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Can Tech Help Teachers Teach and Students Learn?
It's spring break, and high school students are eager to put away their books, binders, pencils and... iPads?
High school classrooms, teaching techniques and the very way students learn may receive a tech infusion in the near future. Already some schools across the country, most notably the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), are bringing in tablets and other technology.
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"Technology is becoming pervasive in the classroom and playing a strategic role," says Carolyn April, senior director of industry analysis at CompTIA.
CompTIA surveyed teachers, admins and students late last year and found that idea of technology in the classroom is exciting for everyone. All tallied, 58 percent of schools with 1,000 or more students use some education technology, compared to 45 percent of smaller schools.
Putting Tech to the Test
Three out of four teachers believe technology positively impacts the education process. Many teachers are under duress from the pressure of raising test scores, April says, and so they see the use of technology helping them hit their goals and improve student achievement.
Three out of four principals and vice principals believe technology plays an important role in recruitment, particularly among millennials holding newly minted teaching credentials. April says young teachers who grew up with technology simply expect to work with tools such as tablets, not so much chalkboards.
Most importantly, nine out of 10 students believe the use of technology in the classroom will be crucial in helping them get jobs down the road. It'll also change the way they learn. Technology can remake the classroom experience from listening to lectures to learning interactively.
[Related: Will iPads in the Classroom Make the Grade for Students and Teachers]
When most people think about technology in the classroom, they think about the tablet or, more narrowly, the iPad. Indeed, Comptia's survey found that the tablet is the number one technology that schools plan to invest in within the next few years.
Educational Technology Is More Than Tablets
But it's important to note that the tablet is only the tip of the iceberg, especially when considering the many cloud services in the education market. There's classroom management software and online curriculum for teachers, game-based learning software for students, and wireless network infrastructure and backend software, such as mobile device management, tying everything together.
Technology in the classroom isn't easy to do, and early adopters have had a rough learning curve. Educators across the country who dream of iPads are surely cringing as they watch missteps in the massive iPad rollout at LAUSD.
In the summer of 2013, LAUSD began a $1.3 billion effort to put an iPad in the hand of every student, teacher and admin. Since then, there have been rumors of stacks of iPads collecting dust, students using iPads inappropriately, L.A. schools Supt. John Deasy resigning under pressure over his close ties with Apple and Pearson, (which provided the online curriculum) and, most recently, the FBI seizing documents related to the contract bidding process, Los Angeles Times reported.
[Related: What's Behind the iPad Hack at Los Angeles High Schools?]
Then there's this alarming stat from an outside firm hired by LAUSD to assess the project's progress last fall: Only one teacher out of 245 classrooms visited was using Pearson's online curriculum, Los Angeles Times reported. Four out of five high schools reported that they rarely used the iPads.
Apparently, the rush to get iPads in people's hands outpaced what teachers and students should do with them. Development and training lagged behind, a common problem in large scale technology deployments. In fact, CIOs say change management and user training are often the biggest hurdles in a project.
You Can’t Stop the March of Tech
Nevertheless, the troubled LAUSD iPad project hasn't dampened enthusiasm to bring technology to the classroom.
"I don't think this one case is going to stop the march of time when it comes to different types of devices in the classroom," April says, adding, "If you're seeing pushback, it's because [teachers] are being handed a bunch of tools but not taught how to use them... that's not a technology problem."
Teacher surveys indicate that about half of U.S. teachers use technology in classroom instruction. That use, however, varies greatly from school to school. In some schools, staff technology use nears 100 percent; in others, it is virtually non-existent.
I like those tips for encouraging technology use among their school's staff.
Here’s how parents and teachers can teach young children how to use technology safely.
This was written by Lynette Owens, director of Trend Micro’s Internet Safety for Kids and Families division.
How Technology Enhances Teaching and Learning
This article was originally published in the Fall 2000 issue of the CFT’s newsletter, Teaching Forum.
By Ellen M. Granberg
Students at the Owen School’s Strategy in the New Economy seminar enter a classroom that looks like any other, except that a projection system and video screen have been installed. Their professor announces that today they will be joined by a guest lecturer, a senior VP from a Fortune 500 corporation. What makes this guest lecture unique is that the students are sitting in a Nashville classroom but the guest lecturer is speaking from his home office in Estonia, via video technology.
