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Our Obligation to Adapt

October 22, 2010

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Imagine the following hypothetical scenario. Jen is a college first-year student. She attended a public high school in which randomly selected students received iPads as part of an innovative curricular grant project. Jen was fortunate enough to be one of the selected students. She loved writing, reading and using the computer – sometimes for fun, sometimes for homework.

Jen scored in the 78th percentile on the SATs, played on a varsity athletic team, and late in her senior year, showed an aptitude for and interest in photography. She worked during the summer. One of her two parents is a college graduate. Their combined income approximates $95,000.

Jen was accepted to a variety of colleges and universities, and decided to attend a mid-sized university, largely because of the financial aid package, and because its website showcased a new photography major.

Jen was bemused after her first week in college. She is a product of iPhones, smartboards, iPads and text messaging, and yet her classroom was devoid of technological gadgetry. Her professors lecture, sometimes with PowerPoint, sometimes without. They talk about research as if it is something to be done in a library, and not on one’s lap or in one’s hand.

The preceding example may or may not sound familiar to many educators and students, but it is likely to be the norm in the next few years. Our students process, retrieve and garner information in ways unimaginable a few years ago, if not months ago. We faculty, trained with card catalogs, photocopy packets, and reserve reading, are rapidly becoming living, breathing anachronisms.

Challenges abound – for Jen and for us. Students’ demand for infotainment need not be satisfied, but so too one should not dismiss the reality that such demand is a creation of cultural forces not easily ignored. Similarly, Jen’s technological acumen is not unique, nor is her professor’s lack of it. That divide is only likely to grow. Even as universities attempt to prepare faculty with info-tech workshops and seminars, today’s teenager is going to be more proficient at web design, for example, than your typical 50-something year-old English or sociology professor.

Years ago, I would find an article – in hard copy or on microfiche. If the abstract looked relevant, I would print out the article and read it. Now the digital version of that article is available with the touch of a few clicks. Which article abstracts does one read? How does one choose? The plethora of data is overwhelming for me; it must be daunting for someone without years of experience filtering and culling information.

We need to devote some time to rethink how we – faculty and students alike – read, write, study, research, and more generally, learn. As a relatively new dean, I have asked faculty to rethink their classes, not by tweaking a syllabus by adding or removing a book, but by thinking about today’s and tomorrow’s students. While this process has just commenced, I find that, generally, faculty are eager to accept the challenge. They too realize that today’s students are showing different learning skills than but a few years ago. Anecdotal evidence suggests that they are comfortable with facts – dates, times, and places – but less secure questioning ambiguous or conflicting ideas. Perhaps this is nothing new. After all, contextual analysis is a tricky and sometimes exhausting enterprise.

We have to develop those skills by adapting our own pedagogy and modifying our formal training. Many of us still love the book – the smell, the spine, and the ability to write in the margins. But we need not be intellectual dinosaurs. Perhaps there is something to be said about digital textbooks, replete with high-pixel digital images, highlighting and note-taking capabilities, podcasts and moving cameras. (The new digital art history books are mesmerizing.)

How do we develop those skills? The responsibility, I would suggest first lies with provosts, deans and chairs. Instead of wasting valuable time on weekly meetings about the status quo, we should be listening carefully to college-bound high school students. Our faculty should be present too, perhaps sitting in the background taking copious notes (either on a memo pad or an iPad). Provosts should make technology in the classroom the theme of their faculty retreats, perhaps for the next year or two, if only because technological advancements find the marketplace faster than the glacially slow academic calendar.

We then should be holding a series of summits with our information technology departments, not as we always do to discuss next year’s budget, but to imagine together what the next five or ten years of classroom instruction will look like, and to develop specific strategies for implementing that vision. Perhaps it will require a million dollars. Perhaps, indeed. If so, then it is time for us deans to raise funds, or for us quickly to develop strategic partners with computer companies.

There are no more Luddites in the university. I should know. I learned how to do chi-squares calculations by hand, and I still believe such a method teaches students how to understand the relationship between two variables. I still have a file cabinet full of journal articles. My fondness for books and bookstores has not dissipated, nor has my passion for reading the hard copy of the newspaper.

