Musings from the Curl
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Technology Integration Matrix
The Technology Integration Matrix is a useful tool to evaluate the level at which a teacher and classroom operates with regard to technology integration and use. At its best, I would say my classroom operates at the Constructive/Infusion level, though it's not consistently. Some lessons I have had would include creating campaign commercials for candidates with the students having the choice of technology and style, research papers with a technology extension, and abstract expression of constitutional amendments using video.
I doubt that additional progress will be made by the end of this school year, but with visions of BYOD access for next year dancing in my head, I hope to be more consistent in my use of technology integration very soon. This improved infrastructure as well as better access to tools for my students will be necessary for progress to occur. Many students have devices available, but lab access within our school must also improve.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Barriers and eLearning
I told my economics students
that we were going to play an online stock market game which used real-time
market quotes and they'd be competing against my other economics classes.
I told them that we would spend limited time in class on the game, but
they could access the game online at home.
They were interested.
I told them that they could check their portfolios anytime
during class on their phones. "But Mr. Wilson, school rules forbid
us to carry our phones." Me - "You can have them during this
class with my approval."
They were committed.
My classroom wouldn't be considered a blended learning
environment by any stretch of the definition, but the students' affinity for
technology use raises the odds for interest and participation. At a minimum, it
engages most of the students, and many of those who are considered at-risk.
It gives the "quiet" student a chance to quietly achieve.
It removes one barrier to learning - initial engagement. The
challenge then becomes maintaining that interest. A self-paced program could
help with students who disengage because the classroom pace is too slow. They
would rather master the content and move on. An asynchronous learning
environment might help these students as well as those who would prefer to more
deeply study topics which interest them. eLearning facilitates those
students nicely.
Another barrier I have seen broken with eLearning tools is one
of access to materials. Most of my students have accessed a website I use
to post classroom materials. These are often materials that have been
used or distributed in class, so students are most often looking for additional
review or retrieval of lost materials.
I had three homebound students who would
have benefited greatly from an online learning environment, but it
wasn't available to them. The homebound instructors typically delivered
content and proctored tests. This would be another excellent opportunity to
offer an online learning component.
I've also found that the notion of "the students know a lot
more than the teachers" regarding technology is also misleading.
Certain students, certain teachers - sure. But it's not
consistently the case at my school. Online learning often teaches
students to use technology more effectively by necessity. Students must
use the technology to master the content. Randy Pausch (The Last
Lecture) called this the "head fake". I'm currently
exploring game-based learning. Please share any experiences you've had
with games.
Our school currently limits online access for students to
computer labs, except for those of us who use smartphones in classroom
projects. We are slowly moving to a BYOD model, but don't currently have
the infrastructure to handle additional access. A few teachers have used
grants to purchase an additional computer or two for the classroom, enabling
some station-based blended learning, but it is currently limited to the
classroom level. These are barriers to blending our classrooms.
Other barriers include students' computer ownership, students'
home access to the internet, and teacher knowledge.
One thing I've learned since becoming a teacher - school isn't
for everyone. By this, I mean that the brick-and-mortar model works well
for many, but it shouldn't be a barrier to achieving one's goals. If we
are truly going to offer differentiation, then we must recognize that eLearning
has much to offer. It may be a slow road to pave at my school, but
I believe we're missing an effective way to engage students of we hold off much
longer.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Rip curl reflections
Never one to blog, journal, or reflexively share, I'm confident this foray into public reflections will be a rewarding experience. I'm looking forward to the course and all it has to offer with the goal of expanding the experiences of my students and learning from my colleagues.
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