Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Reflection (Week 1 &2)

Chapters 1-3, AECT Handbook - Historical Foundations, & Classroom discussion.

Well, as a history teacher I enjoyed reading the chapters and foundations article as well as our classroom discussion! Even though I teach about Socrates, the Dark Ages, the Renaissance, the Turn of the Century, and the 1900s, I often don't get the chance to really think about HOW those teachers were teaching and what they were using to teach. Sometimes we get so caught up on the newest technology, we forget that Socrates had little more than a porch and his voice! I also find it fascinating that the 1840s saw the first "blackboard"! I guess I just always took it for granted & never thought about where that technology came from. The 17th century saw slides illuminated by oil lamps, the 1900s saw silent movies and eventually recorded sound with those movies - all things that I teach about, but never really stopped to think about them as educational tools. Photographic images, movies, and recorded sound are all things that we barely even consider technology anymore. I know in my own experience I get funny looks from students when I introduce something like barbed wire or the phonograph as new forms of technology. I have to remind my students that technology does not have to require electricity or batteries, but it just means that it is an improvement over what you had before the new technology.

I also found the information presented about media use during and after WWII very interesting. The fact that Hollywood directors and actors produced over 400 sound films and over 400 silent filmstrips is amazing! Using these films to train troops not only taught them to care for their weapons, but teaching them about jungle diseases like malaria kept them safe as well. These films were also used to inform citizens. Even Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck had wartime films that encouraged citizens to buy war bonds or recycle materials.

A few things that come up often when talking about the lack of technology used in the classroom today was also an issue in the 1940s &50s - lack of teacher training, limited budgets, and lack of resources! It is very easy for us to think that these are new issues, but in reality they are the very issues that always seem to come when implementing any new technology.

Then came the computers! Computers in the classroom were going to change education forever! Well, they did, didn't they? Just maybe not the way it was originally envisioned. I remember as a kid playing "Oregon Trail" for hours during "Computer Lab" classes in the library. Thinking back there was not much to it & I probably learned more about playing computer games than what life was actually like along the Trail - well, I did learn I did not want to lose little Susie to dysentery or get my wagon wheels stuck in the mud! :)

With the creation of (and continued emphasis on) Instructional Design models, these new technologies are being implemented more efficiently and with more emphasis on student learning. HOW students learn (cognitivism, constructivism) has also emerged as important to the instructional design process and the implementation of technology into the classroom. These models, like ADDIE, ensure that the learning process is learner centered, has specific goals, is meaningful, is measurable, is revisable, & the creation usually involves many viewpoints. I would be willing to bet if the "Oregon Trail" game has been remade for classroom use Instructional Design strategies were used!

Students of the "Digital Age" have the world at their fingertips with the Internet, mobile devices, and even virtual schooling the world is so much more open to students than ever before. Socrates had his voice and a porch - today I have my voice AND voices from all over the world! Teachers today can use recorded videos from the History Channel, websites from around the world, and live streaming video of experts that the kids can question. What would Socrates think about that!?

2 comments:

  1. Hey Kelly - good question about Socrates. I could see him leading a discussion about which method is best and why it is better or worse than the other choices. That's great you get to teach history and have access to what new tech tools have to offer, and use that to convey your content. Students do have a great opportunity to see things in a more interactive way. Now you just need to get your colleagues on board to join you so they can see how the students can benefit from these tools.

    I read an interesting article about a history teacher who has her students utilize ipods and create podcasts about historical events and share them with one another. If I can find it I'll send it your way if you want.

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  2. You are right, I am lucky to have all of this access. I only complain out of frustration sometimes. I think as we can hopefully move to more technology integration in all areas those frustrations will diminish.

    I would love to read that article - please do forward it. I have always thought about getting the kids to create old fashioned radio plays and podcasting them. I really think they would get into something like that.

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