"We must wait patiently before we see in the majority of college
students the effects of widespread progress in providing basic computer
technology skills now being made in grades K-12. Until that time,
instructors cannot take for granted that students come to college
having mastered basic technology skills. Thus, we need to think
through what skills students must possess and sometimes even devote
valuable class time to reviewing the skills needed for class assignments
and projects."
Tomorrow's Professor Msg.#341 TEACHING WITH TECHNOLOGY AND GENERATION
"E"
Folks:
The article below looks at the false assumption that most college
students are conversant with web-based technologies and suggests
some steps we might take as teachers to deal with this reality.
It is number 15 in a series of selected excerpts from the National
Teaching and Learning Forum newsletter reproduced here as part of
our "Shared Mission Partnership." NT&LF has a wealth
of information on all aspects of teaching and learning. If you are
not already a subscriber, you can check it out at [http://www.ntlf.com/]
The on-line edition of the Forum--like the printed version - offers
subscribers insight from colleagues eager to share new ways of helping
students reach the highest levels of learning. National Teaching
and Learning Forum Newsletter, February 2002, Volume 11, Number
2. © Copyright 1996-2002. Published by Oryx Press in conjunction
with James Rhem & Associates, Inc. (ISSN 1057-2880) All rights
reserved worldwide. Reprinted with permission.
Regards,
Rick Reis reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: Managing the Scientific Multitudes
Tomorrow's Teaching and Learning
------------------------------ 1,163 words ---------------------------
TEACHING WITH TECHNOLOGY AND GENERATION "E"
Volume 11 Number 2
Janette B. Benson University of Denver
Today's college students are sometimes described as knowing more
about computers, the Internet, and just about anything electronic
than most anyone else on campus. We hear them called "Generation
E." Electronic technology has been an omnipresent force in
their lives since they were born. Tell them you typed your dissertation
on a typewriter and you become a dinosaur before their very eyes.
For those of us grappling with how to use technology effectively
in teaching, Generation E presents an interesting problem. What
exactly can we expect students to know about how to use the computer
technologies that we are just learning and trying to incorporate
into our teaching? It's an issue that requires serious attention
as university administrators increasingly urge faculty to infuse
computer-based technology into our courses.
As with many social changes, answers emerge from experience perhaps
more forcefully than from think tanks or environmental scanning
groups. My experience using educational technology in my course
"Children and Government," an advanced undergraduate developmental
psychology seminar on child policy in U.S. government, taught me
some valuable lessons.
As a Carnegie Scholar in the Carnegie Academy for the Scholarship
of Teaching and Learning, I developed a Web-based pedagogy designed
to facilitate student critical thinking and deep understanding.
When thinking about child policy issues, I wanted to move my students
from a "make sense epistemology" (Perkins, Allen &
Hafner, 1983), where they typically thought about issues from existing
beliefs, to a "critical epistemology," that required them
to ". . . examine the data and the reasoning for inconsistencies,
take alternative perspectives, construct counterarguments, and look
for bias and overgeneralizations . . . [which] . . . is necessary
to do for a deeper understanding of the situation and to achieve
more reasoned and informed decision making" (King, 1994, p.
33).
My primary strategy for achieving this "hoped for" epistemological
goal was to provide each student with a template of a "side-by-side
frames" Web site. Each week students published to their Web
site "point versus counterpoint" arguments for two different
sides of a child policy issue of their own choice (e.g., "Does
maternal employment negatively affect children's development?").
Students were required to include two pieces of evidence to support
each argument, with at least one in the form of a hypertext link.
Requiring students to support their arguments with evidence from
the Web prompted them to think critically about its quality and
credibility. I provided weekly feedback on Web site development,
and classmates also reviewed each other's work.
To document changes in student critical thinking and the depth
of their understanding, a 6-week learning record was created, consisting
of students' archived weekly Web site work along with their weekly
annotation paper. The annotation paper included a reflection on
their Web site work for that week, their current position on the
child policy issue, and an evaluation of the credibility of the
evidence used to support their arguments.
At the beginning and end of the 10-week quarter I also collected
students' responses to a questionnaire that assessed their orientation
to critical thinking and their familiarity with, attitudes toward,
and use of computers and the Internet.
