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Lost Arts of Teaching

June 2, 2010

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AUSTIN, TEX. -- Anthony Pitucco, chair of physics at Pima Community College, apologized to his audience here on Tuesday at the annual meeting of the National Institute for Staff and Organizational Development. He had asked, he said, for “a more advanced room” at the convention center, but there were no rooms available with the technology he wanted: a chalkboard, chalk and eraser. He asked for a whiteboard and markers. Nothing was possible. Forced to make do with “lesser technology,” he had to use PowerPoint, which, for various reasons he elaborated on, he considers inferior to chalk and a board.

Pitucco -- along with his Pima colleague and fellow presenter, Stewart Barr, chair of philosophy -- aren’t Luddites. They can produce a PowerPoint when they have to. But they argued in an unusual session at this gathering of community college educators that the push to use technology in the classroom has diminished the roles of teaching and education. They said they feel that many sessions for faculty members about the use of technology are the equivalent of “Tupperware parties,” focused on convenience and not education.

The NISOD meeting features numerous sessions about technology, and the exhibit hall is full of companies anxious to explain how to use clickers in new ways and how various technologies can help faculty members do their jobs better. In fact, several sessions focused not on debating the value of technology, but on how to persuade dubious faculty members to embrace technological advances. Easily the best-named session of the conference was “We Can’t Give Enemas Online -- Strategies for Moving Nursing Faculty to Online Programming.”

But the presentation by the Pima professors was defiantly against the grain, and audience members appeared to welcome the change, nodding and chuckling at the critique that was offered. Audience members weren’t Luddites, either. When they were asked in the presentation to cite examples of technologies that improved learning, they cited a number. One faculty member mentioned that plagiarism detection software (combined with instruction) had significantly reduced plagiarism at his institution. Another praised MyMathLab (a Pearson product) for speeding students through remedial math. Attendees in career-oriented fields mentioned how simulation technology helps teach community college students to mix drinks (in hospitality programs) and to perform some medical procedures (in nursing programs).

The concern about technology (in its entirety, rather than one tool or another) was summed up in a series of statistics reviewed by both professors showing that increasing numbers of college students are not prepared for work at the college level. At that point, the presenters asked: If technology is helping us teach better, why are we seeing so much evidence that students aren’t learning as well as we would like? Current college students have had more exposure to technology in high school and college than previous generations did, but are they better off for it?

Pitucco stressed that he was not arguing that technology is the cause of educational failings. But he said that -- given that technology costs money and takes time to learn -- shouldn’t more questions be asked about whether the entire emphasis on technology has helped enough to justify its continued use?

“There is a science and an art to teaching,” he said. And if technology is part of the science, it’s time to focus anew on the art. Audience members traded stories about colleagues back home who -- on a day that technology in their classrooms wasn’t working to allow for PowerPoints or other tools -- canceled class because they didn't know what to do.

Others talked about how seemingly forward-thinking ideas, like the “hybrid” course that mixes in-person and online instruction, can backfire. One faculty member spoke about how, at her campus, students sign up for the courses with no idea what they really are – sometimes unaware that they still must attend class and others not understanding how to work online. “It’s been a real disaster,” she said.

There was no real manifesto issued at the session, but there were repeated calls to take back the classroom.

Barr talked about his revelation last year that he could ban students from using laptops or cell phones during class. He said he immediately saw the quality of discussion in class go up. Faculty members may think, as he did originally, that since they would have used laptops for note-taking (if they had had them as students), that's how they would be used today -- and not realize all the Facebook action and messaging and surfing that’s really going on.

Telling students that cell phones must be turned off, he said, requires firmness on the professor’s part. He demonstrated the looks he sees on some students as they are constantly glancing down on their muted but decidedly not off cells, anxious about any texts they may have missed. Barr said he isn’t heartless on the matter and that he has been known to tell some students “go outside and get your fix. You are in too much pain” from not being able to use the cell. But they must leave to do so.

And the professors said faculty members also need to be more questioning about whether PowerPoints are really the best way to communicate with students. Pitucco said that he believes that they may work well in some cases, but said that “when you are lecturing, you are unfolding ideas, and on the screen you have an immediate snapshot.”

He said he finds that the act of writing on a board more accurately conveys the path he is taking an idea.

Barr said that he thinks the real problem is that professors are over-relying on their PowerPoints, and are losing the art of improvisation. A good faculty member, he said, must be like a good comedian – “knowing the audience, responding to the audience” and either extending one line of thought or regrouping when something hasn’t worked.

