Showing posts with label digital classroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital classroom. Show all posts

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Myth #8: The Teacher's Role is New and Different

8 Myths About Digital Learning

"Technology has even changed that old and traditional notion of the teacher as the main source of knowledge and turned him/her into a simple facilitator, organizer, and collaborator."  (25 Techy Tips Every Teacher Should Know About).

We have read this so many times in the last 5 years that we all assume it is true.  It is a myth.

Unfortunately, digital is not yet human.

At its core is the belief that technology will create heightened student information seeking, gathering, and curating, followed by the collaborative building of understanding.  "Teachers can be with students as they learn and give feedback as they go" (Five Ways Technology Enhances Education).

I have written previously about Myth #5: Collaboration.  Let's look now at the changing role of the teacher.  I think that over the last five or so years this role did move toward a new paradigm in some 1:1 classrooms, but also in expeditionary classrooms, PBL and experiential learning environments, and lit circle classrooms.

However, for the most part, the role of the teacher as content curator and deliverer has not, by and large, changed.  Take a look at this piece of information from a new PBS LearningMedia survey of teachers:
Teachers Embrace Digital Learning Strategies

Does this data suggest in any way that teacher's perceive their role in the classroom to be changing as a benefit of educational technology?  Does it suggest a shift of content management from teacher to student?  

To me the survey data suggest that technology in the classroom has not changed the teacher's role at all, and may in fact be returning it to that of the pre-digital educational timeline.  

Why would this be?  Many reasons come to my mind, including lack of adequate teacher preparation, professional resistance at all levels, the primacy of "motivation" or "engagement" over deep learning, and the conservative ELA methodologies many believe are proscribed by the new Common Core Standards (Consider this from Learning Unlimited's Common Core Cheat Sheet: "The standards define what students should know and be able to do, not how teachers teacher. Decades of literacy research should provide the framework for instructional best practices in reading, writing, speaking and listening." If anything, the recommended strategies for close reading and writing instruction put the teacher more than ever front and center).  

Combined, these create a powerful blockade to changing the teacher's role in the classroom. 

But wait, there is more. Placing one adult in a room with a passel of students creates an imbalance. There was a time when Teacher Power was expected in the classroom.  This power came from Knowledge + Technique, and Technique contained many elements that have disappeared from our school culture (Discipline is a big one, Failure is another).  

Technology is perceived by many today as a way to solve that imbalance by turning student attention from teacher to tool, geting the teacher not off of the podium, but off of the classroom see saw. This would be terrific, but it doesn't generally happen.  

Most of the time, technology is expected to be a middleman - a deliverer, a diffuser or filter (as needed), a communicator.  On one end is the teacher, whose goals and roles remain the same (define & clarify content, design activities, units and assessments, address the needs of individuals as well as the group as a whole).  At the other end is the student, who has a body of new skills and content (Standards) to master in a given time and to communicate clearly back to the teacher. 

It would fall to the middleman - technology - to be the true Guide on the Side.  But, unfortunately, digital is not yet human. The quality of what goes in still determines the quality of what comes out.  Technology is not a teacher; the Knowledge and Techniques of the teacher in the classroom are still of utmost importance.  

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

The Silent Classroom: 14 Tools for Loud Silence

Laptop 012 - Jeff Whipple
(Creative Commons license)
"The classroom is the one place where we are supposed to notice things," writes Douglas Rushkoff in an interesting recent post (Computers in the Classroom: A Mindful Lens on Technology).  He goes on to remind educators that face-to-face time is lost when technology runs a lesson. He warns educators that transparent integration of technology is still using technology in place of people.  Students and teachers alike need to be aware of the role that digital media is playing in the learning experience.

Thank you.

Add to this the research implications of research studies of learning environments reported in Classrooms as cages vs. classrooms as everywhere.  Jason Flom wonders if our technology rich classrooms do not cage our children more than ever, despite our intentions.

There is to me nothing more unsettling and oxymoronic than a room of students, each deeply and silently engaged in a digital learning experience.  The silent classroom.