This is an example of one of the creative ways faculty members at Vanderbilt are using technology to enhance their students’ learning. In the scene described above, Owen Professor David Owens, along with Professor Bart Victor, use video conferencing to bring an international guest speaker to their organization studies seminar. Across the University, faculty are using technology to help students master subjects from elementary and secondary school instruction to bioengineering to structural equation modeling. They are developing their own skills while making students comfortable with the technology that will help them be successful after leaving Vanderbilt. As they introduce more and more technology into the classroom, faculty are finding it raises the quality of class discussion and involves students much more deeply in their own education.
For this issue of the Teaching Forum, we spoke to four Vanderbilt faculty members, each of whom is using technology to enhance their students’ learning.
Owen Management Professor David Owens uses videoconference links to bring in guest speakers and incorporates video and audio technology into most of his lectures.
Psychology Professor Andy Tomarken teaches methods and statistics courses in a computer lab, allowing him to integrate traditional lecture with demonstration projects using the methods he is teaching.
Peabody Professor Margaret Smithey guides her students in the preparation of multi-media classroom presentations including clips from the Internet, video, audio, and news archive footage. She has opened an e-conference for interns from her courses who want to stay in touch with their fellow students and professors, and she maintains a library of digitized video clips, taken from live and simulated classroom settings.
Department of Biomedical Engineering Chair Tom Harris directs a new NSF-funded center focused on developing technology-based bioengineering teaching materials and curriculum. He is collaborating with several partners, including Peabody Professor John Bransford.
What Technology Brings to the Classroom What these faculty members have in common, and what they share with many others across the campus, is a commitment to exploring the opportunities technology offers for improving the quality of classroom instruction.
Professor Margaret Smithey describes how technology allows her to capitalize on unexpected turns in class discussion. “Yesterday afternoon my students had specific questions about classroom management, so at that point I said ‘let’s look at these scenarios that I have on a CD.’ The CD brought to life their questions. I think seeing actual classroom scenarios related to their questions makes learning come alive for my students better than if I gave my opinion or told a story.”
Professor Tomarken, who teaches advanced statistics and methods classes, says incorporating computers into class discussion can also make extremely difficult courses much easier for students to grasp.
One of the challenges of teaching advanced statistics to students who often lack a strong math background is “translating theoretical stuff into a workable set of concrete analysis, “Tomarken says. “I find that it’s really important to talk about different types of models from the point of view of specific problems and that’s really where the ability in class to have stuff be on the projection system is critical.”
Access to a computer-equipped classroom can also be important. “I like to get students interacting with software in the class, “Tomarken says. “I find if you just send them home to do it on their own, they run into real problems. When they follow me, typing in on their own computers, that facilitates their learning.”
Last semester, Tomarken also faced another problem – the lack of a good textbook for teaching structural equation modeling to social science students – that he solved using technology. “There is no book that is perfect, that really is appropriate, for this class. There are either books that tend to be too easy or too hard or just not broad enough in scope.” Tomarken solved this problem using the Prometheus system, by placing his lecture notes on the web. This not only replaced the textbook, it allowed students to spend more time focused on the lecture and less time copying formulas from the board. “I told them, you don’t have to write anything, it’s all on the web, just listen.”
Technology Changes Teaching, Not Teachers While all the faculty members interviewed for this article believe technology has great power to influence their teaching, no one feels it fundamentally changes them as teachers. “I’ve always wanted a very interactive classroom,” Smithey says. “I want it to be very theoretically based and I know exactly what I want my students to learn. I think technology has improved the quality of what we can access.” Smithey also emphasizes the importance of technology being used for a clear purpose. “I never want to use technology just for technology’s sake but to support my students’ learning.”
Professor Tomarken feels that integrating statistical software and visual models into his courses means he comes into class “better prepared” but doesn’t think it changes him as a teacher. “I usually am pretty interactive with the class.” He does, however, credit the accessibility of computers with reducing the “passivity factor” in his classes. “They have to type things in, they have to click on the mouse. I think it’s pretty lively in a lot of ways.”
