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Weblogg-ed News: The Read/Write Web in the Classroom

Digital Disconnect?

Net Day Speak up logo I just read the article in THE Journal about the results of the 2007 Speak Up Survey and was not at all surprised to read that large numbers of teachers, administrators and parents thought that they were "doing a good job preparing (their local) students jobs and careers of the future." Administrators, BTW, had the highest number of affirmations (66%).

At the same time - and here is the "disconnect" - students, particularly those in middle and high schools, believe "teachers are limiting their use of technology in schools" and that security practices "were limiting their ability to take advantage of technology for learning."

This got me to wondering how we in Maine are doing in this regard. After all, we have spent hundreds of millions of dollars with our Maine Learning Technology Initiative (MLTI) - the "laptop program." One would expect that Maine would therefore be leading the nation in results. But at this point, I just don't know. I've asked the good folks at Project Tomorrow, who organize the survey, if it was possible to get state aggregated results. I'll let you know what they say.

In the meantime, here were some of the more striking survey results:

What teachers say...

  • Most common use of education technology: homework and practice (51%). Ugh!

What students say...

  • Following a trend identified in every Speak Up survey since 2003, girls in all grades continue to be more likely to identify themselves as having beginner or average tech skills compared to boys, and less likely to say “advanced.” Hmm.

~John Brandt

Technology and 21st Century Skills

There has been an increased amount of discussion in recent weeks regarding the need for students in Maine, and elsewhere, to be educated to meet standards that include what is often being referred to as “21st Century Skills.”

The Maine Department of Education recently unveiled a new campaign which emphasizes the importance of 21st Century skills and links the idea to the Maine Learning Results and other initiatives such as High School Redesign (formerly known as High School Reform). This comes about at a time when a new report has been released which suggests that America is falling behind in the big technology race. The report, "Maximizing the Impact: The Pivotal Role of Technology in a 21st Century Education System," published by the State Educational Technology Directors Association (SETDA), the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) and the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, urges renewed emphasis on technology in education.

Following these inputs, there has been an increased amount of discussion about how we are doing in Maine. After all, Maine was one of the first states to embrace technology in the form of the Maine Learning Technology Initiative (MLTI) and has spent hundreds of millions of dollars equipping schools with laptop computers.

Somewhere in all this, the question of efficacy has to be asked and a nice written piece by Patricia Deubel an education consultant and the developer of Computing Technology for Math Excellence at http://www.ct4me.net, does just that.

Entitled, "The Great Debate: Effectiveness of Technology in Education," the article is published on-line in the THE Journal. Deubel lays out a nice summary of the arguments and questions associated with this discussion. She cites a number of works that challenge some of the quick, off-the-cuff thinking we often hear about the issue and she pulls no punches. Everyone who is interested in this topic needs to read, think about, and discuss this article.

~John Brandt

Did You Know 2.0

An official update to the original "Shift Happens" video from Karl Fisch and Scott McLeod, this June 2007 update includes new and updated statistics, thought-provoking questions and a fresh design. For more information, or to join the conversation, please visit http://shifthappens.wikispaces.com. Content by Karl Fisch and Scott McLeod, design and development by XPLANE.

I am sharing this because the message is so powerful and speaks for itself. I recommend you play the video for your staffs, administrators, school board and parents.

~John Brandt

Schools and Technology - cont'd

I am not surprised by the article posted on the website of the Pittsburgh Post Gazette lauding the success of Pennsylvania's high school laptop program. As I noted in my commentary a few days ago, a critical component in the success of this kind of program is professional development for teacher.

In the case of Pennsylvania, teacher training was and is an essential component according to the Post Gazette article. "Education Department spokeswoman Sheila Ballen said...Pennsylvania's program places special emphasis on training teachers to use the technology and know how to incorporate it into their lesson plans,...'There would never be an argument against putting chalk and blackboards in the classroom,' Ballen said. 'In this day and age, these [computers] are the tools that you need to teach.'"

BTW, the theme of the 2008 Journal of Maine Education is "Technology Today: The Changing Role of Technology in Schools" and in the call for papers, we are looking for teachers, tech coordinators, and school administrators who can write about what they've learned, successes they've had, and pitfalls to avoid in integrating technology in Maine schools.

~John Brandt

Schools and Technology

Boy_looking_at_monitor There has been quite a bit of buzz today about an article in the New York Times “critical of computers in classrooms.” This comes a week or two after the buzz about another report questioning the value of various educational software programs.