Critics may misinterpret this call for action as a desire to teach to the whims of technology. Quite the contrary. Even the able scholar with a fountain pen now uses a laptop and a flash drive. Information abounds – good, bad, true and false. It can be retrieved and stored in ways inconceivable but two years ago. Teaching Jen to discern what is crud and what is critically valuable – in a way that both inspirational and imaginative – is no easy task. Her voracious intellectual appetite must be met with creative energy we have not yet tapped.

Robert M. Eisinger is the dean of the school of liberal arts at the Savannah College of Art and Design.

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Comments on Our Obligation to Adapt

  • Color me skeptical
  • Posted by Kate , Social scientist on October 22, 2010 at 7:00am EDT
  • I teach in the same state as the author, at a regional institution. I am probably one of the highest tech users in my college within the university. I have almost 500 students this semester, 92% of whom, on a survey the first week of class said that their tech skills were "strong" or "outstanding." I defined tech skills as 1) able to attach files to an email or a discussion post; 2) able to download a reading from Bb; 3) familiarity with what a discussion board is; 4)comfort with reading and locating files in an online environment; 5) saving a document in Word 2003 or Word 2007. I had a Likert scale from which they could choose; "strong" or "outstanding" was the highest choice.

    And I would actually like some evidence of our students' great tech knowledge please. Because I don't see it. They cannot navigate Blackboard ("it is too confusing" or "it is too busy, I can't find anything there" (the home page has six [very clearly marked in words and each with a different icon] folders under which everything 'lives'; they are attaching the picture of the file and not the file, which means that I cannot open it, hence they get no grade; they cannot post to the discussion board because "it is too complicated" (one types an entry and hits 'post'), etc. I have had, between 8 discussion posts so far this semester and 5 short essays to upload, nearly 42% make some technological error that means their assignment was not graded.

    One more thing -- these technological failures are in INSPITE of the fact that I added, this semester, clear "how to upload" directions (and how not to send me the picture of the file) and how to be sure the file is in Word 2003 or 2007 directions at the bottom of every assignment in big, bold letters.

    I think this author and all of us really need to nuance this "this generation knows technology" a whole lot before telling us faculty that we need to adapt to them. They might know some technology well, but that does not mean they know academic technology well, nor does it mean they want to learn it. Or at least recognize that their lack of learning of academic technology is an easy excuse we will hear over and over again.

    So before I and others have to sit in meetings for the next two years about their wonderful tech skills -- can we please get real about those skills (and lack of them) first?

    After all, another columnist for IHE has encouraged us to only attend meetings that are worth attending and focus on our own research, etc., too. So please don't give administrators more to pontificate about until we actually know more about these students and their tech skills.
  • Anecdotal evidence is unconvincing
  • Posted by DrRingDing on October 22, 2010 at 8:00am EDT
  • I agree with Kate; more generalizable evidence of students' technological skills is necessary, and it needs to go beyond notoriously inaccurate student self-reporting (social desirability bias anyone?) The well-worn 'n of 1' rationale is inappropriate and insufficient rationale for claiming a need for instructional design change. My new favorite quip in discussions like these is "the plural of anecdote is not data."

    My experiences teaching traditional-aged (22-26) first year masters students is that they are unable to create simple data tables in Excel and convert them to appropriate graphs, figures, or charts. Ostensibly, these are students who have had more experience interacting with technology than undergraduates. As a result, the author's recommendation that "we should be listening carefully to college-bound high school students" raises the serious question: are students the best judge of how they need to be taught in college? More national data as evidence, please.

    Finally, the author's knowledge claim that "There are no more Luddites in the university" is simply not true. How would Dean Elsinger explain the results of a recent faculty survey at my Doctoral /Research-Intensive institution indicating that less than 50% of faculty use email? (and believe me, the alternate explanations are not Twitter and FaceBook).

    My sense is that this commentary is based on a limited sight vantage point of higher education: from behind a desk at a special focus private institution with privileged students.
  • Future Shock
  • Posted by Karin Foster on October 22, 2010 at 8:15am EDT
  • This term lost its shock value by the 70s. But the whole society is struggling with the rapid advance in digital information systems producing endless feedback loops and compounds of one another.