In fact, it has always struck me as bizarre that teachers would want to use digital communication tools within a classroom, within a class period.  It is quicker, easier, often more fluent, more flexible, and much less expensive to use speech.  It strikes me as odd that educators would want students to make a "group drawing" in digital space when poster paper and markers are quicker and serve just as well (and the product is quickly displayed for all to see).  It makes little sense to me that a goal of education is to have students create a credible Google stream or identity, or to value others for these streams (read What are YOU doing to make sure that your students are "well-Googled" - I hope this is tongue in cheek). That, it seems to me, is a path to future intellectual mediocrity.

Nonetheless, there are tools for digital communication that lend themselves to classroom use in a loud silence sort of way. That is to say, they require more than passive clicking through options, they can be monitored in some way to guarantee involvement by individual students, and multiple digital voices are heard in each conversation (or else, why use any tool?). In addition, each of these tools encourages thought and reflection before a student responds.

Here are my top 10 picks, in reverse order, with suggestions for using each sensibly in the ELA classroom.

  1. Doceri is an app + desktop application (PC or Mac) that makes it possible to control and annotate the desktop display from the iPad, very handy in a classroom with AirPlay or other projection - review - This would be a great tool for modeling, saving file transfer time, especially when used with eBooks and archived test anchor papers.  It is a teacher-centered tool, by and large, at best a student-input tool.  Not the top of my list, but a type of digital classroom interface that is getting a great deal of press.  Pricing is unclear to me - $30 sounds awfully high.
  2. Learnist - "Learnist is like a collaborative, multimedia and interactive ebook from the future." - which is to say, it is a Pinterest-type or Scoop.It-type space (deceptively called a Learnboard) for collecting and (maybe) curating content - new for education is the ability to create a group for a class or several groups within a class, making this a safe private space OR a space supporting long-distance collaboration, rather than a space in which anyone can post anything related to a topic (eg. a teacher can curate student Learnboards) - review of an earlier version - I am not a supporter of do-it-yourself, random learning paths, nor am I a supporter of students using student-created materials.  So I can not in all honesty say I would ever use Learnist.  For those who believe that simply locating resources is a path to learning for the learner, however, I might say give this a try. Create LearningBoards for poetry study, for example, focusing on a single poet, a theme, or a movement. There will be many more apps like Learnist in the future, which is to say that one direction "textbooks" are going is internet media collection.  At least it is a step above filling the desktop or Home screen with funny kittens.
  3. Kickoff is a promising new tool for teamwork - available in beta (as a Mac only app) at this time  - an app for iPhone/iPad will soon be available - there will be a 1-time purchase fee - has the advantage of enabling small teams (think 3 students) to upload files and for teams to work both synchronously and asynchronously - includes todo lists and shared notebooks, making it function much like NoteShare, which I found to be invaluable in my classroom - review of 2011 release - This is an app for projects.  As one review notes, all of what Kickoff does can be done in Google Drive, but this fast, all-in-one-place app makes sense for the MS or HS 1:1 classroom.  I used similar tools for reading groups to plan projects, which generally took the form of performances or video.  Kickoff could be the tool that makes it possible for the teacher to easily monitor contributions of group members, progress toward task, etc.  See similar tools for web-based brainstorming reviewed by Richard Byrne.
  4. TogetherTalks is a free iPad (only) app designed for shared viewing/responding to TED talks, but it is more than that - "powered by Spin" means that the tool can be used for much more online content, and the TogetherLearn app (iPad) expands the tool beyond TED - read about it . The app plays upon the concept of the Gathering, which is nothing more than individual users (with Spin ID's) who are viewing the same thing at the same time. What is refreshing and exciting is that the Gathering members can be anywhere, making this a great tool for inter-class learning. Further features include the viewers' ability to pause content (think a video of Macbeth), to annotate, and to control the video.  Facebook accounts are helpful, but not required.  
  5. Socrative is a free and easy student response system - students need internet access (desktop, laptop, smartphone, iPad), but do NOT have to be in the same room to take part in a lesson, quiz, assessment, etc.  Best used in ELA for checks of understanding. For example, to quiz a key literary term or vocabulary word at the end of class period.  The teacher can create the exercise/question while students are engaged in the last part of the lesson itself.  Other interesting uses: assign scores to writing samples (for discussion), student "fill-in" responses to blanks left in displayed writing (from single words to complex sentences), opinion surveys pre and post persuasive writing exercises, "Do you predict..." questions for all-class reading (upper elementary especially).