But in this recent article it’s not clear exactly what it is they are criticizing. The article describes various efforts in different parts of the country where tax dollars have been spent to acquire technology for classrooms with the apparent expectation that it would result in increased test scores. From the NYT article “’After seven years, there was literally no evidence it had any impact on student achievement — none,’ said Mark Lawson, the school board president here in Liverpool, one of the first districts in New York State to experiment with putting technology directly into students’ hands.”

In another section of the article they state:

Matoaca High School just outside Richmond, Va., began eliminating its five-year-old laptop program last fall after concluding that students had failed to show any academic gains compared with those in schools without laptops. Continuing the program would have cost an additional $1.5 million for the first year alone, and a survey of district teachers and parents found that one-fifth of Matoaca students rarely or never used their laptops for learning. “You have to put your money where you think it’s going to give you the best achievement results,” said Tim Bullis, a district spokesman.

So, let me get this right…the students were not using the laptops…AND….they were not “showing academic gains compared to those students without laptops….” So the problem was the laptops, right?

This is sounding very John Stewartish – I know; but bear with me.

In the next paragraph the Times states:

Northfield Mount Hermon School, a private boarding school in western Massachusetts, eliminated its five-year-old laptop program in 2002 after it found that more effort was being expended on repairing the laptops than on training teachers to teach with them.

Okay, so now we got defective laptops, or we had a bad contract with a repair service, or we had people who did not know how to use them to begin with and kept breaking them or …?

I think I really know what the problem is - money. You can read it between the lines.

Okay, I was not going to get into the $2,000 pencil argument, but I am going to tell you about my personal experience with various “tools” for learning. Sorry, I am old so it is a bit of a long story.

When I was a lad, attending a Catholic school in Brooklyn, NY, where my parents paid tuition, each student was expected to come to school equipped with various “tools” supplied by their parents. In first grade nearly 50 years ago, the requirement was to bring two pencils and a box of crayons (an eight crayon box of Crayolas was the requirement - not the larger 24 or extravagant 64 crayon box) for use in school. Each day my mother would make sure I had my pencils in my pencil case, in my school bag along with my lunch box and milk money – the crayons stayed in school for safe keeping. Viscerally, I can still remember the smell of leather, pencil lead, wax and sour milk.

In second or third grade, when we were first instructed in Penmanship in “script,” the required equipment sheet was expanded to include a cartridge-filed fountain pen. Personally, I kept the Wearever Pen Company in business for several years. For you see, in 1960 every little boy in the America (and probably the Soviet Union) wanted to be an astronaut and, in the eyes of little boys, fountain pens made terrific prototype rocket ships. This phenomenon inevitably led to a multitude of ink spills and many broken fountain pen points.

Apparently, in 1960 it was a sin for Catholic School children to use ballpoint pens, because they were absolutely forbidden in my school. But by about 1965, the Pope interceded and removed the ban from ballpoint pens and placed it squarely upon an altogether new evil - “the felt tipped marker” – you know, those Flair pens that were becoming so popular. But I digress.

By the time I was in high school there was a new "tools" of learning expectation. Many, if not all, of my school reports would need to be typed on a typewriter – remember those?

We had an old used Royal classic that my dad brought home one day. It weighed about 30 pounds and I quickly taught myself to type using the time-honored, hunt-and-peck approach. My parents also provided the large amounts of erasable bond and carbon paper.

The schools I attended never provided any of these “tools” for learning. In fact there were quite a few additional things parents were expected to provide including notebooks and binders with loose leaf paper, lunchboxes, book bags, rulers, protractors, compasses and lots of other stuff. I suspect that for those kids whose parents couldn’t afford all that stuff, there were some exceptions made or things donated, but I think there had always been an expectation that students come to school with at least some of the “tools” for learning.

So, now let’s move ahead a few decades and enter the world of information technology. And here’s where we get back to the issue in the New York Times article. The central issue of this article not about the efficacy of technology in the classroom, it is about who should pay for technology in the classroom.

I don’t think anyone can argue that technology has a no place in schools or that the students of today don't need to be technologically literate. I also don’t think anyone would argue about the importance and ubiquitous nature of IT in the workplace. So what is the problem?

