21st Century Skills
 
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The year is over.  I am now at the beach in N.C. with my family, but everyone is sleeping, so it gives me some time to reflect.  Mike and I have done some great work this year for, and with, our students.  By using skype, Google docs, inspiration, comic life, wikis, Google earth and other technologies, we have been able to link students in a way that would not have been possible when I was in high school in the late 1980's or when Mike was finishing high school in the late 1990's.  Technology has experienced exponential growth and we teachers are playing catch-up.  I see how technology has effected our teaching; how it is impacting teachers in my building and student learning.  It is truly amazing to see what is happening, but the question continues to be: how has it changed teaching and learning?  I think as teachers, we tend to use the final "product" to analyze the effect of methodology and the use of technology.  I don't think everyone can see the change brought about by the use of technology by looking at a students podcast, imovie, wiki, etc.  These final products are great technological tools, but you cannot see the collaboration, research, revision in any of these final products.  Like these blog entries; you see the final written piece, but no nothing of the revisions and conversations (Mike's revising this right now) that go into an outstanding final product.

The question, however, must still be answered.  Modern education loves data and proof, however, proof and data do not always tell the complete story.  We must explain how technology changes our role as teachers and how it impacts the role of students and individual learning.  I will not be able to answer these on my own and will ask for your help: please add your ideas and explain how technology/computer have changed teaching and learning in your classroom.  

Daniel Pink said ""We are preparing students for their future, not our past."  I believe this is the place we must start.  Often I hear: "We used a textbook all the time and I turned out fine."  We are preparing the students for a future that no one knows what it will bring.  Our students (7th graders) will retire around the year 2060? Think about that.  I understand the idea that pencil and paper were fine for teaching students to function in an industrial world, but now we are facing a global "flat world" and students must be prepared to work in ways not possible 10 years ago.  Books like, "Wikinomics" by Dan Tapscott and Anthony Williams, was written from Canada and England without the two authors meeting in person.  In fact, they did not even finish the book,  but invited anyone to edit the final chapter in a wiki online.  This is very different from the traditional book.  We are living in a world where individual-created content is exploding on the web.  You tube, in one minute, has 24 hours of new material uploaded to its site.  That happens every minute!  Not to mention 2 billion videos viewed each day. Facebook, has 400 million active members--many of those are our students (that is 90 million more people then inhabit the United States).  We need to prepare students for a world where communication, critical thinking, collaboration and problem solving are the key building blocks for success.  They need 21st Century skills--not that content is not important, but as "Did you Know" states: where were questions asked before Google (BG)--31 billion every month.  We have to prepare them to think, to engage with content and to be creative in solving problems.  We need to prepare them for a world very different from out past. 

So, we need to highlight how this changes our teaching and student learning.  I would like to provide a few key ideas and then hope you will respond with more ideas.  This is a question education must be able to answer as we move toward more technology integration in the classroom.  We have to explain how technology impacts student learning.

1.  It requires teachers to be risk takers--but based on sound educational principals.
2.  It focuses less on content and more on process, understanding, and critical thinking about material.
3.  It requires "old" skills (reading, writing,etc..) but develops new skills need for the changing world.
4.  It exposes students to engaging social networking in an educational setting
5.  It establishes and allows students to can create their own knowledge based on fact and content.
6.  It makes learning and teaching more FUN.

These two Youtubes, might help us to think about this idea (Then and Now: Tom Woodward's Blog).  I hope to hear from you, Cheers,  Garth

 


Comments

David Church
06/15/2010 17:27

Having been and still am involved with teaching as an art educator as well as practicing artist I have watched, observed, been involved with and swallowed what has and continues to happen in education in America. Trying to more with less and getting further behind. First off I would like to say that we int eh arts have been teaching what has been high lighted by Garth, being teaching critical thinking, problem solving creatively and there is more than one right answer. These are the cornerstones to my art classes. WE have been assessing these students using various criteria without being hindered by numbers and percentages. We humans are visual learners for teh most part but yet these are the programs that continue to be under fire and reduced. We have a model in the arts to follow and expand on in the other academic areas utilizing technology. I took part in a collaboration with Garth skyping a renaissance art presentation a few months ago. What transpired is unlike anything I have seen. The shear enthusiasum, creative thought, passion for learning and creative problem solving was amazing. And they get it and retain the information. Lets ride the wave not drown in the wake of this technological revolution. It must not only from the top down but the bottom up. As educators we must educate not only the children of tomorrow but teh powers to make this happen as well.
Thanks to Garth and Mike for leading the way.

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T.C. Messer
06/15/2010 18:34

Generally speaking, in my experiences so far, I think one of the most valuable impacts technology has made on teaching and learning is that of making both more authentic. I believe it is that authenticity that fuels enthusiasm.
It is more difficult for me to speak globally about how it has changed teaching and learning because I think the term "technology" is broad and because when I think of effects, I usually think about specific lessons and specific learners.

I totally agree with you, Garth, that data and products alone can not possibly show the net worth of a learning experience and the beautiful complexity of the effects of technology :-)

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Dustin
07/03/2010 10:43

Technology has changed how some teachers teach their students, by having students become closer and more aware that their are other students in the world besides them. Technology really has made the world a smaller place. Technology is a great communication tool if used correctly. Technology is used effectively in a classroom if both teachers and students know how to use technology correctly. The use of the internet in the classroom has connected students to other students and finding more than one way to solve a problem they might have in math class for example.

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Susan Flinner
07/07/2010 12:34

Technology is constantly changing! It is vital that educators keep up with and know how to use technology within the classroom...when we fall behind, we lose our target audience!

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Patti Chrisman
07/11/2010 16:16

I very much agree with the information you have put into this blog post. As someone who is just entering into the teaching field, I think this can be a challenge. Not because of the students or of my skills (which are improving), but because of funding. I realize that we can get lots of things for free, but I am not sure that those in higher positions are helping to make the 21st century classroom a possibility for all. Educational funding is difficult to decipher and it is even more difficult to get. Again, being very new in this realm, I may be off base, but it seems that there are some road blocks, primarily financial, that are getting in the way of having 21st century classrooms. As I just typed that last sentence, I realized that another road block could be the teachers and leaders that are less than willing to change with the times.

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Katie Marsch
07/13/2010 12:02

I love the quote that you mentioned by Daniel Pink in this blog, "We are preparing our students for their future, not our past". That is really a powerful statement and a great starting point for teachers to start reflecting on their teaching styles. It is all too easy to teach students in a style that is most comfortable for the teacher, most likely the style that taught were taught in years ago. It makes me think though, what good is this for them? The world is changing drastically, minute by minute. Our transportation is changing, our entertainment is changing, but why does it seem like education is not changing? Every moment that students spend in school is a moment that can't be given back to them...How do should we use it?

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