Faculty members who base their classes on PowerPoint, he said, seem to lose that flexibility, which he said was crucial to reaching students. “Just because your machine tells you to go, you go.”

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Comments on Lost Arts of Teaching

  • Not a luddite, but....
  • Posted by Margaret Campbell on June 2, 2010 at 6:45am EDT
  • Would that I had seen the speech and heard the discussion!

    I'm in no way anti-technology, but while it has its place in the classroom, I think we are horribly mis-using it. When they are building or re-fitting a classroom, I think they ought to be constructed so that techie stuff, including the lowly phone-only cells, won't work in the classroom. Minimalizing the distractions we all seem to think we need these days should help return the attention of both the students and the teacher to the subject at hand. Heck--after the shock wears off, maybe the students will actually ask questions and focus on the topic under discussion!

  • student evals
  • Posted by Andy , tenure and promotion chair at Hamline on June 2, 2010 at 8:15am EDT
  • I agree with most of what's in this article. One of the problems I've encountered when thinking of ways of talking to my faculty about these issues is student comments like "I really liked the powerpoints!". My cynical take on it is that students like being taken off the hook for taking good notes. However the emphasis often given to student evaluations at my institution has led many of my colleagues to this possible misuse of technology.

  • Technical Freehand Sketching
  • Posted by Ken Manning , Professor of Engineering at SUNY Adirondack on June 2, 2010 at 8:15am EDT
  • My preferred technology is colored chalk. I teach engineering and feel that one of the things I must teach my students is how to make a simple, clear drawing, by hand, to convey the idea being presented. I do not use prepared drawing (whether by PPT or handouts) so that I can show the students how to put together an illustration by hand, and make them do it as well. I even circulate through the classroom to look at their drawings. An art professor and I have a small in-house grant to give my students a seminar called Technical Freehand Sketching (no rulers, compasses, protractors). I tell my students they really will make a drawing on a napkin to illustrate a point they are trying to convey to their boss at lunch some day. She will get the idea much more quickly if the drawing is just that bit better.

  • Posted by Altheia on June 2, 2010 at 8:15am EDT
  • We're building a new large lecture hall facility. I'm one of 3 faculty on the architectural committee. When I suggested software/electronic blocking technology as part of the 6 lecture halls of various sizes, our IT people said that was illegal. Anyone know if this is true? I can't find it in my state's laws (a Southern state) and it seems like lots of schools use such technology. As a faculty member about to teach (and want to) 450 students -- I desperately wanted such software that I could turn on/off.

  • You ARE Luddites
  • Posted by Art on June 2, 2010 at 9:00am EDT
  • I address this to a collective "you" and consider my audience anyone who has been nodding along with that reported in the article above and the first comment.

    You don't have a problem with technology, you have a problem with ineffective teachers. Technology is just a delivery method, like a microphone that amplifies your voice. If your lecture is nonsense, then the microphone is simply making your nonsense louder. Teaching with technology is different from teaching without it, but the skills you have as a teacher translate to the on-line environment. And there IS a lot of evidence of the instructional use of technology improving teaching and learning. The technology isn't the reason for the improvement or the failure--it's just a delivery tool. You're right that there is an art to teaching, but to suggest that technology gets in the way of that art is very much a Luddite-like belief.

  • It is a tool!
  • Posted by Richard Baker , Associate Professor, Department of Communications at Kansas State University on June 2, 2010 at 10:00am EDT
  • The thing that so many seem to forget is that technology, such as PowerPoint, is just a tool. It is like the chalk and chalkboard. And professors, just like so many others, think because they can put a PowerPoint together they know how to use it. Wrong! It is just like teaching...just because you have a Ph-D doesn't mean you can teach. With regard to the cellphones...I have always made my students turn them off. I also make them take off their caps. I was taught that everything you do in a classroom must have a reason!

  • This Stuff is a Little Too Obvious
  • Posted by Eric Gates , Sr. Sales Consultant at ALEKS Corporation on June 2, 2010 at 10:45am EDT
  • In other news, breathing is important.

    Let us agree:

    1) PowerPoint is a blight on the presentation lnadscape, ill used by the plurality of presenters.

    2) cell phones and laptops turned on while I am presenting? I am leaving. Human beings cannot do an excellent job at more than one task at a time.

    3) Therefore what?

    What boggles my mind about this article is the low level at which the discussion is taking place. In the 21st Century!

    Let's take it up a notch, OK?