  6. [review quoted from 5 iPad Apps to Help Students and Teachers Collaborate] "Subtext – Ok, so what if you wanted to collaborate and share a story or longer piece of text? Take a look at Subtext. It allows you to search Google Books for free or paid books, and the teacher can create small study groups for students working on a given book. Students, and teachers, can highlight sections, leave comments, and create conversations about the text. You can link out to the web and provide additional online content to add to the narrative or put things in a better context. It also integrates well with Edmodo and will import all your groups if you use your Edmodo login. Subtext will even let you share any ePub documents you have, or have converted to that format. Subtext is free and well worth checking out."
  7. Nearpod - much more complex than Socrative, this app (Mac, iPad, iPhone, iPod) can be used for an in-class flipped-style lesson - in a class, students view a lesson as presentation, responding directly onto slides in a method and at a pace dictated by the teacher - student-created Nearpods are possible too (with Nearpod Teacher) - review - commentary with video.  I would use this in an ELA classroom for close analysis lessons.  There are times when thoughtful silence is important, and using this tool would support that, as well as ensuring that every student responds.  It could be used in this way as soon as students are able to read and write independently (or with read-aloud support). 
  8. Thinglink is one of those tools that makes kids say WOW - begin with an image and add (tag) links (they appear as dots on the image) to annotated web-based content - since this is web-hosted, students can access and comment upon each other's images - free - review - interesting sample: Avatar Adventures - a Digital Citizenship lesson in a ThingLink (upper elementary, middle).   I recommend viewing the ThingLinkTookkit and samples at ThingLink's page. I can see applications for ELA in elementary and middle grades: using an image to support setting in novel study, figurative language in poetry or fiction study, creative writing (using a student's own photo), using a central thematic or setting image to frame essential quotations from a text.  Think of this as a tool for those "reflect and gather" times, to be followed by sharing (digital, in this case). Not an essential tool, however.  
  9. Chatzy - a web-based, free, chatroom - options for teachers include hosted private rooms (chats can be ongoing here) and embedding chats into a webpage - student groups can also have more-or-less instant chats (registration is not required for use) - reviewI used NoteShare in a similar way in my classroom.  Projecting an all-class chat onto a board is a good way to encourage fruitful posts as well as energetic discussions.  Chats that are passage-based can be assigned and transcripts distributed to all students.  Caution: setting benchmarks for sentencing, grammar, spelling, etc. increases the value of the chat.  I graded chats 1,2,3 (0 not being an option) with a simple rubric that included only appropriate content and mechanics.
  10. Scoop.It is a web-based tool with support for mobile browsers - I use this to "scoop" web pages in the learning categories that interest me (see the right sidebar) - has the powerful feature of allowing page annotation both in the description field and in a Comment field, inviting student conversation about web-based content.  In ELA, this is a tool for compare and contrast (video v. text, poems, criticisms, oral readings) and for any tightly controlled analytical task. Scoop, for example, a theme-based poetry anthology or discussion of the n-word in TKM or Huck Finn.  Students can "share" and friend their scoops. The app will suggest related sites (many search criteria possible) based upon keywords.  
  11. Twitter - you know about Twitter - bookmark A Great Twitter Cheatsheat for Teachers - Have some fun in ELA by creating tweet streams around vocabulary, film v. text criticism, writing 6 - 50 word stories, writing 1st and last sentences for model paragraphs...  
  12. VoiceThread remains one of my favorites - creates an audio or text conversation around a collection of artifacts (image, text, video) - check out this Wall of Samples for education - I recommend a school account
  13. Blogs and Wikis - of course you use them, but do you use them well?  In MS, students need practice and guidance in using them well, in HS, they can hold student-created curriculum
  14. Google Drive and Google's cloud will do all of the above in some way, with the added advantage of being private.  Here is a very little something to get you interested: 6 Powerful Google Docs Features... 
email remains the best way to communicate silently - archived, easily monitored (see note about this below), asynchronous, no limit to length, document attachments, platform and tool independent, easily organized.  Don't ignore its value for any aspect of ELA.  I know business leaders who ONLY use email, despite advances in other digital communication platforms.
If you jump in to silence:
  • Also check out the apps posted in 5 iPad Apps to Help Students and Teachers Collaborate - I have recommended only one of them until I have a chance to review them.
  • Remember that most school networks are conservative in terms of allowed social media. You may need to unblock.
  • Many of these apps and tools integrate with Facebook and Twitter, several encouraging users to use an existing login (which means that work leaves the classroom space).  I recommend against allowing this.
  • Generally, email is required for use. Please, please think about Google for Education email accounts!
  • Media-rich student conversations take time, especially if you set a high standard (which you should).  Allow twice what you think they will take, especially if students are learning the tool.
  • In fact, the more teachers using these tools the better. Talk them up with teaching peers in other grade levels and content areas.
  • Access to the technology is a must.  Not all students have access outside of the classroom. Can you provide for this?