    For decades those students who went into teaching naturally taught the way they learned. Now instructors are having to learn to teach through radically different methods and media without having first experienced these as students themselves over extended time. They did not, as students, "imprint" with such academic habits. It is not deeply ingrained upon the soul. There is nothing to flip: "For a long time I was the student on the receiving end of a lecture; now I'm the teacher on the sending end."

    It is for many like simultaneously learning and teaching a new foreign language.
    Therefore, institutions should consider, as part of professional development, having faculties take elaborate, interactive, image-rich, online courses in their present discipline at advanced levels. And they should also take an online course or two in a discipline in which they are complete beginners. Teachers need to know what it is like to be a student in these new areas, and, I sumit, this would go a long way toward helping them internalize new teaching skills as well. Problem is, technology is changing so fast, this is all rather like warp-speed future shock.
  • Posted by Russell on October 22, 2010 at 8:45am EDT
  • I also agree that I have seen no evidence of a technological literate generation. Yes, they can text really well on their cell phones...but beyond that they just as well be from the 18th century.
  • Ditto!
  • Posted by Nick , prof/chem at Hamline University on October 22, 2010 at 8:45am EDT
  • We have to give detailed instructions on the use of MS Excel, Blackboard, registering their clickers on the Turning Point website, using an online course system for doing problems, sending an attachment, finding their pin numbers for printing on campus, etc.

    However, if you want help with getting through a level in "Halo" you will have no shortage of student help. Or, if you want to download a song, movie, or other form of entertainment, the students are up to speed (assuming it is not something you have posted on Blackboard!).

    Basically, they know how to have FUN with technology, but not how to WORK with technology.

    As usual, it is the faculty member's fault - we are the deadwood, the lazy, over-paid, tenured (I wish), dinosaurs. (I try to ignore the fact that city bus drivers make more than most professors at my institution, my 60+ hour work weeks, and that if you don't have tenure you better be careful what you say that is critical at many institutions.) Perhaps administrators should be required to take a course per year to see what is going on in the classrooms at their institutions. I don't think many of the faculty are resting on their "laurels".
  • Also dubious
  • Posted by Michael , Humanist at Ithaca College on October 22, 2010 at 9:00am EDT
  • It is difficult for me to square Eisinger's argument with what emerges from this NY Times story earlier this week:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/20/nyregion/20textbooks.html

    Moreover, my own experience as a humanist trying to meet the students where they are reputed to be (in terms of tech saavy) has confirmed the perspectives of the first two comments.

    Finally, there seems to be an element of IT departments on campus promoting this narrative in order to justify the continuing expansion of their own departments. As a long-time scholar of teaching and learning I couldn't agree more that there's just not enough evidence to support these arguments for radical pedagogical transformation.
  • Eye on the Ball
  • Posted by Cranky Old Prof on October 22, 2010 at 9:30am EDT
  • "[Her professors] talk about research as if it is something to be done in a library, and not on one’s lap or in one’s hand."

    Well, at least they talk about research. Your implication that the freshman students think about research in a more "advanced" way (or in any way at all) is, well, just silly.

    I agree that some professors refuse to learn new technology, but they are actually fairly rare. Most show a moderate interest, and learn the forms that are actually useful to them (not just the one's that currently make their students squeal the loudest). Do you really think it is necessary that every professor spend his/her time learning whatever this year's fashionable gadget is (knowing full well that it will be replaced by something else in just a couple years' time)?

    Or is it more important that we keep up to date on the CONTENT we teach students, rather than vehicles by which we convey it. So the question becomes rather stark: is it better to teach antiquated content on flashy gadgets, or up-to-date content with books and chalkboards and the occasional Power Point slide. I leave this as an exercise for the reader. (Caveat: One thing technology hasn't changed is that there are still only 24 hours in a day.)
  • Budget?
  • Posted by Samuel J. Huskey , Associate Professor and Chair, Classics and Letters at University of Oklahoma on October 22, 2010 at 9:30am EDT
  • "How do we develop those skills? The responsibility, I would suggest first lies with provosts, deans and chairs. Instead of wasting valuable time on weekly meetings about the status quo, we should be listening carefully to college-bound high school students."