    1) Computers are MUCH better at some things than humans will ever be

    2) Computers can work 24/7

    3) Humans remain much more capable than computers at certain tasks(praise god!)than computers (and let us fervently hope this is always true).

    So it's not really that complicated: divide the labor (sillies) and use computers when humans are not available, either because it's 3 in the morning, and we have a student who is wide awake and ready to learn, or because the budget axe has fallen on someone's head.

    That is all. Now, please go forth and talk intelligently about technology and education. I suggest calling thie talk referred to in this article a draft and totally reworking it. I am available to help if the need should arise, but only between the hours of 7 AM and 5 PM PDT.

  • Power Point removes a critical step of mental processing
  • Posted by MJK , Professor of psychology at State Flagship U. on June 2, 2010 at 11:00am EDT
  • I use a chalkboard in my classes, for two reasons: (a) it makes me a better instructor, as it keeps me from talking too fast and moving through points too quickly. (b) it helps my students learn. Students in classes where instructors teach with PowerPoint either copy the slides down verbatim or, worse, download the slides from the web. In either case, they are missing out on a critical stage in learning, which is processing the material mentally and summarizing it in their own words. My students stare at me in disbelief and disappointment at the beginning of the semester when they realize they are actually going to have to work during class to record the material. But I tell them that they will be a step ahead when it comes time to study for exams because they have already processed and rehearsed the material once while recording it. I also suggest that they do what I did as a (nerdy) undergraduate, which is to go home each day and type up the handwritten notes, which allows a second stage of processing and results in an easy to read, well-organized set of notes that will make studying for midterms a lot easier. Not many students follow through on this advice, but the ones who do thank me at the end of the semester.

  • Take back the classroom from whom? what?
  • Posted by Steve Ehrmann , Director, The Flashlight Program at The TLT Group on June 2, 2010 at 11:00am EDT
  • Take back the classroom from whom? The answer to that question is probably signaled by the mention of controlling cell phone use.

    I recall a comment from Diane Thompson (Northern Virginia Community College) about this issue in the mid 1980s. An early use of chat rooms for a composition course had led to an eruption of student profanity and obscenity online. Diane commented that, 'we talk glibly about how technology can empower students. But what happens when powerless people get power? Think about the French Revolution! ...The challenge here is not how to crush the rebellion. It's how to channel the energy!"

    (for the full teaching case study in which this comment appears, see
    http://www.tltgroup.org/ProFacDev/Case_Studies/Intro.htm)

    Let's be more specific. I think the most successful uses of technologies have been as tools for students to do research, creative work, clinical work, etc. In order to practice those skills, and receive coaching, they often require Internet access and, occasionally, cell phone access (want to save money on clickers? try pollanywhere.com). So cutting off all communications access to classrooms simply removes perhaps the most important instructional use of technology (far more important than PowerPoint). The challenge is to elicit, and then channel, the energy. I've got an article on using such a strategy to improve the outcomes of academic programs (what students learn, how well they learn, who can learn); it should appear in the September issue of Change Magazine.

  • A different paradigm of instruction
  • Posted by James Morrison , Professor Emeritus of Educational Leadership at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on June 2, 2010 at 12:15pm EDT
  •  

    Most of the comments to this article assume that the art of teaching is based on the lecture paradigm. Steve Ehrmann’s comment about channeling student energy to research and creative work reflects a different paradigm of instruction: technology-enhanced active learning. This paradigm assumes that in order for students to be successful in their lives and work, they must be able to use technology tools and must be able to function as independent thinkers and problem solvers. And they must be able to work effectively in groups and across cultural boundaries. Instructional strategies that promote active learning via project-based and inquiry-based instruction enhanced by technology will effectively prepare our students to be productive citizens and workers in the global village.

     

    The problem is that the majority of faculty members in higher education are ill equipped to change their instructional paradigms. I suspect that Steve’s article will address this problem. Please know that you are welcome to join a discussion of this problem now in Ideagora at http://tinyurl.com/apsouf

     

     

     

  • Simulated drink mixing
  • Posted by Voxygen on June 2, 2010 at 12:30pm EDT
  • Technology to simulate mixing drinks? Seriously?

  • Training Media
  • Posted by Dennis McCormick , Director of Training at NYCDOC on June 2, 2010 at 12:30pm EDT
  • I think people/students/trainees can learn via any relevant media (lecture, chalkboard, video, facilitation, group discussion or project) that clearly informs the student of what is necessary to grasp the objective. The important part is using the best medium that will support the learning experience.

