From: http://www.morguefile.com/archive/display/156096 |
I have found in my discussions with other teachers that one evident trend in technology is to open it up in the schools. In other words, allow students, particularly older students, to bring their own devices. Open up social media so educators can initiate classroom discussions with students about its implications, and how we can use it properly and responsibly. How can we harness the wealth of online applications that students already use or would use if they could apply them to their studies in a relevant and meaningful way?
This trend among educators, at least in my own area, does not come without first showing acceptance of and being open minded towards the previous approaches that were tried. But over and over, when the department of education or the district implemented a plan, whether it be one to one net/notebooks or creating customized media servers for students and staff to use, it quickly became evident that long term management and financial commitment to these projects were going to become major barriers.
So educators were finding their own online resources. Yet, excited with what they discovered and eager to try it at school, they would soon realize that network restrictions would sometimes block some sites, or security preferences prevented students to fully use the services or slow down the services to the point that the only results witnessed were student frustration and disengagement.
The article Teachers' Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge and Activity Types: Curriculum-based Technology Integration Reframed by Judith Harris, Punya Mishra and Matthew Koehler, articulates well the problem with "trickle down" technology integration. The articles states "...there is no single technological solution that will function equally well for every teacher, every course, or ever pedagogical approach. Rather a solution's success lies in a teacher's ability to flexibly navigate the spaces delimited by content, pedagogy, and technology, and the complex interactions among these elements as they play out in specific instructional situations and contexts."
There is a troubling trend where teachers are frustrated with cumbersome networks and outdated equipment while department and districts offer "one stop" solutions. Two years ago I sat in a session where two members from the department of education plugged an online platform they developed where students could go and create a personal space. It was similar to MySpace, they explained. One teacher raised his hand and asked how he could access it. A puzzled look came over one of the presenter's face as he explained the site is for the students, not the teachers. I watched teachers turn and look at each other and shake their heads. How did the department expect us to present this to students if we could not play with it? Further, how did the department want us to implement its use in our classrooms if we could not be exposed to the platform to consider how it might be possible to implement it in what we taught? Unsurprisingly, I never heard anyone talk about it again.
There is, as the article states, no single technological solution, and educators realize or are quickly realizing this. Additionally, educators also observe how quickly technology is changing and evolving. Another trend among many educators is working alongside students to determine what equipment or platform would be best to use. Sometimes allowing students to determine which application they will use to present a project or work on an assignment is one of the best lessons for both the student and the teacher. I have been in situations where I have suggested an online tool for students to use, only to have a few hands shoot up with other suggestions, which, in some cases, were more versatile and useful than the one I recommended. In such circumstances, the teacher becomes the student, as a student introduces and explains the resource to his/her classmates.
From: http://www.morguefile.com/archive/display/67265 |
Whether one agrees completely with Kurzweil's arguments, there is no denying the pace of developments in technology is sometimes mind-boggling. Additionally, how we define who we are as a society is also changing. While I do not think educators are claiming they have all the answers, many do recognize the need for us to acknowledge these realities in our classrooms. Many of our educational institutions need to seriously rethink how we integrate technology in our settings so that what we do continues to be relevant and meaningful to the students we teach. Educators have to play a big part in the shift from"trickle down" technology integration to a system that effectively reflects what is happening (and will happen) in the world our students live in.
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