Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Anthropological Assessment of my School's Technology Culture

Dimond High School is pretty hooked up when it comes to technology. Much of the information that I was asked to find out about came to me at the beginning of the year when I was getting the lay of the land at Dimond and finding out what resources were available to me. I would say that Dimond is behind the times of technology when it comes to Smart Boards. They have projectors and every teacher seems to have a Lap Top computer that wants one. Most teachers use the computer labs or mobile lap top computer cart in there classes at some point during the year. I don't know of any technology classes offered at Dimond where students use technology to create movies or videos. In the class I am teaching I have a semester project that I have encouraged students to create movies, videos, slide shows, power points or something using technology.

I did come to a road block when I tried to get the program "Comic Life" installed on the lap top computers for use in my classroom. I wanted to have the students create a comic using the program. The tech coordinator was not very knowledgable as to how to do this or if it was even possible to do this. Turns out, I won't know or it won't happen this semester in time for me to use it. BUMMER!!! It was going to be a really cool project. Anyone have any ideas for me? Any other cool comic programs or resources out there?

A Link to the Anthropological Assessment Document of my School's Technology Culture
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhdntmgx_1dk42cm

Monday, September 17, 2007

Assessment: "Listen to the Natives" by Marc Prensky

Janice Crawford
iamjlc@gmail.com
9/15/07

Listen to the Natives
By: Marc Prensky

OVERVIEW:
The article discusses the idea that technologically, schools are stuck in the 20th century and students today are rushed, technologically, into the 21st. The article attempts to explore how schools/teachers can use their students’ technologies productively and to the schools, teachers, and students advantage. When students’ knowledge surpasses that of the school and teacher, there is a catch up game happening while trying to figure out how and whether or not to use the new technologies in the educational setting. The article presents ideas as to how

MAIN POINTS:

➢ The term digital native refers to today’s students. They are the native speakers of technology, fluent in the digital language of computers, video games and the Internet.
➢ Students as digital natives will continue to evolve and change so rapidly that teachers/schools will not be able to keep up. Traditional in-services and trainings will no longer be sufficient to train educators.
➢ Schools should be teaching kids how to program, filter knowledge, and maximize the features and connectivity of their (electronic) tools.
➢ Teachers need to start putting engagement before content.
➢ Digital tools are like extensions of students’ brains
➢ According to the article, students want more technology in schools
➢ Schools need to find ways to integrate kids’ technology rich after-school lives with their lives in school.
➢ If parents and teachers don’t stop and listen to the kids they serve, value their opinions and make major changes (in regard to technology in schools) on the basis of the valid suggestions they offer, we will be left with school buildings to administer, but with students who are physically and mentally somewhere else.
➢ Two things need to happen in the classroom today: more one-to-one personalized instruction and self-selected learning groups by the students. Virtual groups are one way to broaden the possibility for a student to find a compatible learning partner.

REFLECTION
As an educator, I haven’t heard a lot of this before and I don’t think most schools are aligned with the thinking in this article. This article makes me wearisome of the implications.

I disagree with the following quote for the article, “Today’s students have mastered a large variety of tools that we will never master with the same level of skill. From computers to MP3 players to camera phones, these tools are like extensions of their brains. Educating or evaluating students without these tools makes no more sense than educating or evaluating a plumber without his or her wrench.” I think this is absurd.
Students aren’t computer programs they are human beings. Students are independent of the technologies they use and one can most certainly evaluate a students learning dependent of those technologies.

If this article is true then where are those trainings and new world in-services that they say we need as educators in order to teach and evaluate our students?

I do agree that teachers need to put engagement before content. Make the classroom and activities interesting!