    I've often learned more about science from a Nova broadcast or history from a televised documentary than I have in many boring classroom presentations. And many of the PowerPoint presentations I have seen are just poorly written notes projected on a screen.

     

  • Posted by Susan Zvacek on June 2, 2010 at 12:30pm EDT
  • Wow, this article makes me feel like beating my head against the wall. If we can someday rid ourselves of the idea that the teacher is the "performer" (the one actually doing something) and the students the audience (the ones whose job is to sit quietly and appreciate the performance) we might also get past the need to demonize technology because it interferes with that process. Until then, we'll continue to see rants that arbitrarily categorize chalkboards, books, paper, and pencils as somehow superior to other technologies, and screeds that blame inanimate devices for our own poor teaching strategies and lack of classroom management skills.

  • Posted by old adjunct on June 2, 2010 at 12:30pm EDT
  • My college has converted most of the classrooms to "smart" rooms with computers &c. The wizards did it in phases, so one smart room does not function like another in a different building. I feel like a fool because I cannot turn on the DVD player (between buildings). I do not know how to make a power point presentation, and do not want to learn how bc they always seem to put me to sleep when others use them in assemblies I find myself in. Well, but I teach poetry, and Robert Frost has not written anything new lately, not to mention other significant poets . . . I did want to play a DVD biography re: Poe, but even the college techie had a hard time turning the thing on. I think those may work better for the sciences; anyway I find these things such an obstacle. The students laugh or else try to help.

  • cell phone blockers
  • Posted by ADD on June 2, 2010 at 12:30pm EDT
  • Altheia: The federal government (the FCC, to be more precise) forbids jamming cell phone signals. The penalty is up to $11,000 and a year in jail. You can purchase the equipment from overseas, but you could get in trouble for using it if you get caught. However, the chances of getting caught are probably pretty slim. Apparently, nobody has been prosecuted under this law.

  • A different perspective
  • Posted by Christopher Heard , Assoc. Prof. of Religion at Pepperdine University on June 2, 2010 at 1:00pm EDT
  • Several of the comments posted here in agreement with Pitucco and Barr seem to presuppose that learning happens best in classrooms where the professor talks and students quietly take notes, free of extraneous input, and then demonstrate their memorization of those notes on exam day. I disagree. In my classroom, I don't want students listening to me talk for more than a few minutes at carefully-selected points during our time together. Instead, I want them working directly with the material under study, under my supervision. I also want them producing tangible evidence of learning in every class session, and this usually means producing documents in every class session—documents that I would prefer to receive as electrons rather than as remnants of dead trees. My entire teaching strategy is predicated on students having easy and consistent access to the Internet during class, and during exams—on which students do not repeat to me material on which I've lectured or about which they've read, but on which students use the knowledge and skills they've acquired to address miniature case studies that they haven't seen beforehand.

    Whether one teaches in an "active learning" mode or a "lecture-and-test" mode, it's the teaching strategy, not the technology, that determines whether technology helps or hinders. If a lecturing professor's digital presentations or slideshows (this is 2010, folks, so let's stop treating PowerPoint as if it's the only game in town) can substitute for the lecture, blame not the presentation/slideshow software, but the individual who created the particular presentation/slideshow that exhibits the undesirable qualities. Presentation software only displays what its users tell it to display.

    Of course, no professor should feel obligated to use any particular technology just because it's available. As for me, sure, I want a whiteboard and markers available in my classroom, and I use them frequently. But is the map I draw by hand on the whiteboard really going to serve my students better than the professionally-crafted one that I can project from my computer onto the screen, or whose URL I can give to students? Occasionally, other people really can do certain things better than I can, and I appreciate classrooms with Internet connectivity because they make accessing such materials so much easier for students. At this stage, I can't imagine teaching in a room where Internet access was blocked or students didn't have their laptops open. Such blockage would certainly limit one channel for student distraction—though I can remember plenty of ways that I distracted myself in class as an undergraduate, long before laptops—but would also place significant restrictions on my teaching and testing options.

  • off the mark
  • Posted by bradley bleck , English instructor at Spokane Falls CC on June 2, 2010 at 1:30pm EDT
  • There is so much wrong with the thinking behind this article, it's hard to know where to start. Steve Ehrmann and others, though, had made a number of solid points. First rule of teaching with technology is knowing what to do when the tech goes down (and that tech includes chalk, chalkboard and the like).