Just because students are members of Generation E does not mean
they have mastered even the most fundamental features of the operating
system on their laptop or desktop computer. Some students in my
course did not know how to move easily among open windows or even
among applications that were running simultaneously on their computer.
I received blank stares from some students the first time I said
in class, "Minimize the current open window."
When students told me that they were familiar with computers and
the Internet, for some this meant knowing how to send e-mail messages
or how to order a sweater from a favorite e-commerce outlet. For
a very small number of others, this meant knowing how to write computer
code. Not only do some students arrive at college with limited computer
skills, the range of ability and technology experience across students
sitting in the same classroom can be vast.
We must wait patiently before we see in the majority of college
students the effects of widespread progress in providing basic computer
technology skills now being made in grades K-12. Until that time,
instructors cannot take for granted that students come to college
having mastered basic technology skills. Thus, we need to think
through what skills students must possess and sometimes even devote
valuable class time to reviewing the skills needed for class assignments
and projects.
Ultimately, universities may want to define a set of basic technology
skills required for admission and to offer remedial training for
students who need it.
Most college students learn how to conduct scholarly library research
on printed materials during their first-year English courses. However,
when it comes to searching for quality information available on
the Web, many students are at a loss. They are often slow to realize
that, unlike information that is published in academic journals
or books, anyone can instantaneously publish to the Web. This lesson
was learned quickly as students realized others could read what
they were publishing to their own Web sites! The ease of Web publishing
typically sidesteps the peer review process or editorial oversight
of any kind, increasing the need for heightened scrutiny of the
credibility of information found on the Web.
The American Library Association (ALA) has developed important
criteria for information literacy in the Information Age. "To
be information literate, a person must be able to recognize when
information is needed and have the ability to locate, evaluate,
and use effectively the needed information." (ALA Report, Presidential
Committee on Information Literacy, http://www.ala.org/acrl/nili/ilit1st.html).
Additional information about what skills are required for information
literacy is also contained at the ALA Web site.
Until universities institute information literacy requirements
as they infuse technology into the curriculum, individual instructors
will find Alexander and Tate's Web Wisdom (1999) a valuable guide
for helping students to identify and evaluate the quality of information
contained in different types of Web sites (http://www2.widener.edu/Wolfgram-Memorial-Library/webevaluation/webev
al.htm). This book and the accompanying Web site provide an
important first step toward helping students achieve information
literacy.
The assessment devices I included in my course design provided
intriguing information about my efforts to facilitate student critical
thinking. Students' responses to questionnaire items that assessed
orientation to critical thinking revealed significant increases
by the end of the quarter. Students also reported that the computer
and Internet skills they acquired gave them a sense of empowerment,
which has been suggested to lead to increased student ownership
of learning (King, 1994).
Finally, contained in students' anecdotal comments and in my own
reflections is the sense that, despite the long hours and sustained
effort, the Web-based pedagogy employed in this course was well
worth it. Students and instructor alike enjoyed the added challenge,
critical thinking, and creativity required by the use of technology.
On some days members of Generation E even admitted that they were
having a good time working on their Web sites!
----------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------
References
Alexander, J. E., & Tate, M. A. 1999. Web Wisdom. Mahwah, NJ:
Erlbaum.
King, A. 1994. "Inquiry as a tool in critical thinking."
In D. F.
Halpern, et al. (Eds.),
Changing College Classrooms: New Teaching and Learning Strategies
for
an Increasingly
Complex World, pp. 13-38. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Perkins, D.N., Allen, R., & Hafner, J. 1983. "Differences
in Everyday
Reasoning." In W.
Maxwell (Ed.), Thinking: The Frontier Expands. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
Contact:
Janette B. Benson
Psychology Department
University of Denver
Denver, CO 80208
Telephone: (303) 871-3771
Fax: (303) 871-4747
E-mail: jbenson@du.edu
----------------------------------------------------------------------
TOMORROW'S PROFESSOR MAILING LIST
is a shared mission partnership with the
American Association for Higher Education (AAHE) http://www.aahe.org/
The National Teaching and Learning Forum (NT&LF) http://www.ntlf.com/
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|