We know that very few things move faster than the speed of technology. Tools and technologies that were state of the art 25 years ago are ancient now; such will be the case with today’s technologies in the next 15 years. As educators, it is important to analyze the impact this changing landscape has on the role of schooling. The fundamental role of schools is (should be) to prepare students for their world. Schools and teachers are to provide students with the knowledge and skill sets that not only help students survive in the “real world” landscape, but to excel and lead a new generation.
So what does this mean? We acknowledge that students live in a technological age where using card catalogs and slide rules is laughable. While these are exaggerated examples of an earlier time period in school, it is easy to look around the classroom you or your kids are in and find resources that are just as obscure to students. Let’s take a look at some:
Physical Textbooks: Let’s face it; the day of students carrying 5 textbooks home to read has passed. Students get all of their information from Smart Phones, Twitter, Social Networking, television, blogs, etc. And that’s not to say they don’t read articles and texts. Plenty of students read books, but they do it off of kindles and IPads.
Chalk/Dry Erase Boards: At least in Loudoun County, you cannot walk into a classroom without bumping into an interactive board. Be it a Promethean Board or Interactive White Board, technology has overridden traditional chalk and erase boards. The applications for interactive software are inclusive and endless; they involve entire classes with instruction and activities in a way that also draws their interest.
Rows of Desks: You’ve seen (or experienced) school house scenes where everybody is in distinct rows with textbooks open to page 103 in the Arithmetic book, heads down and diligently working. Not anymore. Classrooms are now arranged in groups/clusters, and in some cases, just have tables. The trend is away from individual mastery and towards collaborative discovery. Is this the right path? Who knows? But we will take a look at how it might help.
Lecture & Note-taking: Although still common in college settings, the lecture is silently being ushered out of the high schools. Teachers don’t stand at the front of the room and speak on the causes of World War II while students furiously scribble Archduke Franz Ferdinand’s name and ancestry. Instead, students are given a WebQuest and asked to create presentation outlining the events leading up to WWII. Why? Because by the time the teacher has explained who Franz Ferdinand is and why he was important, a student on a computer has already finished creating a Glogster about WWI in its entirety.
In realizing that the landscape of education is changing, the role of education itself must follow. Information is being accessed in a plethora of ways, the least of which being taking notes from a PowerPoint. Students today can information by one touch on a Smartphone or two clicks of a mouse. Schools will no longer be charged with giving students the knowledge in the future. Instead, schools will teach students how to filter and sort information. Instead of giving students the facts for an event, teachers will be showing students where credible places to find this information online. Schools will provide portals for students to access and display information technologically, instead of making students stare at overheads and take down notes. Schools will be arena where students can connect to the world instead of just their class or community. In the simplest terms, the role of schools will change from a local involvement to global community, and from the source of information to the gatekeeper showing students the way to gain access.
In addition, schools will be relied upon to teach students how to collaborate with others and work with information. In an age where interaction happens at the speed of technology, collaboration is becoming (has become?) the most sought after skill in the job community. The old adage “two heads are better than one” is certainly true, and in the future will be easier than ever before. Schools will need to teach students not only how to work well in groups (i.e. how to assign roles, divide tasks, bring together all parts of a project, etc.), but also how to display information across various technological portals. Students will be better served with knowing how to work in various technologies than in simply accumulating knowledge of facts, events, and processes.
With all this being said, what types of rigorous and authentic learning experiences can teachers employ to engage all students in learning? Combined with a heightened understanding of collaborative work and the use of vast expanses of technology, schools will need to encourage higher level thinking and problem solving skills. This is where rigor will come in. Schools will need to create assignments where students not only display an understanding of how to use technology to acquire and display knowledge, but do it in such a way that it can be deemed unique and fresh. By the year 2025, students should never be asked to regurgitate facts as a measure of knowledge. Instead assignments will need to ask the “why” or “what if” questions. An example of this would be an assignment such as a WebQuest where a student acquires the information to create a Voice Thread analyzing the impact of the information they just learned (www.voicethread.com). The voice thread would be used as a forum to analyze arguments and use an array of technological portals to produce counter opinions or evaluations. This type of activity would incorporate the integration of technology to display understanding of a topic, while also providing the rigor of coming up with alternative responses and displaying them in unique ways.
Technology is changing the scope and spectrum of education. The roles of schools is not to buck this trend or attempt to change the tide, but to welcome and embrace this change as an opportunity to create a more well rounded student who can interact in a changing world. If the role of schools does not keep pace with the changing landscape of society, a disservice is provided of students that will never be overcome.
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