    Beyond that, it's understanding that simply using powerpoint to deliver what you would have written on the board is tantamount to a waste of time and technology, unless your penmanship is so bad that your scribbles cannot be deciphered. In that case, slow down and write more legibly. It can be done and you don't need to waste your time putting useless powerpoint slides together.

    But if you want to teach with technology, there's a lot you can do to better engage students. My students, those who do as the assignments direct, have already engaged their readings and peers before they come to class because we use a blog (http://bleckblog.org/lit) to not just post content and information, but to engage one another. Students engage in a response to their reading and then are required to respond to others online as well. I read their entries to see what the hot topics are and what they got right/wrong/confused by. They then come to class an engage each other f2f, with an occasional talking to from me. This is hardly radical, or so it would seem, until I read an article of this sort.

    This is just the tip of the iceberg. Students can use wikipedia or youtube to examine the two sides of issues (but not as sources for more traditional research) by looking at videos that spoof issue videos and by looking at the discussion that goes into a wikipedia entry. There are engaging, and even a little fun, ways to use technology to help students learn, to teach them things, to teach academic discourse. But if all you do is put "content" into powerpoint, you've missed the train and you are missing the point.

  • I Have this Amazing Pencil
  • Posted by Brian D-L , Anthropology/Sociology at QVCC on June 2, 2010 at 1:30pm EDT
  • I inherited an office from a colleague who retired years ago. My desk still contains some artifacts he left behind that I thought would be nice to keep. One is an old plastic "chalk holder" you could use to keep your hands from getting all chalky when writing on our now non-existent chalkboards. But I also have this amazing pencil: I know it is amazing because he use to use it to teach accounting quite effectively. It must have some wonderful accounting theory and knowledge in it, but I haven't figured out how to get it out. So it sits in the drawer. If only I could figure it out, I might be able to teach an accounting course or two myself, in addition to the anthropology and sociology I now teach. Some day maybe...

  • They missed the point!
  • Posted by Al , Director, Learning Technologies at Colorado St Univ on June 2, 2010 at 2:00pm EDT
  • These guys may have fun doing their presentation, but they've missed the point. It's NOT the technology, it's what you DO with it!

    It's possible to do an equally good or lousy job of teaching in any medium, including the classroom. There's no more virtue in droning on while writing on a chalkboard with your back to the room than there is in doing a boring Powerpoint show which you read verbatim.

    I reject the notion that PPT leads to poorer presentation and teaching more than any other tool does. There have been thousands of lousy classroom teachers who do no preparation, lecture badly, write illegibly on the board, and generally screw up the process of teaching.

    It's not the medium, stupid, it's how you use it. Faculty need to learn to use the media they work with, regardless of what those media are.

  • Not Quite a Luddite, but. . . .
  • Posted by Philogenes , Professor at A Community College on June 2, 2010 at 3:00pm EDT
  • Years ago, when Power Point was all black and white and the province of a few early adopters, I decided that I'd put my first semester composition course into PP presentations. The results were disheartening. Students, according to their evaluations, felt that I was distanced from them by the transparencies, and they didn't like it. I decided to use PP for special occasions only.

    Some years later, Smart Instructor Workstations sprouted in a number of our classrooms. I swore I wouldn't get fooled again, but that electronic monster kept calling me and before long, I was figuring out ways to use it. I've noticed that some of the most effective uses are those that seem integral to the lesson, not overlays. It seems simple enough to think message, not medium.

  • before you break up the looms . . .
  • Posted by smart room lover on June 2, 2010 at 5:30pm EDT
  • I'm not normally stereotyped as a technology worshipper, but I've adapted enthusiastically to the "smart rooms" installed where I teach. I still rarely use powerpoints, but the technology allows so much else: near-instant access to good quality artwork via computer (either flash drive or google images) means I don't have to make and lug around cases of transparencies; the document camera allows closeups on artifacts, or passages of text, or the drawing of diagrams that are clearly visible to people in the back of the room; and when it all crashes, my cell phone allows instant calls for help from the control center. (This latter consideration, to say nothing of the occasional need to call security or other resource offices for students, should counter-balance any wish to block telephone usage.)

  • Good teaching and good teachers
  • Posted by RBG on June 2, 2010 at 5:30pm EDT
  • It doesn't matter what the medium is - textbook, chalkboard, Power Point, movie projector, or some sophisticated technological invention -- good teachers are those who can transcend the medium and provide students with that which cannot be found in the medium. The rest is glitz.

