Saying "no" to new hardware and software requests without understanding educators' needs is unacceptable. IT in schools must prioritize supporting teaching and learning... and they must defer to educators as they know it in a way IT does not.
Hey IT: Educators are often excited about new tech tools they see at conferences. But they need support from IT departments to implement them in the classroom. Do you make this reality, or no?
“AI is transforming assessment and pedagogy, shifting the focus from knowledge transmission to knowledge creation.” Yeah, we have heard this before. New technology hasn’t and won’t cause this shift.
“So, although we have computers in schools, the key education artifacts are a century and older: the textbook, the lecture, and ephemeral classroom discussion.”
“Knowing” is important in being “smart” but it isn’t sufficient. It is also not necessary to “know” everything before proceeding to the rest of becoming “smart.”
35 years in education led me to conclude tests are not for students. They are of limited value to teachers. They are highly valued by managers and regulators.
I think “identifying misinformation, disinformation, and bullshit (the technician definition)” is more important than “remembering” in our current information landscape.