For me, one of the most relevant parts of Dr. Robert’s presentation was his statistics on increased use of technology multi-tasking in conjunction with his hypothesis that this leads to increased attention deficits and difficulty in long term concentration in students. This has significance for the ability of students to focus and persist through assignments in and outside of the classroom.
Question: Has the time spent on media consumption replaced time spent on homework completion in students?
I am dismayed by the push for online education in grades K-12 and hope that this trend that will not be followed to its full conclusion. Although offering online elective courses (such as Chinese) when on-site classes would not be possible due to low enrollment is enriching, care needs to be taken that this does not open the door to mandatory online curriculum. Online education, while appropriate for motivated college students, does not offer the checks and assessments needed to ensure learning in average students. In addition, if schools are advocating online classes due to budget concerns, it stands to reason that these schools are in low socioeconomic areas where student motivation is already an issue in the regular, teacher-assisted classroom. Moving these students to a platform that requires a higher degree of self-monitoring, motivation, and metacognition will lead to a further widening of the educational gap as well as continuing the decline of education in our nation. Without in-person contact with class members school community and students’ social competence would also come in to question. How would students’ ability to work in groups, compromise, accept people’s differences, and communicate in interpersonal situations be affected?
Technology Resources for the Teacher:
http://quizlet.com/ allows teachers or students to build flashcards and has various quiz features: you can even add pictures to the cards, so great for ELD and other vocabulary development.
I would definitely like to use this for any ELD students in my future class. I think it would be helpful for a range of subjects including, science, history, and language arts. Giving the students flashcards that incorporate pictures will help with developing vocabulary as well as concepts.
http://www.glogster.com/ allows students to create virtual “posters” containing text, images, and even video and music. Worth looking at, especially for grades 4-8.
This would be great to use in a variety of subjects as well. It could be used to create concrete representations from science and math or abstract concepts from literature.
http://puzzlemaker.discoveryeducation.com: generates crosswords, acrostics, word searches.
I like the idea of using crosswords as a form of pretest. It would let the teacher know what areas the students understand and what areas might need more explanation.
http://www.techsmith.com/download/jing/ is a free client which lets you record anything that happens on your computer screen, include your own narration or captioning, and publish a video of it. Nice if you want to narrate a slideshow presentation or make a demonstration of how to use an application or website.
Having students create a video would be a great project for many subjects. Students could narrate science processes and turn in the video as a form of test or they could create and illustrate stories. Being able to verbally narrate a video as a form of test would be especially useful for students who are not able to fluently read or write.