  • Have you taught if no one learns?
  • Posted by J. Jacobs , Professor Educational Leadership at Western Carolina University on June 2, 2010 at 8:45pm EDT
  • While I suspect the authors' presentation might have led to some interesting discussion at NISOD, I wonder why we continue to think that learning only occurs based on what the teacher does. I teach at a state university in a fully online masters program. When other faculty say, "Online teaching is not as good as face-to-face", I respond, "It may not be for some faculty, but I am going to be the best teacher I can be to facilitate student learning regardless of the delivery method." The challenge to develop a high quality learning environment through technology is just like the challenges of creating a high quality learning environment in a face-to-face classroom. "High tech" (computers?) or "low tech" (chalk?) is not the issue in our classrooms. The quality of student learning opportunities and assessment of same are the real challenges. Go forth and facilitate learning. It will improve your teaching.

  • Know what works for subject, and you.
  • Posted by Bernard Schuster , Owner at Arrive2.net on June 2, 2010 at 8:45pm EDT
  • I used to give a lot of lectures. I liked to have two whiteboards, one to project a PowerPoint on and one to write on as needed. Projecting the PowerPoint on a whiteboard enabled me to add circles, arrows, words, numbers, etc. on the whiteboard to respond to the questions, or just to add interest. PowerPoints take longer to prepare than regular lectures, but if you will use it repeatedly, the PowerPoint is actually more efficient, in my opinion. You can adapt and update a PowerPoint you use repeatedly, over time, so that the PowerPoint becomes a sort of living memory of what has worked for you. A PowerPoint can make you a little complacent about getting ready. Once I developed and gave a PowerPoint presentation, then went back to give it again 6 months later, but I was overconfident about how easy it would be, so it was a huge struggle, as the material was no longer fresh in my mind. I think that kind of thing happens to a lot of people and it can leave a negative impression of PowerPoint on the audience.

    Regarding hybrid classes, experiences like the one in the article teaches us that we have to make sure the student understand what is required and what is going to happen, especially when the class is in that new format.

  • Seriously?
  • Posted by Derek Bruff on June 3, 2010 at 2:15pm EDT
  • I like the attention in the conference session to what students are doing in the classroom (thinking, taking notes, summarizing, sense-making). What the students do in the class is far more important than what the teacher does--although it's the teacher that has a great influence over what the students do.

    But to say that chalk is superior to slideware? Good teaching choices are so much more context-dependent than that. My field is mathematics and, trust me, I've seen some mind-numbingly bad chalkboard lectures in my time. As others have pointed out here, it's all about how you use the tool. A chalkboard is just another tool from that standpoint.

    As for slideware, PowerPoint can be a great tool for explanations when used well. Sure, many don't use it well, but that's changing as more of us in academy find out about best practices emerging from the business world, like the ones outlined in Garr Reynolds' book, Presentation Zen.

  • Lesson organization
  • Posted by Fred Flener , Retired on June 3, 2010 at 5:00pm EDT
  • I hate it when I can't cite the study or give attribution to the researcher, but about 30-40 years ago there was a study comparing the difference between having proofs in geometry on overhead projectors versus doing the proofs in class. The results were significant. Having the work/thought process "evolve" versus having the finished product showed the student better understood the development of the proof better than the finished product.

    I think this type of study can be extrapolate to power point versus colored chalk presentations. It seems that the power point gives the students the "facts" they need to survive a test, but the development of the material gives them a better understanding of the concepts. Personally, I think the latter leads to a better education.

  • What to do when there is no blackboard
  • Posted by JJ Cohen , Professor of Immunology at Big State Medical School on June 3, 2010 at 6:30pm EDT
  • I teach 168 students in a huge hall. No one beyond the 3rd row can read what I write on the whiteboard. I don't much care for PPT for teaching, so I bought a Lenovo X61 a couple of years ago-- a REAL tablet PC. I now put it on the lectern and write on it with a stylus (no turning away from the students to do that) and it is shown via the data projector on the big screen where PPT usually goes. If I have pictures to show, I can embed them in the program (Windows Journal) or I can switch over to PPT for a moment. I could not teach otherwise in such a large classroom without being forced to use PowerPoint. The students love the Tablet. NB, I don't think you can do this with an iPad.

  • Assess the technology, don't just use it
  • Posted by Physics Prof on June 3, 2010 at 10:00pm EDT
  • Before I digress into the territory discussed in most of the comments, I want to highlight the observation about declining preparation levels entering college as technology gets used more widely in high schools. I know that many algebra classes spend weeks of class time teaching students how to use a particular calculator that makes totally lame graphs. Is all that time spent showing them how to "trace" to a zero the reason students can't solve an equation where everything is in symbols instead of numbers? Is it the reason few of them have ever done a word problem before taking a college chemistry or physics class?

