Thursday, June 19, 2014

Week #1 - Should we integrate . . . ?

Today, I sat in a classroom while 12 juniors worked diligently on a final exam. But their final exam wasn't the standard pen and paper test. I gave them some simple guidelines and asked them to write a letter. The details of the letter don't really matter - the idea does. I asked them to search the internet and craft their letter from what they found.  I asked them to find something they found interesting and write about it. The goal was to generate interest in the subject and perhaps influence them to go a little bit further with the information they've accumulated over the semester.

I am fortunate to have access to laptop computers in my classroom. The National Center for Education Statistics reports that 97% of teachers have one or more computers in their classrooms, but the student to computer ratio remains at 5.3 to 1. My classroom is an exception - but does it need to become the norm? Before we had access to computers, we had to schedule library time and have the students look in books to find the information they needed. Now, they can do a Google search to find pretty much anything they need. There were 31 BILLION Google searches per month in 2008 - 10x higher than 2 years previous. This video (from YouTube) is a great collection of statistics on technology penetration across the world:
Statistic like this shouldn't scare people. They should encourage people. They should inform and drive them to innovate. Our children are falling behind in education, ranking 24th in math and 25th in science among industrialized countries. By bringing more technology into our education system we give our students the full advantages of living in the United States. Even student that have never seen a computer can learn from them. MIT did a study with kids in Ethiopia who had never even see printed words. They were able to take a tablet and within days become prolific users and learners. What could our students do if they were given laptops?

Most cynics say "use Facebook" or "text their friends" and that is one way of thinking about it. We can't continue to think of technology as the enemy in schools. We have to give students direction in its use - to become good digital citizens. In other words, we have to be educators. If we can help guide them in the proper use of technology, we can use it to their (and our) advantage. Right now cell phones are taboo - most high schools have some policy which bans cell phones in the classroom. So, students hide them and use them without us "knowing". They become contraband instead of becoming a tool for their learning experience. I recently had a conversation with a student about water quality. During our discussion another student standing by helped out by providing definitions and data that we couldn't recall. And the data was provided quickly allowing the discussion to move on with confidence and real engagement. All from his cell phone.

Teachers fear technology because they don't understand it. I'm a techno-phile and I don't understand 90% of the new technology that's coming out these days. But we can't let that deter us. Angela Watson posted an excellent blog about this very subject. Her take home message? No one is an expert in technology. It's changing so fast that no one can be. As teachers, we're supposed to be experts in our subject areas. We don't have time to even become experts in technology. But we can use Google just like anyone else can. Like Angela said "When you get stuck, Google it."  Join the rest of the world and become search number 31 billion and one. 

4 comments:

  1. First, I would like to thank you for thinking out of the box with the assignment for our children. I feel like anytime we are tasked with our own original ideas the results can become endless. I have to say I was also skeptical about the use of cell phones in the classroom for fear that the students would be using it for texting, or even cheating. Do you feel as though that would be an issue, or do you think some sort of regulations could come into play?
    I also agree that technology is constantly evolving and that there is so much to keep up with that it could become intimidating but by having the approach that the students can "teach" the teacher is a great one!

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  2. Scotty, I think you and I have very similar views on technological integration in classrooms. Your comment about cell phones in the class room really resonated with me.
    "Most cynics say "use Facebook" or "text their friends" and that is one way of thinking about it. We can't continue to think of technology as the enemy in schools. We have to give students direction in its use - to become good digital citizens. In other words, we have to be educators. If we can help guide them in the proper use of technology, we can use it to their (and our) advantage." I honestly could not agree more with you. Cell phone use is allowed in my school district, as a learning tool, "if the teacher wishes to allow it." Unfortunately, there are still some that do not. I think your message of digital citizenship and educators teaching students to use technology responsibly is what education should be progressing towards.

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  3. Hi Scotty, I like to read your blogger post, and it made me to think about more. Like you said: “No one is an expert in technology. It's changing so fast that no one can be. As teachers, we're supposed to be experts in our subject areas. We don't have time to even become experts in technology. But we can use Google just like anyone else can.”I cannot agree you more. We can use Google to learn everything, but do not afraid of using technology for give students a better variety of learning curriculum. We should challenge both ourselves and students.

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  4. Hi Scotty, It is so true no one is an expert in technology - it is constantly changing. I am curious as to how your lesson with having the students research something they are interested. I find giving my students a lesson like that is difficult because they all have emotional/behavioral disabilities, and getting them off the computer to write is always a task. Would you ever think of doing a story board of what they are interested in? So they stay on the computer but are creating their own story on what they found interesting.

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