How Technology Enhances Learning Professor Owens, Smithey, and Tomarken all feel they can see technology enhancing their students’ learning, particularly when students use the technology directly. David Owens requires his students to do at least one group project entirely over the Internet. “They’re not allowed to do it face to face,” Owens says. “They aren’t allowed to say, “I’ll call you tonight.’ They have to do everything virtually. In this project, they have a lot to figure out about group process, what things are done best face to face, what things are done best asynchronously, what things are done best in an anonymous chat room. And they figure it out. It’s…so much more powerful than my sitting up there saying “the group process models show…”
Professor Smithey requires her students to complete a series of computer assignments from a course CD that she has developed. Smithey values these pre-class assignments because they save classroom time and improve the quality of class discussion. “When the students complete their CD assignments, they come to class with a common context. We are able then to discuss particular class dilemmas or teaching dilemmas that everyone has watched, analyzed and reflected upon. So, we can start there and go with our class discussion rather than having to take 20 or 30 minutes of class showing the video and asking the specific questions. They’ve done all that in the computer lab.”
Technology can also improve the dynamics between teachers and students, often leading to enhanced learning. “Students can see you’re doing a lot of work to further their education and I think that there’s an appreciation factor that ultimately contributes to their own motivation,” Tomarken says.
Students who may question how much their professors care about teaching can also see evidence of the time and trouble taken to prepare for class. “I think sometimes graduate students, or possibly even undergraduate students, go in with the mindset that this teachers doesn’t really give a darn about teaching and I think using technology is a real way of communicating ‘yes I do,'” Tomarken adds.
Technology Brings Challenges Introducing technology into the classroom can also bring a set of challenges. First among them is finding the time needed to incorporate new technology into courses. Professor Smithey not only uses the technology herself but also requires her student to produces multi-media projects during the semester. “If you’re going to ask the students to do such a challenging project, you have to be available to them. You have to have support. There has to be some relief time to learn about the technology. You don’t have to know the details of technology but you have to understand it well enough that you can envision what your students need to know about using it.”
The technology itself can fail, leaving an instructor to resort to back up. Technology also changes rapidly and it takes time to keep up with technical changes that influence how equipment and software perform in the classroom. Professor Owens points to a digitized news show he purchased from CBS: “I have the CD in here and one of my fears is that someday I’ll pop it in the classroom and it won’t work. It’s a constant upkeep.”
Professors Tomarken and Owens also note that having computers in the classroom can distract students from the class itself. Teaching in a classroom equipped with computers “actually introduces the potential for students to be doing something on the computer that doesn’t have anything to do with the class,” Tomarken says.
“I occasionally go parading around and check out what people are up to,” Owens says. Some people take notes on the computer, some people try to get the lecture slides up on their screen so they can see them up close, some people do e-mail, surf the net, do whatever.” He agrees with Tomarken that students’ personal use of computers in class is an issue that needs to be examined, “through whether that’s worse than day dreaming I don’t know.”
Need for University Support Support by the University for the use of technology is also critical. Bringing technology into the classroom uses resources ranging from computers to classrooms to graduate assistants, and university wide coordination is essential for ensuring an effective learning environment for students.
“One element that is essential is support in the form of graduate students to help students with technology,” Smithey says. “It is impossible for one faculty member to support an entire class of students in creating innovative ways to use technology. You can continue to use CDs that you have in your own library, you can continue to connect to the Internet from the classroom, but additional faculty support is necessary to take technology use to the next level of requiring our students to use technology in a way that prepares them for using it in the future classrooms.”
Physical facilities are also important. Keeping the technology in working order is crucial but so are other issues such as ensuring a classroom’s physical design supports the best possible use of the technology. “You have a very real problem if you have big nice screens and nice projectors but the screen is in front of the white board; if you want to write and have slides at the same time, it’s difficult if not impossible,” Owens says.
Moving Forward with Technology As the University moves towards an increasingly coordinated approach to the use of technology, several efforts are underway at Vanderbilt to determine just how technology can be used to most effectively enhance learning. One effort is the VaNTH Center in Bioengineering Educational Technologies, a joint effort between Vanderbilt, Harvard University, University of Texas, and Northwestern. Among is several priorities is research into the value of technology, such as web-based education for teaching bioengineering. The research team is collaborating with specialists from the Learning Technology Center at Peabody and with the Institute for Software Integrated Systems (ISIS).