    Has anyone assessed whether the introduction of a particular technology has improved the achievement of the course objectives?

    I suspect it isn't an accident that I agree with the physicist who made the presentation at NISOD and the engineer who posted here. Technology should be used when it enhances learning, not simply for its own sake. For example, clickers are a compromise between doing active learning exercises while you walk around the desks in a small classroom and having sponges sit in a 300 seat lecture hall. Clickers are probably ideal if you are training the students to pass a mc exam, but not really helpful if they can only pass the test by drawing an accurate free-body diagram.

    Several comments mentioned the need to get away from being the performing lecturer, which strikes me as odd given that I have never seen Powerpoint used to do anything other than deliver a lecture. Slideware tends to increase the divide by turning the student into a spectator rather than an active participant. How many times have you ever seen a student go up and write on the Powerpoint slide?

    Art and a few others mentioned ineffective teachers, but that is one place where Powerpoint can hide the actual knowledge and teaching skill set of an instructor who is teaching a sample class. God help you if you hire based on the glitz and end up with someone who can only show the 21st century equivalent of a film strip, with or without the record playing in the background.

  • The right tools in the right hands
  • Posted by cameron , eLearning and Educational Design on June 3, 2010 at 11:00pm EDT
  • I used to think the most dangerous tool you could use without a licence was a chainsaw, until I saw Powerpoint used in Higher Education.

    I often find myself saying to people enthusing about some new ed tech product, "it's a good tool for good teachers, until we can get some more of them, this product is a white elephant." Don't expect people who are being rewarded for being career researchers to understand the complex field of teaching and learning without providing a lot of support.

  • Depiction vs. Imagination: It's All Good?
  • Posted by Maria Shine Stewart , Multiple at Multiple on June 5, 2010 at 7:00am EDT
  • There are many subtleties of human communication that escape even the quickest technology. There is the mystery of rapport. And of imagination. And the seconds of uncertainty that accumulate and then unfold into eureka!

    I like technology -- when it works. I like projecting text, as I teach writing. I like writing in front of my students and allowing them to do the same. We edit one another, too. Of course we can--and do--engage in these activities without computers some days. I have seen basic writers greatly helped by slowing down the process (writing by hand) rather than speeding it up (with all the automatic error correction). And I have seen other students benefit by the acceleration technology allows. And then others actually stymied by it.

    How much I like technology depends on the day and the degree of computer cooperation and even how sore my wrists, elbows, shoulders are. (I type a lot, and I am not made of vinyl, plastic, rubber, or anything of the materials of the button I must press and wires I must yank.) When I finally figured out how to use Powerpoint creatively -- not to poke holes at teachers who use it dryly -- I found, as I suspect, that even with the best of planning it can hem in my normally highly associative teaching style. Fun when used well? Of course. Dramatic, even. Like movie making.

    And though I love working smart classrooms--and had the joy of teaching in one painted blue that was smarter than smart--the Mensa of classrooms--one of the best things I did was to borrow a remote clicker so I could freely move around the room. I have a gentler voice and have always communicated through spoken words plus gesture, silence, eye contact, etc. Not only are these among the tools of teacher communication, but students need to know how to use their whole bodies, too. I need to model this and encourage this; some dimensions of "how to be attentive" are at risk with being plugged in 24/7.

    Do students expect ppt...like it...wait for it...rely on it...oh, yes. Even too much. So we gently discuss its limits. But I also see re-entry students using it for the first time--and they feel so accomplished. It's here to stay but -- I hope -- maybe more mindfully. The slides are not paper-savers, by the way. Designing "old fashioned" visual aids is not yet obsolete, and all that coloring by hand might still have value for the brain.

  • I was one of his students...
  • Posted by Amy Gladwin , Student/Physics at Pima Community College on June 5, 2010 at 7:00am EDT
  • In case anyone was wondering how effective this guy is in the classroom, I was one of his students. I took Dr Pitucco for several classes: Honors Colloquium, Introductory Mechanics, Intro to Electricity and Magnetism, Thermodynamics, Quantum Theory and Special Relativity, and Tensor Theory.
    When he walks into the room, he brings nothing but a dry erase marker, walks straight to the board (while beginning his lecture on the way), and picks up exactly where he left off last class. I don't have a single other teacher that can develop a lesson before my eyes that is so dense, yet fluid, engaging and entertaining-without notes, a book, or a powerpoint to guide his train of thought. He may have given you the impression he is a just lecturing professor. That's not exactly how I would describe his method.

