Archives For Learning

A MacArthur Foundation funded longitudinal study focused on Internet use of high school students’ reveals that:

* For many youth, their interest in the Internet translates into engagement with civic and political issues.
* Contrary to popular belief, it is rare for individuals on the Internet to only be exposed to political perspectives with which they agree, but many youth are not exposed to political perspectives at all.
* Teaching new media literacies such as credibility assessment is essential for 21st century citizenship.

Yet another resource pointing to the fact that the time, effort and resources spent on filtering or censoring internet access in schools would be better spent on teaching youth how to effectively assess the information they come across.

The the full press release…

Recognizing and understanding the challenges and criticism in using technology to enhance learning helps keep one honest and focused on the fact that … it is about the learning. Kentaro Toyama writes this article primarily for an audience most interested in government-funded primary and secondary education in developing countries but the fundamentals that he addresses and the myths that he exposes apply universally. Toyama is NOT against technology and clearly confirms that it useful:

in rich environments, where the basics of education are assured, where teachers are facile with technology, and where budgets are unconstrained, widespread use of technology, even in a one-to-one format, might benefit students.

Toyama provides an exceptional point and counterpoint refutation of the following 9 Myths of Technology:

  1. 21st-century skills require 21st-century technologies. The modern world uses e-mail, PowerPoint, and filing systems. Computers teach you those skills.
  2. Technology X allows interactive, adaptive, constructivist, student-centered, [insert educational flavor of the month (EFotM) here] learning.
  3. But, wait, it’s still easier for teachers to arouse interest with technology X than with textbooks.
  4. Teachers are expensive. It’s exactly because teachers are absent or poorly trained that low-cost technology is a good alternative.
  5. Textbooks are expensive. For the price of a couple of textbooks, you might as well get a low-cost PC.
  6. We have been trying to improve education for many years without results. Thus, it’s time for something new: Technology X!
  7. Study Z shows that technology is helpful.
  8. Computer games, simulations, and other state-of-the-art technologies are really changing things.
  9. Technology is transformative, revolutionary, and otherwise stupendous! Therefore, it must be good for education.

As advocates for using technology to enhance learning we need to be continually reminded that the fundamentals of effective learning must be in place before technology can be used to enhance learning.

Read the full article…

It is interesting to get so much recognition for being a finalist in a Gates Foundation Grant. Now the pressure is on…

Read about the grant submission from ACU and all the other finalists…

Yury Lifshits of Mashable pulls together a list of online resources that are having a signficant impact on the future of education. Fortunately he has boiled down the list to fit into the following 9 categories:

  1. New Institutions
  2. Learning management
  3. Online Content
  4. Networks and Marketplaces
  5. Live Training and Tutoring
  6. Learner Tools
  7. Collaborative Learning
  8. Funding and Payments
  9. Hardware for Education

Read the full article..

Diana Chapman Walsh president of Wellesley College from 1993 to 2007 challenges us to consider the recent moves in cognitive science and the scholarship of teaching and learning and asks us to put:

learning rather than amenities at the center of the arms race, spend less on making students more and more comfortable at college and more on making them more and more curious?

Refreshing questions considering the challenges that Arum has put forward Academically Adrift.