“It’s recognized that bioengineering teaching materials are not very well developed and there is not a broad consensus on bioengineering curricula,” says Thomas R. Harris, chair of Vanderbilt’s Department of Biomedical Engineering. “We need a new way to look at bioengineering education. Why not use the modern methods that we’ve been developing in the learning sciences and learning technology, and really take a look at this from an entirely new point of view?”
The result is a $10 million NSF grant for Vanderbilt and its academic partners to develop a new curriculum in bioengineering, one that utilizes fundamental principles of learning science and “is driven by technology, web based technology, simulations, slides, interactive systems, and tutoring and homework systems,” Harris says.
Although the grant focuses on the development of bioengineering, the collaboration between Peabody’s Learning Technology Center and the Department of Biomedical Engineering has the potential to benefit students and faculty in all areas of the university because part of the research involves determining exactly which technological tools best enhance learning.
“One of the things of concern is that in higher education a lot of people are very critical of technology as being just a waste of time and money and so forth. Well, is that right or not?” Harris asks.
“If a particular piece of learning technology is no good, we’re going to be happy to identify it as such. We’d like to be able to guide the decision of educators and administrators about what is effective and what is not. And if you can begin to show major advances for some of this, then the justification for the additional investment is there.”
Another potential benefit this research offers is the opportunity to develop a much better understanding of the kinds of resources required for faculty to use technology in ways that consistently enhance student learning.
“There could be a small investment that could dramatically increase our effectiveness if we do it right,” Harris says. “That’s the key. We have to know how to do it and what to do. So if we get in and do research in this center and we find out some of the mistakes and things you ought to avoid, I think that you could tailor a system that could dramatically increase effectiveness and make faculty more effective.”
Harris believes that effective use of technology has the potential to transform the student-teacher relationship at the undergraduate level. “I think we’re going to see a revolution in the interaction between students and teachers,” he says. “I think the relationship to undergraduates is going to become more like the relationship to graduate students in the sense of more direct personal interaction. By using technology we’re going to be able to use the power of the person, who they are and what they are. The teacher’s inspirational role is going to become much greater.”
Like Harris, Professors Owens, Smithey and Tomarken also see new opportunities to use technology in the classroom. David Owens wants to pursue his interest in virtual teams by developing a course run exclusively on the Internet. Andy Tomarken plans to continue integrating computer interaction with more traditional classroom activities. Margaret Smithey would like to use videoconference links to allow her students to observe a live classroom setting and then interview the teacher afterward, all via video. In each case, these faculty members, like many others across the University, will continue to use technology to challenge both themselves and their students.
https://cft.vanderbilt.edu/library/articles-and-essays/the-teaching-forum/how-technology-enhances-teaching-and-learning/
36 Ways To Use Wearable Technology In The Classroom We’re not quite at the stage of all being cyborgs, but the wearable computing market is growing,…
Pretty cool article!!
I think those new technology is very cool! When the teacher guides students use those wearable technology in the classroom, I believe the class will be more fun and powerful.
3 Tech Platforms for Students to Practice Speaking Foreign Languages
These Tech Tools can Help Fill the Void in Foreign Language Learning – Practicing Speaking the Language!
Are you a student who is struggling to learn a foreign language? Or maybe you’re a teacher who teaches foreign languages? Every teacher knows that students who want to get up to speed on a new language need to start conversing in that language with as many people as possible. Language learners who focus on writing and grammar can master these aspects, but they will lack the flexibility and fluency that can only be achieved through speaking practice.
Real, verbal communication helps you become more fluent. Your mind starts working faster, and you find yourself talking without thinking about grammar and vocabulary. It’s hard to achieve such speed of thought when you write.
You should never be afraid to communicate in the language you’re learning. It’s always exciting to put your knowledge in practice. When you realize that native speakers easily understand what you’re trying to say, you’ll be motivated to proceed with this challenge.
There is only one question: where to find native speakers? Are you supposed to travel to another country? That would be an ideal situation, but it isn’t realistic? But wait! There is an easier and cheaper way: online platforms!
Check out the following suggestions; they will help you become the language guru you have always wanted to be!
HelloTalk
HelloTalk is a smartphone app that lets you make free calls or send text messages to language-learning partners from all over the world. This platform combines language learning and practicing into a single process. You can talk to native speakers of over 100 languages. You’ll appreciate the ability to search for partners based on the language and city of residence. Since there are users who live in different time zones, you can find someone to connect with at any time of the day or night.