    Is that because they know best how to teach college classes? No. As the expenses associated with higher education spiral out of control, provosts, deans, and chairs need to think about the responsible use, not the gratuitous use, of technology in the classroom.
  • Posted by Jonathan Dresner on October 22, 2010 at 9:30am EDT
  • <I>Anecdotal evidence suggests that they are comfortable with facts – dates, times, and places – but less secure questioning ambiguous or conflicting ideas.</i>

    Instead of relying on impressions, try reading some of the actual research on cognition and learning - this dichotomy is actually a very bad description of most students' skills and attitudes.
  • Black-white view
  • Posted by LEt , Sr. Research Analyst at Community College on October 22, 2010 at 10:45am EDT
  • I think there is a lot of black-white talk in these comments.

    Let's get back to a more realistic assessment for just a second.

    1. Controversy about how tech-savy certain groups are

    The type of institution (and I agree with one of the previous comments) probably matters. If you are at an Ivy league institution, you will probably have a more (both education and social) tech-savy crowd, right?

    Also I think that non-tenured instructors will have a lot more incentives to learn new teaching technology that their tenured counterparts. Yes, of course the idealist tenured faculty member is always willing to learn more, I know, but face it, this world is not populated by idealists only...

    PLEASE don't make statements like "this generation is tech-savy", "professors are technoidiots". Not helpful.

    2. We all agree that Blackboard is not the gold standard in usability, don't we?

    3. If you don't think your students are tech-savy, go ahead and deal with it in a more productive manner. Teach them. That's what you're getting paid for!

    4. And yes, it is important to use advanced teaching technologies. This high unemployment world cannot afford more computer illiterates.
  • Research
  • Posted by Ann Marie Kinnell , Anthropology and Sociology at University of Southern Mississippi on October 22, 2010 at 10:45am EDT
  • <They talk about research as if it is something to be done in a library, and not on one’s lap or in one’s hand.>

    As one of the "they" (and btw a sociology prof homing in on 50 in the next 7 years), I teach my students that research happens in the real world. For my discipline, it's the literature review that happens in the library - part of which is available electronically, part of which isn't. You need to be able to access both.

    I agree with previous comments. If I want my students to text me, they can do that. Use JSTOR to find an article? EBSCO Host? Even after significant coaching, a significant number of students have difficulty doing this. Maybe because JSTOR doesn't look like Facebook??

  • Posted by Susan on October 22, 2010 at 10:45am EDT
  • Unfortunately, you are working for an institution that does not promote people with vision. It will, ocassionally, bring the visionaries in--to upgrade itself--but the people who do the heavy lifting do not last long.
  • Posted by Assoc Prof on October 22, 2010 at 11:00am EDT
  • The financial problems at many institutions complicate this issue. If you invest heavily in technology in the classroom, you find that the campus staff to support your efforts are not there when you need them. It is difficult getting new versions of standard software updated on classroom computers and our student tech support lab was just closed. Those who are most dependent on tech support are left in the lurch when budgets are cut, so it makes more sense to stick to low-tech but reliable approaches in the classroom.
  • Same Old Song
  • Posted by Philogenes , Professor at a Community College on October 22, 2010 at 11:30am EDT
  • For the last twenty years or so, I've heard that technology was going to save education. Students would all learn what they needed to learn (at their own pace, perhaps). Faculty would find that burdensome tasks could be handed off to computers. We wouldn't have to worry about classroom space because distance education would render the traditional classroom obsolete.

    None of that has happened. Instead, we see laptop and notebook computers in our wi-fi equipped classrooms--and we worry if we see that a couple of students are on Facebook instead of taking notes. Some of us are giving ground slowly and reluctantly: online sources are okay but not Wikipedia. And we're surprised that our students, a good many of whom have been around computers and the Internet almost all of their lives, have trouble with simple tasks, like changing a file format when they save a document or setting up a format for a document.