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

The Answer is Not in the Book (or the iPad): On the end of the print Britannica and rise of the iPad

photo by Joi Ito accessed 3/26/12

David Warlick writes an interesting post in his 2¢ Worth: "Coolest Thing I've Seen in a While." He muses about the interconnectedness of knowledge and about the concept of disparate search topics sharing a common root, perhaps multiple common roots.  Mining-down to these roots, he suggests, might (must?) be the true nature of learning.

To many, the Britannica is emblematic of ready access to interconnected knowledge, just as (ironically) Wikipedia is in Warlick's article. "Mining-down" with a print encyclopedia means following cross-references within an article (if there are any), using one's own imagination and good sense to follow up on textual leads (such as the index, citations, section headings, highlights, vocabulary, proper nouns), and - if all else fails - enlisting the aid of an adult.  In the old days there was little mining done in school. One topic correlated to one article.  Within that one article was found all of the information on the topic that it was deemed important for the student to know. It was the perfect correlation of one learning goal to one tool. 

In fact, between encyclopedias, magazines, and textbooks, it used to be possible to teach oneself just about anything.  If you have the interest, read Heinlein's neglected YA SF novel: Have Spacesuit - Will Travel.  He nails this optimistic spirit of can-do learning, circa 1958 (along with insight into the dangers of "child-focused" schooling).

For Warlick and a mounting corps of educators, on the other hand, print encyclopedias and texts, libraries and classrooms, are antithetical to 21st century learning.  In this view, mining-down requires multiple knowledge contexts and access to a vast cloud of opportunities for individual and social construction of learning. This can not happen deeply in a traditional paper and classroom environment.  The new can-do learning optimism says that we can "find anything [we] need" online.  I tend to agree with that statement, but I don't think this is much to shout about.  In fact, I think it is a dangerous confidence.

I thought, when I began this column, that I was going to write about my sorrow for Britannica's disappearance from print - its feel, look, smell, weight, and space taken on the shelf will be sorely missed by me. However, the more I thought about my own experiences with Britannica and other print texts, the more I realized that what I was sorrowing for was something intangible. I sorrow for the experience of finding that the answer is not in the book after all. 

How liberating that moment is!  Learning begins when mining-down ends - not with answers, but with frustration, inspiration, and questions - with a fresh look at sources and research paths - with a desire for more - and with proximal, face to face conversation about all of this.  This might be called mining-up, digging out from the specific and getting lost in larger questions and deeper understandings: learning.  For all of its limitations, the Britannica (and by extension, libraries and classrooms) gave the motivated learner this push - spacial and informational limits became strengths. 

Do we leverage iPads and the internet for not finding the answer? For frustration, inspiration, questioning, and conversations about learning?

No yet, although it is a common belief that we do - that the iPad and other digital tools will make a new level of learning happen.  It is not happening, as Elliot Soloway and educators also realize (source article).  What internet access, especially with mobile tools, has given students is a vast digital book.  More often than not, an app or a teacher-generated site list is still viewed as the perfect correlation of one learning goal to one tool. 

A profound shift in educational process is required to change this, but the shift is not simply away from physical spaces and time-clocked classrooms.  After all, questioning and conversation are older than Socrates - they do not require a digital classroom.  Nor do they require that we rid ourselves of print, libraries, buses, schools, classes, or 7-hour days. 