The voice-to-text feature enables you to speak and allow HelloTalk to translate your words into text. There is also a text-to-voice feature, which helps you practice proper pronunciation. You haven’t heard the best part yet: the platform also supports transliteration and translation.
Italki
Instead of paying for online language courses on Rosetta Stone and similar platforms, you can count onitalki – a website that does not offer courses and boring lessons, but still enables you to master a language. It helps you get directly to the main point: communicating with people.
The platform connects you with online teachers for personal lessons in different languages. You’ll get personal attention and customized lessons that will encourage you to relax and start speaking from the very first day. There is even an option to exchange services and get free help by offering to help someone else learn your native language! Italki gives you access to a great pool of teachers you can choose from. The major languages are covered, and the community is constantly growing.
Bussu
At Bussu, you’ll discover a worldwide community that will make your speaking practice simple and accessible. There are over 50 million native speakers of different languages, so you can instantly blend into the group. One of Busuu’s best features is the effective categorization of vocabulary in sections such as In the Kitchen, Positive Feelings, or The Job Interview. Thus, you are able to find the words and phrases you need without any effort.
Clearly, the greatest benefit you’ll gain from this platform is the ability to communicate with a native speaker. You can record your voice and realize how you sound to other people. In addition, you’ll have access to podcasts and printable content.
Keeping Internet Safety in Mind
Of course, younger students need to take extra precautions when communicating with strangers with tools like these, so if anyone that you connect with asks or says things that make you uncomfortable, stop communicating with them and let a teacher or parent know about it. Also, don’t provide personal information like your address or your age, or where you go to school. You can discuss these things in general terms (“I live in New York state”, “I go to High School”), but there is no need to provide more specific information than that.
The Key to Mastering a Language Is Communication.
Thanks to the fact that we are all connected through the Internet, it’s easier than ever to discover someone willing to help you with the speaking practice. You might be a bit timid and lack confidence when you first start talking in a foreign language, but remember that even natives make mistakes. Relax; you’ll get better with more practice!
Try one of these platforms today and you’ll be speaking that foreign language fluently in no time.
http://www.emergingedtech.com/2015/09/tech-platforms-for-students-to-practice-speaking-foreign-languages/
It still offers some good and popular tool.
I think Ipad or other plate computer are very popular, so I think these APP is very important for teaching.
YouTube is a vast resource for educational content. A completely free resource this huge and varied has nearly endless potential for the classroom.
I think some short videos are very good tool for students. Those videos can attract students’ attentions. They can help students to focus on discussion on a big idea, to summarize on a topic. When you use some YouTube popular video in the classroom, your students will think you are a cool teacher, it help to build a closer relationship with your students.
4 Great Wikipedia Tools to Use With Your Students
September 26, 2015 The use of Wikipedia in education is a controversial topic with a polarizing effect in the education community. Without getting into the nuts and bolts of this heated discussion, we do harbour a positive stance towards this collaborative platform and view it as an interesting starting place and a springboard for researching any given topic. More specifically, the reference section at the end of Wikipedia’s articles, besides being a gold mine of information in and by itself, can provide students with useful links to help them with furthering their research. That being said, we are introducing you today to some handy Chrome extensions to help you make the best of Wikipedia. Check them out and share with your students:
1- Wikipedia Quick Hints
‘With Wikipedia Quick Hints getting definitions of unknown terms has become as simple as just hovering the cursor over a respective link. The definition pops up automatically. Images zooming is another useful feature of the extension.’
2- Readable Wikipedia ‘Wikipedia Readability improves the readability of wikipedia by reducing the number of distractions on the page and improving the readability of the type. This extension attempts to keep the distinctive Wikipedia look while adding usability and readability improvements.’
3- Wikipedia Search ‘Wikipedia Search allows you to type the word 'wiki' into your browser's search bar, press the space key, and search for an article on Wikipedia. You can also select any word or phrase on the web, right-click, and search it in Wikipedia. If you have Awesome New Tab Page installed, there's even a widget for that built-in. Instant access to the millions of articles of articles on Wikipedia.’