    Of course there are things they can't do. They're students. If they knew everything we know, we'd be flipping burgers. Still, we must meet them where they are. For example, we went to libraries because that's where the information was. They go to the Internet, and they will go to the library virtually if we show them how to do it. Critical reading? They've heard so much about the dangers and pitfalls of the Internet that they have what sometimes appears to be an innate skepticism.

    I would be glad if I never again heard an administrator tout the wonders of technology, but I want very much to hear about it from my students' points of view. I may have long ago passed fifty, but I'm more than willing to show them what I've learned (some of it from my own kids.)
  • re: What are the College Bound Saying?
  • Posted by Peter C. Herman , Professor, Department of English at San Diego State University on October 22, 2010 at 12:00pm EDT
  • "How do we develop those skills? The responsibility, I would suggest first lies with provosts, deans and chairs. Instead of wasting valuable time on weekly meetings about the status quo, we should be listening carefully to college-bound high school students."

    As the proud father of one such student, I think I am in some position to say about this group thinks, and I can assure you that technology is not part of the mix when students decide on their dream college. Instead, you hear about low class sizes, a vibrant intellectual environment, a broad array of cultural events on campus, and most of all, personal attention. It says something that none of the advertisements my daughter has been inundated with since she took her SATs from the Ivies to CSU Channel Islands mention technology among their selling points. Nobody says: "Come to X University, where the professors hold their classes online!" Instead, colleges and universities focus their message on the quality of the undergraduate experience, not on the latest electronic gadgetry.

    And as the proud author of manyf books and articles, I take exception to the author's description of faculty as stuck in amber. It says something about the author's distance from research and from productive faculty that he would so mischaracterize the people who do the teaching and the research.
  • A question
  • Posted by History Prof. on October 22, 2010 at 12:30pm EDT
  • I'm grateful for people who are willing to discuss this hot-button issue in a genuine and cooperative way. Faculty ought to be willing to experiment with new ways of reaching students that do not compromise rigor (the infotainment trap). But administrators need to stop associating technology with good/innovative teaching tout court.

    I have one honest question for the author and others who are urging faculty to develop more tech-savvy courses. What resources are you providing to allow faculty to make that transition? You state that "We need to devote some time to rethink how we – faculty and students alike – read, write, study, research, and more generally, learn." The key words here are "devote some time." Are you providing faculty members who want to undertake ambitious reforms with release time from other demands to make this happen? If your tech budget goes wholly to hardware, software, and IT staff, and not to instructors who might want to learn new software, develop experimental teaching formats, or otherwise re-envision their jobs, then don't be surprised when teachers already burdened with overfull classes, multiplying committee assignments, and increasing demands to publish/create, pass and continue doing what they always have done.
  • Professor or student technology?
  • Posted by Kevin , Learning Leader at Evil Corporate America on October 22, 2010 at 1:00pm EDT
  • Philogenes provides a great perspective when he says, "I would be glad if I never again heard an administrator tout the wonders of technology, but I want very much to hear about it from my students' points of view."

    I found it interesting that many comments posted here discount the students' technological savvy because said students don't get the technology being used by the professors. As an occasional adjunct, myself, I also feel the pain of anyone first learning Black Board. It's cumbersome compared to more user-friendly solutions.

    In evil corporate America training-land we take advantage of the technology that the young folks are familiar with. We deliver learning opportunities through those channels with great success.
  • Our Obligation to Resist Nonsense
  • Posted by Kelly Roberts at Slow Pendulums on October 22, 2010 at 2:00pm EDT
  • How many more of these articles do we need, in which "trailblazing" administrators and professors make vague, unsupported claims about "digital natives," and then offer silly and/or meaningless "solutions," which amount to nothing short of selling education out to the tech industry?

    Allow me to make a couple of points about "our obligation to adapt."

    1. If Jen is bemused by the prospect of serious research after her first week in college, then Jen doesn't belong in college. But maybe Jen isn't bemused. Maybe Jen is a smart young woman who understands that learning is hard work, and that her iPhone can't do any of that work for her. And maybe Jen is tired of seemingly responsible adults (educators, no less) assuming that she is a stupefied "product" of her "technological gadgetry."

