As they collaborate to make decisions about what technology to install and how to manage it, school and technology leaders must share understanding of three ideas.
First, the systems must be sufficiently secure to remain functional and reliable, but open enough to allow for the functions educators deem necessary.
Second, to accomplish secure yet flexible systems, educators and technicians must engage in an on-going process to improve technology systems.
Third, all stakeholders must recognize the complex nature of the enterprise networks in schools.
Some things we do are so clearly effective that the research hasn’t bothered to demonstrate it… or the obviously faulty research found that it wasn’t effective… so we have to create the data ourselves. The benefit of this version of research is you always prove you are right.
Now, the problem is lots of folks in education (none of whom are here on this platform) will not see the sarcasm I intended.
Why Use Digital Tools in Classrooms?
Complex ideas that are difficult to understand can be illustrated with digital tools. Regression lines are an excellent example. With analog information technology, students must draw “best fit” lines through data sets once they are plotted on graphs (typically paper graphs drawn by students after many minutes of effort). If the graph is drawn with a spreadsheet, however, a regression line can be added to the graph and it changes as data points are plotted. This technology-mediated manipulation of the data helps many students understand the “best fit” nature of regression line more quickly than reflecting on the slow plotting and permanent drawing of the line on a physical graph.
I’m always taken aback by the number of True Believers and Charlatans there are in #highered. People looking to buy magic beans and those willing to sell the beans- like, there’s no secret sauce to #education. It’s hard and slow and expensive and there’s no cheating that without serious compromises.
And, I should point out, #tech doesn’t change this basic fact. There’s no product or service that you can buy that takes the place of decent #pedagogy and expertise.
Chromebooks foisted on students? Teachers monitoring what children do outside of the classroom via nonfree software? Surveillance of children is common, and it's at your child's school, too. Support #FreeSoftware https://u.fsf.org/32h
Director of Teaching and Learning Innovation at a community college in New England
Retired k-12 science/ math/ technology teacher/ technology integration specialist/ coordinator