"Everything is difficult until is is easy" - Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, first lady of the United States from 1933 to 1944
I have been a teacher for just 4 years and just in that time, I have seen changes that are a exciting and a bit mind boggling. I am a lover of technology, a 'true believer' in what technology can do, and am convinced beyond any doubt that if we are going to serve our students well, we must not simply be open to the coming changes - we must embrace them. At the same time I am old enough - 47 crusty years - that some of the things that are happening seem to be almost science fiction in nature. It takes a moment for me to wrap my mind around some concepts, ideas or tools. So I can only imagine what if going through the minds of the far more experienced teachers I work with and talk to. Frankly, I know what goes through their minds because as my school districts 'tech guy' they let me know, sometimes rather loudly, exactly what they think.
These people are the backbone of our educational system. They have been teaching 10 years or longer and have spent the vast majority of that time using "traditional" teaching tools and methods - chalk, blackboards, overheads, quiet students in straight rows, and the like - and they are responsible for some of the best educated children our schools have ever produced. So when you remove their chalk and blackboard, pop up an Activboard or Smartboard, turn on the projector and tell them they can now be more effective, their concern appears to be well founded. Their old way worked, after all, and how in the heck do you use all of this new stuff anyway?! The fact they have seen hundreds, perhaps thousands of "the next new thing" in education come and go only reinforces their doubt. The difference, of course, is that it isn't simply the tools that are changing. The world, how it works, and how our students actually think and process information is changing as well. Our ability to just wait until the "next new thing" fades away no longer exists.
Looking at the articles at http://www.colorado.edu/journals/cye/19_1/index.htm (there is a simple, short sign up required to view this but it's worth it) helps drive this home. So what are we to do? First, I think we as a profession must accept that what is happening isn't simply another fade that is going away. To not recognize that a fundamental change is occurring in our students, the world, and how they will need to operate within it, is to refuse to accept reality and that will only hurt our students. Second, we must educate ourselves so we can communicate in this new world, teach using all of these new tools, know enough to know a good tool from a bad one, and know when it's appropriate to go back to old tried and true methods not based on technology (technology will NEVER replace a classrooms most important component - the teacher). Finally, we must heed the words of the great and oh so wise Eleanor Roosevelt and recognize that everything was a mystery until you learned how to do it. Walking or writing your name could have just as well as been piloting a spaceship until you learned how to do it. Then it became second nature, easy, and an important part of how you work and interact with the world. The new technologies we are being bombarded with seem mind boggling and confusing. Some don't see the purpose much less the method of using them. Using them is hard so some people balk at the idea of bringing them into the class room. However if we recognize how the world and our students are fundamentally changing, the need to embrace these tools is clear, and when we do, and give ourselves a chance to learn how to use them effectively, many things will be much easier.
Taking a Look at Engaged Learning
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Before teachers can see how engaged learning can affect the education
of their student's one has to take a look at the definition of it. Engaged
lear...
14 years ago
You hit the nail right on the head when you talked about "experienced" teachers not wanting to jump on the technology bandwagon. Take this classroom blog for instance. I could have students write weekly reflections, copy them, staple them, and hand them out to the entire class. How many students would read them? Very few. However, if they could write and post online with a blog list of their classmates, I'm betting many more would take part. Unfortunately, blogspot.com websites are blocked at our school building so I may never have a chance to try it.
ReplyDeleteYou proposed something that I never thought of, and that was the teacher’s point view of technology integration into our school systems. I to am about to finish up my fourth year of teaching and you were right when you said that there as been tremendous change only in that short amount of time. School is no longer the same since I was even in it, and I only graduated high school in 2000. The mainstreaming of cell phones, iPods, and the internet opens students to entire world.
ReplyDeleteI would imagine that it would be difficult for a veteran teacher to change their teaching styles after so many years. Their way seemed to work, I mean it was their way that educated my generation. I am not going to be so bold to say that their way will not work anymore, but children need to be entertained. They are used to fast pace lives with entertainment available in their phones, iPods and PSP’s. Students of this generation will not simply listen to a teacher lecture on the importance of the printing press; they will need to be shown it with pictures and videos and experience why it made life easier. With that said, let us not forget the lessons of the veteran teachers for their methods can still work. It is important that we do not get so wrapped up in making everything thing so “techy” that we do not forget the essence of teaching. The answer is to blend the two ways of teaching. We have to incorporate the discipline and book learning of yesterday to the technological, flashiness of today.
This is a fantastic blog. I think, like all things, there are two sides to every story. I find myself trying new things and they always start out great, especially if it happens at a workshop or seminar where direction is provided and help right around the corner. Then, once I get home, I face reality i.e. can my school afford this technology, how can I implement this into my curriculum, what kind of changes will I have to make to my deliverables i.e. new spreadsheets, worksheets and charts. Lastly, and probably most importantly, will this technology better prepare my students for what they will encounter outside the classroom? All these questions must be weighed and deliberated upon. Then decisions must be made and that is where commitment starts. I believe some teachers and their traditional nature of approaching the curriculum is spot on and students are prepared for the next level. I think many of the "old school" teachers view technology as a method of "entertainment." It has more to do with keeping students entertained than making sure the curriculum is full of substance and students are still do the math "without" the calculator. Society and students are changing and technology in the classroom can help fill the gap, but I think more professional development needs to take shape to help "old school" teachers understand where the gaps are and how technology will help fill it.
ReplyDeleteI think that is a great quote for technology. I may have to steal it and use in my class. I think you are right on in saying that it is difficult for some of the older teachers to embrace some of these new technologies. I have been teaching for five years and I am already experiencing changes. Some of the things I used a couple of years ago are already being phased out. It is a challenge but I think it is one that everyone in this class is up to.
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