    2. Faculty taking notes on what high school students want? Provosts making technology the focus of faculty retreats? Million dollar information technology summits? And all of this based on "anecdotal evidence" (the author realizes what `anecdotal' means, I hope) that students are "comfortable with facts" but not "ambiguous or conflicting ideas."

    Arthur Levine wrote what appears to be exactly the same article in these very pages. It was called "Digital Students, Industrial-Era Students," and I responded to it at length here:

    http://slowpendulums.wordpress.com/2010/09/15/we-dont-need-no-education/
  • Posted by OC on October 22, 2010 at 3:30pm EDT
  • Yeah, I too call BS. I routinely have to devote tons of time to helping students navigate Blackboard, e-res, and other online things that I taught myself in about five minutes. They struggle to attach documents correctly in gmail (two students last semester attached one of their final exam essays, but not the other, and had to be chased down before they forfeited 20% of the exam grade.)

    Last year I switched back from e-res to a course pack, because with e-res at least 50% of the students never seemed to have the reading with them. I got some grumbling at the beginning of the semester from a minority of students who didn't want to have to carry it in addition to their other books, but everyone had the reading all the time, and at the end of the semester my evaluations specifically noted how much the students liked the convenience of the course pack.

    From where I sit, the problem is not that professors are benighted fuddy-duddies, but rather that students are not strong users of the technology that is meant to help them, and in fact often find it distracting them from the real work. (We're focused here on the delivery system--iPad, Blackboard, paper? But no matter what you choose, at the end of the day, they still have to do and understand the reading, which is the biggest challenge for almost all of them, and from which focusing on delivery system distracts us.)
  • Alfie … What’s It All About?
  • Posted by Frizbane Manley on October 22, 2010 at 4:30pm EDT
  • What is completely missing from this article and the subsequent discussion, is the point of computers (and computing) in an academic environment and the nature of alignments between students’ capabilities and intellectual -- or even academic -- outcomes. In the absence of those alignments the notion of “tech savvy” is completely meaningless.

    The students to which I will refer are BBA and MBA majors in a business school named in honor of a member of one of the South’s most prominent families vis-à-vis massive resistance ... and at one of those USN&WR’s “America’s Best Colleges.” Students’ tuition and fees include a laptop, and, for years, the university boasted that it was one of the first completely wired campuses in the country.

    There I taught courses in which students learned much about the applications of mathematics and statistics for the purpose of understanding business phenomena and business decision-making. It is noteworthy that, at the beginning of each term, I gave my students an easy 15-item test of high school Algebra I questions (e.g., graph 4x - 2y – 12 = 0) for which, over eight semesters, the average grade was 27%.

    In my courses, I used Excel extensively (for pedagogical, not analytical, purposes) and both a statistical analysis package and an operations research package (for my operations management and supply chain management courses). So you see, there was a very detailed alignment between my learning expectations and the desired computer savvy of my students.

    [Note: Thus far no one has emphasized that, for the vast majority of us, the computer is not even close to being an end in itself. It is “there” merely for the purpose of enhancing and facilitating learning. Therefore, if “computer savvy” is not defined in terms of using that TOOL -- much as one used to use all of that lab equipment in a physics or chemistry course -- then they probably have a distorted sense of the purpose and potential of computing.]

    In any event, although many of my students were somewhat savvy in what I think (assume) is the sense of Professor Eisinger’s essay, those skills seemed to have very, very limited transfer value vis-à-vis the data, statistical, and mathematical analyses that were significant components of my courses. I wish I had kept data to “test” this hypothesis -- it never occurred to me until well after the fact -- but I came to believe that those grunts who had never touched a computer before their college experience turned out to be more accurate and more efficient users of their computers in my classes than the young hotshots who really were savvy in some respect (perhaps gathering “information,” but certainly not analyzing systems or reinforcing learning).

    Two parting shots ...