4- Wikiwand: Wikipedia Modernized ‘Wikiwand is a new award-winning interface that optimizes Wikipedia's amazing content for a quicker and significantly improved reading experience!…Some of its features include:New clean layout for optimal readability, great modern typography, convenient fixed table-of-contents, quick preview when hovering over links, multi-language search with thumbnails, beautiful, immersive cover photos, larger photos and better media gallery, easy article narration and audio playback, color, font and layout personalization…’
http://www.educatorstechnology.com/2015/09/4-great-wikipedia-tools-to-use-with.html
Digital learning games are not new, but their impact on education is growing. Here are a five games or platforms, some widely known, some not:
Students love playing game. Teachers should guide them to play some good games, then students can learning something from those educational games.
How Technology Should Have Already Changed Your Teaching
by Terry Heick
A little bit of technology doesn’t change much. Can make things a little easier by automating them. It could make a lesson here or there gee-wiz flashy, or even engage hesitant students. Tacked-on learning technology can do this.
But deep integration of technology–real at-the-marrow fusion of learning model, curriculum, and #edtech? That changes everything.
10 Ways Technology Has Changed Education: The Iconic Actions #edtech Should Disrupt
1. Giving letter grades
You may need appreciate the way gamification can improve the visibility of the entire learning process. You may dislike standards-based reporting, using labels like “proficient,” or grading with a 1-3 scale. You may not even like pass/fail.
This is okay. With technology, the name of the game is publishing. Sharing. Fluid documents and processes. Iteration. Reflection. Crowdsourcing. Digital communities. Authenticity.
You can still give letter grades–the parents will revolt and the children may be confused if you don’t. Give them whatever grade makes them feel better. But use technology to provide the kind of self-awareness and self-directed revision of work that a letter grade could never promote.
2. Classroom design
Concerns of bulletin boards, rows versus clusters of desks, and where your desk goes change with the full integration of learning technology.
Of more pressing concern is the signage on the walls that focuses on learning strategies and digital citizenship. Also to fret? WiFi signal, outlets, access to frequently move around the class, ways to not disrupt other classrooms with “noise.”
Your classroom has become the world’s classroom–more of a vessel or template than something your own.
3. Where the learning happens
Usually learning happens in your classroom. Part of the time they’re reading or writing or solving problems. Part of the time they’re listening to you. Part of the time they’re doing group work, and then following it all up at home with practice–or in a flipped setting, reverse it all.
But deep integration of technology in learning should–ideally anyway–make learning mobile–always-on, asynchronous and self-directed access to both content and collaborators. In the library, down the hall, from any room in the school, from any school in the district. In their own neighborhoods, cities, and surrounding communities.
Yes, this sounds like crazy talk. No, it’s not feasible for every classroom every day for every age group. Yes, there’d be chaos and disruption of your district’s schedule they created back August.
Cool, huh?
4. The pace of student progress
As the teacher, you’re used to being the control valve for content, assessment, feedback, and reporting.
One person’s control valve is the next person’s bottleneck. Technology should completely obliterate your ability to precisely control what learning happens, when. With full integration of technology, students can choke on too much information, or fall on their face with no idea where to go, or what to do when they get there.
This is an excellent starting point for a new kind of planning.
5. The audience for student thinking
For years, it was the teacher. Then other students when you pinned the work on the classroom walls and in the hallway. Then you started a blog that sees 135 visits per month, and shared work there. You mixed in the occasional project where students all took home—or brought in—very similar artifacts, and felt pretty good about it all. No worksheets in your class!
Except that the idea audience for any student is their community. Connecting them with their own neighborhood in new ways. Or their extended family. Or business and cultural leaders in their city. Or even a classroom in Bombay.
Anybody but you.
6. What is studied
Yes, you’ve got a pile of academic standards that have to be mastered. Grant Wiggins has a great analogy for standards—building code. They only provide a framework for what the building has to look/feel/perform like, but don’t tell you exactly how to build it.
While it’s not that simple for every teacher (your school or district may think of it as otherwise), the fact remains that technology is dynamic. The movie should change every time you watch it.
7. Where the questions come from
Usually the questions come from you. You probe, prompt, front-load, and assess. You take snapshots of learning, and know how to scaffold questions for different students at different levels at different times. It is the students’ job to answer.