    Sure, there's a lecture going on, but it's in a language you've never seen before. He uses set theoretic notation from day one. It's pretty scary the first time you see it, but I've grown so fond of it now I use it all the time. Then, he doesn't just lecture while we sit there quietly and take notes. In fact, if you dare sit in the front, you'd better be prepared to bark out answers to difficult questions on the spot while he shouts "quickly!"

    In class, he has a persona that is strict, demanding, unapologetic, unsympathetic and intimidating. It's very stressful to be a member of his class, but you learn how to have conviction when you answer a question. He knows his stuff, and I've never met a student that didn't have the highest level of respect for him. Meet him after class and you'll find it's all an act. He's really very charming, funny, and encouraging.

    The alter classroom ego calms down a bit when the class has proven they're willing to do the hard work it takes to learn the material. Somehow he manages to inspire class after class of lazy, uninspired, self-entitled brats (I'm an older student, can't you tell?) to want to work hard. I've seen over and over again. The personality of his students seems to change through the course of a semester. Kids that were once ready to cheat on a test or copy someone's homework all of a sudden have strong opinions on complacency and academic integrity.
    I wanted to be a physicist when I entered my first class with him, but I really didn't understand what it took until I made it through my first semester. His classes are by far harder than any you would expect to find a community college, but his philosophy is that when I get my PhD (as he assumed we all would be doing!) I'll be competing with Ivy League schools and countries that "teach Calculus in middle school." It's like a scared straight intervention, but once you get the first taste of success in his class it's kind of exhilarating! My first test score in my first class was a 45%, which was actually much higher than the class average. It was the lowest test score I had ever received and I studied so hard for that test.

    Eventually, I learned the right methods, joined a study group which met for several hours nightly, and somehow managed to get a perfect score on one of his E&M exams. I was instantly famous because no one had ever done that before. I carried the test around with me for a month like it was an Olympic gold medal so I could show it whenever someone asked to see it. I was so proud of this test, that if I had had kids, I would have had to pick the ugliest one, remove their picture from the frame and replace it with this test.

    Until this point, though I had always wanted to go to graduate school, I kept it a secret because I was just a waitress at a resort, going back to school. I knew it was kind of a lofty dream and wasn't even really sure I could do it. Once you survive a class like Dr Pitucco's though, you pretty much feel like you can do anything.

     

  • Please give us options!
  • Posted by JB on June 7, 2010 at 5:15am EDT
  • I like powerpoint, and I like to extemporize on the white/chalkboard. What the heck am I supposed to do in a classroom where the screen is 2.5 ft away from the front wall in the center of the chalkboards in a shallow, wide classroom in which the students seated on the L & R third of the room cannot see the chalkboard on the opposite side of the screen? What am I supposed to do when the screen covers the *entire* board? Wait 2 minutes for the screen to go up/down every time I need to write something on the board? The technology setups don't give us a chance to use PPT wisely! Would someone please tell the IT/classroom technology folks to ask those using the classroom before installing the latest greatest thing?

  • An old discussion
  • Posted by Dave , retired at Central Florida Community College on June 7, 2010 at 3:45pm EDT
  • In 37 years of teaching, I have been through several layers of technology. The main thing I discovered is that all of it has positive and negative aspects. After that, my major contribution here is to advise using lots of different things in class. Too much of almost any technique turns the mind to jello. Lean on your strengths, but try out new technologies and evaluate their effectiveness, just as any good teacher does for their entire career. And, oh, yes, the new technology needs to be easily available, and without Everest-high learning curves. Teachers are busy people. We got 'larning to do, and to impart!!

  • There is a season for every purpose...
  • Posted by Sherri , AP Literature and English III lead teacher at Chavez High School on August 11, 2010 at 5:45pm EDT
  • I, like so many of my learned colleagueas, view teaching as both a science and an art. Under the best of circumstances and in the best of classrooms, we are highly skilled craftspeople plying the trade of opening minds to new thought. I view all technologies, old and new, as grist for my mill and tools for my trade. (For those of you wondering-yes, I speak this way in class as well-:-)) Whether you provide me with chalk, marker, keyboard, or a stick and a pan of dirt, I will teach my students to the best of my abilities. Hopefully all professional educators do the same.