They do requires that there be a shift from a learning culture of answers to a learning culture of questions.  If we don't make this shift, if we look at the internet (digital spaces) as a virtual place where we can "find everything," we might as well be sitting in a 1958-era classroom. 

Think how deeply this search for answers is embedded in our pedagogy. Essential Questions are used to focus each lesson, every day.  We assess with answer-based questions that are based on standards - which are the answers that guide curriculum. Librarians spend an enormous amount of creative energy to get students to mine-down to a single research question that can be answered. Guided reading is no more than reading with specific questions in mind (or on an organizer).  Organizers themselves organize answers. Teachers themselves mine data for answers that will guide what happens in the classroom. 

And very little of any of this is driven by the student's curiosity and questions. How then will the internet or an iPad change the learning experience?

I have taken individual learning journeys consistently since college, but most intensely in the last few days. Temporarily invalided,  I have wandered through some neglected and niggling print fiction, eBooks, print and digital magazines, brainless brain apps, films, HD TV, and of course the net.  I have been entirely free of limits to learning. I have also been, due to pain and pills, virtually free of questions.

No questions?  Well, actually, I began with no questions - but I have ended with at least five zingers that will consume my thinking about war, iteration, heroes, and humanness for quite a while.

Learning as a journey toward questions - not toward answers.  Think of questions not as iterative and determinate, but as creative and sprawling.  Think of creative, sprawling questions not as impersonal, but as highly personal.  Learning happens when these questions are hazily formulated, tentatively answered, supported/explained, tested, and then both questions and tentative answers are reviewed, revised, and expanded again.  Questions form the framework of learning.  It is a creative process.

Interestingly enough, this is the topic of David Warlick's latest post: About Creativity...  He must have read my mind.

I also don't see a "let them do it" (read Warlick's post) process used often in the day-to-day learning experience k-12.  Why not?

First, creative questioning is not goal-oriented learning. No product or end-game is defined or anticipated at the outset. This is a tough path for kids and tougher for teachers, who ask "Exactly what is it I am teaching?"  It is much easier to frame learning as problem-solving than it is to frame it as problem creation.  We have before us the new Bloom's Taxonomy, with Create as the ultimate goal.  But the general perception of educators is that this means to create a product.  I believe it means to create a new question.

Second, digital technology gets in the way.   It is too easy to find and communicate the answers using the internet and digital tools, so easy that we hardly pause to make time for thinking creatively about all of the input.  And rarely will we generate a creative question solely by using digital tools. This is a great misperception about Prezis, Glogs, blogs, Lit Trips, iMovies, wikis... These are all platforms for digital answers.  All can be components of a good questioning journey, but rarely are they used for this purpose.  Apps may be creative in terms of manipulation of the multimedia used, but they are not significantly different in learning weight and value than the hand-drawn book jackets I made in grade 6, circa 1958.

Third, we do not value questions or the journey toward them.  As a teacher, I always put this at the top of a rubric - at times it was the entire rubric. But this is a minority opinion.  Even the in-development national testing places no value on the questions - only on the answers. What happens to the most creative questions in a student group?  Teachers experienced with group work know they are lost.  It is the answerable questions that are valued.  

Fourth, educators do not know much about encouraging and fostering creative questioning.   The pressures to ask those concrete questions that will yield concrete answers (data that can be measured) are so strong that this is what teachers are learning to do.  The pressures to present learning creatively (eg. in a media product) is being driven by the digital classroom, but in my head creative thinking is disappearing from the ELA classroom (reading without organizers, visual aids or the front-loading of a knowledge base, creative writing, the reading of fiction).  Creative response to literature is itself subsumed by 5-paragraph essays and standards-driven textual analysis.  

We are really not much further along than we were in 1958.  The answer to better education is not in a book, on the net, delivered and archived in a webinar.  It is going to come from good minds asking good, creative questions after accessing a vast cloud of opinions, resources and experiences, and then having lively conversations about change.

Trouble is, a lot of educators think we have already done that.  It is awfully easy to find the answer on the net.

[update: It must be in the air.  TeachPaperless posted this piece this morning: How Did School Do? This is a blog to follow.]