Technology creates a different possibility, where inquiry is more natural, and sustainable in highly dynamic and social digital environments. If questions really are more important than answers, shouldn’t students be learning to develop and refine their own?
8. Who provides learning feedback, and when
You probably do all of the grading. This is too much work for you, and robs the student of a chorus of feedback they deserve. You can still be the closest and most attentive responder to their work, offering the most expert feedback of anyone, but as it has been said there smartest person in the room is the room.
Technology says offering feedback can be done asynchronously. Comments can be threaded for discussions. Texts and writing can be highlighted, annotated, and fluid. The cloud says both teachers and students can access the same document at the same time from the park, the classroom, or public library.
The frequency, quality, platforms, and nature of the feedback for learning should be completely alien to that of a “normal” classroom.
9. Starting and stopping class the class, correcting misbehaviors
“5, 4, 3, 2, 1. Eyes on me. Thank you for giving me your attention. Thank you Mackenzie. Thank you Dillon. Thank you for coming to level 1 so quickly, class. I’ve placed you into groups, and written a set of questions on the board. When the timer sounds in five minutes, one speaker from each group will stand and share out takeaways from your mini-discussion on these questions.
Just a reminder, per our district policy and Principal Peabody’s PA announcement this morning, there should no cell phones out any time. No texting, twitter, etc. You don’t need anything for this lesson—no Googling, YouTubing, Wikipediaing. No adaptive apps like Knowji or Duolingo. No sharing a question through twitter with our sister school in Beijing. And whatever you do, do not check the blog post you wrote last week as a journal response to pre-empt this discussion, nor the threaded discussion that followed.
If we have time, we can even use the Smartboard! You’ve got 5 minutes. It is time to learn.”
Technology says that while you were reminding students about Principal Peabody’s very eloquent speech, they could’ve grouped themselves based on the framework you implemented back in August and have practiced weekly since. They could’ve watched the video last night on your YouTube channel, had a follow-up discussion last night on Google+, recorded it via Google Hangouts, then saved it to a private YouTube channel of their own that they could then annotate and contextualize for the class during said “share out.”
Yes, that is oversimplification.
Yes, that is possible.
10. Using curriculum maps to create finished units and lessons
Your curriculum map probably says that you “cover” this standard in this lesson in this unit during this month.
Technology suggests differently. Technology provides, among other things, the ability to curate, revisit, and iterate. This means students will be able to return to work as they learn, connect, and grow, no matter what the curriculum map says.
Bonus
11. “Covering” your content
This idea has been on the way out for a while now, but for some it remains a sticky concept. “Covering” a standard or idea makes about as much sense as sweeping a gravel driveway. You’re never finished, and you look ridiculous.
Technology reinforces the idea that learning is a marathon, not a series of sprints. More than anything else, technology provides access. This is neither good nor bad, but rather represents potential. It’s what you—or your students, rather—do with that potential that matters.
10 Iconic Teacher Actions That Technology Should Disrupt; How Technology Has Changed Education; image attribution flickr user vancouverfilmschool
Create Video Lessons in Minutes by Annotating Screen Snips with this Free Windows App Microsoft appears to have taken a page from Google’s playbook, encouraging employees to “turn their wild ideas into real projects” and calling the effort Microsoft Garage.
It’s still about how to use APP tool in classroom. I think it can help every course teacher to create a funny lesson plan.
The makerspace in one inner-city school is helping infuse hands-on learning into all core classes.
I like this post, it’s very helpful about how to light up students’ creativeity.
A new survey released today by Pearson, and conducted on its behalf by Harris Poll, finds that while student ownership of mobile devices continues to increase, Wi-Fi connectivity at school lags behind home. Nearly all the students in grades 4-12 (96 percent) surveyed reported having Wi-Fi access at home. However, only 68 percent of those same students said they can connect to Wi-Fi at school. I think this report a information, which requires our school as soon as possible to match the increasable mobile devices.
Teaching should be enhanced by technology. I am all for using technology in a classroom, but am against having technology run and be the basis of technology. Students should have access to technology in school WITH teaching, NOT IN PLACE of teaching. Technology has so many student benefits if it is used correctly and in reason.
Yes, I agree with your idea. At same time, I believe students can use technology via Internet anytime, anywhere. In addition, they can get improving independently learning skills because there are mass information online.