Summary of chapter 3 The Wrong
Expectation
Because of the low
academic achievement of American school-aged children in the last three
decades, many educators want to find a powerful “hammer” to treat this hard “nail”
which could promote students’ academic outcomes prominently.
“This hammer-seeking
scheme rapidly distorted the use of technology in teaching and learning that
technology is expected by many to address the seemingly pressing need of
improving test scores.” (page 56)
There is nothing
wrong that teachers and administrators wish using technology could boost students’
test scores and promote their academic performance because in such a test-only
external environment, high score means that students can be admitted to their
ideal school, teachers can get merit pay and administrators can retain school
funding and attracted qualified teachers to promote academic outcomes.
But using technology
to improve test scores is wrong. High test score doesn’t mean high cognitive
skills that the ability to analyze abstract problems and logical thinking won’t
get higher when test score goes up. And nonacademic skills like coping and
resilience may be more important than cognitive skills in determining academic
performance and employment outcomes. In addition, high test score motivates
teaching to the test, it’s not the real purpose of education.
The real value of
educational technology is providing better education, not high test scores. For
instance, technology has brought digital textbooks, personal learning networks,
collaboration and the iLearn model into teaching and learning for better
education.
Comparing to
traditional textbooks, students can download all the lesson materials include
text and multimedia content and easily get access to digital textbooks on
computers or portable devices with internet connecting anywhere. Teachers can
also create their own digital textbooks dedicated for relevant courses by using
iBook or other similar software which may better accommodate the needs of their
students.
For developing professional
knowledge on teaching by communicating with other teachers towards different
topics or interests, teachers can create and maintain a personal or
professional learning network based on diverse goals. For example, they can
search for others who have similar interests and goals within the database of
Twitter and following them to get updates from them. In addition, they can use
hashtags to mark interesting information from others’ tweets for later review
and tag their own tweets with a topic so that others also find their tweets
when searching by hashtags. This interest or goal orientation information
gathering technology can help teachers a lot on their own knowledge construction.
Besides this, technology
can also bring collaboration to a new level that collaboration is no longer limited
between classmates or friends in physical environment. For instance, students
can collaborate with others via online video conferencing tools such like Skype
or WeChat and teachers can easily share their lesson plans, learning resources,
rubrics and assignments with other teachers in same area via Google Docs which allows
users to form a small online sharing group for communication.
“The most profound
change that technology brings to learning is probably the possibility of developing
a new learning model, the iLearn model.” (page 66) This iLearn model helps a
lot for personalizing students’ needs and individual learning.
Identifying and assessing
students’ instruction levels and providing differentiated instruction according
to the assessment are really difficult jobs for teacher to address, but with
Google Forms it can be easier. Teachers can design learning activities and
provide various materials for students in different instruction levels based on
the assessment generated automatically by Google Forms, they won’t worry about
making complex assessment for each student anymore.
For teachers who teach
international students from non-English speaking countries, it’s a little
difficult for them to promote teaching if they couldn’t understand students’
words clearly. But with Google Translate technology, they can make it easily
that they can hear the corresponding translations when students speak their
native language.
In the process of
learning, every student performs uniquely in different styles such as visual,
kinesthetic or mathematical. Technology can provide more opportunities to meet
these styles that teachers can choose different technologies as learning tools for
students in different styles to consist on individual learning so that they can
authentically take an active role in their learning.
Using technology to help
active students’ learning and motivate their individual development, it’s the
real expectation for technology in instruction.
Nice work!
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