    1. I would have loved to use the open source R in my statistics and mathematics classes, but, alas, I would have spent 80% of my time hand-holding those who just wouldn’t “get it,” including many who were savvy in the Eisinger sense. I was already spending waaay too much time hand-holding with those who were struggling with the software packages I was already using.

    2. It always amazes me how unsophisticated (to put it kindly) college students -- and even administrative assistants -- are in the use of MS Word, OpenOffice, and other fairly powerful word processors. What’s that about?

  • Technology and its proper use
  • Posted by Hugh Miller , Biology at ETSU on October 22, 2010 at 8:45pm EDT
  • I think that most of the comments are right on. All I can add is my observations after 22 years of teaching biology. I was an early adopter of technology in our department and as such I stated using PowerPoint all the time in all my classes. I even taught other faculty to use PP. However, over time what I realized was that I had gotten lazy and forgot the fact that PP is not the end-all for providing information. Also, I started getting student comments about how they were getting so sick of all the professors using PP and that they were not liking that technology! As a firm advocate for continuous improvement, I scaled back my PP use and found that if I actually use other tools and mixed it up; the students were understanding the concepts and I was reaching more students.

    Technology is simply a tool and we have to decide the best use of that tool to allow our students to learn to think and analyze. Also, you must teach all students to use the Internet from the standpoint of how to interpret the validity of information! I do not think that anyone in K-12 is teaching the students to discern the validity of information!! So, there are many skills that we must teach to the current and future students and we must not make the mistake that the author of this post makes by assuming something is true---never assume skills in students, it will disappoint you every time!!!
  • Computers are like an appliance
  • Posted by Psychprof on October 22, 2010 at 11:15pm EDT
  • Good discussion all. One of the problems with students' use of technology is they use the computer as an appliance, not as a learning tool. Its a game machine, a communications machine, an entertainment machine. The average student has no more idea of how the computer works than how the phone works. This is no slam against students, mind you, but I think its a descriptive of how students come to us. They can use the computer, but not so well for learning tasks. They view themselves as tech savvy, but that "savvy" is pretty limited.

    I am reminded of when my child's elementary school went to an "all laptop" school. It was exciting that they all had laptops, but my question was--how are you using laptops in a way that make them learning tools?

    I think we do need to help our students learn to use technology. But much of what they need to learn is how to apply the "18th century tools" of critical thinking, close reading, and good writing skills to their assignments. Its how we can help them use technology to further this type of learning that seems most useful to them.

    Happy weekend everyone.
  • Respect for intellectual tools must transcend their media
  • Posted by Christopher Berg , Professor of Music at University of South Carolina on October 23, 2010 at 1:15pm EDT
  • Many students' familiarity and fluency with technology reflects their larger interests in society: they're comfortable with the popular culture aspects of technology (e.g. facebook, uploading videos to YouTube), but they're not always able to use technology's tools for more effective and creative work.

    Perhaps it's symptomatic of the larger issue of literacy: Respect for the tools of "critical thinking, close reading, and good writing skills" (mentioned by Psychprof above) must transcend their media.

    I gasped last week as I helped a student with a graduate prospectus on his laptop: he was formatting the document with the spacebar, didn't know what a right tab was, and had wasted hours getting it presentable. (That said, I've seen the same behavior in some of my senior colleagues.)

    In the arts, especially, technology has not traditionally been necessary for us to do our own work (disseminating or writing about it now is a different story), but it can enhance our teaching. I'd love to use PowerPoint in my classes, but do not have access to a classroom where I can simply plug in my laptop and start teaching.

    I've invested my own resources and time to acquire and learn to use various software programs for research and teaching. I suspect that this is a barrier for some overworked and underpaid senior people whose training occurred before the advent of the personal computer.