Schools have been providing “microcomputers” in classrooms for about thirty years. Some affluent communities and specialized high schools provided some form of data processing as early as the late 1960s, but with the advent of the small microcomputers of the late 1970s and early 1980s the potential to have a computer in every classroom became a possibility and inevitability. Throughout this period, technology was generally provided by the school so districts and communities that had more resources generally had more technology to go around. And the poorest districts, well they got....

When the Maine Governor Angus King proposed what would eventually be called the Maine Learning Technology Initiative, it was not about getting computers into classrooms, it was about leveling the playing field; it was about making sure all middle school students in Maine had equal access to information technology.

So, now people are trying to justify the money spent. Who should be surprised? But, I wonder if we are returning to a point where the public will now expect students to come to school with the “tools” for learning – now including a laptop computer - in the same way little John brought with his two pencils and box of eight Crayolas so many years ago.

One last thought – people teach people.

Think about it.

~John Brandt

21st Century Teacher

A blog entry by Doug Johnson (Blue Skunk Blog) got me thinking about the attributes needed to be a 21st Century Teacher. By this I mean a teacher who can teach 21st Century students.

Doug writes:

So what might be the hallmarks of the teachers who survive this meteoric change? I'd put my money on those who:

  • are diagnosticians who use technology to help them create effective IEPs for all their kids using evaluation data that is accessed and manipulated electronically
  • are masters of differentiated instruction
  • communicate online easily
  • can identify, organize and prescribe online learning activities
  • are dynamic and engaging discussion leaders (and possibly lecturers)
  • figure out new ways of teaming with other educators to specialize in learning styles rather than content areas

I hear the voice of my old supervisor Dr. Abe Amchin when I read the first bullet...he predicted in 1976 that I would live to see the day when all students - special and not-so-special - would have an Individual Education Plan (IEP).

I generally agree with Doug's list, but am not so sure of the fifth bullet and its reference to "lectures." I think 21st Century Teachers need to be architects, constructors and facilitators of learning. I hope the lecture disappears in the 21st Century Classroom.

I thought Doug's final pronouncement was also complimentary of Maine:

What do you do when you have their bodies in your classroom, but their minds are everywhere but? I hope our pioneering 1:1 educators in Maine and Africa and elsewhere will be offering guidance.

~John Brandt

Educational Software Controversy

Several weeks ago the US Department of Education released a research report apparently critical of "educational software." The release highlights were quickly picked up by the media and the tongues began to wag.

From the headlines and 2-3 sentence descriptions that appeared in the medi -, both print and digital - in the days that followed, I sensed that there was probably a controversy brewing under the surface. After all, as American taxpayers, we have spent literally billions of dollars in the past 10 years to put computers and software into our classrooms. Indeed, when the Maine Learning Technology Initiative (MLTI) was proposed and then funded, there were many critics who projected that the technology would not raise test scores or improve student education.

So the many nay-sayers out there must have felt vindicated by the news that they were right.

Well, I took a quick look at the research report and was immediately not impressed with its design or results. I had planned - when I had the time - to write up a review of the report. But, I figured that since the research design was so flawed to begin with, and with billions of dollars riding on the potential outcomes of this research, I figured it would just be a matter of time before the other shoe dropped.

In the days following the initial story, there was a lot of activity on the education blogosphere criticizing the report on a number of different levels. Most correctly cited the fact that the report looked at "educational software" and not at the general integration of technology into the educational milieu. The report was talking about a couple of "teaching programs" that just weren't making a difference in kids' test scores.

Today eSchool News published a editorial critical of the report and summarizing some of the controversy. The editor Greg Downey goes on to criticize the media (both print and digital) including his own e-publication for simply over-reaching, over-reacting, and generally doing a lousy job at reporting.

But I have yet to see the more in depth analysis of what was fundamentally wrong with the research design. A good analysis would have looked back at the research over the past 55 years on the use of technology and its effect on learning outcomes. It should have started with B.F. Skinner and his "teaching machine" (here is the link to Skinner's original paper in Science Oct. 24,1958) and all of the manifestations that have emerged over the years as commercial entities have attempted to perfect a system that replaces human teachers. There is a nice summary of Skinner's method here by Nichole Wleklinski at the University of Illinois, and another summary and review by Christine Sevilla and Timothy Wells which discusses the use of technology in a constructivist methodology.

There is much more about pedagogy that is not included in this report from the DOE, and it would take volumes to do it justice. Suffice it to say, that this study does relatively little to increase our understanding of the effects of technology on our classrooms. So get back to work.

~John Brandt