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Folks:
The posting below is an insightful look at the uses and abuses
of technology in the classroom. It is by Jack Meacham, SUNY Distinguished
Teaching Professor, University at Buffalo-State University of
New York. The article is from the Fall, 2006 issue of Peer Review,
Volume 8, Number 4. Peer Review is a publication of the Association
of American Colleges and Universities [www.aacu.org/peerreview]
Copyright © 2006, all rights reserved. Reprinted with permission.
Regards,
Rick Reis
reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: Managing a Career Versus Managing a Program or Department
Tomorrow's Teaching and Learning
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Questioning the Best Learning Technology
When I was a new assistant professor, I gave much time, thought,
and energy to my courses. I worked late the nights before on classroom
presentations and rose early the mornings of my classes. I read
and reread and underlined and took notes on the key books and
chapters as well as the current articles on the topics that I
was teaching. I continued to reorganize and revise my lecture
notes (most of my teaching has been with large classes) until
just before I walked to the classroom, adding additional material
and making certain that I was prepared for any questions the students
might raise. Looking back, I can see that I was making a simple
error: I was mistaking my own learning for the students' learning.
I thought that if I had learned the material well, my extra preparation
would magically increase my students' learning.
Until recently, I was making a similar mistake, still working
late into the nights and rising early the mornings before my classes.
I continued to search the Web for information to add to my lecture
slides and links to add to the course Web site. I continued to
construct additional slides for my lectures as well as fuss with
the content and formatting for previous slides. Until just before
I walked to the classroom, I continued to search Google for more
and better images to show during lecture, as well as rehearse
the sequence and timing for the audio and video clips I had woven
into my lectures. Looking back, I realize that this time I was
mistaking my use of technology for the students' learning. I thought
that if I was competent with classroom technology and my lectures
were entertaining, my students would magically learn the material
better.
I've learned from talking with students that some see the place
and value of technology in their courses as follows: First, they
like professors' lectures to highlight the main points in the
assigned reading (so they don't have to do the reading, think,
evaluate, underline, and take notes). Students like lectures presented
with slides, so they can see what to copy into their notes (as
opposed to having to listen, think, and select what is worth noting
as well as assess whether they are understanding the material
and, if not, form questions). And students like lectures illustrated
with images (these make the class entertaining) and video clips
(a welcome break from copying from slides). Next, they like professors'
lectures to not go beyond the reading and they like the lecture
notes to be posted on a course Web site (so that the students
don't have to attend class). Last, before the exams they like
professors to post review handouts and sample questions on the
course Web site (so they don't have to read the lecture notes
posted previously or review, organize, and think about the material
prior to the exam). These students like the exams to be multiple-choice
and computer-scored, rather than fill-in-the blank, short answer,
or-worse-essay exams (so they can rely on recognizing the correct
answer rather than having to work to recall it or-worse-having
to think and write).
If my use of technology merely encourages and supports student
attitudes and behaviors such as these, then I have lost sight
of my primary goal and responsibility as a professor, which is
to facilitate student learning. Instead of expanding and fine-tuning
my use of classroom technology, I should be putting my time, effort,
and creativity into promoting the active engagement, thinking,
questioning, and learning of my students. Once we move beyond
a transmission model of teaching and learning, in which students
are passive, to a constructivist model of liberal education, in
which students are actively engaged, curious, reflective, and
thinking critically, the best learning technology becomes the
posing of a problem, issue, or question for the students (and
this is real, not magic). Yes, I continue to use a variety of
technologies in my teaching, but less so than a few years ago,
for often the students can best be stimulated by sharing a good
story with a twist or sketching a simple table or diagram with
chalk. The criterion for bringing technology into my courses should
always be: will this enable me to pose questions that better engage
my students, spark their curiosity, and push them to think critically
and, ultimately, to learn?
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