  • RE: Our Obligation to Adapt
  • Posted by Christine Greenhow , Assistant Professor, College of Education & iSchool at University of Maryland, College Park on October 24, 2010 at 9:45am EDT
  • Before overhauling the whole instructional system based on a sense that today's students demand or require or are technologically savvy and therefore, primed for pervasive, technology-infused instruction, colleges should assess the current state of their students' technology access and use as well as students' "social envelope" surrounding that access and use. Students who have 24/7 access to the internet via a wireless device they own and family and friends who regularly use online technologies will likely have decidedly different prior experiences, expectations, and needs regarding technology-infused instruction (e.g., wholly online courses or hybrid courses) than students who do not. Such measures, in addition to more qualitative approaches such as the "copious notes" one comment mentioned above, must fore-ground instructional revisions. In addition, colleges and individual instructors should be thinking about what aspects of their course or typical teaching problems could be transformed or resolved with today's freely available online technologies rather than think in terms of using the internet for its own sake. Finally, just because expensive software and hardware is being pushed by corporate interests does not mean colleges should invest in them (or even accept so-called "free" products that will require tech support and professional development). Many free and open source online services exist today as does open courseware and digital content objects for teaching purposes. We should be teaching with the technologies students can actually use in their daily lives, and they will not use expensive, standalone technologies that are learned and used solely in a class.
  • ditto
  • Posted by nh on October 24, 2010 at 11:30am EDT
  • There is actually research out there that says technology doesn't necessarily enhance learning. It's the educator. It's the same in high school. You have to engage students.

    PowerPoints are flat and passive teaching tools. They are boring (but good for study notes). Think about all the meetings you have sat through. How interesting was it? In fact, a high level military official said he is no longer using PowerPoint because people were bored, and some were even falling asleep.

    People are social creatures and want to be engaged. How are educators going to do this? There are professors who are doing this. One of the professors I saw, who was interviewed on 60 minutes was amazing at engaging his large classes of 250 students. But not all of us are entertainers. So, what do you do?

    The days of passive teaching are over. Today's kids want you to entertain them. There are few who are intrinsically motivated and want to learn because of their thirst for knowledge.

    Also, think about most companies: what are they doing to engage their employees? Are they using technology? No. Most jobs entail sitting in a cube and working *on* a computer. Education is to prepare people for the working world, and hopefully along the way, they become lifelong learners.

    Also, to address Kate's comments about students saying it's too hard to post comments or attach documents -- it's not too hard. They don't want to take the time to *read*. I have students who tell me to tell them what to do because they don't want to read the directions.

    My perspective comes from working in a high school. Kids need so much more than technology to learn, and it starts with the parents.
  • Posted by Steven Sharp on October 24, 2010 at 1:45pm EDT
  • I agree with others that to assume technology expertise of our incoming students is problematic at best. However, to assume they don't have technology savviness because they cannot handle Blackboard shows lack of understanding just the kind of knowledge students have. Blackboard is an artificial construct, and not at all similar to the social networks that our teens are used to working in. Incoming college students are used to searching blogs, working on social networking sites and other web 2.0 tools where the emphasis is on the person, not the subject or the classroom. Blackboard is a construct that is intended for instruction, where the person is put in the background. These are not at all similar, and students will find themselves very uncomfortable in this environment, even to the point of not wanting to go there unless they are forced.
    I know from personal experience as both a teacher and a student how correct some of what the author has to say is. I have been teaching in the public school setting for several years, and recently moved back to a university to get my Ph.D. and found that nothing had changed in the many years since I got my masters. You still sit in a classroom, and listen or talk and sometimes there is a power point presentation. Not much different than the chalkboard presentations for the 80s and 90s.
    Sure, you can find articles online in the libraries - and read them electronically, but there is no instruction in these skills. Students are expected to figure these things out for themselves - just because they are "digital natives". I think it is a mistake to assume that just because it is electronic, that students will know how to use it. Simple things like how to do a reasonable search for articles aught to be taught, not just in one class, but in all classes - a brief discussion so that a feedback loop wherein students and faculty can learn from each other and develop these skills throughout their time at school.
    Things are changing, and in some ways faster than we can keep up. I commend the author for his insights and attempts to keep his college moving forward but with an open mind about how to do it. It is important to understand our students and their needs, if we are going to be of any service to them.
  • Posted by Russell on October 26, 2010 at 2:45pm EDT
  • "An Overview of Progress and Problems in Educational Technology"
    http://greav.ub.edu/der/index.php/der/article/viewFile/39/27