised Mediation Environments (SOMEs) 鈥 better known as the Granny Cloud - where children interact with online 鈥榞rannies鈥 to engage in a wide range of informal activities.Explaining his idea for the School in the Cloud, Professor Mitra said it would bring together all of the research to date, linking the SOLEs and the Granny Cloud to create a web platform where ideas and children from all over the world can come together.Further information about the first published on: 13 February 2014